Cassie
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Appearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Well, while industry boomed, the division between the wealthy elite and impoverished working class became even more pronounced. The upper class, consisting of aristocrats and people connected to the royal family, lived lives of privilege. They were highly educated and inherited their wealth and status generationally.
The middle class also lived very comfortable lives with wealth and status that was earned. They took on roles as doctors, lawyers, engineers, merchants, and bankers. They could afford private homes, education for their children, and a degree of respectability that elevated them above the grinding conditions of the poor.
The middle class also lived very comfortable lives with wealth and status that was earned. They took on roles as doctors, lawyers, engineers, merchants, and bankers. They could afford private homes, education for their children, and a degree of respectability that elevated them above the grinding conditions of the poor.
The middle class also lived very comfortable lives with wealth and status that was earned. They took on roles as doctors, lawyers, engineers, merchants, and bankers. They could afford private homes, education for their children, and a degree of respectability that elevated them above the grinding conditions of the poor.
The working class, however, formed the backbone of the city and the majority of the population. They were the laborers, seamstresses, dock workers, washerwomen, and factory hands, people who worked long hours for little pay and often poor conditions. Many women worked in domestic service, while others turned to the street vending or begging.
The working class, however, formed the backbone of the city and the majority of the population. They were the laborers, seamstresses, dock workers, washerwomen, and factory hands, people who worked long hours for little pay and often poor conditions. Many women worked in domestic service, while others turned to the street vending or begging.
The working class, however, formed the backbone of the city and the majority of the population. They were the laborers, seamstresses, dock workers, washerwomen, and factory hands, people who worked long hours for little pay and often poor conditions. Many women worked in domestic service, while others turned to the street vending or begging.
Reliable crime statistics from Victoria and London are hard to come by. Many incidents were never documented, and the media often sensationalized the ones that were. While only 10% of recorded crimes were violent, countless acts, especially against working-class victims, went unreported and unnoticed. The majority of crimes, roughly 75%, were petty offenses, with pickpocketing topping the list.
Reliable crime statistics from Victoria and London are hard to come by. Many incidents were never documented, and the media often sensationalized the ones that were. While only 10% of recorded crimes were violent, countless acts, especially against working-class victims, went unreported and unnoticed. The majority of crimes, roughly 75%, were petty offenses, with pickpocketing topping the list.
Reliable crime statistics from Victoria and London are hard to come by. Many incidents were never documented, and the media often sensationalized the ones that were. While only 10% of recorded crimes were violent, countless acts, especially against working-class victims, went unreported and unnoticed. The majority of crimes, roughly 75%, were petty offenses, with pickpocketing topping the list.
A more aggressive and feared form of street crime was known as garrotting, a type of mugging involving partial strangulation. Though relatively rare, garrotting sparked widespread panic, Amplified by press coverage, the public hysteria eventually prompted Parliament to pass the Gawrotters Act in 1863, which reinstated flogging as a punishment for violent robbery.
A more aggressive and feared form of street crime was known as garrotting, a type of mugging involving partial strangulation. Though relatively rare, garrotting sparked widespread panic, Amplified by press coverage, the public hysteria eventually prompted Parliament to pass the Gawrotters Act in 1863, which reinstated flogging as a punishment for violent robbery.
A more aggressive and feared form of street crime was known as garrotting, a type of mugging involving partial strangulation. Though relatively rare, garrotting sparked widespread panic, Amplified by press coverage, the public hysteria eventually prompted Parliament to pass the Gawrotters Act in 1863, which reinstated flogging as a punishment for violent robbery.
How does that become a thing where it is it's like we're robbing you, but we're also strangling you?
How does that become a thing where it is it's like we're robbing you, but we're also strangling you?
How does that become a thing where it is it's like we're robbing you, but we're also strangling you?
I love talking about women and crime. And I love a criminal gang of women. I think that's amazing.
I love talking about women and crime. And I love a criminal gang of women. I think that's amazing.
I love talking about women and crime. And I love a criminal gang of women. I think that's amazing.
No, I just love this topic. I think it's because you always whenever I hear of gangs, you think of like notorious, especially when you're going into London, especially think of notorious gangs of men who are in.