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The Victorian poor lived crowded into small and miserable homes where they often worked and slept in filthy conditions. Work could be both physically demanding and hazardous to health, like fur pulling - constantly breathing in and choking on fluff which hung in the air. But, like a lot of working class people in the 19th Century, the alternative to not working was to starve. In this eyewitness account, find out how they earned a living, the appalling conditions in which they worked, and how, despite all this, everyday family life carried on. 📣 JOIN to support the channel as a Member: / @factfeast 👍 Support the channel (donations): Send a Super Thanks on the video page Do you like history? SUBSCRIBE and click the bell icon to keep up-to-date. Please support the channel by sharing this video on social media 📲 ✅ It really helps the channel grow so we can bring you more content to watch 📺 Thank you. ▶️ The Brutal Reality of 1800s Homeworking: • The Brutal Reality of 1800s Homeworki... ▶️ Working to Death in Victorian London: • Working to Death in Victorian London ... ▶️ Worst Jobs in Victorian History (Playlist): • Worst Jobs in Victorian History ▶️ Victorian documentaries (Playlist): • Victorians ▶️ Edwardian Documentaries (Playlist): • Edwardians ▶️ Criminal Past (Playlist): • Criminal Past ▶️ Victorian workhouses (Playlist): • Victorian Workhouses ▶️ American Slums and Tenements (Playlist): • American Slums and Tenements Credits: Narration - markmanningmedia.com CC BY - A wife asking her husband 'When will you get rid of the alcohol, Illustration depicting cramped and squalid housing conditions, Specimens from Mr Punch's Industrial Exhibition of 1850, The Sewer Hunter, View of a Dust yard by Wellcome Collection CC BY-SA - Shop Sign, Chapel market, Islington by Jim Osley - geograph.org.uk #VictorianLondon #VictorianDocumentary #VictorianLondonDocumentary #VictorianEraDocumentary #VictorianLife #Victorian #19thCentury #VictorianEra #VictorianSlums #HistoryDocumentary #FactFeast