My birthday is on Monday so today I am in a mood of recollecting that life is short and we should live it to the full. In honor of the “life is short” bit, I have come up with a slightly depressing list (don’t worry – I will post a happier one tomorrow). The Victorians were a special breed and this list looks at 10 aspects of life from the Victorian era that are creepy. Note that the focus is entirely on Victorian England. Be sure to post any we have missed in the comments.
The Victorian upper class (and later middle class) had no televisions to entertain them, so they entertained themselves. One of the popular forms of entertainment was for friends and family to dress up in outrageous costumes and pose for each other. This sounds innocent – but just think: can you imagine your grandmother dressing up as a greek wood nymph posing on a table in the living room while everyone applauds? No. You can’t. The idea is, in fact, creepy. But for the Victorians, this was perfectly normal and fun.
Poorhouses were government-run facilities where the poor, infirm, or mentally ill could live. They were usually filthy and full to the brim of societies unwanted people. At the time, poverty was seen as dishonorable as it came from a lack of the moral virtue of industriousness. Many of the people who lived in the poorhouses were required to work to contribute to the cost of their board and it was not uncommon for whole families to live together with other families in the communal environment. In the Victorian era life didn’t get much worse than that of a poorhouse resident.
London during the Victorian era was famed for its pea-soupers — fogs so thick you could barely see through them. The pea-soupers were caused by a combination of fogs from the River Thames and smoke from the coal fires that were an essential part of Victorian life. Interestingly London had suffered from these pea-soupers for centuries – in 1306, King Edward I banned coal fires because of the smog. In 1952, 12 thousand Londoners died due to the smog causing the government to pass the Clean Air Act which created smog free zones. The Victorian atmosphere (in literature and modern film) is greatly enhanced by the thick smog due and this creepy environment made possible the acts of people like Jack the Ripper.
English food can be creepy at the best of times, but especially so in the Victorian era (disclaimer: England currently produces some of the finest food in the world). The Victorians loved offal and ate virtually every part of an animal. This is not entirely creepy if you are a food fanatic (like me) but for the average person, the idea of supping on a bowl of brains and heart is not appealing. Another famous dish from the Victorian era was turtle soup. The turtle was prized above all for its green jello-like fat which was used to flavor the soup made from the long-boiled stringy flesh of the animal. Due to dwindling numbers, turtles are seldom eaten nowadays, though it is possible to purchase them in some states of America where they are plentiful.
In a time when one in four surgery patients died after surgery, you were very lucky in Victorian times to have a good doctor with a clean theatre. There was no anesthesia, no painkillers for after, and no electric equipment to reduce the duration of an operation. Victorian surgery wasn’t just creepy, it was outright horrific. Here is a description of one surgery:
The assembled crowd of anxious medical students dutifully check their pocket watches, as two of Liston’s surgical assistants – ‘dressers’ as they are called – take firm hold of the struggling patient’s shoulders.
The fully conscious man, already racked with pain from the badly broken leg he suffered by falling between a train and the platform at nearby King’s Cross, looks in total horror at the collection of knives, saws and needles that lie alongside him.
Liston clamps his left hand across the patient’s thigh, picks up his favourite knife and in one rapid movement makes his incision. A dresser immediately tightens a tourniquet to stem the blood. As the patient screams with pain, Liston puts the knife away and grabs the saw.
With an assistant exposing the bone, Liston begins to cut. Suddenly, the nervous student who has been volunteered to steady the injured leg realises he is supporting its full weight. With a shudder he drops the severed limb into a waiting box of sawdust. [Source]
At this time, castration was also still widely practiced along with other revolting surgeries like lobotomies which were first used in the Victorian era.
How could the gothic novel (a genre of literature that combines elements of both horror and romance) not be included on a list like this? It was the Victorian period that gave us such great works of terror as Dracula, and the Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde. Even the Americans got in on the act with Edgar Allen Poe producing some of the greatest gothic literature of the time. The Victorians knew how to frighten people and they knew how to do it in grand style. These works still form the basis of much modern horror and their power to thrill has not dwindled in the least.
