Sunday, 31 May 2026

From Victorian Stage Star to Humanitarian: The Story of Beatrice Cameron

From Victorian Stage Star to Humanitarian: The Story of Beatrice Cameron

Today, I want to tell you about Beatrice Cameron.

Beatrice Cameron was born Susan Hegeman in 1868 in Troy, New York. At the time acting was not always viewed as a respectable profession for women so stepping onto the stage required both courage and a certain amount of determination.

Her theatrical career began almost by chance. She was attending a rehearsal for The Midnight Marriage at New York’s Madison Square Theatre, a performer in a small role became ill and Susan volunteered to take the part. By the following evening she had learned not only the lines but also the dance routines. The experience opened the door to a new life.
After working briefly with actor Robert Mantell, she joined the company of the celebrated actor Richard Mansfield in 1886 and adopted the stage name Beatrice Cameron. Her first role with Mansfield’s troupe was in Prince Karl, but she soon gained wider attention. In 1887 she played Agnes Carew in Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, a role she performed in America and in London. She travelled and performed in major productions.

In 1889 she became the first actress to portray Nora on Broadway in Henrik Ibsen’s controversial play A Doll’s House. The role explored independence and the expectations placed on women, and it makes me think whether it spoke to her personally.

In 1892 she married Richard Mansfield, and the two continued touring together. In February 1895, while travelling to Milwaukee, Beatrice and her maid were injured when a passenger coach crashed into their private railway carriage.

 Thankfully their injuries were only minor.
Their son, George Gibbs Mansfield, was born on the 8th of August 1898, and shortly before this Beatrice had retired from acting. Maybe motherhood and family pulled her away. Sadly Richard died in 1907, and during the First World War she lost their son to meningitis while training with the Signal Corps in 1918. The loss must have been devastating.

Beatrice turned toward helping others. In 1920 she travelled abroad to aid victims of the Armenian genocide, working with the refugees and orphans in places including Urfa and Jerusalem. Through the suffering and uncertainty, she reportedly recited Shakespeare in an attempt to comfort those in need. She also supported relief efforts elsewhere, backed the women’s suffrage, and became active in civic causes.

Beatrice also preserved her husband’s theatrical legacy, she donated costumes and organised productions in his memory. She remained in New London, Connecticut until her death from coronary thrombosis on the 12th of July 1940, aged 72.

Jane Seymour: Virtuous Tudor Queen or Careful Player in Henry VIII’s Court?

Jane Seymour: Virtuous Tudor Queen or Careful Player in Henry VIII’s Court?

The Extraordinary Courage and Sacrifice of Dutch Resistance Fighter Hannie Schaft

The Extraordinary Courage and Sacrifice of Dutch Resistance Fighter Hannie Schaft

Today I want to talk about a young Dutch woman whose courage in World War Two was extraordinary. Her name was Hannie Schaft, but she became known as “the girl with the red hair.” Her story is not only about resistance and danger but also about conviction, friendship, and the terrible price that some were forced to pay in order to oppose the German occupation.

Hannie Schaft was born Jannetje Johanna Schaft on the 16th of September 1920 in Haarlem in the Netherlands. She was Dutch and grew up in a family where politics was openly discussed. Her father was a teacher with socialist sympathies, and this must have influenced Hannie’s strong sense of justice. The death of her older sister when she was a child made her parents even more protective of her.
In 1938, Hannie began to study law at the University of Amsterdam. She hoped one day to become a lawyer and to defend human rights. While there, she formed close friendships with Jewish students, including Sonja Frenk and Philine Polak. When the Second World War and the German occupation was forced on the Netherlands in 1940, the persecution of the Jewish people became impossible to ignore. Hannie watched the discrimination and fear growing around her, and it deeply affected her.

At first, her resistance work involved small and discreet acts of courage. She helped Jewish people to obtain false identity papers and helped friends in hiding. In 1943, when Dutch students were ordered to sign a declaration of loyalty to the occupation authorities, Hannie refused. And like many others, she lost the right to continue studying.

