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The saying "The past is a foreign country" comes from the 1950s novel “The Go-Between,” which is set at the tail end of the Victorian era. It’s one of those concepts that sounds outlandish until one actually sits down and looks at the reality of life in the past.

The “Victorian Chronicles” Instagram page is dedicated to sharing interesting and illuminating posts and images about the Victorian era. So get comfortable as you scroll through, upvote your favorites and be sure to add your own thoughts to the comments section down below.

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Discover more in 50 Interesting Posts About The Victorian Era

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#1

Woman in Victorian era dress holding small dog, standing in front of large tree outdoors, Victorian era fashion.

This is 18-year-old Alice Roosevelt and her long-haired Chihuahua named Leo in 1902. She also had a pet snake named Emily Spinach who she would wrap around on one arm and take to parties. She was extremely independent and unlike many women of her time, she was known to wear trousers, drive cars, smoke cigarettes, place bets with bookies, dance on rooftops, and party all night. In a span of 15 months, she managed to attend 300 parties, 350 balls and 407 dinners..William Howard Taft banned her from the White House after Alice buried a voodoo doll (of Taft’s wife) in the front yard.
Her father, Theodore Roosevelt famously said, “I can either run the country or I can attend to Alice, but I cannot possibly do both.”
She died in 1980 at the age of 96.

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    #2

    Two women in Victorian-era dresses and hats rock climbing a steep cliff face using a rope for support.

    Lucy Smith and Pauline Ranken ascending Salisbury Crags, Edinburgh, wearing long, ankle-length skirts, hats, blouses and smart shoes, 1908. The only protection they had was a length of rope tied around each of their waists -no helmets, harnesses, spikes or other modern safety equipment as it wasn't available to them at the time. They formed their own club the Scottish Climbing Club founded in 1908, after being barred from joining the men-only Scottish Mountaineering Club. By 1909 the club had fourteen members.

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    #3

    Workers resting on makeshift beds inside a dimly lit Victorian era factory with a dog lying among them.

    Knife grinders in Thiers, France circa 1902. These knife grinders had the nickname of ventres jaunes or ‘yellow stomachs’ referring to the yellow dust released by the grinding wheels. By laying face down, these yellow stomachs would save their backs from being hunched over all day. Workers were encourage to bring their dogs to not only keep them company but to act as heaters to keep them warm by having the dogs lie on their legs!
    This is where the phrase ‘nose to the grindstone’ originated.

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    One of the most compelling reasons people remain drawn to Victorian photographs is the medium's novelty during that era. Photography was still relatively new in the Victorian period, having been invented in the 1830s, and the process of creating images was vastly different from today's instant digital snapshots.

    Early photographic techniques like daguerreotypes and later innovations required subjects to remain perfectly still for extended periods, sometimes up to several minutes. This technical limitation resulted in the characteristically serious, almost haunting expressions that define Victorian portraiture. Modern viewers find themselves mesmerized by these solemn faces, interpreting them as windows into the souls of our ancestors and projecting onto them stories of hardship, dignity, and resilience.

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    #4

    Older man in a white suit holding a kitten while sitting outdoors, evoking a Victorian Era historical atmosphere.

    Portrait of Mark Twain (Samuel Langhorne Clemens)with his kitty taken circa 1907, in New York: “When a man loves cats, I am his friend and comrade without further introduction.”
    Mark Twain was a great cat lover. He did not own just one cat, at one time he owned up to 19 cats, all of whom he loved, respected and took care.
    When he had to travel and leave his cats at come, he would rent cats to take the place of his left-behind pets. In Ireland, during summer 1906, Twain rented three kittens! After leaving, Twain left enough money to cover their care.

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    2WheelTravlr
    Community Member
    1 month ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    If you ever find yourself near Hartford Connecticut, take the time to tour the Mark Twain house. The structure itself is bold, overblown, a bit snarky, and as radically fantastic as the man himself. The tour takes you through the rooms and also the chronology of the Clemens family. You'll find yourself laughing at the beginning and a bit maudlin by the end.

    #5

    Victorian era family portrait outdoors with woman in period dress, man in suit and hat, and child in white dress.

