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The London Journal
A Review of Metropolitan Society Past and Present
Volume 20, 1995 - Issue 2: Twentieth Anniversary Issue 1975-1995
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Articles

Modern London 1850–1939

Pages 56-90 | Published online: 18 Jul 2013

BIBLIOGRAPHY 1 General surveys, collections of essays, etc.

  • G. Alderman and C. Holmes, Outsiders and Outcasts: Essays in Honour of William J. Fishman (Duckworth, 1993).
  • M. Charlot and R. Marx, Londres, 1851-1901: L'Ere Victorienne ou le Triomphe des Inégalités ( Paris, Editions Autrement, 1990).
  • H. J. Dyos and M. Wolff, The Victorian City: Images and Realities (2 vols., Routledge and KeganPaul, 1973).
  • D. E. C. Eversley, ‘Searching for London's Lost Soul, or How Not to Get from the There and Thento the Here and Now’, London Journal, 1 (1975), 103-117.
  • D. Feldman and G. Stedman Jones, Metropolis: London. Histories and Representations since 1800 (Routledge, 1989).
  • P. L. Garside, ‘West End, East End: London, 1890-1940’ in A. Sutcliffe, ed., Metropolis, 1890-1940(Mansell, 1984).
  • P. L. Garside, ‘London and the Home Counties’, in (F. M. L. Thompson, ed., The Cambridge SocialHistory of Britain, 1750-1950, vol. I, Regions and Communities (Cambridge, Cambridge Univer-sity Press, 1990), 471-539.
  • R. Porter, London. A Social History (Hamish Hamilton, 1994).
  • P. J. Waller, Town, City and Nation. England, 1850-1914 (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1983).
  • G. Weightman and S. Humphries, The Making of Modern London, >1815-1914 (Sidgwick and Jack-son, 1983).
  • G. Weightman and S. Humphries, The Making of Modern London, >1914-1939 (Sidgwick & Jack-son, 1984).