This seems to have given her the resolve to get more involved. Hannie joined the Dutch resistance group known as the Raad van Verzet, or Council of Resistance, which had links to the Dutch Communist movement. There she worked with sisters Truus and Freddie Oversteegen. Hannie carried weapons, transported unauthorised and illegal newspapers and documents, sabotaged targets, and took part in attacks against the German occupiers and Dutch collaborators. She became brilliant at disguise, she eventually dyed her famous red hair black and wore glasses to avoid detection.

The work she did was dangerous. She did not accept every mission and reportedly refused one plan that involved kidnapping children because she was worried that innocent lives would be put at risk.
On the 21st of March 1945, only weeks before the end of the war in Europe, Hannie was arrested at a checkpoint while carrying underground material. She suffered harsh interrogation and solitary confinement but it appears she did not betray her fellow resistance members.

On the 17th of April 1945, just three weeks before the German surrender in the Netherlands, Hannie Schaft was executed by shooting in the dunes near Bloemendaal. She was only twenty-four years old.

After the war, the Netherlands honoured her sacrifice. She received the Dutch Cross of Resistance, the Resistance Memorial Cross, and the American Medal of Freedom awarded by General Eisenhower. She was also recognised as Righteous Among the Nations for helping Jewish people survive persecution. In November 1945, her state funeral was attended by members of the Dutch royal family, and she became a symbol of Dutch resistance during the Second World War.
I wonder how much courage it must have taken for someone so young to risk everything for people she believed deserved justice and freedom.

 Could we have shown the same bravery in her place?

Saturday, 30 May 2026

Why Victorian Photographs So Often Show Serious Faces Instead of Smiling Ones

Why Victorian Photographs So Often Show Serious Faces Instead of Smiling Ones

I have recently been finding out a little bit about everyday life in the Victorian era. It made me wonder about those old photographs that so often seem serious and unsmiling. Today, we take pictures all the time of laughing, smiling faces and people enjoying themselves. Victorian photography was very different. When we look at those stern faces, I wonder if people were unhappy, but the truth is rather more complicated.

Photography became increasingly popular during the nineteenth century after early processes such as the daguerreotype appeared in the 1830s and 1840s. At first, having a portrait taken was not an everyday experience. It could be expensive and time-consuming, making it something of an occasion. For many families, especially those of more modest means, a photograph might be the only portrait they would ever have.
The process helps us to understand the expressions we see. Early cameras required very long exposure times. Depending on the method and lighting, people sometimes had to sit motionless for several seconds or even longer.
 Holding a smile naturally for that length of time could be uncomfortable and difficult. Photographers often used head rests or they used carefully posed positions to prevent the subject from moving, because any movement could blur the image.

Victorian culture also shaped how people approached photography. Portrait painting had influenced ideas about what was seen as dignified and respectable and serious expressions were seen as signs of self-control and good character. Many people believed a formal portrait should present them at their best. A smile, especially a broad one showing teeth, could sometimes be linked with silliness, informality, or even poor manners.

This does not mean Victorians did not have fun. Family letters, diaries, and surviving candid photographs remind us that they laughed, played, and loved much like we do. But sitting in front of a camera may have been intimidating. Some people might have been nervous about wasting money or worried about how they would appear to future generations. Others dressed in their finest clothes might have been eager to leave behind a lasting memory.

Post-mortem photography, though unsettling to us today, became part of Victorian mourning culture. For grieving families, a photograph could preserve the face of someone they worried would be forgotten.

When we look at those unsmiling Victorian faces, we are not seeing coldness at all, but people trying to present dignity.

 Do you think we misunderstand Victorian photographs because we judge them through modern expectations?

When Henry VIII Rejected Anne of Cleves: Politics and Cromwell’s Fall

When Henry VIII Rejected Anne of Cleves: Politics and Cromwell’s Fall

Today I want to find out a little more about the brief marriage of Anne of Cleves and Henry VIII and how it became in many ways the downfall of Thomas Cromwell. This story is not just about a king disliking his bride. It was also about politics, Henry’s grief, his pride and about the dangerous rivalries that were all too prevalent  in the Tudor court.


