Rarely
first three that come to my mind is Cholera Diphtheria smallpox.
yes. it could have bought a house
The Crinoline was the fashion in Victorian Times.
Young children were chimeny sweeps in Victorian times because they could fit down the chimney better than adults Unfair ain't it
Whole families were sent there if they could not keep themselves.
Cholera
cholera
Cholera and smallpox
first three that come to my mind is Cholera Diphtheria smallpox.
In Victorian England you could catch Cholera, Typhoid Fever, scarlet fever and smallpox.They had Cholera which is a bad disease that they got from water pumps.They had many dieases such as Cholera, the black death, The barbary plague, bubonic plague you can also look some more up on googleIn the Victorian times adults and children got lots of different types of disease. There were three common diseases that people got. There was Cholera,
Cholera in Victorian times was the same as it is now. It is a GI disease with vomiting and diarrhea mainly. Some times the diarrhea is called "rice water" because of the color of it looks like the color of water that had rice cooked in it. Loss of water can be up to 5 gallons a day. A person looks almost blue because they as so dehydrated.
You have to understand how dirty the cities and towns were at this time. People did not have any sort of indoor plumbing and threw the contents of their "chamber pots" into the streets each morning. They had absolutely no idea of how diseases were spread nor did they have any treatments for them. What they had were just superstitions. These are the reasons, why the cholera was so much prevalent in Victorian times.
in the Victorian times one pound would buy a courgette
The worst job in victorian times was the job in the work house because the machines could kill you straight away!!!
TB... no cure (then)
People usually require food to survive.
In Victorian times, the punishment for stealing an apple could vary depending on the circumstances and the judge. It could range from a fine or a short prison sentence to transportation to a penal colony.