Dr Bob Nicholson
@digivictorian.bsky.social
1.9K followers 350 following 30 posts
Historian • Broadcaster • Victorian Pop Culture • Presenter of 'Killing Victoria' on BBC Sounds 🎙️ • www.bobnicholson.co.uk
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digivictorian.bsky.social
Hello! I’m a historian who loves to unearth surprising new stories about the Victorians.

You’ll usually find me posting about weird things I’ve found in archives, or getting mad about bad newspaper props in period dramas.

I also presented this BBC podcast! podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/k...
Introducing Killing Victoria
Podcast Episode · Killing Victoria · 12/03/2023 · 4m
podcasts.apple.com
Reposted by Dr Bob Nicholson
Reposted by Dr Bob Nicholson
drlindseyfitz.bsky.social
With science falling under increasing attack, this medical historian is here to remind people of the power of #vaccines. THREAD🧵

Hard-hitting polio advert from 1958. In the first half of the 20th century, polio was the leading cause of death in children and young adults. 1/7
An advertisement for the polio vaccine which reads: "they all got vaccine except dad...don't take a chance...take your polio shots!" It depicts a photo of a family gathered around a father who is in an iron lung.
Reposted by Dr Bob Nicholson
digivictorian.bsky.social
I did record quite a bit about the first murder on the railway but, alas, that segment is on the cutting room floor!
Reposted by Dr Bob Nicholson
victorianlondon.bsky.social
the quaint world of Victorian porn advertisements
digivictorian.bsky.social
Britain’s Railway Empire returns at 8pm tonight on Channel Four. The story moves into the 20th century, but I might pop up a few more times!
Reposted by Dr Bob Nicholson
gregjenner.bsky.social
We don’t all share the same internet. The personalised algorithm has siloed us into parallel worlds
digivictorian.bsky.social
A while back I was looking through the papers of the journalist W. T. Stead, who died on the Titanic. His wife received a series of telegrams from friends congratulating her on his survival, before the horrible truth emerged…
digivictorian.bsky.social
It gets a nice write-up in the Radio Times!
digivictorian.bsky.social
Rather surprised to see a picture of myself on the TV listing! I’m not presenting it — just one of several talking heads.
digivictorian.bsky.social
I’m on TV tonight! Check out the first episode of Britain’s Railway Empire at 8pm on Channel 4.

It’s a new, two part series about the history of the railways, starting with the Victorian Era. It’s not just a story about tech and engineering, but covers the social and cultural impact too.
Reposted by Dr Bob Nicholson
chloewigstonsmith.bsky.social
It was such a joy this morning to see Lela Harris’s extraordinary portrait of Miss Lambe, Jane Austen’s only character explicitly of African heritage, from the last novel she worked on. She died at age 41 without being able to finish Miss Lambe’s story. 1/
Lela Harris’s portrait of Miss Lambe, charcoal on found writing paper. Miss Lambe is seated, holding a book and looking up and out at us. Artist Lela Harris standing next to her portrait of Miss Lambe.
Reposted by Dr Bob Nicholson
wallyberry.bsky.social
Hello UK friends - please, please could you sign this petition against the job cuts at my place of work - 1 in 4 us will be out of a job by August next year if we don't stop the cuts. And once you've signed it, please share. We need your help! www.change.org/p/stop-mass-...
Sign the Petition
Stop Mass Redundancies at Lancaster University – Hold Senior Management Accountable
www.change.org
Reposted by Dr Bob Nicholson
noreenmasud.bsky.social
does anyone know of any research on the history of the 'family newspaper' - by which I mean a 'newspaper' produced usually by children, about daily goings-on in the household? think Gad's Hill Gazette, Hyde Park Gate News, etc...
Reposted by Dr Bob Nicholson
chrchristensen.bsky.social
Talk about The Wire, Sopranos, Game of Thrones all you want, but the greatest US television program ever made is Sesame Street. It's not even close. 50+ years of treating kids across class, ethnicity, religion not as mini-consumers...but as citizens with a stake in this world.
Reposted by Dr Bob Nicholson
sorgeway.bsky.social
Of use to those working on 1852-1879, it includes a chronological index of open-access copies of the Englishwoman’s Domestic Magazine, a widely read (affordable) secular early women’s monthly miscellany. jmsw.github.io/edm-index/