2 Population, demography and health

  • P. J. Atkins, ‘White Poison? The Social Consequences of Milk Consumption in London, 1850-1939’, Social History of Medicine, 5 (1992), 207–228.
  • H. T. Bernstein, ‘The Mysterious Disappearance of Edwardian London Fog’, London Journal, 1 (1975), 189–206.
  • V. Berridge, ‘East End Opium Dens and Narcotic Use in Britain’, London Journal, 4 (1978), 3–28.
  • V. Berridge and G. Edwards, Opium and the People. Opiate Use in Nineteenth-Century England (Allen Lane, 1981).
  • W. F. Bynum and R. Porter, eds., Living and Dying in London (Wellcome Institute for the Historyof Medicine, Medical History Supplement no. 11, 1991).
  • M. J. Daunton, ‘Health and Housing in Victorian London’, in W. F. Bynum and R. Porter, eds., Living and Dying in London (Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, Medical History Supplement no. 11,1991), 126-144.
  • E. Fox, 'The Jewish Maternity Home and Sick Room Helps Society, 1895-1939: a Reply to Lara Marks', Social History of Medicine, 4 (1991), 117-122.
  • C. Hamlin, ‘Politics and Germ Theories in Victorian Britain: the Metropolitan Water Commissionsof 1867-9 and 1892-3’, in R. M. McLeod, ed., Specialists, Administrators and Professionals, 1860-1919 (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1988), 110-127.
  • A. Hardy, ‘Smallpox in London: Factors in the Decline of the Disease in the Nineteenth Century’,Medical History, 27 (1983), 111–138.
  • A. Hardy, ‘Water and the Search for Public Health in London in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries’, Medical History, 28 (1984), 250–282.
  • A. Hardy, ‘Diagnosis, Death and Diet: The Case of London, 1750-1909’, Journal of Interdiscipli-nary History, 18, (1988), 387–402.
  • A. Hardy, ‘Urban Famine or Urban Crisis? Typhus in the Victorian City’, Medical History, 32 (1988), 401–425.
  • A. Hardy, ‘Public Health and the Expert: The London Medical Officers of Health, 1856-1900’, in R. M. McLeod, ed., Specialists, Administrators and Professionals, 1860-1919 (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1988), 128-142.
  • A. Hardy, ‘Parish Pump to Private Pipes: London's Water Supply in the Nineteenth Century’, in W. F. Bynum and R. Porter, eds., Living and Dying in London (Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, Medical History Supplement no. 11 (1991), 76-93.
  • A. Hardy, The Epidemic Streets. Infectious Disease and the Rise of Preventive Medicine, 1856-1900 (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1993).
  • J. D. Hirst, ‘Vision Testing in London: A Rehearsal for the School Medical Service’, Journal of Educational Administration and History, 14 (1982), 23–29.
  • G. Kearns, ‘Cholera, Nuisances and Environmental Management in Islington, 1830-1855’, in W. F. Bynum and R. Porter, eds., Living and Dying in London (Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, Medical History Supplement no. 11, 1991), 94-125.
  • C. -L. Lacassagne and N. Davie, ‘Luxe, Tintamarre et Puanteur’, in M. Charlot and R. Marx, eds., Londres, 1851-1901: L'Ere Victorienne ou le Triomphe des Inigalities (Paris, Editions Autrement, 1990), 57-69.
  • W. J. Luckin, ‘The Final Catastrophe — Cholera in London, 1866’, Medical History, 21 (1977), 32–42.
  • W. J. Luckin, ‘Evaluating the Sanitary Revolution: Typhus and Typhoid in London, 1851-1900’, in R. Woods and J. Woodward, eds., Urban Disease and Mortality in Nineteenth-Century England (Batsford, 1984), 102-119.
  • W. J. Luckin, Pollution and Control. A Social History of the Thames in the Nineteenth Century (Bristol, Adam Hilger, 1986).
  • H. Malchow, ‘Free Water: The Public Drinking Fountain Movement and Victorian London’, Lon-don Journal, 4 (1978), 181–203.
  • L. Marks, ‘Dear Old Mother Levy's: The Jewish Maternity Home and Sick Room Helps Society, 1895-1939’, Social History of Medicine, 3 (1990), 61–88.
  • L. Marks, ‘Ethnicity, Religion and Health’, Social History of Medicine, 4 (1991), 123–126.
  • L. Marks, Model Mothers: Jewish Mothers and Maternity Provision in East London, 1870-1939 (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1994).
  • L. Marks, —They're Magicians": Midwives, Doctors and Hospitals. Women's Experiences of Child-birth in East London and Woolwich in the Interwar Years', Oral History, 23 (1995), 46-53.
  • M. K. Matossian, ‘Death in London, 1750-1909’, Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 16 (1985), 183–198.
  • G. Mooney, ‘Did London Pass the “Sanitary Test"? Seasonal Infant Mortality in London, 1870-1914’, Journal of Historical Geography, 20 (1994), 158–174.
  • M. J. Peterson, The Medical Profession in Mid-Victorian London (Berkeley, University of Califor-nia Press, 1978).
  • E K. Prochaska, Philanthropy and the Hospitals of London: The King's Fund, 1897-1990 (Oxford, The Clarendon Press, 1992).
  • G. Rivett, The Development of the London Hospital System, 1823-1982 (King Edward's Hospital Fund for London, 1986).
  • J.-L. Robert and Jay Winter, ‘Un Aspect Ignore de la Demographie Urbaine de la Grande Guerre: le Drame des Vieux a Berlin, Londres et Paris’, Annales de la Demographie Historique (1993), 303-328.
  • J. Sheldrake, ‘The L.C.C. Hospital Service’ in A. Saint, ed., Politics and the People of London. The London County Council, 1889-1965 ( Hambledon Press, 1989), 187-198.
  • M. Thompson, ‘Social Policy and the Management of the Problem of Mental Deficiency in Inter-War London’. London Journal, 18 (1993), 129–142.
  • Jay Winter, J. Lawrence and J. Ariouat, ‘The Impact of the Great War on Infant Mortality in Lon-don’, Anna/es de la Demographie Historique (1993), 329-353.
  • A. S. Wohl, Endangered Lives: Public Health in Victorian Britain (Dent, 1983).
  • R. Woods, ‘Social Class Variations in the Decline of Marital Fertility in Late Nineteenth-Century London’, Geografiska Annaler, 66 (1984), 29–38.

