What Life Was Like in Victorian England
The Victorian era can broadly be defined as the time in which Queen Victoria reigned over Britain, from 1837 to 1901. This period saw the British Empire at its absolute peak, while industrialization rapidly transformed the wider world.
While this time period has been romanticized in hindsight, what was it really like for ordinary people? Let's delve in and discover what it was like to actually live through this eventful era in world history.
The middle class expanded significantly.

While there were still rich people and poor people in Victorian England, a strong economy and cheap labor ensured that a middle class was able to flourish.
This meant that people in this social class had the means to flaunt their relative wealth by acquiring better clothes in more colors, toys for their kids, and family heirlooms like silverware and tea services. Some people in the middle class were even able to afford servants — a luxury previously only seen in the upper crust.
Things weren't as prudish as you might think.

While the stereotypes might say that people in Victorian England were prudes when it came to the bedroom, this isn't entirely accurate. Most people wouldn't talk about these risque topics in polite society, but that doesn't mean they weren't discussed.
Indeed, advances in both science and literature ensured that such matters were written about frequently in both academic and fictional literature. Victorians wanted to enjoy themselves as well, and this was seen in the explosion of prostitution and venereal disease during the era.
It was a tough time to be a member of the working class.

New technology, industrialization and mechanization pushed thousands of Victorians from the country to the city, as that's where the majority of the jobs were. These working class people were mostly unskilled laborers, and their working conditions were grim at best.
Without the workers' protections we see today, the Victorian-era working class had to toil in unsanitary conditions without access to clean water or food. In many cases, they lived on the streets and had to walk long distances to get to their jobs.
Life expectancy wasn't great.

Despite the significant technological leaps of the era, the average person in Victorian England still had a rough go of it. Professor Sarah Richardson told History Extra that the outlook was "pretty grim."
"Life expectancy at birth for the average Victorian was about 42, and more than 25 per cent of children died before their fifth birthday," she explained. "Of course, there was some light on the horizon — universal education came in during the 1870s."
The population grew and grew.

Needless to say, the population of the British Empire as a whole grew as Britain continued to add new territories — but even back at home, Britain's numbers were continually swelling.
The population of the United Kingdom doubled between 1801 and 1871, with large numbers of Irish people moving to England to escape the potato famine. Migration went the other way as well, with vast numbers of people leaving the Old World to seek a better life in North America.
Things became more affordable.

Thanks in large part to the factories that sprung up around England, goods became cheaper for the average Victorian as the 19th century wore on. Imported goods also dropped in price as shipping routes (and ships themselves) became more reliable.
This was augmented by new technologies that improved living conditions for those who could afford them, like clean running water, household drains, and gas heating and lighting.
The gender divide was significant.

Victorian England was hardly the only society that treated men and women very differently, but the Victorians took this to extremes. The "doctrine of separate spheres" ensured that men and women were treated differently from birth and pushed towards different occupations later in life.
In general, men were seen as belonging in the public sphere, while women were viewed as being dependent and private. Men were to be the breadwinners, while women were expected to be homemakers.
Prostitution was widespread.

Since women were shut out of most jobs, it was tough to make a go of it for a woman without a husband. Many of these women turned to prostitution to support themselves — and for many years, prostitution was legal in most of England.
Laws surrounding prostitution were mostly meant to protect men — not women — from venereal diseases. Over time, this poor treatment prompted an early feminist movement. British parliament responded by passing the Criminal Law Amendment Act of 1885, which added some protections for women.
Life in the city wasn't great.

It could be argued that Victorian England marked the beginning of modern slums, as the influx of large numbers of workers into city centers meant that cheap accommodations had to be built quickly.
These poor-quality lodgings were known as tenements and oftentimes saw entire families — or multiple families — living out of a single room. Building standards were virtually nonexistent, so many of these houses flooded or collapsed.
Terrible conditions led to social reforms.

Several decades of terrible treatment of workers slowly led to a campaign of social reform. Several acts — known as Factory Acts — limited the number of hours that women and children could work. That said, children still made up a significant percentage of the workforce.
The era also saw prison reform and the establishment of police forces. These reforms did improve conditions for ordinary people, but any large-scale attempts at unionizing or organizing were quelled until the very tail end of the Victorian era.
There was time for leisure.

