Rosemary Ashton, "Victorian Bloomsbury"ISBN: 030015447X | 2014 | EPUB | 380 pages | 2 MB
 While Bloomsbury is now associated with Virginia Woolf and her early-twentieth-century circle of writers and artists, the neighborhood was originally the undisputed intellectual quarter of nineteenth-century London. Drawing on a wealth of untapped archival resources, Rosemary Ashton brings to life the educational, medical, and social reformists who lived and worked in Victorian Bloomsbury and who led crusades for education, emancipation, and health for all.
Ashton explores the secular impetus behind these reforms and the humanitarian and egalitarian character of nineteenth-century Bloomsbury. Thackeray and Dickens jostle with less famous characters 			  			 	   			 	  		  		  		  		  		  		  		  		   			 	   		  	   		   	  		 		   	 			   		 			  		  		  	 			   		  	   		   	  		 		   	 			   		 	 	  		  					 like Henry Brougham and Mary Ward. Embracing the high life of the squares, the nonconformity of churches, the parades of shops, schools, hospitals and poor homes, this is a major contribution to the history of nineteenth-century London.