if you start to see posts on here again...i'm active but i'm not lol
not promising anything regular but i'll be here when the fancy strikes
and maybe one day i'll create a real tags page to make things easier to track but for now... :)
YOU ARE THE REASON

Janaina Medeiros

@theartofmadeline
Today's Document
KIROKAZE
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styofa doing anything
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
NASA
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Cosmic Funnies
Monterey Bay Aquarium
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Sade Olutola
Claire Keane

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@musicalcuriosity
if you start to see posts on here again...i'm active but i'm not lol
not promising anything regular but i'll be here when the fancy strikes
and maybe one day i'll create a real tags page to make things easier to track but for now... :)
Corcorans Win at the Bridge
Cocorans Win at the Bridge 25 Jan 1899, Wed The Sun (New York, New York) Newspapers.com
January 25th, 1899
Mrs. Corcoran and her two daughters get in to a tangle with Mrs. Shea.
People:
Mrs. Shea (Widow Shea)
Mrs. Corcoran
Rosie Corcoran
Mamie Corcoran
Policeman O'Brien
Policeman Doyle
Places:
Park Row
Elizabeth Cochran was born on May 5, 1864 in Cochran’s Mills, Pennsylvania. The town was founded by her father, Judge Michael Cochran. Elizabeth had fourteen siblings. Her father had ten children from his first marriage and five children from his second marriage to Elizabeth’s mother, Mary Jane Kennedy.
Michael Cochran’s rise from mill worker to mill owner to judge meant his family lived very comfortably. Unfortunately, he died when Elizabeth was only six years old and his fortune was divided among his many children, leaving Elizabeth’s mother and her children with a small fraction of the wealth they once enjoyed. Elizabeth’s mother soon remarried, but quickly divorced her second husband because of abuse, and relocated the family to Pittsburgh.
Elizabeth knew that she would need to support herself financially. At the age of 15, she enrolled in the State Normal School in Indiana, Pennsylvania, and an added an “e” to her last name to sound more distinguished. Her plan was to graduate and find a position as a teacher. However, after only a year and a half, Elizabeth ran out of money and could no longer afford the tuition. She moved back to Pittsburgh to help her mother run a boarding house.
In 1885, Elizabeth read an article in the Pittsburgh Dispatch that argued a woman’s place was in the home, “to be a helpmate to a man.” She strongly disagreed with this opinion and sent an angry letter to the editor anonymously signed “Lonely Orphan Girl.”
The newspaper’s editor, George A. Madden, was so impressed with the letter that he published a note asking the “Lonely Orphan Girl” to reveal her name. Elizabeth marched into the Dispatch offices and introduced herself. Madden immediately offered her a job as a columnist. Shortly after her first article was published, Elizabeth changed her pseudonym from “Lonely Orphan Girl” to “Nellie Bly,” after a popular song.
Elizabeth positioned herself as an investigative reporter. She went undercover at a factory where she experienced unsafe working conditions, poor wages, and long hours. Her honest reporting about the horrors of workers’ lives attracted negative attention from local factory owners. Elizabeth’s boss did not want to anger Pittsburgh’s elite and quickly reassigned her as a society columnist.
To escape writing about women’s issues on the society page, Elizabeth volunteered to travel to Mexico. She lived there as an international correspondent for the Dispatch for six months. When she returned, she was again assigned to the society page and promptly quit in protest.
Elizabeth hoped the massive newspaper industry of New York City would be more open-minded to a female journalist and left Pittsburgh. Although several newspapers turned down her application because she was a woman, she was eventually given the opportunity to write for Joseph Pulitzer’s New York World.
In her first act of “stunt” journalism for the World, Elizabeth pretended to be mentally ill and arranged to be a patient at New York’s insane asylum for the poor, Blackwell’s Island. For ten days Elizabeth experienced the physical and mental abuses suffered by patients.
Elizabeth’s report about Blackwell’s Island earned her a permanent position as an investigative journalist for the World. She published her articles in a book titled 10 Days in A Mad House. In it, she explained that New York City invested more money into care for the mentally ill after her articles were published. She was satisfied to know that her work led to change.
Activist journalists like Elizabeth—commonly known as muckrakers—were an important part of reform movements. Elizabeth’s investigations brought attention to inequalities and often motivated others to take action. She uncovered the abuse of women by male police officers, identified an employment agency that was stealing from immigrants, and exposed corrupt politicians. She also interviewed influential and controversial figures, including Emma Goldman in 1893.
The most famous of Elizabeth’s stunts was her successful seventy-two-day trip around the world in 1889, for which she had two goals. First, she wanted to beat the record set in the popular fictional world tour from Jules Verne’s Around the World in Eighty Days. Second, she wanted to prove that women were capable of traveling just as well as—if not better than—men. Elizabeth traveled light, taking only the dress she wore, a cape, and a small traveler’s bag. She challenged the stereotypical assumption that women could not travel without many suitcases, outfit changes, and vanity items. Her world tour made her a celebrity. After her return, she toured the country as a lecturer. Her image was used on everything from playing cards to board games. She recounted her adventures in her final book, Around the World in 72 Days.
