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Orphans of Empire - The Fate of London's Foundlings (Paperback)
Loot Price: R362
Discovery Miles 3 620
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Orphans of Empire - The Fate of London's Foundlings (Paperback)
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Loot Price R362
Discovery Miles 3 620
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Eighteenth-century London was teeming with humanity, and poverty
was never far from politeness. Legend has it that, on his daily
commute through this thronging metropolis, Captain Thomas Coram
witnessed one of the city's most shocking sights-the widespread
abandonment of infant corpses by the roadside. He could have just
passed by. Instead, he devised a plan to create a charity that
would care for these infants; one that was to have enormous
consequences for children born into povertyin Britain over the next
two hundred years. Orphans of Empire tells the story of what
happened to the thousands of children who were raised at the London
Foundling Hospital, Coram's brainchild, which opened in 1741 and
grew to become the most famous charity in Georgian England. It
provides vivid insights into the lives and fortunes of London's
poorest children, from the earliest days of the Foundling Hospital
to the mid-Victorian era, when Charles Dickens was moved by his
observations of the charity's work to campaign on behalf of
orphans. Through the lives of London's foundlings, this book
provides readers with a street-level insight into the wider global
history of a period of monumental change in British history as the
nation grew into the world's leading superpower. Some foundling
children were destined for Britain's 'outer Empire' overseas, but
many more toiled in the 'inner Empire', labouring in the cotton
mills and factories of northern England at the dawn of the new
industrial age. Through extensive archival research, Helen Berry
uncovers previously untold stories of what happened to former
foundlings, including the suffering and small triumphs they
experienced as child workers during the upheavals of the Industrial
Revolution. Sometimes, using many different fragments of evidence,
the voices of the children themselves emerge. Extracts from George
King's autobiography, the only surviving first-hand account written
by a Foundling Hospital child born in the eighteenth century,
published here for the first time, provide touching insights into
how he came to terms with his upbringing. Remarkably he played a
part in Trafalgar, one of the most iconic battles in British Naval
history. His personal courage and resilience in overcoming the
disadvantages of his birth form a lasting testimony to the strength
of the human spirit.
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