A Brief History of Life in Victorian Britain

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A Brief History of Life in Victorian Britain Page 37

by Michael Paterson


  prison 50–1

  prostitution 40–1

  public school/university sports 255, 265–6, 269, 271–2, 275–6

  Pugin, Augustus Welby Northmore 78–80

  Punch xxiv, 40, 46, 53, 99, 205, 286–8

  punts 255–6

  Puritan values 164–5

  Pusey, Edward 159

  ‘quadricycles’ 148

  Queen Anne style 72, 102–3

  Rackham, Arthur 290

  racquets 276

  Ragged School movement 47–8

  Raglan, Lord 312, 314–15

  Railway Act (1844) 117–18

  railway bridges and viaducts 120

  railway stations 120–1, 124, 209, 291–2

  railways 111, 116–19

  Channel Tunnel proposal 338

  classes 122, 140–1

  foreign 121, 124, 259–60

  line building 119–24

  locomotives 122

  royal travel by 16, 18

  seaside destinations 248

  and shipping links 126

  Tay Bridge collapse 161

  transport of building materials 76

  transport of food 56

  underground 138–42

  Rainhill trials, Liverpool 116

  The Red House, Bexleyheath 104–5

  Reed, Talbot Baines xxi

  Reform Bill (1832) 313

  riots 73, 161

  refrigeration 57–8, 69

  Regency style

  architecture 71, 77, 87, 89, 92, 100

  clothes 215, 216, 225, 227

  footwear 221, 228

  hats 229

  republicanism 22–3, 26

  river-boating 255–7, 271–2

  road-building 112–13

  Roberts, Lord (Lieutenant General) 30, 322–3, 325–6, 333, 334, 335

  Rossetti, Dante Gabriel 104

  Rourke’s Drift 328

  Royal Family

  clothes 16

  German connections 2, 9, 15, 24, 25, 30

  private life 13–15

  public life 16–21

  use of motor cars 154

  see also individual members

  Royal Navy 297, 307–9

  Crimean War 313–14, 315

  guardians of Empire 305–6

  modernization 339–40

  steam boats/ships 125, 309, 339

  threat of France 336–7

  rugby 264, 270–1

  Rugby School 81, 266, 277

  Rumford, Benjamin 58

  Ruskin, John 71, 81–2, 104, 107, 233

  Russell, Charles 182–3

  Russell, Odo 338

  Russell, William Howard 316

  Sabbath see Sunday

  sailing-ships 129–30, 305, 306

  St Aubyn, Giles 28

  Sala, George Augustus 83, 85–6, 188, 213–14, 224–5, 226–7

  Salisbury, Lord 27

  Salomons, Sir David 152

  Salvation Army 160, 166

  Samboume, Linley 288

  Linley Sambourne House, Kensington 99–100, 101

  Sankey, Ira 189–90, 191

  Schlesinger, Arthur 74

  Schlesinger, Max 83–5

  science

  and new technology 27

  and religion 192–3

  Scotland 161–2, 194, 252, 253–4

  Balmoral 14, 21, 27, 229

  Forth Bridge 120

  golf 273

  Highland troops 314, 315, 318–19

  Presbyterian Church of 177–81

  Sunday observance 177–8

  Tay Bridge collapse 161

  Scott, George Gilbert 81

  Scott, M. H. Baillie 106–7, 108

  Scott, Sir Walter 88, 91, 104, 294

  screw propellers 125, 127

  sea bathing 247–8, 249–50

  Seacole, Mary 316

  seaside 247–52

  sermons 174–7, 178, 179

  servants 44–6

  and callers 202, 204

  ‘emptying slops’ 96

  and family religious observance 172, 187–8

  former female 40–1

  quarters 76, 86–7

  Sevastopol, siege of 313–14, 318–19

  sewage disposal and treatment 97

  Shaftesbury, Lord 48

  shawls 221

  Shepard, Ernest 168, 181, 185, 199

  Shillibeer, George 132

  shipbuilding industry 127, 128

  shorthand 241

  shovel hats 230

  Simpson, James 315

  Sirius (ship) 126

  slavery 306

  Smith, Francis Pettit 125

