Tag: women’s history

  • Epistolary Empire: Letter-writing and the British Empire at Home in the Nineteenth Century

    Epistolary Empire: Letter-writing and the British Empire at Home in the Nineteenth Century

    By Molly Groarke, @Molly_Groarke Agnes Acland was nineteen years old in 1870, when her brothers left Britain to travel overseas. Her eldest brother Charlie, heir to the family fortune and baronetcy, departed on a world tour, travelling as far as Australia and New Zealand. Gib, the brother she was closest to, had a successful military…

  • A Nazarene Christmas

    A Nazarene Christmas

    Be David Martin (Bluesky: @davidmartin8293.bsky.social) The bell tolls the hour and the murmuring crowds shuffle into the grand porticoes of St. John’s Cathedral. Twinkling string lights illumine the way, punctuated by bushy, glowing Christmas trees, all aflutter in the warm midnight air. Soon enough, the the scent of cashew nut- strewn fruitcake and milky coffee…

  • Bored Bluestockings and Frivolous Flirts: The Necessary Adaptations of Early Female University Students in Ireland

    Bored Bluestockings and Frivolous Flirts: The Necessary Adaptations of Early Female University Students in Ireland

    By Aoife O’Leary McNeice (@aolmcn) Female students were admitted to Queen’s College Cork (QCC) – now University College Cork – Ireland in 1886. One might imagine that these women were innovative and progressive, as they challenged the boundaries placed upon their gender by entering the predominantly male space of the University. But despite their pursuit of higher…