When John Styles was researching his book about everyday fashion in the 18th century, The Dress of the People, he found that very little of the clothing of the poor people has survived. He was told about the Foundling Museum in London. It is the Museum of the Foundling Hospital, found in 1739, London's first home for abandoned children. The Foundling Hospital no longer exists, but its work is being carried on by the children's charity Coram, making it the oldest children's charity in Britain.
Thousands of babies were abandoned and left at the Foundling Hospital. The exhibition Threads of Feeling concentrates on the period 1740 - 1770. Although many of the babies were just left, with no care for their welfare, some of the mothers (most of them could not read and write) left with their children various little tokens of love, many of them small scraps of fabrics or ribbons, as in a hope that this would identify the child sometime in the future, should they be able to claim the child back, which rarely happened. The staff at the hospital kept these tokens, or a piece of child's clothing, attaching them to the child's registration form and these were kept as part of the hospital's ledgers.
With some 5,000 pieces, the ledgers have become the largest archives of 18th century textiles in this country, as many of the pieces came from the mother's dress or an adult clothing.
This has blown me away ....such a gut wrenching thing all those poor mothers and babies....i would love to go too and really thinking about it as its quite near Great Ormond St Hospital which i know very well....very very interesting.
Thank you for this article, Jennie. So moving!
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely fascinating - the exhibition must be extremely moving. How tragic for those mothers and babies - I do hope you get the chance to visit someday.
ReplyDeleteJennie, I have seen these little tokens on t.v.Oh how sad.We just can't imagine the pain and loss for these mothers and their babies.
ReplyDeleteThankyou for this post.
Thankyou for your comment on my blog too.
Judyxx
That must be some exhibition Jennie, tears in my eyes just thinking about
ReplyDeleteall those scraps and what those Mother's had to go through. I think that was a time when famine was pretty big since the weather was really cold and there was not enough food. I read a book about it and for several hundred years there was not enough food....xox Corrine