By the 19th century, more Britons were literate than ever before, and the growing middle class (and ever-present upper class) demanded diversions for their idle hours. This is why so many theaters, music halls, and museums throughout the UK date back to the Victorian era.
Sporting pursuits also gained in popularity. Rugby and its various offshoots — including football/soccer — gained a footing during the era, and many long-running clubs can trace their roots back to the Victorian era.
Education efforts were stepped up.

While schooling had traditionally been reserved for privileged children, sentiment during the 19th century increasingly saw education as a necessity for all. State-run "board" schools were established, along with church schools, during the Victorian age.
These efforts were fruitful, as nearly everyone in England was literate by the year 1900. Education continued at home as well, as many pieces of classic children's literature were written during these decades.
Virtually everyone was Christian.

Religion has been a hot topic issue throughout England's history, but by the Victorian age, the vast majority of Britons were members of some kind of Christian church. Anglican churches dominated as the state churches of England, Wales and Ireland.
Scotland's state church was Presbyterian, while there were also smaller populations of non-Anglican Protestants. Small groups of Catholics, Jews, and Muslims existed as well, but they were a tiny minority.
Legitimacy was important.

The concept of "legitimate" and "illegitimate" children gained a foothold during the era, as it was quite common for children to be born out of wedlock. Life was tough for these children, considered "bastards," as they wouldn't receive the same care and benefits as "legitimate" children.
The Poor Law Amendment Act of 1834, also known as the Bastardy Clause, made things even worse, as it banned parishes from helping unwed mothers. This, in turn, forced unwed women and their children to toil in workhouses under terrible conditions.
The Empire shrunk, then grew.

One could be forgiven for thinking the British Empire was in decline at the beginning of the Victorian age — after all, the Empire had recently lost its American colonies in a humiliating defeat.
But thanks to wealth from other territories and a seafaring tradition, Britain bounced back. Efforts to colonize territories around the world — most notably India — led to the popular phrase "the sun never sets on the British Empire." This was quite literally true, as there were British outposts all around the world.
Queen Victoria served as an inspiration.

Victoria's reign defined the era, and the queen's home life served as an inspiration for millions of Britons. For those in the middle and upper classes, the home became a more technologically advanced, cozy setting than it had been in the past, and Queen Victoria and her family served as an inspiration for idealized family life at home.
This was helped in part by the growth of mass media, which allowed ordinary people to get a glimpse into the lifestyles of the rich and famous.
The class structure was rigid.

While class divisions had always existed in England, they became even more pronounced in the Victorian age. The rich got richer, the poor got poorer, and the middle class flourished.
Perhaps in part to the growth of the middle class, the upper class became even more protective of their status. Of course, there was little chance for upward mobility for anyone who was part of the working class.
Technology improved by leaps and bounds.

The British Empire was keen to show off its technological advancements, and big international events like the Great Exhibition of 1851 showed off the latest technology for all the world to see.
Some of the biggest innovations included the telegraph, which enabled people to communicate over long distances, and the railway, which facilitated the rapid transportation of goods and people. It's safe to say that the effects of these technologies are still being felt today.
Before the railway, canals were king.

For a brief period, a system of canals of purpose-built canals and waterways flourished around England, designed to take raw goods to industrial centers throughout the country.
This era was short-lived, however, as technological advances like the railway rendered these canals obsolete. Many of them still exist, but in the vast majority of cases, it's been decades — if not a century — since they were used to transport significant goods. They're now home mostly to pleasure boats.
Science and medicine made big leaps.

It stands to reason that advances in technology mirrored advances in science. From groundbreaking advancements like Charles Darwin's theory of evolution to Joseph Lister's antiseptic techniques, the Victorian era was a time of significant growth.
Meanwhile, the unsanitary and dangerous conditions that many people lived in led to a greater understanding of germ theory and, eventually, reforms that led to better conditions. Wars spurred innovation as well, as Florence Nightingale's pioneering work in nursing during the Crimean War helped improve medical care as a whole.
Modern policing got its start.

