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In 1720s London, the streets reeked not only of coal smoke and open sewers—but of cheap gin. What began as a political move under William III of England to weaken French brandy imports spiraled into one of the worst public health disasters in British history. With regulations stripped away, anyone could distill spirits. The result? Toxic, high-proof gin flooding the poorest districts of the city. At the height of the crisis, one in four houses in some neighborhoods sold gin. Crime soared. Families collapsed. The death rate overtook the birth rate. Women and children were among the hardest hit, earning gin the infamous nickname “Mother’s Ruin.” The horror was immortalized in 1751 by artist William Hogarth in his shocking print Gin Lane, contrasting it with Beer Street—a visual attack on the epidemic that helped sway public opinion. Parliament’s early attempts to control the crisis failed, sparking riots and chaos. But eventually, stricter laws curbed consumption and reshaped London forever—leaving scars that influenced urban policing, public health policy, and even literature. This is the story of how a city nearly collapsed into addiction… and how it clawed its way back. ---------------------------------------------------------- ⚠️ DISCLAIMER – AI-Generated Video This video contains AI-generated visuals created to reconstruct historical environments, locations, and daily life based on available historical research. While events, settings, and details are grounded in documented sources, some imagery, dialogue, and scenes are interpretive reconstructions intended for educational and illustrative purposes, not exact recordings of history. ---------------------------------------------------------- 👍 If you enjoyed this video If you enjoy hyper-realistic historical reconstructions and immersive storytelling, subscribe for more journeys into the past.