In 1895, Elizabeth retired from writing and married Robert Livingston Seaman. Robert was a millionaire who owned the Iron Clad Manufacturing Company and the American Steel Barrel Company. When Robert died in 1904, Elizabeth briefly took over as president of his companies.
In 1911, she returned to journalism as a reporter for the New York Evening Journal. She covered a number of national news stories, including the Woman Suffrage Parade of 1913 in Washington, D.C. Elizabeth often referred to suffrage in her articles, arguing that women were as capable as men in all things. During World War I, she traveled to Europe as the first woman to report from the trenches on the front line.
Although Elizabeth never regained the level of stardom she experienced after her trip around the world, she continued to use her writing to shed light on issues of the day. She died of pneumonia on January 27, 1922.
Liz, The Newswoman
Liz, The Newswoman, Used Her Fists 06 Sep 1899, Wed The Brooklyn Citizen (Brooklyn, New York) Newspapers.com
September 6th, 1899
A Brooklyn news-seller, Liz, gets in to a fight with a man, who was friends with a man she had previously fought. The first fight occurred when Liz came to the defense of a young newsboy.
People:
"Liz" (alias of newswoman, Mrs. Hartenia Monteverde)
Thomas Higgins (age 31, no relation to our beloved Racetrack)
Ned (a newsboy)
Connors (Ned's bully, a grown man)
Policeman Doherty
Magistrate Kramer
Places:
Lee Avenue Court
39 Taylor Street (Liz's residence)
Eastern District Ferries
Bedford Avenue Police Station
846 Manhattan Avenue (Thomas's residence)
Girl Groups of the 1960s
The Marvelettes
The Supremes
The Ronettes
Patti LaBelle and The Bluebells
The Angels
Martha and the Vandellas
The Dixie Cups
The Shangri-Las
The Ikettes
The Shirelles
The Raelettes
The Crystals
Les Mis + June 1832 uprising map masterpost
All my June Uprising related map posts (so far)
(Well at least all the ones based mainly on Les Mis)
General events and locations:
4.10: The 5th of June 1832 (part 1: agitation before the 5th)
4.10: The 5th of June 1832 (part 2: the funeral procession)
4.10: The 5th of June 1832 (part 3: the outbreak of the riot)
4.10.4. The Ebullitions of Former Days
The Morgue (a post I hijacked)Â
Routes taken by various Les Mis characters:
4.11: The Atom Fraternizes With the HurricaneÂ
4.13. Marius Enters The Shadow
The Corinthe barricade:
The Barricade & Corinthe (maps)
The Barricades & Corinthe (illustrations)
The Barricades & Corinthe (the modern location)
Corinthe in Atlas Vasserot
Saint-Merry Barricades Map Masterpost
Mapping the historical barricade site near the Saint-Merry church which served as inspiration for Les Misérables.
Part 1: Introduction
Part 2: Map Sources (links)
Source Maps: The Church
Source Maps: The Main Barricade Area
Part 3: Hôtel Jabacq, House no. 30, Café Leclercq
Part 4: Café Rossignol, Rue Maubuée
Part 5: The Field Hospital
• Day dress.
Designer/Maker: James Galanos (1924-2016)
Date: 1955-1959
Medium: Gray and yellow windowpane plaid cotton.
Does anybody just have a large bank of people’s names in canon era France? First names, last names–I’d love to just have a massive list of them. I have no ability to pull French names out of nowhere when an extra shows up.
Here you go, a ranked listing of the top 500 or so names for men and for women! As of 1900, but of course that’s still going to be mostly people from the 19th century.:P give me a minute and I’ll try to find something more specifically canon-eraish!
Children licking blocks of ice during a heat wave in New York City, July 1911.
What BBC Les Mis costumes should have looked like
Cosette’s wedding dress in the tv series:
In reality:
Something like this
Or this:
Fantine’s dress in the tv series:
In reality:
something like this
or this:
Or this
Fantine’s second dress in the tv series:
In reality:
Something like this:
Or this:
Cosette in the tv series:
In reality:
something like this:
or this
Or this
Cosette’s dress in the tv series:
In reality:
something like this:
Or this:
Cosette in the tv series:
I don’t actually know how she should exactly look like, but I assume that she would have worn something black (instead of brown) and (I’m sure about this) cover your head girl! You are in the convent, you are not allowed to go bareheaded! (same thing is with all the women in this series: cover your head!) (Looking at you Fantine especially)
Enjolras in the BBC series:
In reality:
something like this
or this
Courfeyrac in the tv series:
In reality:
Something like this
or this
Probably I do another post later when I find more inaccurate costumes in this tv series.
I would only like to add this other Very Good potential canon-era Look for CourfeyracÂ
(and not only because my heart is consumed with wishing that someone with Vision would cast him in a Young Dumas biopic RIGHT NOW, it’s just a good Look )
The Elizabeth Home for Girls
In honor of @newsies-girls-week​, I have finally gotten around to making a post about the Children’s Aid Society’s girl’s lodging house- The Elizabeth Home for Girls.
