


Diagram of a slave ship

Shopping for fabric

Wordsworth, 'Daffodils'

Textiles from India

Beethoven's sketches

Exhibition of a rhino and zebra

Deciphering the Rosetta Stone

Battle of Waterloo letter

Jane Austen, Persuasion

Peterloo Massacre

Cartoon of a street accident

Shampooing Surgeon

Description of London

Execution of a 12 year old boy

Diary entry on 'The Pillory'

Invention of photography

1832 Reform Act

Tolpuddle Martyrs

Early Chartist meeting notes

Dickens, Oliver Twist

The People's Charter

Dickens: Nicholas Nickleby

Poster for Living Mermaid

The Railways

First postage stamp

Coal mining

Popular entertainments

Engels: factory conditions

Freak show: What is it?

Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre

The Communist Manifesto

Chartist William Cuffay

The Great Exhibition

Sketch for the Crystal Palace

Woman's magazine

Poverty and the workhouse

London Zoo

Cookery for the poor
Human Exhibition

Mary Seacole

Ship building

Britain's Indian empire

Nightingale, Notes on Nursing

Victorian fashion

Florence Nightingale letter

Coal mining

Mrs Beeton - Lady's maid

Mrs Beeton

Mrs Beeton's Turkey

A Hulk (prison ship)

Underground trains

Alice in Wonderland

Letter from Charles Darwin

City slums

Opening of the Suez Canal

Music Hall

Street sellers

Freakshow posters

Invention of the telephone

Illusionists and conjurers

The textile industry

Victorian farming

Magic show

Circus poster

Victoria's Indian servant

Match Girls Strike

Jack the Ripper murders

Daily shopping

An Asian MP in Parliament

Gladstone: Irish Home Rule

Oscar Wilde on trial

Nightingale Nurse diary

Factory accidents

Samuel Coleridge-Taylor
Florence Nightingale (1820–1910) became a legend in England for her years nursing soldiers during the Crimean War. To the puzzlement of her upper-class parents, she hadn't become someone's rich wife, but instead - as well as travelling widely – chose to work with the poor. Her tender care for the soldiers earned her the name the Lady of the Lamp. But her major achievement was to raise nursing to the level of a respectable profession for women.
Nightingale believed that disease was, to a large extent, caused by dirt and bad smells. Although mistaken, this belief did lead to improvements in hygiene. This letter was sent by Florence Nightingale to Edwin Chadwick who was a social reformer noted for his work on reforming sanitary conditions for the poor. In it, Nightingale reveals her opinions of the treatment of Consumption (Tuberculosis).
Shelfmark: MS 45814
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Letter from Florence Nightingale to Edwin Chadwick
Upper Terrace
Hampstead
N.W.
Sept 8 / 60
Dear Mr Chadwick
I make haste to answer your question as to my experience (as an old nurse) in the 'application of the water cure to incipient consumption,' especially as it regards so valuable a life.
1. In incipient tuberculosis, [where the object is to avoid local congestion, the water treatment (not as a charm, as Englishwomen take medicine, but as part of a treatment) I have seen to be most effectual, the rest of the treatment being open air during the greater part of the day] (riding or otherwise, according to the patient's strength), bedroom ventilation at night, diet, founded upon improved digestion, the result of the open-air exercise, sometimes gentle gymnastics, much cold water sponging and little wet-sheet packing.