Now updated with a searchable spreadsheet of contents by category!
The EDM - Open Access Chronological and Searchable Indexes, 1852-1879
jmsw.github.io
Reposted by Dr Bob Nicholson
patrickleary.bsky.social
Speaking of the Illustrated London News, a paper whose pages I never tire of turning, here's an account of its (mainly 19th-c.) history I put together some years back for the publisher Gale, which has made the essay free to access. It was fun to write. www.gale.com/intl/essays/... #C19th
A Brief History of The Illustrated London News | Patrick Leary
"On the 14 of May, 1842, The Illustrated London News burst upon a world that had never seen anything quite like it. Not that there hadn’t been plenty of…"
www.gale.com
digivictorian.bsky.social
The job advert highlights 20thC political and/or military history as an area we’d like to cover, but we’re very open minded about how candidates address this brief. We’re also open to international applications!
Reposted by Dr Bob Nicholson
vjctorianist.bsky.social
IT'S ALIVE!!!!! I had the best time working with Annemarie to edit our fabulous contributions - huge thanks to our authors for sharing their research, and for being polite when I suggested revisions. Huge thanks also to VPR ed Kathy Malone for her patience and making the editorial process so smooth.
vpreditors.bsky.social
VPR's special issue "Currents and Currencies in the #Victorian #PeriodicalPress" is out now! Huge thanks to guest editors Victoria Clarke (@vjctorianist.bsky.social) and Annemarie McAllister. Check out their intro essay: muse.jhu.edu/pub/1/articl... @rs4vp.org
Cover of VPR 57.4, Special Issue: Currents and Currencies. Image credit: “The Revolution in France,” London Illustrated News, February 26, 1848, 118. 

Table of contents: 

Introduction
Currents and Currencies in the Victorian Periodical Press 
VICTORIA CLARKE AND ANNEMARIE MCALLISTER

Articles
General News in Early and Mid-Victorian Class Periodicals: The Gardeners’ Chronicle, 1841–70
ALI HATAPÇI

Cash for Questions: Elizabeth Burgoyne Corbett’s Female Detectives, Journalism, and the Case of the Missing Income
SARA LODGE

Commercialised Temperance: The Phenomenon of the Temperance Companion and How It Stayed Afloat
ANNEMARIE MCALLISTER

Crossing Currents: The Mother Tongue, Monolingualism, and Multilingualism in Household Words and All the Year Round 
ANNE-MARIE MILLIM

Seriality and Characterisation in the Press: Death Club Sensationalism, the 1848 Revolutions, and Reviews of Mary Barton
CAMILLE STALLINGS

Book Reviews

Biographies

Endnotes
Reposted by Dr Bob Nicholson
plashingvole.bsky.social
This is terrifying, and happening right now. My university is about to reduce the curriculum from 6 20-credit modules per year to 4 30-credit ones, one assessment per module. Explicitly designed to reduce subject richness in favour of skills (and save on teacher numbers). Students will hate it.
digivictorian.bsky.social
In fact, you can stream all three episodes on NOW right away!
digivictorian.bsky.social
I'm on the TV! 'Jack the Ripper: Written in Blood' is a new docudrama about the journalists who reported on the killings and helped to mythologise the figure of the Ripper. I'm one of the talking-head historians. Part one premiers tonight at 9pm on Sky History & NOW TV. #WritteninBlood
digivictorian.bsky.social
Cool! Thanks very much for sharing one of my podcasts. Hope it made for some useful discussion.