Let's discover history together
Discovering the history
Saturday, 16 May 2026
Sarah Forbes Bonetta: The Young African Girl Who Entered Queen Victoria’s Court
The Forgotten Collapse of Old St Paul’s Cathedral’s Great Spire in 1561
The Forgotten Collapse of Old St Paul’s Cathedral’s Great Spire in 1561
I have been talking about a few of the major fires during
the medieval and early modern era and it got me thinking about what other
disasters happened in that period. So I started to do some digging and found
the collapse of the great spire of Old St Paul’s Cathedral in London. It seems to
have been largely forgotten today.
Old St Paul’s Cathedral was one of the most famous buildings
in medieval England. The old cathedral dominated the skyline of London long before
the modern cathedral that we know today. It had an enormous Gothic spire and it
was considered one of the tallest structures in Europe, it is estimated to have
been around 489 feet. For centuries, it stood showing the power of both the
city and the Church. People could see it for miles and it would have been a
familiar sight for many merchants and travellers and the everyday Londoners
going about their lives.
In 1561 during the reign of Elizabeth I, on the 4th of June
1561, lightning struck the spire during a thunderstorm. The huge wooden
framework inside the spire caught fire. Witnesses described flames rushing up
while there was burning debris falling into the streets below.
The fire destroyed the spire completely. Molten lead from
the roof was reported to have poured down like rain into the churchyard and
surrounding streets. Smoke could apparently be seen across London. It must have
caused panic as people watched one of the city’s greatest landmarks collapse in
front of them. Some Londoners saw it as a sign from God. England was going
through enormous religious tension at the time after the English Reformation,
and many people believed events like this were a warning.
Remarkably, the number of deaths seems to have been very low
when you consider the scale of the disaster. Contemporary accounts suggest that
very few people were killed. Several people were injured by falling debris and
burning material though. One story is that a bookseller’s stock that was stored
in the cathedral was destroyed. Nearby homes and shops also suffered damage
from the sparks and falling debris. The area around St Paul’s was crowded and
busy, so there was a fear that the fire could spread across London.
The aftermath lasted for decades. The spire was never
rebuilt. Although repairs were carried out on other parts of the cathedral, the
disaster permanently changed London’s skyline. Some people saw the ruined
cathedral as symbolic of a country that was still struggling with religious
division. Old St Paul’s continued to deteriorate until it was finally destroyed
during the Great Fire of London in 1666. A new cathedral that was designed by
Christopher Wren was eventually built on the site. The building began being built
in 1675 and was officially completed in 1710.
Do you think you would have seen it as a natural disaster,
or as a warning of something greater to come?
The Navy Nurse Who Guided America’s Nurses Through The Second World War
Friday, 15 May 2026
Before Electricity: The Dangerous Reality of Lighting Victorian Homes
Before Electricity: The Dangerous Reality of Lighting Victorian Homes
I have been finding out a little bit about life in the
Victorian and Edwardian era. I started
to think about lighting. What was it like inside Victorian and Edwardian homes?
It really made me realise how different everyday life was. Today, most of us
simply flick a switch without even thinking about it, but for the people of the
nineteenth century, lighting was expensive and dangerous. The way your home was
lit could reveal a great deal about your wealth and your status.
For centuries, candles were one of the most common forms of
lighting. Poorer families relied on cheaper tallow candles that were made from
animal fat. They smoked, smelled bad, and burned quickly, but they were
affordable. Wealthier households could afford cleaner and brighter beeswax
candles, these were expensive to use in large quantities though. In small
working-class homes, families often gathered in one room after it got dark to save
candlelight. Darkness clearly controlled life in a way that is difficult for us
to imagine now.
Candles also carried serious dangers. Candles were lit in
houses that were full of flammable items. Wooden furniture, curtains, straw, or
paper could easily lead to issues. Victorian and Edwardian towns regularly witnessed
devastating house fires caused by candles. In cramped poorer districts, where
buildings stood tightly packed together, a single accident could destroy entire
streets.
