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Step into Victorian London's most infamous street. November 1889. Gas lamps flicker. The Ripper murders are one year past. And a social reformer named Charles Booth is about to change history with a map. Join us for a first-person walk down Whitechapel Road on a Friday evening in 1889. Meet the lamplighter earning 16 shillings a week. The flower seller standing in the cold. The Jewish tailors racing against sunset. The dock workers stumbling home exhausted. Experience the fog, the gaslights, and the stark reality that shocked Victorian Britain into creating the welfare state. This is history you can walk through. This is Charles Booth's poverty map... brought to life. 🕰️ CHAPTERS: 00:00 - Opening: London, 1889 00:57 - Scene 1: Aldgate Twilight 01:13 - Scene 2: The Lamplighter 01:32 - Scene 3: The Jewish Tailor's Shop 01:54 - Scene 4: The Pub 02:15 - Scene 5: Side Alley Glimpse 02:32 - Scene 6: Flower Seller 02:45 - Scene 7: Workers Returning Home 03:03 - Scene 8: Evening Settles 📚 ABOUT CHARLES BOOTH'S MAP: Charles Booth (1840-1916) spent 17 years surveying London's poverty, documenting 4 million lives. His color-coded maps became evidence that poverty wasn't moral failure, it was systemic. His work directly led to old age pensions (1908), housing reform, labor protections, and the foundation of Britain's welfare state. 🔗 LEARN MORE: View Booth's original maps: https://booth.lse.ac.uk "Life and Labour of the People in London" - Charles Booth 👍 If you enjoyed this immersive journey into Victorian London, please LIKE and SUBSCRIBE for more historical reconstructions! 💬 COMMENT: What surprised you most about 1889 Whitechapel? What other historical maps should we bring to life?