Breakfast Links: Week of October 16, 2017

• Advice for English ladies in India, 1847.
• A handy guide to vampires from the Royal Armouries.
• The spinster's numeration table : a guide for 19thc men.
• Blowing a cloud: pipes in Georgian London.
• Image: Forget Gatsby: F.Scott Fitzgerald's legacy is secured by this note in which he conjugates the verb "to cocktail."
• Striking images by portrait photographer Olive Edis, who was commissioned to document the women's war effort in France and Belgium during World War One.
• How Eleanor Roosevelt and Henrietta Nesbitt transformed the White House kitchen .
• Talking corpses : how even in death, women's testimony was considered less credible than men's.
• Conservation of Queen Victoria's petticoa t.
• Image: Print showing the interior of a fashionable London haberdashery in 1825.
• Among the rarest and oldest books in Horace Walpole's collection: two 16thc books of swan marks.
• How a gilded-age heiress became the " mother of forensic science ."
• The whimsical world of garden follies .
• Heroin, opium, mercury, and cocaine were among the ingredients in Victorian medicines that "soothed" the nation's children.
• Image: Women's Home Defence Corps , 1940.
• To dine at Kew: the meals of George III.
• Napoleon's "Kindle": the miniature traveling library that he took on military campaigns.
• First look at the newly restored York Mansion House .
• In Boston in 1765, there was one tavern for every 79 adult men; the importance of taverns .
• Just for fun: Sky-high modern paper wigs inspired by 18thc excess in fashion.
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Above: At Breakfast by Laurits Andersen Ring. Private collection
Published on October 21, 2017 14:00
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