During the early nineteenth century, gas lighting was beginning
to transform towns and cities. William Murdoch helped to pioneer practical gas
lighting systems, and by the mid-1800s gas lamps were becoming increasingly
common in wealthier homes, theatres, factories, and even city streets. Gas
lighting produced a brighter and steadier light than candles did.
One major improvement to the gas light came with the invention
of the incandescent mantle during the late nineteenth century. Austrian
inventor Carl Auer von Welsbach created a fabric-like mantle that glowed
intensely when it was heated by a gas flame. This invention made gas lamps even
brighter and far more practical than older versions.
Many large upper-class homes started to embrace gas lighting
much earlier on because its installation was prohibitively expensive. Prince
Albert was well known for his passion for technological progress and modern
improvements. Many of which he implemented in the royal residences. He helped
to make many of the new innovations fashionable and respectable among the upper
classes.
But gas lighting brought with it many fears. Gas leaks could
cause explosions or suffocation, and many people were worried about breathing in
the fumes. Rooms became hot and stuffy and some families worried about the
invisible gas running through pipes inside their walls. In poorer homes, gas
remained far out of reach for many years because the costs were still too high.
By the late Victorian and Edwardian period, electricity
slowly began to appear. Inventors like Thomas Edison and Joseph Swan helped
develop practical electric lighting. Electric light was cleaner, brighter, and
safer in many ways than candles or gas. There was no smoke that blackened the
ceilings and there was far less fear.
At first, electricity was mainly found in wealthy homes,
grand hotels, and public buildings. Working-class districts waited years before
electric lighting became common. But, people recognised the benefits.
Do you think people realised just how dramatically electricity
would change everyday life forever?
The Great Fire of York and the Fear of Medieval Cities
The Courage and Compassion of Australian Wartime Nurse Kathleen Hope Barnes
The Courage and Compassion of Australian Wartime Nurse Kathleen Hope Barnes
Today I want to
continue looking at some of the remarkable nurses who served during the Second
World War. I want to tell you about Kathleen Hope Barnes.
Kathleen Hope Barnes was born on the 19th of May 1909 in
Cottesloe in Western Australia. Her parents had emigrated from Scotland and
Ireland, and her father ran a local shop. She went to Methodist Ladies’ College in Claremont. Nursing
was starting to be seen as a profession
and a public service.
When the Second World War started in 1939, Kathleen joined
the Australian Army Nursing Service. In April 1940, she became part of the
first group of Western Australian nurses who were sent overseas. She left from
Fremantle on board Nevassa. For many of these brave women, it would have been
the first time they had travelled so far from home.
By October 1942, Kathleen was serving in Port Moresby in
Papua during the New Guinea campaign. She worked with the 105th Casualty
Clearing Station that cared for wounded soldiers in the harsh tropical
conditions. Disease and exhaustion were
a huge part of everyday life. In March 1943 she was promoted to lieutenant, and
just a few months later she became a captain.
In late 1944 and early 1945, Australian forces moved into
Jacquinot Bay on the island of New Britain. Kathleen led some of the first
Australian nurses to arrive there. Their arrival meant that injured troops
could finally receive medical care closer to the front lines.
Her dedication did not go unnoticed. Kathleen was mentioned
in dispatches for her wartime service and became an Associate of the Royal Red
Cross. She was also appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire
(MBE).
After the war, she continued nursing in Australia and helped
to expand community healthcare services before her death in 1981 at the age of 72.
Thursday, 14 May 2026
The Hidden Loneliness Behind Wealth for Victorian and Edwardian Women
Sarah Forbes Bonetta: The Young African Girl Who Entered Queen Victoria’s Court
Sarah Forbes Bonetta: The Young African Girl Who Entered Queen Victoria’s Court Today I want to step away briefly from life in the Victorian...
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Arthur, Prince of Wales circa 1500 Private collection, Hever Castle, Kent Arthur, Prince of Wales was born on the 19th or 20th o...
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BOSWORTH FIELD Bosworth Field was a hugely important part of British history, it was the start of the Tudor dynasty. Everybody has heard of...
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A Life of Duty and Sacrifice: John Thayer on Titanic I have been learning about some of the people who were on board the Titanic, I want t...