  Smith, William Henry (W. H.) 291–2

  smoking 199, 216–17

  Smollett, Tobias 258

  snooker 274

  social calls

  gentlemen 203–6

  ladies 196–9

  social unrest 35, 51, 73, 161, 164

  socialism 160

  The Sphere xxii

  South Africa

  Boer War 30, 309, 311, 324, 330–1, 332–6

  Zulu War 328

  Soyer, Alexis 59–60

  spinsterhood and marriage 212–14

  sports 247, 263–5

  army officers 324–5

  character building 265–6

  see also specific sports

  Spurgeon, Charles Haddon 66, 162, 175, 176

  squash 276

  stage-coaches see coach travel

  Stanley, Arthur Penrhyn, Dean of Westminster 175, 181

  steam boats/ships 124–9, 263

  naval 125, 309, 339

  steam cars 151–2

  steam trams 137

  steam turbines 128

  Stevenson, George 116

  Stockton and Darlington railway 116

  stovepipe hats 230–1

  stoves 58

  Strawberry Hill 78

  street children 47–8, 49

  street vendors 66–9

  Studd, Charles (C. T.) 191

  Studd, Edward 190–1

  Sudan 329–30, 331–2

  Sunday 161, 170–4

  charity work 168

  edifying papers 288–9

  at home 181–3

  pastimes 183–5

  Sunday Observance Acts (1677 and 1780) 161

  Sunday Schools 173

  swallow-tail coats 225, 227

  Taeping (tea-clipper) 129–30

  Tay Bridge collapse 161

  Tayler, William 171–2, 183, 213

  Taylor, Tom 233

  tea 53, 55, 67

  tea-clippers 129–30

  telegraphs 27, 121, 129, 240, 315

  telephones 27, 240, 242–3

  Telford, Thomas 112

  temperance movement 67, 160

  Temple Meads station, Bristol 120

  Tenniel, John 288

  tennis 264, 274

  terraces/town houses 74–6, 82–6, 98–9

  Territorial Army 340

  Thackeray, William Makepeace 62–3, 287

  ‘ticket-of-leave’ prisoners 51

  timekeeping

  ‘hora Inglese’ 302

  ‘railway time’ 121–2

  Tissot, James 94

  Tolstoy, Leo 318

  top hats 230–1, 232

  trading links 301

  tram systems 135–8

  transport

  commuting to work 131, 233–4

  leisure 253

  see also specific forms

  travel 247

  cultural 253–5

  foreign 257–63, 296–7

  Trevelyan, G. O. 22

  Trevithick, Richard 116

  tricycles 147–8

  Trilby hats 230

  trousers 225–6

  Turbinia (ship) 128

  Turks/Ottoman Empire 306–7, 313

  ‘two fingers’ greeting 198–9

  typewriters 240–1, 242–3

  typhoid 20, 22, 97

  underground railway s
ystem 138–42

  United States xx

  baseball 275

  bicycling 144

  Civil War 242, 339

  Derby hat 231–2

  food imports from 56, 57–8, 254

  industrialization 303

  missionaries 189–90

  paddle-steamers 124–5

  press 284

  revival of boys’ books 295

  as rival power 20, 304–5, 339

  steamships crossing to 126, 263

  trams 135–6

  Victoria Crosses (VC) 11, 19, 317, 328, 333

  Victoria, Princess of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld (Duchess of Kent) 2–3, 4, 20

  Victoria, Princess (‘Vicky’) 9, 23–4, 25, 30

  Victoria, Queen

  accession to throne 2, 4–5, 16

  appearance 5–6, 17–18

  attitude to motor cars 154

  at Balmoral 14, 21, 27, 229

  birth 2–3

  at Buckingham Palace 10, 75, 97

  childhood and adolescence 3–4

  children 9–10

  see also individual entries

  coin portraits xviii–xix, 16

  coronation 6

  death 30–1

  diplomacy 12, 13

  Empress of India 24–5, 299

  first conflict of reign 311

  flees London 13, 73

  at French Riviera 258

  ‘good works’ 10

  ‘Grandmother of Europe’ 24

  humour and amusements 26–7

  husband see Albert, Prince of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha

