Noise nuisance, it would appear, is not just a modern problem. The soundscape of Victorian London was shaped by clattering horse-drawn vehicles, bustling railway stations, yelling costermongers, barking stray dogs and incessant street music, all of which, and particularly the last, could drive Londoners like Mr Thomas James Rawlins to distraction. In 1861 Henry Mayhew estimated that there were approximately …
Queen Victoria’s Hairdresser: Nestor Tirard and the Crowning Glory
Recently a curious advertisement in The Morning Post dated the 1st of March 1879 caught my eye: Her Majesty’s Drawing Rooms Lessons in the correct court headdress as Approved at the Lord Chamberlain’s Office, given daily by Nestor Tirard, Coiffeur Fleuriste by special appointments To her Majesty the Queen H.R.H. the Princess of Wales H.I. and R.H. the Duchess of …
How to Get Sent to a Victorian Reform School
In April 1899 Police Constable 390 W was walking the beat in North Street, a thoroughfare that runs from Wandsworth Road to Old Town Clapham. He spotted a stationary van—a covered wagon that was used for transporting goods and people—and thinking that there was something odd about it he took a closer look. Inside the van were three young boys …
A Window in Whitechapel, or, The Sad Story of Eliza Wilmot
In the winter of 1848 a rather melancholy case came before the magistrate’s court in Worship Street in Shoreditch. Presiding over the court was Mr John Hammill. The complainant was a man by the name of Saunders. He was a dealer in furs, with premises in the Whitechapel Road in the East End. The defendant was one Eliza Wilmot, and …
William Weale, Brother Francis and the Bad Boy
The victim was scarified from ankle to thigh, with some deeper cuts marking his mottled flesh. One witness described his buttocks as resembling nothing so much as raw beef with blood streaming from it. The damage had been caused by a punishment beating of between thirteen to twenty strokes with a gutta percha rule two feet long. Before he collapsed …
One Man and His Dog, or, Edward Wix Comes Home
There is rather a good story about a missionary and his dog. We feel it fully qualifies for inclusion here as a nineteenth-century story with a London connection. Aside from the two protagonists—the human and the canine—there is a ship and a ship’s captain and a hospital. The joy of the story lies in part in the connections between these …
Colonel Rackstrow’s Peculiar Museum
Walk along the north pavement of Fleet Street between Chancery Lane and Bell Yard, and you will pass a heavily rusticated building of imposing proportions, home of an executive recruitment firm and a magazine publishing company. But in the late eighteenth century there stood here a row of brick-fronted premises, one of which was owned by a Benjamin Rackstrow. He …
The Prince and the Paupers, or, The Soup Kitchen in Leicester Square
Can a building qualify as an overlooked Londoner? On this website it can. Take for example no.40 Leicester Square, which is currently occupied by the Odeon Luxe cinema adjoining the new Londoner Hotel. The cinema opened in 1930 as the Leicester Square Theatre, and was renamed the Odeon Leicester Square in 1988. And before that? Well, there lies a good …
A Theatrical Undertaker: Theophilus Dunkley
Theophilus Dunkley was described by those who knew him as convivial, clubbable, charitable and very fond of the music hall, not qualities one immediately associates with the Victorian undertaker—perhaps unfairly. Theo lived on and around Westminster Bridge Road all his life, and now rests in Lambeth Cemetery in Tooting among the many variety performers who were both his friends and …
A Marked Man, or, The Trials, Tribulations and Tattoos of Samuel Carlton
The year is 1836, the last year of the reign of William IV, and the sunset of the Georgian era. The month is March, and the day is the 3rd, a cold and cloudy Thursday. The setting is the workhouse in Lambeth in Surrey, where one of the inmates has just died. Ordinarily the death of a workhouse pauper would …