
Show Notes
Eleanor and Courtney discuss the life of cookery revolutionary, Charles Elmé Francatelli.
Transcript here.
Sources
Charles Elmé Francatelli. A Plain Cookery Book For The Working Classes. London: Bosworth and Harrison, 1867 https://archive.org/details/plaincookerybook0000fran
—.The Cook's Guide And Housekeeper's & Butler's Assistant : A Practical Treatise On English And Foreign Cookery In All Its Branches, Containing Plain Instructions For Pickling And Preserving Vegetables, Fruits, Game, &C, The Curing Of Hams And Bacon, The Art Of Confectionery And Ice-Making, And The Arrangement Of Desserts, With Valuable Directions For The Preparation Of Proper Diet For Invalids, Also For A Variety Of Wine-Cups And Epicurean Salads, American Drinks, And Summer Beverages. London: Bentley, 1865 https://archive.org/details/b21526850
—. The Modern Cook; A Practical Guide To The Culinary Art In All Its Branches: Comprising, In Addition To English Cookery, The Most Approved And Recherché Systems Of French, Italian, And German Cookery; Adapted As Well For The Largest Establishments As For The Use Of Private Families. London: Bentley, 1877 (25th edition). https://archive.org/details/McGillLibrary-95770-33
—. Popular cookery: being a reprint of a pamphlet entitled, "Cookery for the Lancashire operatives, " gratuitously circulated during the cotton famine, in 1863. By an Englishman. Manchester: A. Ireland & Co, 1871. http://access.bl.uk/item/viewer/ark:/81055/vdc_100049731949.0x000001#?c=0&m=0&s=0&cv=0&xywh=-1%2C-146%2C1345%2C2432
—. The Royal Confectioner, English And Foreign: A Practical Treatise On The Art Of Confectionary In All Its Branches, Comprising Ornamental Confectionary Artistically Developed ... Also, The Art Of Ice-Making, And The Arrangement And General Economy Of Fashionable Desserts. London: Chapman and Hall, 1874 https://archive.org/details/b20409473
Lauren Gilbert. Cook at Buckingham Palace: Charles Elme' Francatelli. https://englishhistoryauthors.blogspot.com/2019/01/cook-at-buckingham-palace-charles-elme.html
Catherine Gore (as Albany Poyntz). ‘The French Cook’. Bentley’s Miscellany Jan 1 1842, pp. 606-13
Patricia Bixler Reber. Queen Victoria's chef Charles Elme Francatelli. http://researchingfoodhistory.blogspot.com/2017/02/queen-victorias-chef-charles-elme.html
Colin Smythe. Charles Elmé Francatelli, Crockford’s, and the Royal Connection.https://colinsmythe.co.uk/charles-elme-francatelli-crockfords-and-the-royal-connection/
Mary Ellen Snodgrass. Encyclopaedia of Kitchen History. New York: Taylor and Francis, 2004
Henry Turner Waddy. The Devonshire Club and Crockford’s London: E. Nash, 1919
Support Victorian Scribblers by contributing to their tip jar: https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/victorian-scribblers
Sep 30, 2022
33 min

Show Notes
TL;DL we're hoping to have an episode for you in mid-June!
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May 27, 2022
3 min

Show Notes
Courtney and Eleanor discuss some of the major historical events, writers, and genres that shaped the early to mid-Victorian period.
Transcript here.
Resources for this episode included:
Sally Mitchell’s Victorian Britain: An Encyclopedia
Timeline of Victorian Legislation on Victorian Web
Stats from At the Circulating Library
Alexandre Dumas’s publications
The Oxford (or High Church) Movement
Read The Lifted Veil at the George Eliot Archive
Read open access scholarship about The Lifted Veil on George Eliot Scholars
Support the show via one-time contributions on our ko-fi page, or recurring donations to our tip jar of as little as $1 that get you access to private audio content right in your podcatcher!
You should be listening to:
Courtney's fiction podcast! The Way We Haunt Now is a lighthearted horror audio drama about friendship, found family, and fighting the narratives that try to define us – even in the afterlife. One of the central characters is Victorian ghost, Frances "Frankie" Matilda Summerson.
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Mar 25, 2022
38 min

