The 1870s

The 1870s

S1 E2: The slum dwellers have left behind the 1860s, when London was the richest city on earth and it was hard but possible to make ends meet. Now they must live through a dire economic depression that blighted the 1870s. Tailoring family the Howarths have become ‘sweated workers’, so called because of the rate at which they had to work. They must toil nonstop to make up Victorian factory orders for clothing. It’s food for thought when they’re forced to employ their neighbours’ children to complete the work. The Potter family can no longer rely on breadwinner Graham as he struggles to find work, so they join forces with single parent Shazeda to try and get by making artificial flowers. For Heather Potter, the experience has added poignancy when she finds out the fate that befell her own poverty stricken East End ancestors. There are new arrivals in the slum when siblings John and Maria Barker arrive from Ireland. They’re horrified by the conditions that would have greeted Irish migrants to Victorian London. But they’re young, strong and have no dependents and they do have the ability to work. As the week progresses rent collector Andy and the shopkeepers the Birds begin to worry that some in the slum won’t be able to settle their debts. A moonlit flit has a knock on effect for all, and the harsh realities of life for the Victorian poor hit home.