Great Excavations! Digging Charles Dickens' Workhouse with Sir Tony Robinson
Subtitled Series and Documentaries
•
47m
Sir Tony Robinson comes to History Hit to present a special film about a remarkable excavation in central London, the workhouse that inspired Charles Dickens to write his famous novel, “Oliver Twist”.
In the middle of the capital, archaeologists are digging deep to find out more about the lives and deaths of the poorest of the poor, the inmates of the workhouse. Behind the workhouse building lies a cemetery where they were buried - now it is being carefully excavated as the whole site is being redeveloped. It’s a rare opportunity to investigate the treatment of London’s destitute in the late 18th and 19th centuries - a story that was repeated in great cities across the world as people poured into them in search of work.
Tony has a special connection with this story - not only has been making archaeology films for decades, he also appeared as a child actor in the first stage production of the musical, “Oliver!”. He knows digging and he knows Dickens! He explores the finds from the excavations, from humble clay pipes to dissected skeletons revealing how dead inmates could be anatomised in the name of medical science.
This film combines unique archaeology, as well as social and literary history - the care of the poor, how their plight was brought to the attention of the public and the extreme challenges created by burgeoning cities. Dickens was writing about his times, but like all good history, the heart of it remains relevant today.
______________
To find out more, do check out the websites of some of our expert contributors:
Here is a useful website with information about the whole project - https://middlesexannex.com/
Peter Higginbotham's excellent workhouse website has a wealth of information - https://www.workhouses.org.uk/
Emily Bell - https://ahc.leeds.ac.uk/english/staff/3258/dr-emily-bell
Emily also runs the Dickensian Journal
https://www.dickensfellowship.org/index.php/read/the-dickensian
You can find out more about Paul Carter's fascinating work into the archives left by workhouse inmates - https://blog.nationalarchives.gov.uk/author/pcarter/
Emma Griffin - https://www.emmagriffin.info/index.php
Up Next in Subtitled Series and Documentaries
-
Mary Tudor - Real Fake History
On November 17th 1558, Mary Tudor, Queen Mary I of England, died - the end of a short and still controversial reign. But what if history had been different, what if she didn’t die in 1558, but lived longer to reimpose Roman Catholicism on England and forge a long lasting Anglo-Spanish alliance?
... -
The Forgotten Battle of World War I
This documentary sees military historian Alex Churchill travelling through Germany and the Belgian battlefields, retracing the opening weeks of the First World War - a blood battle that took place before the trenches, barbed wire and gas we typically think of when we think "First World War" - ins...
-
Battle of Bosworth - Battlefield Dete...
Matt Lewis travels to the Bosworth Battlefield Heritage Centre in Leicestershire to meet Richard Mackinder, an archaeologist who has spent the last two decades scouring the earth around the site where King Richard III and Henry Tudor clashed in one of the most famous battles in English history.
...
20 Comments