Let's discover history together
Discovering the history
Sunday, 21 June 2026
Patrick Munro: The Only MP to Die on Home Guard Duty
Saturday, 20 June 2026
The Victorian Nursemaid: Caring and Raising Children in a Changing World
The Victorian Nursemaid: Caring and Raising Children in a
Changing World
Yesterday we found out about medieval and Tudor nursemaids,
and today I want to find out a little bit about the Victorian nursemaid and how
they compare.
By the Victorian era, Britain had changed enormously. The
Industrial Revolution had completely changed the country. Cities like London
were growing fast, and class was still very much ingrained. Wealthy families usually
lived in large, grand houses, and they employed several servants. This was seen
as success and respectability and was very much valued. If the family had
children, one of those servants could have been the nursemaid. Her job was to
care for the children. In some ways, her role was similar to the nursemaids of
earlier centuries, but the Victorian era brought changes.
Like many domestic servants, nursemaids usually came from
poor or working-class families. Some were still quite young, maybe only in
their mid to late teens when they entered service. But experienced older women
could also have the role. For many young women, becoming a nursemaid offered
them more that just a wage. It could offer them regular meals and a roof over
their heads as well. To the many families that were struggling with poverty, it
may have seemed like a valuable opportunity. But like so many servant roles,
the reality was often demanding and exhausting.
A Victorian nursemaid’s day usually began early and ended
late at night. Her duties depended on the age of the children and the size of
the household. She helped with washing, dressing, feeding, comforting, and
entertaining the children. She might be required to prepare the nursery meals,
keep the children’s clothes clean, tidy up the toys, and sometimes settle the
children to sleep. If a baby was in the household, sleepless nights must have
made the job even harder.
Unlike many medieval and Tudor nursemaids, Victorian
nursemaids often worked in a more structured servant hierarchy. In larger
households, they usually answered to the nurse or head nurse, who supervised
the nursery and oversaw the children’s care. In smaller homes, the nursemaid
might be required to manage most of the childcare herself. She was expected to
be patient, calm and reliable.
Victorians placed a huge amount of importance on manners,
discipline, and respectability. These values influenced how children were
raised. Nursemaids were expected to care for children but to also teach them
how to behave.
Life as a nursemaid must
have been quite lonely. She spent a lot of her time in the nursery or outdoors
pushing the babys pram in parks and streets. They were seen but very rarely
noticed. Although she cared for the children, she was still a servant.
This must have been a difficult line to walk. She was the
one caring for the children every day, comforting them, witnessing their first
words and first steps, but you were still beneath the family. There were
invisible boundaries that you could never cross.
The conditions nursemaids worked in could be very different
depending on the home. In wealthy houses, the nursery might be warm and
comfortable, but the long hours were still tiring. In some homes, life was much
harder. She might sleep in a small room or in the nursery and get very little
time off. Like many servants, she was expected to be ready whenever she was
needed.
Compared with medieval and Tudor nursemaids, Victorian
nursemaids often worked in more organised households with stricter routines and
expectations.
It was these young women that quietly helped to raise the
next generation.
Do you think Victorian children sometimes felt closer to
their nursemaids than to their own parents?
WW2 Home Guard Part 11: The End of the Home Guard and Its Life After the War
WW2 Home Guard Part 11: The End of the Home Guard and Its Life After the War
Today I want to continue looking into the Home Guard, and I want to explore how it all came to an end and what happened after the war. The Home Guard is something that we often only connect to Britain’s war years, but their story did not end there. In some ways, their legacy continued long after 1945.
By 1944, the threat of a German invasion had almost entirely gone. After the success of the Normandy landings on the 6th of June 1944, Allied forces were pushing into Europe. Britain was no longer standing alone. The Home Guard still did important work. They guarded key sites, patrolled and stayed prepared, but many believed that the danger had almost passed.
But the men continued to serve. Many of them had given years of their lives to the Home Guard, balancing work during the day with their duties in the evenings. Some had joined in the early days of 1940 armed with little more than determination. They became far better equipped and trained as the years went on. For many of the volunteers, the Home Guard had become a huge part of their lives.
I wonder how they must have felt in those final months. There must have been relief, but maybe some uncertainty. For nearly five years, they had the responsibility of defending their communities. They had prepared for a battle that thankfully never came.
On the 3rd of December 1944, the Home Guard was officially stood down. Across Britain, parades and ceremonies took place. Many of the men were awarded certificates to recognise their service, and some received the Defence Medal.
They were ordinary men, shopkeepers, teachers, factory workers, clerks, labourers, fathers, and grandfathers. They had stepped up when Britain needed them most.
The Home Guard was officially disbanded on the 31st of December 1945, several months after the war in Europe had ended. They returned their uniforms and weapons and life slowly began to get back to some kind of new normal. For many of them, this was the end of an extraordinary chapter.
But the story did not end there.
Only a few years later, the world was plunged into a new period of tension known as the Cold War. Relations between Britain and the Soviet Union had become increasingly strained, and there were fears of another major conflict. When the Korean War broke out in 1950, concerns about national defence rose again.