In the late Victorian era, London was terrorized by the monster known as Jack the Ripper. Using the pea-soupers as a cover, the Ripper ultimately slaughtered five or more prostitutes working in the East End. Newspapers, whose circulation had been growing during this era, bestowed widespread and enduring notoriety on the killer because of the savagery of the attacks and the failure of the police to capture the murderer. Because the killer’s identity has never been confirmed, the legends surrounding the murders have become a combination of genuine historical research, folklore, and pseudohistory. Many authors, historians, and amateur detectives have proposed theories about the identity of the killer and his victims. You can read a list of the most fascinating Jack the Ripper suspects on our Top 10 Interesting Jack The Ripper Suspects.
A freak show is an exhibition of rarities, “freaks of nature” — such as unusually tall or short humans, and people with both male and female secondary sexual characteristics or other extraordinary diseases and conditions — and performances that are expected to be shocking to the viewers. Probably the most famous member of a freak show is the Elephant Man (pictured above). Joseph Carey Merrick (5 August 1862 – 11 April 1890) was an Englishman who became known as “The Elephant Man” because of his physical appearance caused by a congenital disorder. His left side was overgrown and distorted causing him to wear a mask for most of his life. You can read about two other famous “freaks” who had what is probably the most bizarre relationship in history here. There can be no doubt that the Victorian freak shows were one of the creepiest aspects of society at the time.
Memento mori is a Latin phrase meaning “Remember you shall die”. In the Victorian era, photography was young and extremely costly. When a loved one died, their relatives would sometimes have a photograph taken of the corpse in a pose – oftentimes with other members of the family. For the vast majority of Victorians, this was the only time they would be photographed. In these post-mortem photographs, the effect of life was sometimes enhanced by either propping the subject’s eyes open or painting pupils onto the photographic print, and many early images have a rosy tint added to the cheeks of the corpse. Adults were more commonly posed in chairs or even braced on specially-designed frames. Flowers were also a common prop in post-mortem photography of all types. In the photo above, the fact that the girl is dead is made slightly more obvious (and creepy) by the fact that the slight movement of her parents causes them to be slightly blurred due to the long exposure time, while the girl is deathly still and, thus, perfectly in focus. You can read an excellent article on memento mori (post-morten photographs) complete with a huge archive of somewhat macabre photos here.
Queen Victoria has to have position number one on this list because the era is named for her and, frankly, she was bloody creepy. When her husband Albert died in 1861, she went into mourning – donning black frocks until her own death many years later – and expected her nation to do so too. She avoided public appearances and rarely set foot in London in the following years. Her seclusion earned her the name “Widow of Windsor.” Her sombre reign cast a dark pall across Britain and her influence was so great that the entire period was fraught with creepiness. Ironically, since Victoria disliked black funerals so much, London was festooned in purple and white when she died.






























JFrater-Happy birthday in case I forget Monday-(Senility sitting in rapidly now)–Great list and very interesting but I don’t see anything particularly “creepy” about any of it–There have been “freak shows” long before Queen Victoria” and they still exist today at fairs and carnivals-At least they do here in the USA-As far as Jack The Ripper-Any serial killer is creepy,of course,but he wasn’t any worse than Jeffrey Dahmer(not sure of correct spelling)–And “people dressing up in costumes” just sounds like the masquerade parties of today-And smog killing people? There’s more people dying today from pollution than ever died during the Victorian period–Still,a very interesting list-Well put together-
Great list, JFrater. Real interesting. Here in the US, we also had our period of taking pictures of the dead, also in the late 1800′s. The cowboys, bad guys, good guys, who were shot were often propped up in their caskets and a picture was taken, often in front of the saloon or undertakers shop.
@calm_incense (51): I wouldn’t complain too much about “grammer nazism” if I were you, as you sound like one of it’s proponents.
One of the more unusual, though not strictly disturbing, trends of Victorians was the prepensity for dressing their children in the clothes of the opposite ***** (i.e. small boys would be dressed as girls). So you could infer that Victorians fostered the notion of cross-dressing as much as they did *****ual repression.
It wasn’t really crossdressing. Boys and girls wore the same type of clothes (dresses) until about 4 because dresses where more practical when it came to changing diapers. No small children wore pants.
Interesting. I’ve studied the Victorian Era for my miniatures and got so interested in it that I read far more than what I needed to create an authentic mini setting!