    Unidentified African-American family prairie settlers from the 1880s.

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    2WheelTravlr
    Community Member
    1 month ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Beautiful family. I hope their lives lived up to the promise shown in this photo.

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    #6

    Two people in Victorian era clothing sitting close, smiling and engaging in a casual moment indoors.

    Portrait of famous Danish adventurer and explorer extraordinaire Peter Freuchen with his first wife, an Inuit woman called Navarana Mequpaluk, in 1911. Navarana bore him two children, a boy named Mequsaq Avataq Igimaqssusuktoranguapaluk and a girl called Pipaluk Jette Tukuminguaq Kasaluk Palika Hager. When she died in the Spanish Flu epidemic in 1921, the local Christian church refused to allow her burial, and so Freuchen buried her himself.

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    2WheelTravlr
    Community Member
    1 month ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    What a beautiful smile she has! As an aside, I know a lot of really wonderful Christians, but I know few Christian organizations that can hold their heads up and truthfully say they've always followed the New Testament teachings.

    The aesthetic qualities of Victorian photographs also contribute significantly to their lasting appeal. The monochromatic tones, the slight imperfections, and the formal compositions create an artistic quality that many contemporary viewers find more authentic and emotionally resonant than modern photography. There's a texture and grain to these images that digital photography often lacks, giving them a tangible quality that feels more connected to physical reality. The careful staging, elaborate costumes, and attention to detail in Victorian photographs reflect a time when having one's portrait taken was a significant, often once-in-a-lifetime event, imbuing each image with tremendous importance and careful consideration.

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    #7

    Young Victorian era girl sitting on steps holding a cat with a woman blurred in the background on a porch.

    A girl sitting with her cat on her lap while her mother watches her from behind the door, taken early 1900s in Canada.

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    2WheelTravlr
    Community Member
    1 month ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Looks like mom put her hair up in rag rollers the night before to get those pretty ringlets! I mean the girl, not the cat.

    #8

    Young woman in Victorian era clothing lying on billiard table next to relaxed cat in vintage Victorian era setting

    Pepper the Cat and Louise Fazenda taking a rest during the filming of “Are Waitresses Safe?” Circa 1917. Pepper was a female Oriental Maltese cat who had starring turns in several silent comedy films produced by the Mack Sennett Studios from 1917 to 1922. Noted for her exceptionally photogenic good looks and her catty yet lovable personality, Pepper became the first true celebrity feline in film history. Louise Fazenda (June 17, 1895 – April 17, 1962] was an American film actress, appearing chiefly in silent comedy films.

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    #9

    Victorian era woman wearing period dress holding three large cats in a vintage sepia-toned portrait photograph.

    Victorian cat lady c 1890s.

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    Beyond aesthetics, Victorian photographs serve as invaluable historical documents that satisfy our curiosity about how people actually lived during that transformative century. These images capture everything from fashion and architecture to social customs and technological innovations.

    #10

    Victorian era man with an exceptionally long beard wrapped around a black cat in a vintage black and white photo.

    By1904, Louis Coulon was making headlines with his extraordinary 11-foot-long beard (3.35 meters), which he even used as a cozy resting spot for his beloved cats! This is an earlier portrait of him with his kitten circa 1890, in Montluçon, France.

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    2WheelTravlr
    Community Member
    1 month ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    That kitten has seen some things. Probably a few of them in that beard.

    #11

    Horse-drawn carriage on a foggy city street during the Victorian era with tall buildings lining the wet road.

    ”A fine day in London” photographed by Hector Colard c.1898.

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    2WheelTravlr
    Community Member
    1 month ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Photography was truly a mix of science, art, and a little magic back then.

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    #12

    Native American woman in traditional attire with braids and jewelry, representing Victorian Era cultural history.

    Umatilla Princess Eat-No-Meat in Native Dress with Ornaments - Moorhouse - 1900.

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    We can observe the elaborate hairstyles and clothing, the design of furniture and household items, and even glimpse the social structures and class distinctions that defined Victorian society. For history enthusiasts and casual observers alike, these photographs provide concrete evidence of daily life in a way that written descriptions never quite can, making history feel immediate and real rather than abstract and distant.