By the late 1530s, Henry VIII was relying heavily on Thomas Cromwell. Cromwell had helped to guide England through its break with Rome and the dissolution of the monasteries. It made him one of the most powerful men in the kingdom. But with power often came enemies. Many of the more conservative nobles disliked his religious reforms and resented the influence he had over the king.

England was facing uncertainty abroad. Relations with the Catholic powers were tense, and Cromwell believed a political marriage would strengthen England’s position. Anne of Cleves was the sister of the Duke of Cleves, she appeared to offer a perfect alliance. On paper the match seemed to be sensible and useful.


The reality proved to be far more uncomfortable.

Anne arrived in England in late 1539, and Henry met her in January 1540. The king had relied partly on reports from ministers and on a portrait by Hans Holbein. But, when they finally did meet, Henry was disappointed and he struggled to hide it. They did however marry. Why? You may ask.

That is one of the most debated parts of the story.

The short answer is that politics, pressure, and pride likely all played a part.

By late 1539, the marriage had already become an important diplomatic arrangement. England was worried about hostility from powerful Catholic rulers such as Charles V and Francis I of France after the break with Rome.


When Anne arrived, huge preparations had already been made. Diplomats had negotiated for months, gifts had been exchanged, and the match had been publicly announced. He could not easily refuse her at the last minute, it would have risked humiliating Anne and would have also insulted her powerful family. That could have damaged England diplomatically and would have made Henry seem unreliable.

There was also the issue of Henry’s own image.

When Henry met Anne at Rochester in early January 1540, he reportedly disguised himself and expected a romantic reaction. Anne was unfamiliar with this English custom, and she apparently did not recognise him. Some historians think Henry may have felt embarrassed before the marriage had  begun. Henry may still have hoped that his feelings would change. Physical attraction was not always immediate in dynastic marriages, and kings were expected to place duty before preference. There was considerable pressure to proceed.

I also wonder whether Henry felt trapped by his own decisions. Admitting publicly that he disliked the match before the ceremony might have suggested poor judgement or even weakness, something that Tudor kings would deny at any cost.

After the wedding on the 6th of January 1540, Henry continued to complain that he could not bring himself to desire Anne and he insisted that the marriage had not been consummated. Once diplomatic circumstances had shifted, the alliance seemed less necessary, and that gave Henry a way out.

It was claimed later that he called Anne a “Flanders Mare,” but historians doubt that these exact words were ever spoken. What is clearer is that Henry complained privately that he had very little attraction to poor Anne and that he struggled with the marriage.

For Cromwell, this must have been extremely worrying. He had recommended the match and would have now found himself trapped between royal expectations and political reality. His enemies at court were quick to sense weakness and were eager to use the failed marriage against him.

I also cannot help wondering whether Henry’s feelings were influenced by more than appearance. Jane Seymour had died only a little over two years earlier, on the 24th of October 1537, after giving birth to Prince Edward. Henry appeared to have been genuinely devastated by her death. Jane may have become idealised in his memory, remembered as the wife who had given him his long-awaited surviving legitimate son. No living woman could easily compete with that memory.

By 1540 Henry was ageing and becoming increasingly troubled by illness and pain. Pride and insecurity may also have played a role. Admitting personal difficulty was not easy for a Tudor king.

In the end, Anne herself was not Cromwell’s downfall. But the marriage exposed the tensions that were already simmering beneath the surface. Cromwell’s enemies and Henry’s disappointment along with the court politics, and perhaps even some grief for Jane all combined to destroy him.

Do you think Henry’s rejection of Anne was political, or do you think his feelings for Jane played a role?

The Brave Norwegian Woman Who Defied Fear At Hegra Fortress

The Brave Norwegian Woman Who Defied Fear At Hegra Fortress

I have been discovering more about the courage shown by ordinary people during the Second World War. Today I want to tell you about a Norwegian woman called Anne Margrethe Strømsheim. She was born Anne Margrethe Bang in 1914 in Trondheim. Her father was a doctor who had volunteered in earlier wars and had taught her first aid. Although she hoped to become a nurse one day, money made training difficult.