I collect cabinet cards and cartes de visites. I have three albums I’m trying to fill. Some of the most interesting ones are the sideshow performers cards. I have a Willy Ray (famous midget) card and a postcard with Harry Earles (of the Doll Family; he and his sister starred in the movie “Freaks”) on it. I also have a memento mori of a toddler in a casket. It has a name on the back but right now I can’t recall what it is. The memento moris and the freak cards are EXPENSIVE. I would love to find some at a garage sale or something for super cheap, but so far no way.
Mostly I just collect them if I like the people. I have a ton of ones with babies on them and some interesting people like an English nurse and a soldier.
I love Victorian furniture too, but I can’t afford that! My dream is to have a Victorian house and fill it full of authentic period things. So far all I have is little things. I did finally get a pickle caster (holds pickles at the table, with tongs to pick them out). One thing they did was ornament EVERYTHING. So even the most mundane objects were decorated all fancy. Mine is a purple pressed glass jar with ornate tongs. It was pretty cheap at $120. Most of them are really fancy and more like $300 or $400!!
Similar to mine:
http://www.rubylane.com/shops/appalachiandream/item/1387
Oh, and HAPPY BIRTHDAY JFRATER!!!
@ redcaboose (62): At first I was going to protest you calling me a proponent of Grammar Nazism, but then I realized my urge to point out your misuse of “grammer” and “it’s”.
I guess you’re right.
>_:(
Gah, this site messed up that last smiley…
On second thought, all three smileys are messed up. Maybe it was me.
This list is too Victorian!
Good list. I’ve always been interested by Momento Mori.
Is it weird that my grandma still takes & keeps photos of funerals, and family members gathered around them? Must be an Eastern European thing…
Wow. Pretty cool.
What’s a life gem?
Happy Birthday! Number to is effing creepy!
This list was too all over the place. It could have been so much better. Seemed like a half hearted effort. Had alot of potential though.
Oh yeh, and a happy b day to you!!!!!!!!!!
best list ever man, i shall read this list daily
Didnt queen Victoria really like the elephant man or something? Maybe I just made that up
@Brebe (73): really? It took me hours to put together so I can at least assure you that it wasn’t rushed. It also happens to a topic that fascinates me
@Vera–71
A life gem is where a company takes the cremation ashes, extracts all the carbon, and compresses it into a man-made diamond. The main company (could be the only one) is in Illinois I think. The grade and size of the stone depends on how much you want to pay, but I think they only go up to one carat. That costs around 20,000, so if you’re wanting to economize you’d be better off going with a full plot and headstone. Plus the idea of turning your loved one into jewelry… and making it an HEIRLOOM… Not an heirloom, for God’s sake. I could see a grieving widow or widower wanting to be buried with their crystilized loved one. Oh, and they do pets, too. I supose that’s better than having them ‘preserved’ and keeping them lying around the house.
i just recently finished reading Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte and there is almost a whole chapter devoted to Vignettes..
I told my daughter I wanted her to make a ring out of my ashes. I asked her if she’d wear me, she said ‘no’ she was afraid she would lose me. I know I’m wierd, was born that way. LOL (I don’t think she’d make a ring out of me, but I think it is kind of cool.)
Happy birthday jfrater!
WOW, that memento mori stuff is absolutely terrifying and fascinating all at the same time. I didn’t realize the creepiness of the photo until I read your description of it. I couldn’t stop staring at how still the girl is and how blurred her parents are. Augh, that gave me the willies, thanks =)
I honestly don’t find some of these things creepy, for example with Number 10, that is like the precursor to modern day cosplaying. Moreover, men and women married and had children very young, so you were more likely to end up being a grandmother in your thirties and forties. It’s like your mother dressing up as Cleopatra last Halloween.
By the way, happy early birthday JFrater.
Not a halfhearted or haphazard list, Jamie — you just keep doin’ what you’re doin’.
I think the Victorian Era was such a strange time: universally enforced *****ual repression and frustration, horrible sanitation and medical conditions, and so many views of white Christian (male) superiority that today we would view as hypocrisy and bigotry. And yet, England built an empire that in many respects was the backbone of the civilized world, even shoring up places that had either never been civilized before, or had been stagnant for centuries. I’ve heard it said that England’s gift to the world was a flair for administration, of law, of military strength and of social services. Once the English administrative structure was pulled out of each country in the 20th century, as the colonial era drew to a close, many countries formerly under British rule either exploded in civil war or slowly toppled due to internal corruption. Granted, most of these countries were being systematically pillaged of their resources by the British (I’m looking at Iraq and Rhodesia, to give just two examples) but at the same time, they enjoyed a stability that vanished when the Union Jack was taken down for the last time.