    #13

    Historic Victorian era street scene with children and adults gathered along narrow, curved cobblestone road and old buildings.

    The Shambles in York, pictured in 1900, is still one of the best-preserved medieval shopping streets in Europe. It's a narrow street of mostly timber buildings that date back as far as the 13th Century.

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    2WheelTravlr
    Community Member
    1 month ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    It's amazing to think that in the era of open flames and tight living conditions any wood building survived to modern times.

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    #14

    Young Victorian era woman in period dress hugging a large dog, both posing for a vintage sepia photograph.

    Quaint picture of unknown Victorian lass with her dog taken circa 1890s.

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    #15

    Black and white cat sitting on Victorian Era style patterned floor near ornate wall and a step inside a dim room

    Portrait of Sussy, 1917, Sweden.

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    Victorian photographs, particularly those of families and children, evoke a poignant sense of mortality and the passage of time. Every person captured in these images has long since passed away, yet they live on through these frozen moments, creating a bittersweet meditation on memory and impermanence that resonates with contemporary viewers.

    #16

    Victorian era woman in period attire boarding train, showcasing fashion and travel in the Victorian era.

    A female train conductor in London 1916. With the men folk gone off to war at the front, women showed they were able to do these important jobs. When the war was over these jobs unfortunately became 'men only' again.

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    2WheelTravlr
    Community Member
    1 month ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This is Edwardian or War era, but it's a fantastic photo so I'll ignore the mistake.

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    #17

    Young woman in Victorian era lace dress with curled hair, resting her head on her hand in a vintage portrait.

    Unknown Edwardian lady Circe early 1910s.

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    #18

    Young girl in Victorian era clothing sitting on a bench, holding a black cat surrounded by flowers and foliage.

    Portrait by German photographer Wilhelm von Gloeden (1856–1931), entitled “Rosina Buciunì petting a black cat”. This image was published in 1909 in the “National Geographic”, p. 1094, captionedː “Happy hours in Sicily”.

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    Social media has also played a crucial role in the renewed interest in Victorian photography. Platforms dedicated to historical images have made these photographs more accessible than ever before, allowing people worldwide to discover and share them. The mysterious and sometimes unsettling quality of Victorian portraits makes them particularly shareable online, where they often spark discussions about history, photography techniques, and the lives of the subjects depicted. This digital renaissance has introduced Victorian photography to younger generations who might never have encountered these images in traditional archives or museums.

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    #19

    Victorian era woman dressed in period clothing standing on an early motorized scooter on a city street.

    Lady Florence Norman, a suffragette, rides her motor-scooter to work, 1916.

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    2WheelTravlr
    Community Member
    1 month ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    She's actually posing on the scooter, the kickstand is down so she's stationary.

    #20

    Victorian era black and white photo of a fluffy cat sitting on a dark surface in an oval frame.

    Portrait postcard of a heterochromic cat taken / produced in 1908.

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    #21

    Black and white Victorian era portrait showing a family dressed in period clothing with formal serious expressions.

    Biracial Family taken circa circa 1900, Tennessee, USA. He was Jim Turner, from an affluent white family in Henning, TN, and his wife Carrie Turner, a schoolteacher.
    Their sons George, William, and Hardin, who became a doctor. This is a stunning portrait of a family who defied societal norms and embraced their mixed heritage with pride, showcasing that love knows no boundaries.

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    Ultimately, Victorian photographs endure because they satisfy multiple human needs simultaneously. They feed our curiosity about the past, appeal to our aesthetic sensibilities, and provide a tangible connection to our ancestors. In an age of disposable digital images taken by the billions every day, there's something refreshing and grounding about photographs that were created with such deliberation and care, each one a precious artifact of a moment that will never come again.

    #22

    Woman dressed in Victorian era clothing seated on a chair, holding a glass up in a celebratory pose in black and white.

    Portrait of actress Betty Lindlay taken by Bassano at his studio, 25 Old Bond Street , London. Taken circa 1914.

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    2WheelTravlr
    Community Member
    1 month ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    The correct spelling is Linley, although it's misspelled as Lindley in many places. This misspelling confuses things even more! She was on vaudeville and then made the transition to movies, acting in a few nearly up to her death in 1951.