3 The Metropolitan economy

  • P. J. Atkins, ‘The Growth of London's Railway Milk Trade, c.1845-1914’, Journal of Transport History, 4 (1978), 208–226.
  • P. J. Atkins, ‘London's Intra-Urban Milk Supply, c.1790-1914’, Transactions of the Institute ofBritish Geographers New Series, 2 (1977), 383-399.
  • P. J. Atkins, ‘The Retail Milk Trade in London, c.1790-1914’, Economic History Review, 33 (1980),522–537.
  • F. Bédarida, ‘Urban Growth and Social Structure in Nineteenth-Century Poplar’, London Journal, 1 (1975), 159–188.
  • N. H. Buck, ‘The Analysis of State Intervention in Nineteenth-Century Cities: the Case of Munici-pal Labour Policy in East London, 1886-1914’, in M. Dear and A. J. Scott, eds., Urbanization and Urban Planning in Capitalist Society ( Methuen, 1981), 501-535.
  • C. Chariot, ‘Harrods, l'Autel de la Mode’, in M. Chariot and R. Marx, eds., Londres, 1851-1901,L'Ere Victorienne ou le Triomphe des Inegalités ( Paris, Editions Autrement, 76), 76-81.
  • N. Cohen, ‘Dr Thomas and the Milkman’, in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939(Jewish Historical Society of England, 1981), 53-58.
  • P. Damesick, ‘The Inner City Economy in Industrial and Post-Industrial London’, London Journal,7 (1981), 23–35.
  • D. R. Green, ‘Street Trading in London: A Case Study of Casual Labour, 1830-1860’, in J. H. Johnson and C. Pooley, The Structure of Nineteenth Century Cities ( Croom Helm, 129), 129-152.
  • D. R. Green, 'Distance to Work in Victorian London: A Case Study of Henry Poole, Bespoke Tailors', Business History, 30 (1988), 179-194.
  • D. R. Green, ‘The Metropolitan Economy, Continuity and Change, 1800-1939’, in K. Hoggart and D. R. Green, eds., London. A New Metropolitan Geography (Edward Arnold, 8), 8-33.
  • D. R. Green, Economic Change and Poverty in London, 1790-1870 (Aldershot, Scolar Press, 1995).
  • P. G. Hall, The Industries of London since 1861 (Hutchinson, 1962).
  • P. Kirkham, The London Furniture Trade, 1700-1870 (London, Furniture History Society, 1988).
  • P. Kirkham, R. Mace and J. Porter, Furnishing the World: The East London Furniture Trade, 1830-1980 (Journeyman Press, 1987).
  • J. Lawrence, M. Dean and J. -L. Robert, ‘The Outbreak of War and the Urban Economy: Paris, Berlin and London in 1914’, Economic History Review, 45 (1992), 564–593.
  • C. H. Lee, ‘The Service Sector, Regional Specialization and Economic Growth in the Victorian Economy’, Journal of Historical Geography, 10 (1984), 139–155.
  • C. H. Lee, ‘Regional Growth and Structural Change in Victorian Britain’, Economic History Re-view, 34 (1981), 438–452.
  • P. E. Malcolmson, ‘Getting a Living in the Slums of Victorian Kensington’, London Journal, 1 (1975), 28–55.
  • J. Marriott, “West Ham: London's Industrial Centre and Gateway to the World”. I, Industrialisa-tion, 1840-1910', London Journal, 13 (1988), 121-142.
  • J. Marriott, —West Ham: London's Industrial Centre and Gateway to the World”. II, Stabilization and Decline 1910-1939', London Journal, 14 (1989), 43-58.
  • R. Perren, The Meat Trade in Britain, 1840-1914 (Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1978).
  • G. Phillips and N. Whiteside, Casual Labour: The Unemployed Question in the Port Transport Industry, 1880-1970 (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1985).
  • D. Rose, ‘Accumulation versus Reproduction in the Inner City: The Recurrent Crisis of London Revisited’, in M. Dear and A. J. Scott, eds., Urbanization and Urban Planning in Capitalist Society (Methuen, 339), 339-381.
  • J. Schmiechen, Sweated Industries and Sweated Labour: The London Clothing Trades, 1860-1914 (Croom Helm, 1984).
  • R. Scola, Feeding the Victorian City. The Food Supply of Manchester, 1770-1870 (Manchester, Manchester University Press, 1992).
  • M. A. Shepherd, ‘How Petticoat Lane became a Jewish Market’, in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical Society of England, 125), 125-131.
  • J. White, Penniless and Without Food”. Unemployment in London Between the Wars', in G. Alderman and C. Holmes, eds., Outsiders and Outcasts: Essays in Honour of William J. Fishman (Duckworth, 119), 119-135.
  • J. F. Wilson, Ferranti and the British Electrical Industry, 1864-1930 (Manchester, Manchester University Press, 1988).