Victorian morality affected the social mores of Europe and America as well, producing a *****ually inhibited period that far too many people still view as “the good old days” for simple, clean-living people. The best that can be said for that time was that when world culture at last rebelled against it, the end products — everything from Picasso to Jung to Proust and Miller and Joyce and right on up to the Rolling Stones, baby (with more to come, I’m sure) was worth waiting for.
One thing’s for sure: we shall not see ol’ Vicky’s like again. I don’t think the human psyche would ever put up with such a gray prison again. But then again, who knows?
Enjoyed the read…
#6 – BEAR IN MIND, if medical practice and surgery was bad in the UK, it must’ve been much worse everywhere else. UK were (and still is, of course) the leaders in modern medicine and research.
- See BBC’s Casualty 1906/07/09+ TV series.
#1 – It’s VERY HEARTLESS to call the mourning of the loss of her loved one as “bloody creepy” – wearing black and being sad for a long time after such a death isn’t uncommon whatsoever.
mourned for several years, at some point, she has to leave things in the past and work for her country
the victorian era has always creeped me out, this list only confirms my horrors
Memento Mori, actually dates back to antiquity —
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memento_mori
Memento Mori photography, (or “postmortem photography”) actually did not end with the Victorian era. Many of the more commonly found photos are from the 1920s/1930s, and beyond. When my grandmother passed away at the age of 91, in 1997, we came across a dozen or so postmortem photographs that were in her possession. Included were photos of my great grandmother, as well as a number of great aunts, uncles and cousins. All were from the 1940-1950s. From what I was told, they were taken by the funeral director and supplied to those who wanted them as a keepsake.
One of the largest collections of online postmortem photography can be seen on this page:
http://www.paulfrecker.com/collections.cfm?pagetype=library&typeID=1&myPage=1
(Warning, some of the images are extremely disturbing!)
I was so inspired by the memento mori pictures a couple of years ago that I ended up doing my final ceramics project about it.
http://fc06.deviantart.com/fs43/i/2009/077/d/f/Memento_Complete_by_enchantedpeach.jpg
Double Decker buses during the VE. That’s a new one on me!
I also think the *****ual repression and Hypocrisy were if not creepy then at least deeply disturbing and with consequences that still reverberate today.
Cheers
Lee
jfrater u should come to Chile and try some of the weird food we have…in the country people eats everything from sheeps and cows.
“Welcome back, Victoria… Clean hands, clean face–dirty mind.”–Jesus Jones, sometimes in the eighties.
Misremembered. Should be “clean books, clean screens, clean words–dirty minds.” Even better. Had a Samuel Beckett moment there (damn Swiss cheese memory)
JFrater btw it would be nice someday to translate the site book into spanish. cant wait to get it!
***** was kind of invented in this era no?
Great List. Also:
Spring-Heeled Jack
Chimmney Sweep: They would clean the chimmnies naked, and the ash and mold would cause testicular tumors. And they were young boys
Imperialism: The inspiration for Heart of Darkness
@samfishers (95): ***** was kind of invented in this era no?
lol not even close. Why do you think it’s called “the world’s oldest profession”?
@samfishers (95): I think there are already *****s in the Biblical era.
@Brian (96): It’s a good thing I’m not a chimney sweep.
Oh gosh, we’re so lucky to live in this era.
@astraya (3): so does Victoria have *****mania?
@RolliePollie (43): circumcision does not really prevent *****.
@missmozell (78): life gems are pretty cool
Very interesting list. yeah english food can be a bit hard to swallow heh.
Your site has been a great inspiration and the knowledge gained has gotten me past the obstacle blocking my way.
Hey i don’t find life gems all that creepy.My husband and I have actually thoroughly researched what I want done with my remains and we have determined that it is legal.I plan on being cremated then we are going to have the ashes mixed with concrete to make lawn ornaments for each of my kids and my husband.Our good friend maureen liked this idea so much that she wants one with my ashes in it.
Obviously it doesn’t! But that was the popular thought and I found it extremely creepy that people felt justified to mutilate someone’s genital.