Show Notes
Eleanor and Courtney discuss the life of cookery revolutionary, Eliza Acton.
Transcript here.
Read Eliza Acton's Work
UPenn's Online Books Page featuring all digitized editions of her work
Poems (1826)
Modern Cookery (1845)
Resources for this episode included:
Asa Briggs. Victorian Things
Sheila Hardy. The Real Mrs Beeton: The Story of Eliza Acton (would not recommend tbh)
Elizabeth Ray’s “Acton, Eliza (1799-1859)” in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
and this article in The Guardian
Support the show via one-time contributions on our ko-fi page, or recurring donations to our tip jar of as little as $1 that get you access to private audio content right in your podcatcher!
You should be listening to:
Horse Girls, a podcast in which hosts Alex, Jenna, and Tim take a canter down memory lane to revisit all of those horse girl books they read growing up. Find the pod on Twitter @HorseGirlsCast
Support Victorian Scribblers by contributing to their tip jar: https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/victorian-scribblers
Feb 25, 2022
48 min

Show Notes
In the season five premiere, Courtney and Eleanor discuss some of the major historical events, writers, and genres that shaped the beginning of the Victorian period.
Transcript here.
Resources for this episode included:
Sally Mitchell’s Victorian Britain: An Encyclopedia
Richard Altick’s Victorian People and Ideas
Timeline of Victorian Legislation on Victorian Web
Pickwick Papers and the Development of Serial Fiction on Victorian Web
Cliffhangers on Victorian Web
Stats from At the Circulating Library
Eleanor’s entry on Factory Acts
Support the show via one-time contributions on our ko-fi page, or recurring donations to our tip jar of as little as $1 that get you access to private audio content right in your podcatcher!
You should be listening to:
Check out long-time listener Art Kilmer's Bookshelf Odyssey podcast! The podcast can be found at www.bookshelfodyssey.com and you can also find it on YouTube!
Support Victorian Scribblers by contributing to their tip jar: https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/victorian-scribblers
Jan 28, 2022
21 min

Show Notes
A long overdue trailer as we set out on season five<img alt="Transcript here" src="https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1eHxrCGLLWrAcjky4nRjMWZ0GtezIq_on?usp=sharing" />.
Music:
String Quartet no. 2 in B minor - II. Minuetto moderato, performed by Steve's Bedroom Band
Jan 21, 2022

Show Notes
The story featured in this episode is Mrs Ranford's New Year's Dinner. Read along.
If you want to read more about William and Mary Howitt, their Quakerism, and work on behalf of the poor, there's a good overview from the Thoroton Society of Nottinghamshire.
Dec 31, 2021
51 min