When Germany invaded Norway on the 9th of April 1940, Anne was recovering from bronchitis in the mountains. She did not stay in safety, she decided to hurry back toward Trondheim. She travelled using skis, trains, and taxis. After helping move her mother to safety, she learned that Norwegian defenders near Hegra Fortress desperately needed medical supplies. She gathered what she could and made her way there.

At Hegra Fortress, Anne became the only female defender among a small group that were determined to resist the German forces. Before the siege had even properly begun, she was already treating the casualties. One incident stayed with her when a civilian train was mistakenly fired on and she cared for a badly wounded Finnish woman. She sang softly to comfort her while help was arranged.

The Battle of Hegra Fortress lasted twenty-five days. Conditions inside were bitterly cold and damp. Anne worked for long hours tending to the wounded and sick, often not able to get any rest during the attacks. German observers noticed the blonde woman moving through the fortress and reportedly nicknamed her “Jeanne d’Arc.” Behind all of her bravery, there must  have been fear and  exhaustion. Two childhood friends fighting beside her would sadly not survive.

When the fortress surrendered in May 1940, Anne became a prisoner of war. Though she was treated differently from the male prisoners, she fought to secure medical care for them through the Norwegian Red Cross. Throughout the occupation she remained involved in anti-German activities and eventually had to flee to avoid arrest.

After the war, Anne devoted herself to helping vulnerable people, including blind children and injured veterans. She was decorated for her service and she remained outspoken about the realities of war and the sacrifices that it demanded. She died in 2008 at the age if 93-94. 

Friday, 29 May 2026

The Fear Of The Victorian Asylum And What It Meant For Women

The Fear Of The Victorian Asylum And What It Meant For Women

I have recently been discovering more about some of the realities of life for Victorian women. It got me to wondering about one of the darker sides of Victorian England. The fear of the asylum. When we picture Victorian asylums, we imagine frightening buildings and the dramatic stories told about them, but the reality was far more complicated and quite unsettling.
During the early Victorian period, beginning in 1837, attitudes toward mental illness were changing. In earlier centuries people who suffered with mental health were often treated badly or they were neglected, but the care depended on circumstances. By the nineteenth century, many doctors and reformers started to believe that asylums could offer them treatment and a form of protection. Large county asylums were built across Britain, and in theory they were meant to be places that would care for people rather than punish them.

But for many women, the system could be frightening.

Victorian society placed enormous expectations on women. They were often expected to be calm, obedient, modest, and devoted to the family. Respectability was hugely important. Women who struggled emotionally, challenged social expectations, or behaved in ways that were considered unusual could be judged rather harshly.

The fear was made even more real by the legal system that surrounded the asylums. Under laws like the Lunacy Acts, people could be admitted to asylums with medical certification and legal procedures. In many cases doctors and relatives genuinely believed that they were helping someone who was seriously unwell. Conditions such as severe depression, psychosis, dementia, or postnatal mental illness did exist and often require a level of care that families could not provide. But the process could still be alarming.

Stories circulated in newspapers and there was gossip about women who were supposedly confined unfairly. Some women were scared of being called “hysterical,” which was a vague diagnosis to describe emotional distress or behaviour that was thought to be unsuitable for a woman. Others worried that family disagreements, inheritance disputes, or unhappy marriages might also place them at risk. They thought they may be deliberately confined although it was far less common than stories sometimes suggested.

The fear was very real.

Even if many of the asylums did attempt treatment, the loss of the patient’s independence would have been terrifying. Some women undoubtedly entered asylums needing genuine help.

By the later Victorian period, public debate grew. Campaigners questioned many asylum practices, former patients shared their experiences, and society slowly began discussing mental health with more scrutiny. The asylums reputation as both a place of treatment and a one of anxiety and fear remained.

Do you think that Victorian women were really afraid of the asylum, or of living in a society where they could be so overlooked?

From Victorian Stage Star to Humanitarian: The Story of Beatrice Cameron

From Victorian Stage Star to Humanitarian: The Story of Beatrice Cameron Today, I want to tell you about Beatrice Cameron. Beatr...