One of
the best things about writing historical fiction is the research – although I
have to confess that I can get completely sidetracked and sometimes spend far
too long researching things I know I am never going to use!
I am currently writing a novel set in mid-Victorian England and my
research has brought home to me how astonishingly difficult it was for
Victorian girls and women to achieve anything amid the huge obstacles which
Victorian society put in their way.
All
classes of Victorian men – working class, middle class and probably especially
upper class - believed the old maxim ‘A Woman’s Place is in the Home’ and
Victorian society did everything it could to keep them there. It took a very strong-minded woman, with
talent, luck and usually some male support to break out of the mould of being a
sweet, subjugated, supporter of men.
The first challenge the Victorian girl faced was that of education.
In the
middle of the nineteenth century, how much education you got didn’t just depend
on how much money your parents had – it also depended on whether you were a boy
or a girl. Among the poorer classes, most primary-age children were educated in
one of the patchwork of voluntary schools up and down the country, which
provided both boys and girls with a basic education in reading, writing and
arithmetic.
Drawing © Kate Randall
After the age of 11, an intelligent boy from a poor background might
have been able to continue to one of the boys’ grammar schools which had grown
up around the country, but there were very few options for girls. In 1864 there
were only 12 public secondary schools for girls in the whole of England and
Wales.
But even
if you were a girl from a wealthy background, you weren’t that much better off
in terms of getting an education, especially compared to your brothers. In
fact, you were very unlikely to have been to school at all. While boys were
often sent to school at the age of 7, middle-class and upper-class girls were
taught at home by their mothers. A small number might afford a governess, but
this didn’t guarantee a better education as many of the governesses themselves
were poorly educated.
John Ruskin was a
very influential Victorian writer, art critic and philosopher.
John Ruskin
This is what he wrote in 1865 about the different ways in which men
and women needed to be educated.
‘Women’s intellect is not for invention or creation…Her great function
is Praise… Speaking broadly, a man ought to know any language or science he
learns, thoroughly – while a woman ought to know the same language, or science,
only so far as may enable her to sympathise in her husband’s pleasures, and in
those of his best friends.’
The vast majority of the middle and upper classes agreed with this –
women should only be educated in order to support their husbands, and certainly
not to learn things for themselves! So, girls were left at home to be taught by
their mothers, and if you remember that their mothers wouldn’t have been to
school either, you get an idea of the sort of education they were getting. They
would have learnt to read and write, and learnt a little French and a few
unconnected historical facts, but you could pretty much forget anything else.
And there was another obstacle for girls. Even if your mother happened
to be well-educated herself, and good at teaching, it wasn’t considered
acceptable for a girl to work hard at anything intellectual. Because men’s
needs always came before a woman’s needs, a girl could only carry out her
studies when she wasn’t needed to fetch or carry for her father, mend her
brother’s shirts, or whatever it might be. Even practising the piano seriously
had to be abandoned if it disturbed someone else’s studying.
Florence Nightingale railed against this attitude in an unpublished
essay she wrote on the subject: ‘How should we learn a language if we were to
give it an hour a week?... [A lady] cannot leave the breakfast-table – or she
must be fulfilling some little frivolous ‘duty’...If a man were to follow up
his profession or occupation at odd times, how would be do it?...It is
acknowledged by women themselves that they are inferior in every occupation to
men. Is it wonderful? They do everything at ‘odd times’…’
Luckily, there were strong-minded, intelligent women who fought against
this prevailing attitude. Some women defied convention and learned as much as
they could from books and any male relation who was happy to teach them. Others
were able to take advantage of the institutions which were gradually set up as
the century progressed. (By the way, in 1868 a government commission admitted
that men and women had the same mental capacity!)
Florence Nightingale
As we all know, Florence Nightingale herself blazed the trail for the
nursing profession, setting up the first nursing school at St Thomas’s Hospital
in London in 1860, where crucially nurses would be trained. In 1848,
Queen’s College in London was founded to educate governesses. Among its
students were two women, Dorothea Beale and Frances Buss, who went on to become
pioneers of girls’ education: Dorothea Beale became Principal of Cheltenham
Ladies’ College and Frances Buss was Headmistress of the North London
Collegiate School.
Frances Buss
In 1849,
Bedford College for Women opened as the first higher education college for
women in the country. Educational reform
gradually took place, alongside a changing view of the role of women, but it
was a slow, slow process.
Before
researching my current novel, I had sometimes looked at a list of so-called
‘Great Victorians’ and wondered why there weren’t more women on the list. I
think I know now. Women had to overcome so many more obstacles than men before
they could even start ‘achieving’ anything at all!
Catherine Randall’s debut novel The White Phoenix is set in London 1666,
and features a strong girl breaking out of the mould society tries to force her
into. It was shortlisted for the Historical Association Young Quills Award
2021.
https://catherinerandall.com/