    #23

    Victorian era woman reading a book with a cat perched on her shoulder in a vintage black and white photograph.

    Amelia Van Buren with friend photographed by Thomas Eakins, late 1880s, Metropolitan Museum of Art: Photography.

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    #24

    Man wearing an unusual coiled suit in a black and white Victorian era photograph, standing against a plain background.

    The original Michelin Man from 1894.⁣ The Michelin Man aka Bibendum is white because rubber tires are naturally white. It was not until 1912, that carbon chemicals were mixed into the white tires, which turned them black. The change was structural, not aesthetic. By adding carbon, tires became more durable.⁣
    Michelin also began reviewing restaurants so that more people would travel further distances in their cars to eat at these restaurants. This in turn would wear down their tires faster, and force them to buy more.⁣
    The star system that Michelin uses goes up to three and is broken down by whether or not it's worth driving to the restaurant.
    One star: "A very good restaurant in its category" (Une très bonne table dans sa catégorie)⁣
    Two star: "Excellent cooking, worth a detour" (Table excellente, mérite un détour)⁣
    Three star: "Exceptional cuisine, worth a special journey" (Une des meilleures tables, vaut le voyage).

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    2WheelTravlr
    Community Member
    1 month ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    It's a good thing he didn't catch the suit on fire or it could have been the first instance of "Burning Rubber".

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    #25

    Victorian era street scene with woman in period dress standing by wooden building and stone archway in black and white.

    Black Gate, Newcastle, England. Street scene close-up of the gateway with a woman leaning against a shop doorway.. taken circa 1880.

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    #26

    Victorian Era street scene with horse-drawn carriage and ornate theatrical building facade in 19th century Paris.

    The cabarets DU CIEL ET DE L ENFER on the Boulevard de Clichy, Paris, France: two celebrated night spots offering a choice of entertainment, divine or diabolical Date: circa 1905.

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    2WheelTravlr
    Community Member
    1 month ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    "ooooh horsie! Omm nommmm nommmmm..."

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    #27

    Black and white photo of a disheveled bearded man indoors, reflecting the Victorian Era lifestyle and conditions.

    This is how Ejnar Mikkelsen, a Danish explorer, was photographed in 1912 when he was found. Ejnar was isolated with Iver Iversen, from the same expedition, for two and a half years in a hut in Greenland waiting to be rescued.
    Ejnar was sent by Denmark with the mission to recover the map and diary of an earlier lost expedition that tried to prove that the Peary Channel did not exist. According to the U.S. Greenland was not a single island but was divided by the Peary Channel and therefore claimed that part of the territory as its own.
    Mikkelsen’s expedition had numerous problems and delays, finally Ejnar and Iver were abandoned by the other members. Due to the lack of food they were forced to eat the dogs pulling the sledge, they suffered hallucinations chasing imaginary animals, they were attacked by bears, etc.
    In the picture you can see a photograph on the wall behind Ejnar. It shows the 53 pupils of a home economics school that filled their long arctic days. The photo was so much talked about that it even led to a fight when Iversen dedicated a love song to the girl Mikkelsen had chosen as his girlfriend. Iversen had chosen 4 girlfriends in the picture, so Ejnar got angry when the other tried to take away the one he had chosen. He got so upset that for two days he didn’t speak to Iversen.
    Mikkelsen returned to Denmark as a hero as he managed to retrieve the maps from the previous expedition that proved that the Peary Channel did not exist and that Greenland was therefore Danish. He also ended his photographic courtship when he met Naja Marie Heiberg Holm, daughter of another explorer, whom he married a few months later.

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    2WheelTravlr
    Community Member
    1 month ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    There are so many stories of early explorers enduring hardships like this, and we freak out when power is interrupted for a few hours.

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    #28

    Young woman with long hair and Victorian-era style dress, reflecting the Victorian era aesthetic and fashion.

    Cléopâtre-Diane de Mérode was a French dancer of the Belle Époque. She has been referred to as the "first real celebrity icon" and the "first modern celebrity". She was also the first woman whose photographic image, due in particular to photographers Nadar and Léopold-Émile Reutlinger, was distributed worldwide. These images were taken between 1902 and 1908.