Because of these growing fears, the government passed the Home Guard Act in 1951, and enrolment began in 1952. They had the same name and had a similar purpose, but this new Home Guard was different from the wartime force. Britain was now preparing for the possibility of modern warfare, including air attacks and even nuclear threats.
The volunteers again trained to protect important sites such as power stations, bridges, railways, reservoirs, factories, and communication centres. They could also support the regular military by taking on the local defensive duties, observing and reporting suspicious activity, and helping with traffic control or local organisation during emergencies.
They were not bomb disposal experts, but they could still help during dangerous incidents. If unexploded wartime bombs were discovered, Home Guard members might help to secure the area, keep the civilians away, report the danger, and even assist the emergency services while the specialist bomb disposal teams dealt with the device.
It is incredible that many of the men who volunteered in the 1950s had either served in the wartime Home Guard or in the Second World War. There must have been a strange sense of déjà vu, that history was beginning to repeat itself. When they put the uniform on again and started to train once more, all in preparation for dangers that they hoped would never come, you have to wonder how they felt.
Thankfully, this post-war Home Guard never had to face the dangers they had prepared for. Defence priorities gradually changed and the immediate threat lessened once again, the revived force was stood down. In 1957, the Home Guard was officially disbanded for the second and final time.
Today, the Home Guard is often remembered for the TV show Dad's Army, which brought us humour and an incredible affection to their story. While the show clearly captured some of the brilliant quirks and personalities, it sometimes led people to underestimate them. But I hope through this short series I have shown just a little of the reality. These were ordinary people who in a time of fear stood up and were willing to defend their country. I for one am immensely grateful for their service. Their story must be remembered.
As we finish this Home Guard series, what has surprised you most about them? Did this series change the way you view the Home Guard?
Friday, 19 June 2026
The Medieval and Tudor Nursemaid: The Woman Trusted to Care for a Child’s Earliest Years
WW2 Home Guard Part 10: How Effective Were the Home Guard?
Thursday, 18 June 2026
The Victorian Hall Boy: The Young Servant Who Was Always on Call
WW2 Home Guard Part 9: The Home Guard and D-Day
WW2 Home Guard Part 9: The Home Guard and D-Day
Today I want to continue to find out more about the Home Guard. This time I want to look at their role during D-Day. D-Day is usually remembered for the thousands of brave men who landed on the beaches of Normandy on the 6th of June 1944. The Home Guard are not usually thought of as part of that, but they still had an important role back in Britain.
By 1944, the war had been going on for nearly five hard, long years and the Home Guard had served throughout. Many of the men had joined in 1940, when Britain was facing the prospect of imminent invasion. They had spent years training, patrolling and guarding important sites all in preparation for an attack that thankfully never came. But in the run up to D-Day, their role became much more important.
Planning for D-Day, which was known as Operation Overlord, became an enormous military operation across the south of Britain. Thousands of soldiers had been gathered at camps, ports, and at temporary bases. Tanks, trucks, fuel, ammunition, and supplies were using all the roads and storage areas. The south coast effectively became one giant staging ground for the invasion.
The Home Guard helped to protect this huge operation. Their job was to guard key locations such as bridges, railway lines, airfields, communication centres, supply depots, and fuel dumps. They were tasked to watch out for anything suspicious. Although the threat of a full German invasion had hugely reduced by 1944, there were still worries about spies, sabotage, and enemy agents trying to gather information.
It must have brought back memories of 1940 for many of the men. Only now, instead of waiting for an invasion, they were helping protect the force that would help liberate Europe.
Secrecy was essential. The success of D-Day depended a lot on keeping German intelligence in the dark about where the invasion would happen. The Home Guard helped to enforce security around restricted areas and challenged anyone who should not have been there. One mistake, one leak of information, could potentially cost thousands of lives.
On the night of the 5th of June 1944, the Allied troops were preparing to cross the English Channel. Many Home Guard volunteers were still on duty. While the soldiers boarded ships and aircraft carried paratroopers toward occupied Europe, in what must have been one of the most intense and anxious times for them, the Home Guard units stayed at their posts across Britain. Some may have known that something major was about to happen. But for others they may have only felt the tension and activity around them.
When the news began to spread on the 6th of June that the landings had begun, there must have been such a mixture of emotions. Relief, hope, pride, and probably anxiety too. Many Home Guard members had family or friends serving abroad.
Although they were not the ones who landed on the beaches, the Home Guard did help to make the operation possible by protecting Britain’s home front. Their roles are often overlooked, but what they did mattered. By the end of 1944, the Allied forces were pushing deeper into Europe, it was becoming clear that the war was turning to their advantage.
Not every contribution to the war happened on the front lines. Some victories were actually made possible by the ordinary people at home, who all too often went without recognition.
Do you think that we sometimes overlook the smaller roles that helped to make the large victories possible?
Patrick Munro: The Only MP to Die on Home Guard Duty
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