The Elizabeth Home for Girls was opened on December 13th, 1892 (the image above was taken in 1895), and was located at No. 307 East Twelfth Street in Manhattan. As previously stated, it was owned and operated by the Children’s Aid Society (the same group who owned and ran the Duane Street Manhattan Newsboy’s Lodging House). It was the place where a young newsgirl or orphan without any other family likely would have stayed- girls did not stay in the same lodging house as the boys under any circumstances.
The home was built to replace the previous girl’s lodging house, which had been established in 1863 and was located at No. 21 or 27 St. Mark’s Place in Manhattan. It had four floors, each with a specific layout (which we’ll get into in a moment) and had about 58 beds in all.
The girl’s home was a bit different than the boy’s lodging house in that the girls who lived there were young adults as well as children and teenagers. The 1900 census lists the lodgers as being mostly between the ages of 14 and 21, in contrast to the boy’s lodging house which prohibited boys over the age of 18 from living there. The girl’s home was also intended to teach the girl’s specific trades, such as laundry, sewing, dressmaking, or typing. As such, the home had facilities for the girls to learn each of these skills.
The cellar of the home contained the trunk room, storage room, and the hot-water heater and water pump to supply hot and cold running water throughout the home. The basement (one floor above the cellar) contained two dining rooms, the kitchen, the lavatory, two bathrooms, the laundry room for the girl’s clothes, and a large room for ironing, washing, and drying “custom work” (the girls who lived in the home took in sewing and dressmaking orders as well as laundry orders to make money).
The first floor contained the classrooms for typing and sewing machine classes and a fitting room for dressmaking, as well as the home’s main office, a reading room, and a waiting/reception room. The second floor contained the matron’s room, a sitting room for the girls, two dormitories, and two bathrooms. The third floor contained five smaller bedrooms, one larger dormitory, a lavatory, a bathroom, and a workroom for dressmaking. And, finally, the fourth floor contained five dormitories, two smaller bedrooms, and three single rooms.
Not all of the girls who lived at the Elizabeth Home were newsgirls or match girls, although some very well could have been. Almost all of them were orphans or children who had been abandoned by their families, however, and many of them eventually left the city on orphan trains to go west and be adopted by farm families there.
The building itself was expanded in 1901 by the CAS when they bought and annexed the building next door, and in 1930 the CAS sold the home. However, unlike with the Duane Street Lodging House which was eventually demolished, the building in which the Elizabeth Home for Girls was once located is still standing today! The inside was gutted in the 1980s and I believe it’s just a private residence now, but it was named a landmark in 2008 and the outside of the building remains largely unchanged.
I hope everyone enjoyed this post, and that you learned something new form it! You may go forward now fully equipped to write about the girl’s lodging house in Manhattan in 1899, and if you would like to learn more about the boy’s lodging house in 1899 you can find the post I wrote about it here.
Sources:
http://nineduane.queenitsy.com/eliz.html
https://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/08/realestate/08scap.html
Westminster, London 1868
Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna of Russia (1895-1918), eldest child of the last Tsar of Russia photographed in 1906.
HISTORY IN COLOR
Scheele’s Green
RGB: (71, 136, 0)
Closest Pantone match: 315-6340 TPG
Invented in 1775 by chemist Carl Wilhelm Scheele, Scheele’s Green is an artificial pigment synthesized from sodium carbonate, arsenious oxide, and copper sulfate. It reached the peak of its popularity around the mid-19th century, when the discovery of various artificial dyes made bright colors in clothing and décor both desirable and available to a wider public. The durability and brilliancy of Scheele’s Green compared to the previously-used copper carbonate pigments made it a popular choice for tinting wallpaper, fabric, candles, children’s toys, and even sweets.
  However, due to its arsenic base, Scheele’s Green proved to be highly poisonous. Products dyed with it would release toxic acid, dust or gas when exposed to conditions such as heat, damp or mold. Direct contact with the dye would slowly poison those who worked with it, causing open sores, yellowed nails and a greenish tint to the skin. Among the last things nineteen-year-old false flower maker Matilda Scheurer could tell her doctor in a widely publicized account was that “everything she looked at was green”. Meanwhile, pre-Raphaelite artist and wallpaper designer William Morris insisted that miners suffering from arsenic poisoning were simply “bitten by witch fever”.
  The color began to fall out of favor as the gruesome accounts of death and illness piled up. By the end of the 19th century, arsenic-based dyes were replaced by the safer cobalt green. A motion was drafted in Britain to outlaw the use of arsenic to dye household products, but it was never passed.
Robe à la française ca. 1785
From Enchères Sadde via Interencheres
This is an interesting list of 18th and 19th century nicknames and the given names they originated from.Â
Nan could be a nickname for Ann, Anna, or Ellen, while Polly could be a nickname for Mary.