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    #29

    Victorian era woman in elegant dress holding a baby, seated on an ornate chair in a classic portrait style.

    Madeleine Astor, a survivor of the Titanic disaster, holds her baby, John Jacob Astor VI, in 1912. Pregnant at the time of the tragedy, Madeleine was the young wife (18 years when they married) of John Jacob Astor IV, the wealthiest man aboard the Titanic. She was rescued on the Carpathia, while her husband perished in the sinking.


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    #30

    Victorian era woman in period dress holding and surrounded by three tabby cats in a vintage black and white photo.

    Portrait of Frieda Baars (Sangernebo) with three cats, taken circa 1907 by Jaan Riet, Estonia.

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    #31

    Victorian era man with a beard holding a black and white cat, wearing worn clothing in a sepia-toned photo.

    Portrait of The most celebrated Vienna Secession painter GUSTAV KLIMT ( 1862 - 1918 ) with his cat.

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    #32

    Victorian era portrait of a young woman in traditional attire holding a cat, with vintage photo effects and stamps.

    A Japanese postcard of a ‘Bijin’ (beautiful person) with her kitten. Circa 1907.

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    #33

    Victorian era photo showing a man startled by a ghostly skeleton figure draped in a sheer veil in a vintage office setting.

    Double-exposed photograph of French illusionist Henri Robin with a ghost⁣. Photo: Eugène Thiébault, 1863⁣.

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    #34

    Victorian era women outdoors dressed in period clothing, with one woman sculpting a snow figure on a winter day.

    Two British Victorian ladies making a Snow Lady, taken in January 1892, taken from “The Strand” magazine, London.

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    #35

    Victorian era woman making a humorous face while seated at a table in a black and white vintage photograph.

    Unknown Victorian lady pulling a face for the camera.

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    #36

    Victorian era sepia photo of a cat holding a violin bow playing a violin, sitting on a round stool.

    Postcard of Cat on a stool playing a violin; by photographer Henry Pointer, British, 1822 - 1889, taken March 1872; Albumen silver print.

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    #37

    Young woman with unique Victorian Era hairstyle and vintage jewelry posing in a black and white historical photograph.

    Daho-Mana, a young Hopi woman, 1902, Arizona.

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    #38

    Victorian era woman with long hair in a flowing dress reaching up among tall plants in a forest setting.

    photoshoot of German actress Gertrude Hoffman posing in garden taken c 1900s.

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    2WheelTravlr
    Community Member
    1 month ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    She was a dancer and vaudeville performer in the early 1900s. Quite popular, and also a bit risqué.

    #39

    Victorian era woman in period dress with a parrot on her shoulder and a dog sitting on a table beside her.

    Postcard of unknown lady with her pets taken by a Rudolph Krull, late 1890s early 1900s.

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    #40

    Victorian era woman in ceremonial attire seated on throne with raised hands and large ornate backdrop behind her.

    Austrian actress Mia May as the embodiment of the goddess Astarte in Part V of the silent film The Mistress of the World (1919).

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    #41

    Victorian era young girl with long curly hair wearing a delicate vintage dress in a sepia-toned portrait.

    Portrait of a young Victorian girl taken circa 1897. Picture found on website findmygrave and used as picture for death of Emma E. I. Ochsner who died aged 10, Joliet Township, Will County, Illinois, USA and buried Oakwood Cemetery.

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    #42

    Victorian era child laborer in worn clothes standing barefoot by wooden barrels in a black and white historical photo.

    Portrait of a Street urchin found by Thomas Barnardo in Whitechapel that led to his orphanage and later a ragged school to educate the East destitute, taken circa 1890s.

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    #43

    Young woman in a Victorian era dress standing amidst garden foliage, captured in a vintage black and white photo.

    The Gardener’s Daughter (Mary Ryan), 1870, From Julia Margaret Cameron’s “Women” series

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    #44

    Victorian Era portrait of a Native American woman wearing traditional clothing and intricate bead necklaces in sepia tone.

    Portrait of Hattie Tom, an Apache Native American, 1899.

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