Show Notes
In the tradition of our annual holiday episodes, I’ve gone a little wild with the title of today’s episode. Today, I’ll read you a Christmas Ballad titled “It is Christmas Day in the Workhouse,” which was first published in the 1870s and which floats around with several variant titles.
Before that, though, I’ll share a mini biography of its author, English journalist, poet, dramatist, and novelist George R. Sims.
But first! let’s take a quick trip around the world in George R. Sims’s lifetime:
Around the World
Feb 11 1847 - Thomas Edison is Born
1848 marked the beginning of several revolutions against European monarchies, notably in Sicily, France, Germany, Italy, and the Austrian Empire
April 10 1848 - Chartists gather across the Thames from the Houses of Parliament for a demonstration in which they planned to march en masse to deliver a petition, but police had them trapped and the event ended with a fizzle rather than a bang
Jul 4 1855 - Walt Whitman's "Leaves of Grass" Is Published
1868 - Elizabeth Blackwell establishes a Women's Medical College
Nov 17 1877 - Charles Darwin received an Honorary Doctorate of Law from Cambridge University During Darwin's honorary degree ceremony, a prankster dangled this stuffed monkey dressed in academic robes from the gallery of the Senate House, which 'excited some mirth'.
April 1888- February 1891 the Whitechapel Murders were committed by an unidentified person who came to be known as Jack the Ripper
Sep 23 1889 - Nintendo Founded to produce handmade hanafuda cards
1899 - Kate Chopin Publishes "The Awakening"
Sep 8 1903 - The American Federation Of Labor Grants A Charter To Granite Quarry Workers
Feb 2 1914 the first film featuring Charlie Chaplin, "Making a Living," is released
Jan 11 1922 - Researcher John Macleod and chemist James Collip administered the first dose of their newly developed Insulin Injection to 14yo diabetic, Leonard Thompson
George R. Sims Bio
George R. Sims was born 2 September 1847 to father, George Sims, and mother, Louisa Amelia Ann Stevenson Sims. He would be the first of the couple’s six children. Between them, they raised their children with the London theater and progressive politics. Louisa was a president of the Women's Provident League and her father, Chartist leader John Dinmore Stevenson, lived with the family.
Sims began writing for in school, where he quickly began to publish poetry and journalism in The College Gazette and later The Welcome Guest, Fun, Weekly Dispatch, and The Referee. For The Referee, he wrote a popular column of miscellany called 'Mustard and Cress' under the pseudonym 'Dagonet' from 1877 until he died. And it is under that pseudonym that he reported, from 1888-1891 on the Whitechapel Murders.
His best-known ballad is “It Is Christmas Day in the Workhouse,” which was often parodied during his lifetime but which struck me as having strong ‘eat the rich’ vibes in a Christmas season marked by the exploitation of wage workers here in the US.
[transition music]
Click here to read the poem!
[transition music]
Thank you for listening! I hope you all have a happy Christmas Eve. Keep an eye on our feed for a second holiday episode from Eleanor. Take care!
Resources
https://archiveshub.jisc.ac.uk/search/archives/86dc0be7-20fa-36d2-8606-be3459167766
Music
This episode featured "Deck the Halls (brass arrangement)" performed by Michel Rondeau.
Dec 24, 2021
15 min

Show Notes
Tres de Marzo
Ya Cepeda, el hombre ilustre
que nos legara en herencia
la Libertad y la Ciencia
fuentes de ventura y paz
consagra con noble anhelo
para eternizar su gloria
a su querida memoria
cantos de felicidad.
Escuchad… Su augusto nombre
por doquier repite el eco…
Todo el pueblo yucateco
honra hoy al libertador
y en dulce y sentida trova
las niñas del Instituto
también le pagan tributo
de gratitud y de amor
Sources
https://www.decimononicas.com/cetina-rita
https://distintaslatitudes.net/archivo/sobre-rita-cetina-gutierrez-madre-simbolica-del-feminismo-en-yucatan
https://www.lajornadamaya.mx/opinion/83810/rita-cetina-gutierrez-pedagoga-feminista-que-dejo-huella-en-yucatan
https://inehrm.gob.mx/work/models/inehrm/Resource/1484/1/images/RitaCetina.pdf
https://www.theyucatantimes.com/2017/10/the-yucatan-governor-who-empowered-women/
https://www.naatikmexico.org/womens-rights-in-mexico-a-brief-history/
https://www.measuringworth.com/dollarvaluetoday/?amount=674&amp;from=1879
Nov 26, 2021
34 min

We still need to get you last month's episode! It's coming! But in the meantime, we have a WHALE of a tale to share: episode one of The Land Whale Murders!
_The Land Whale Murder_s is a Gilded Age comedic alternate history podcast about murders, birders, and a missing whale.
The show is written by Jonathan A. Goldberg (writer of The Fall of the House of Sunshine, Radio Free Mushroom America, Margaret’s Garden) and directed by James Oliva (What’s the Frequency), with original music by Matt roi Berger (Fall of the House of Sunshine, Teen Girl Scientist Monthly).
The trailer for Chapter 1 is here!
Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts to make sure you don't miss a single episode! And find out more about the show at www.landwhalepod.com
Oh, hey, wanna know why Eleanor declared Melvil Dewey an enemy of the podcast??
CLASSISM, SEXUAL MISCONDUCT, RACISM…THE LIFE OF MELVIL DEWEY
Nov 5, 2021
27 min
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