As cities rapidly filled up with an influx of workers, this urbanization led to a rise in crime. The city of London responded by establishing the Metropolitan Police in 1829. This helped lower crime rates, but the early decades of modern policing were full of growing pains.
High-profile criminal cases like Jack the Ripper, along with fictional work like Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories, highlighted just how difficult it was to solve crimes in the age before modern forensics.
Hygiene got worse before it got better.

The era saw significant improvements in cleanliness and hygiene, but the sad reality is that these advancements were made necessary by just how bad conditions had been previously.
The Great Stink of 1858 was, true to its name, a tremendously smelly period in London's history, as untreated human waste and industrial runoff contributed to truly horrifying conditions along the River Thames. Dr. John Snow's research would later prove that contaminated water was to blame for the era's many cholera outbreaks.
It became easier to travel.

Intercity travel was unpredictable and often dangerous in pre-Victorian times, but thanks to the construction of railways during the Victorian age, travel became increasingly accessible.
For those who wanted to travel farther afield, the advent of steamships ensured that international travel was safer and more reliable than ever before. While sailing ships were dependent on weather patterns, steamships could simply steam ahead, regardless of conditions. This allowed them to keep reliable schedules, which in turn encouraged people to travel.
It was a golden age for literature.

Many Victorian-era pieces of literature have stood the test of time and are still being read today — in some cases, two centuries after they were written. Writers like the Brontë sisters, Thomas Hardy, and George Eliot wrote sweeping epics with themes of class and morality.
Other authors, such as Charles Dickens, took a more topical approach, exploring social injustices of the era. Meanwhile, serialized newspapers and magazines helped feed the increasingly literate population's thirst for reading material.
Death was a big part of life.

Every society has beliefs and rituals surrounding death, but Victorians took things to new extremes with their elaborate rituals. This was embodied by the death of Prince Albert in 1861, to which Queen Victoria responded by wearing black for the remaining four decades of her life.
Mourning attire was commonplace, and many people had garments or pieces of jewelry that they'd only wear within the context of mourning. This fascination with death led, in turn, to the rise of Gothic novels and poems, along with interest in the supernatural realm.
The Temperance Movement got its start.

An abundance of alcohol, driven partially by imports from Britain's colonies, led to a society that became very comfortable with drinking. The backlash to this, known as the Temperance Movement, started to gain traction during the Victorian era.
Religious groups and social reformers aimed to combat the issues associated with excessive drinking, especially in working-class communities. Organizations like the Band of Hope helped to educate children on the dangers of over-indulging.
Clothes emphasized gender norms.

Women's fashion of the era was designed to emphasize modesty and elegance, which helps to explain why Victorian women's clothing was often elaborate while covering most of the body.
Men's fashion, meanwhile, was subdued, emphasizing crisp suits and top hats — shades of which we still see today in modern formal fashion. The invention of the sewing machine in 1846 by Elias Howe helped make both men's and women's fashion more accessible to the masses.
Criminal justice was different.

While many aspects of the Victorian judicial system — including courts, lawyers, and police forces — are still present in the 21st century, their methods were significantly different.
Capital punishment was still commonplace in England for serious offenses, while lesser crimes might result in the unconventional punishment of banishment to a far-away British colony. Overcrowded prisons led to the establishment of "prison ships" along the River Thames — derelict ships that were packed with prisoners.
Meals differed by class.

For the upper class, the Victorian era was a time of indulgence, and their elaborate meals with many courses reflected this. There was a strong interest in exotic foods from the colonies, and products like pineapples and sugar-laden desserts were popular.
Meanwhile, those in the working class were forced to subsist on a simple diet based around staples like bread, potatoes, and tea. Advances in food preservation, like canning and refrigeration, also changed dietary habits around this time.
Consumer culture got its start.

The rise of the middle class meant that more people had disposable income than ever before, while mechanization ensured that more products were available for those who could afford them.
The most telling example of the rise of consumer culture came in the form of department stores, such as Harrods in London. These kinds of stores are still seen today, of course, and are seen as the precursor to shopping malls.