  illnesses 22–3, 30–1

  Indian Mutiny 162, 321

  influence on hair styles 220

  inspiration of Elizabeth I 4, 7–8, 19

  intelligence 27–8

  interest in science and technology 27

  Mother of the Nation 28–31

  names 1

  naval songs collection 308

  offers knighthood to George Peabody 36

  ownership of Life at the Seaside (Frith) 248–9, 250

  phases of reign xix-xx

  public attitudes towards 22–3, 28–9

  publications 14

  relationship with John Brown 23

  relationships with prime ministers/governments 6, 8, 13, 24–6

  shyness 26

  as symbolic war leader 19, 30

  temper 3, 5, 7

  travel 22, 27, 258

  view of colonial subjects 29

  voice 6

  ‘Widow of Windsor’ 21–4

  see also Royal Family

  Victorian era

  as ‘golden age’ xiii–xiv

  ‘a grand triumphal march’ xi–xxvi

  use of term xv

  Vincent, Mr 189–90

  visiting cards 196, 198, 200–2, 205

  wallpaper 91, 99, 100, 105

  water closets 97–8

  ‘water gardens’ 101

  Webb Ellis, William 264

  Webb, Philip 104

  Wellington, Duke of 73, 265, 281, 309, 325–6, 337

  West India Regiment 17, 329

  whiskers 232–3

  Whyte-Melville, George 233

  Wilberforce, William 162

  Wilde, Oscar xx

  Wilhelm II (German Kaiser) 31, 150–1, 199, 288

  William IV 2, 3, 4

  Williamson, Mrs Harcourt 149, 150

  Windsor 11, 13, 78, 97

  ‘Widow of Windsor’ 21–4

  Windsor and Slough railway 117

  Wingfield, Major Walter 274

  Wollen, William Barnes 311

  Wolseley, Sir Garnet 325–6, 329, 330

  women

  Bryant and May’s match factory strike 42

  charity work 167–8

  cheese 195

  clerks 242–5

  clothes 148–50, 215–18, 221, 249–50

  cyclists 148–51

  earning a living 40–4, 242–5

  emancipation 25

  hair styles 220–1

  head-gear 218–20, 249, 251

  hostesses 202–3

  household management 73

  leaving/visiting cards 196, 198, 200–2

  and ministers of religion 175–6

  morning calls 196–9

  sports 272–3

  writers 292

  see also courting; marriage; servants

  Wordsworth, Bishop of Lincoln 181

  workhouses 33, 36–8

  Symbol of an era: The Queen, depicted in early middle age by the doyen of European court painters, Franz Xavier Winterhalter.

  A stereoscopic view of the Diamond Jubilee procession passing the National Gallery, 22 June 1897. This event was more than an anniversary; it was a huge celebration of the British Empire and a summing-up of the Victorian age.

  Putting on a crinoline, 1850s. Though this is a particularly monstrous specimen, it conveys the sheer impracticality of any ‘cage skirt’. One of its component hoops can be seen on the right.

  Though Victorian children, like those of previous eras, were often dressed as miniature adults, short jackets and sailor suits or dresses increasingly gave them a distinctively juvenile appearance. The young man in an Eton collar is C.T. Studd, later a cricketer, evangelist and missionary, seen here (appropriately) as an Eton boy.

  A Victorian corner grocer’s. One is struck by the large number of staff for such a small establishment, and by the smartness of the men (for there are no women). This store is still flourishing at Walmer in Kent.

  It is often assumed that servants led a dull and cowed existence, yet this young man – a page or footman in a fashionable quarter of London – is proud enough of his livery to be photographed in it. The nursemaid pictured on the right is permitted to wear a stylish straw hat while in the garden with her charges.

  Interior. By the time this was taken, in the 1890s, rooms had lost much of their darkness and clutter. Here there are no heavy items of furniture or curtains, though there is still the characteristic accumulation of pictures and knick-knacks. The screen was an essential piece of household equipment, for combating draughts.

  . . . and exterior. Albert Place, Kensington, in the 1870s. Many such streets were not accessible to the public, their privacy guarded by gates and uniformed watchmen.

  A gentleman of the 1870s still sporting the ‘dundreary’ whiskers that had been de rigeur in the sixties. Though he wears a top hat and sober frock coat, the somewhat shocking loudness of his trousers suggests that men’s formal clothes had not yet become the dark uniform of later decades.

  William Ewart Gladstone (1809–98), one of several long-serving political giants – others were Palmerston, Disraeli and Salisbury – who shaped events during Victoria’s reign. A man of great integrity and undoubted ability, he nevertheless failed to hit it off with the Queen.

  The Strand in London on a quiet day in the 1890s. This scene gives little idea of the noise, mess and confusion caused by horse-drawn traffic. Iron-shod wheels, horse dung and falling or shying animals could make travel in such a busy thoroughfare far from pleasant.

  The Crystal Palace in its new home at Norwood in the 1860s, vastly extended from its Hyde Park original. The towers, designed by Brunel, pumped water for a series of huge fountains in the gardens below. They survived the building’s destruction in 1936 but were later demolished.

  The bill of fare for a private dinner in the 1870s, printed and indented to resemble a plate. Wealthy Victorians showed little interest in healthy eating, preferring to overindulge and then seek medicinal cures such as mineral baths.

  A beach mission at Deal in Kent, 1900, combining relaxation with piety. This picture offers a fascinating glimpse of how people dressed, even at the end of the century, for a seaside holiday.

  Literature became a serious industry during Victoria’s reign. Not only did the age produce British and foreign authors of outstanding ability, a developing popular press and a newly literate public created an almost limitless mar
ket for the written word.

  Harrow School football XI, an undated image that conveys the structure and organization that Victorians brought to traditional games, as well as the self-conscious prestige of those who played them well.

  A roller-skating rink in the 1880s. The Victorians loved novelty and were much given to crazes, particularly in the field of amusements.

  A stoical British ‘tommy’, as drawn for one of the numerous Victorian boys’ magazines. Images like this symbolized, for millions of readers, the qualities that entitled the British to govern the world’s largest empire.

  A gentleman (perhaps a tea planter) and his family, outside their bungalow in Ceylon, 1880s, looking – and dressing – much as if they were in Surrey. The British possessed an extraordinary ability to replicate their way of life, and make themselves at home, in all corners of the world.

 

 

 


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