Problems of Life and Mind
In Vicotrian era Britain, people were coming to recognize the importance of science and psychology. Though England at the time was filled with deep thinkers, writers, and philosophers, only a few pioneers began to dedcate themselves to the study and observation of the sciences.George Henry Lewes was one such man who began as a philosopher who developed theorys regarding people's health, specifically, thier mental health. Throughout the early part of the Nineteenth-Century, Lewesbegan tests and studies using live animals to experiment nervous systems and refelxes.
Slave Ship by J.M.W. Turner, 1840
This painting was inspired by the story of the slave ship Zong, which in 1781 ordered 133 slaves thrown overboard so the captain could collect insurance payments for them. This was common practice in the slave trade, as insurance could only be collected for those who drowned at sea, but not any who died on board, so any slave that was dead or dying would be hurled into the ocean to increase profits. The painting was originally titled “Slavers Throwing overboard the Dead and Dying--Typhoon coming on.”
Royal Albert Hall
On February 28, 1912, Violet Markham had given a speech on behalf of the Women's National Anti-Suffrage League. Markham addressed the reasoning what the league though women should be doing better things with the opportunities already given from the laws they have than pushing for the parliamentary vote and well as pushed the league's views on the Forward Policy.
The Soot Moth
In 1848, the first confirmed specimen of the melanistic, or darkened, form of the soot moth (biston betularia, or peppered moth) was found outside Manchester. Prior to 1800, this form of the soot moth was practically unrecognized in England, but by 1900, they made up 90% of recorded specimens around industrial and urban parts of Britain.
Manchester
This was one of the 60 branches that belonged to The Women's Freedom League. It had another main branch in Middlesbrough as well. The main headquarters for the WFL was based in London.
Middlesbrough
This was one of the 60 branches of The Women's Freedom League. The WFL's main headquarters was based in London.
Westminster Palace Hotel
The first meeting of the Women's National Anti-Suffrage League took place at the Westminster Palace Hotel on July 21, 1908. The meeting then expanded to the league forming two branches of the Leagues were in
William Thomas Stead and the Criminal Law Amendment Act of 1885
In 1885 the Pall Mall Gazette published a series of articles by editor William Thomas Stead exposing the widespread practice of child prostitution, which was particularly bad in London. Stead used new investigative journalism tactics, which included purchasing a thirteen-year-old girl from her parents for five pounds (which was around 500 pounds in 2012). Stead reported interviews with brothel-keepers, and described in detail how young girls would be manipulated, drugged, raped, and forced into prostitution.