Another ‘creepy’ aspect of Victorian life was the weight loss technique amongst women of swallowing a tapeworm cyst. There were even advertisements for it (http://farm1.static.flickr.com/174/438537358_796ef45563.jpg) and, shockingly, it’s still practised today.
http://www.tapewormdiet.net/index.html
Whoever’s running this site is trying to convince people that swallowing a beef cyst is a brilliant idea with no side effects.
@aikon2963 (60): goth was NEVER cool
The satirical magazine Viz had an awesome pull-out one time. It included a supposedly *****ographic Victorian black and white spread of a young housemaid pulling her petticoats up so you could see her ankles. Phwoar!!!
The best bit was when she told of her turn-ons, like all good centrefolds do:
“I work from well before dawn until midnight every day, scrubbing the house from top to bottom. If I miss even a single spot of dust I am beaten mercilessly by the butler. But on every fourth Christmas day, I get an afternoon off and I can indulge myself on these special occasions, my only holidays, by walking up to the High Street to admire the nobility passing by in their finery. I have never known happiness, not even for a single fleeting moment.”
It’s funny ’cause it’s true.
Turtle soup is actually pretty good. I live in Kentucky and turtle soup is not that hard to come by around here. You just have to find the right restaurant that serves it.
Great list!
Momento mori is interesting, yet creepy. Definately not for the faint of heart, especially since the instances infant deaths were so high. I’ve been going to that momento mori site for a few years and it never fails to amaze me how realistic some can look. Though Momento Mori isn’t just pictures of dead people, they also were of people who were still alive yet deathly ill.
You’ll also see a lot of children posed with their deceased siblings. Breaks your heart.
On another note, my grandmother tells the story of when her mother, who was brought up during the victorian era, was giving birth to her first child. She shocked the doctor when she asked where babies came from, she was under the impression they came out of your belly button… That’s pretty creepy to me.
wasn’t the first human lobotomy performed around 1935? Well after the Victorian era ended.
Anyone else see modern *****ogs to just about
every item on this list? We’ll be thought of
as creepy too in about 100 years.
Happy birthday! You have agreat site, it’s always entertaining and educational. Thanks!
Death photos: remember, we pose our dead and artificially close eyes and mouths using surgical and gruesome procedures. Most people just don’t photograph them, but I’ve seen enough funerals in this century to say we haven’t changed much.
If you want something to do with the ashes I think this is a ood idea http://www.nadinejarvis.com/projects/carbon_copies
The Victorians were, on the whole, far better people than any of you lot could ever hope to be. Know your betters, dogs!
@necro_penguin (14): It might be exciting to do that as long as one could return to the present. Is it creepy? uh yeah… But if you are into “Goth” I’d say you’d fit in quite well. But just remember, there’s no internet.
#11: Ebeneezer Scrooge. Very creepy
@oouchan (31): Can you imagine having to hold the person long enough to take a picture during that era?
Depending on environment, the process took between 15 minutes to an hour (sometimes more) to fully make the photograph. However, most of the ones I saw were posed in such a way that they weren’t supported by other people (dead weight is heavy after all, especially the longer you need to support it). Instead, they were sometimes propped up against an object or even had metal contraptions to pose them in ways that would be impossible without the brace. Even people who were alive would use metal braces for long exposure photographs.
The memento mori with more animated poses and their eyes propped open were the ones that disturbed me the most. I think I saw one (in a textbook) of a fellow casually lounging in a chair with an arm propped on a table. Even his fingers were positioned in such a way that you could imagine he might’ve occasionally drummed his fingers on the table with impatience had he been alive. I think my prof said his eyelids were propped open with small sticks or something, but it was done in such a way that I couldn’t tell how they did it. Quite creepy how… ALIVE… he appeared.
The Philippine National hero was said to be Jack The Ripper…
Jose Rizal went to London, then Jack the Ripper Started.
When Jose Rizal left london, J.T.R murders stopped.
They say that Jack the Ripper must have had some medical training, based on the way his victims were mutilated. Rizal, of course, was a doctor.
Jack the Ripper liked women, and so did Rizal.
And — this is so obvious that many overlooked it — Jose Rizal’s initials match those of Jack the Ripper!
ADDITION………….
It was said that Jose Rizal, was the father of Adolf Hitler, the result of an indiscretion with a prostitute in Vienna.