My Love Letter Time Machine - Victorian History
A podcast by Ingrid Birchell Hughes
79 Episodes
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Baskets and Wotnots
Published: 26/03/2023 -
Matrimonial Superstitions
Published: 18/03/2023 -
Guns and Posies
Published: 12/03/2023 -
Polly finally snaps at Emma's behaviour
Published: 05/03/2023 -
Penny Gaffs, Parks, and Parenthood
Published: 25/02/2023 -
Picnicking, and Quickening
Published: 19/02/2023 -
Darnall Feast, and The Sheffield Flyer
Published: 12/02/2023 -
Trailer - Bringing 200 Victorian letters to life
Published: 27/12/2022 -
The canary caper (season 3 finale)
Published: 04/12/2022 -
Brass bands and travel plans (50th episode!)
Published: 27/11/2022 -
Wedding frills and carriage spills
Published: 19/11/2022 -
Can Janie forgive her 'longsuffering' Fred?
Published: 13/11/2022 -
"You both hurt and vex me!"
Published: 06/11/2022 -
Petty theft, and petty cash
Published: 29/10/2022 -
Janie forgets Fred’s birthday
Published: 22/10/2022 -
Whitsun wedding prep and wash days
Published: 15/10/2022 -
"if you had been there, it would've been an Eden"
Published: 08/10/2022 -
A tale of two sisters-in-law
Published: 24/09/2022 -
Paddle steamers, and public house palaver
Published: 17/09/2022 -
The roles of wives and wallpaper
Published: 10/09/2022
Shortlisted for the International Women's Podcast Awards 2024, 2023 + 2022, and the Independent Podcast Awards 2023. "Ingrid Birchell Hughes presents a charming take on family history via the love letters of her great-great-grandparents Fred and Jane, who exchanged 200 of them between their meeting and their marriage in Victorian Yorkshire. It’s a terrific insight into the lives of two witty working-class people and the times they lived in." — The Times. This is a true story, a love story, a family drama, all contained within Victorian social history. Ingrid has both sides (extremely rare) of a correspondence spanning 1878 to 1882 that her great great grandparents sent one another. They were ordinary folk, trying to make their way in the world, first in the city of Sheffield and later in the town of Middlesbrough. There is a whole 'cast' of characters too from Fred's industrial innovator of a boss who advanced the steel making process - and took Fred with him, to Jane's sister Emma, who had her life splashed across the newspapers through no fault of her own. Against the background of the dramas going around them, Fred and Jane overcame family objection to their match and through their own will and determination, made a new life together.