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  2. Prince Albert's Model Cottage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prince_Albert's_Model_Cottage

    Prince Albert's Model Cottage was the name given to a model dwelling designed in the mid-19th century to offer an improved form of accommodation for poor families in England. It was supported by Prince Albert , husband of Queen Victoria , designed by architect Henry Roberts , and built by the Society for Improving the Conditions of the ...

  3. Society and culture of the Victorian era - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Society_and_culture_of_the...

    Society and culture of the Victorian era refers to society and culture in the United Kingdom during the Victorian era--that is the 1837-1901 reign of Queen Victoria. The idea of "reform" was a motivating force, as seen in the political activity of religious groups and the newly formed labour unions.

  4. The Doctor (painting) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Doctor_(painting)

    A distressed, poor, and modest family is depicted by one small carpet and the washing suspended in a small room. [6] Two mismatched chairs, pressed together, construct a makeshift bed in the labourer's cottage. [4] A couple of scrunched up papers lie on the floor, "most probably a filled prescription" which has been frustratingly discarded. [9]

  5. Luke Fildes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luke_Fildes

    Fildes soon became a popular artist and by 1870 he had given up working for The Graphic and had turned his full attention to oil painting. He took rank among the ablest English painters, with The Casual Ward (1874), The Widower (1876), The Village Wedding (1883), An Al-fresco Toilette (1889); and The Doctor (1891), now in Tate Britain.

  6. The Explorers and Early Colonists of Victoria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Explorers_and_Early...

    To obtain the photos, Chuck photographed some of the surviving settlers, borrowed negatives of others and copied them and photographed portraits and paintings of the more famous. [2] The original framed photograph is 1.5 metres high and 1.2 metres wide. It was presented to the State Library of Victoria in 1872 is still held by them. Later Chuck ...

  7. Jack Sheppard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_Sheppard

    John "Jack" Sheppard (4 March 1702 – 16 November 1724), or "Honest Jack", was a notorious English thief and prison escapee of early 18th-century London.. Born into a poor family, he was apprenticed as a carpenter, but began committing theft and burglary in 1723 with little more than a year of his training to complete.

  8. Common lodging-house - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_lodging-house

    Communal dining area of a Common lodging-house in New York, circa 1910 Children within a Common lodging-house, Christmas 1910. Urban reformer Jacob Riis was not only an advocate for improving the condition of people living in cheap lodging houses; he had lived in them as a young man, an experience he described in his slum memoir How the Other Half Lives (1890).

  9. Victorian era - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victorian_era

    Hunger and poor diet was a common aspect of life across the UK in the Victorian period, especially in the 1840s, but the mass starvation seen in the Great Famine in Ireland was unique. [87] [85] Levels of poverty fell significantly during the 19th century from as much as two thirds of the population in 1800 to less than a third by 1901. However ...