4 The City of London and the financial sector

  • V. Belcher, The City Parochial Foundation, 1891-1991, a Trust for the Poor of London (Aldershot, Scolar Press, 1991).
  • Y. Cassis, Banquiers de la City a l'Epoque Edouardienne, 1890-1914 (Geneva, Librairie Droz,1984), translated as City Bankers, 1890-1914 (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1994).
  • Y. Cassis, La City de Londres, 1870-1914 (Paris, Belin, 1987).
  • Y. Cassis, ‘Financial Elites in Three European Centres: London, Paris, Berlin, 1880s-1930s’, Busi- ness History, 33 (1991), 53–71.
  • M. J. Daunton, ‘Inheritance and Succession in the City of London in the Nineteenth Century’,Business History, 30 (1988), 269–286.
  • M. J. Daunton, ‘Firm and Family in the City of London in the Nineteenth Century, the Case of F.G. Dalgety’, Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research, 62 (1989), 154–177.
  • M. J. Daunton, ‘The City and Industry, the Nature of British Capitalism’, in G. Alderman and C. Holmes, eds., Outsiders and Outcasts: Essays in Honour of William J. Fishman (Duckworth, 185), 185-206.
  • A. C. Howe, ‘Free Trade and the City of London, c.1830-1870’, History, 77 (1992), 391–410.
  • G. K. Ingham, Capitalism Divided? The City and Industry in British Social Development (Basing- stoke, Macmillan, 1984).
  • D. Kynaston, ‘A Changing Workscape: The City of London since the 1940s’, London Journal, 13 (1988), 99–105.
  • D. Kynaston, The City of London, I. A World of its Own, 1815-1890 (Chatto & Windus, 1994).
  • D. Kynaston, The City of London, II. Golden Years, 1890-1914 (Chatto & Windus, 1995).
  • R. C. Michie, ‘The London and New York Stock Exchanges, 1850-1914’, Journal of Economic History, 46 (1986), 171–88.
  • R. C. Michie, The London and New York Stock Exchanges, 1850-1914 (Allen & Unwin, 1987).
  • R. C. Michie, ‘Different in Name Only? The London Stock Exchange and Foreign Bourses, c.1850-1914’, Business History, 30 (1988), 163–178.
  • R. C. Michie, ‘Dunn, Fischer & Co. in the City of London, 1906-1914’, Business History, 30 (1988), 195–218.
  • R. C. Michie, The City of London. Continuity and Change, 1850-1990 (Basingstoke, Macmillan, 1992).
  • D. Owen (ed. by R. McLeod, with contributions by D. Reeder, D. Olsen and F. Sheppard), The Government of Victorian London, 1855-1889: The Metropolitan Board of Works, the Vestries and the City Corporation ( Cambridge Ma., Harvard University Press, 1982).
  • A. Plessis, ‘Le Pouvoir, The City’, in M. Charlot and R. Marx, eds., Londres, 1851-1901: L'Ere Victorienne ou le Triomphe des Inigalités (Paris, Editions Autrement, 188), 188-201.
  • W. J. Reader, A House in the City. A Study of the City and of the Stock Exchange Based on the Records of Foster and Braithwaite, 1825-1975 (Batsford, 1979).
  • T. B. Smith, ‘In Defence of Privilege: The City of London and the Challenge of Municipal Reform, 1875-1890’, Journal of Social History, 27 (1993), 59–83.

5 Housing, planning and the built environment

  • F. H. A. Aalen, ‘Lord Meath, City Improvement and Social Imperialism’, Planning Perspectives, 4 (1989), 127–152.
  • P. J. Atkins, 'How the West End was Won: The Struggle to Remove Street Barriers in Victorian London', Journal of Historical Geography, New Series 19 (1993), 265–277.
  • S. Beattie, A Revolution in London Housing, L.C.C. Housing Architects and their Work, 1893-1914 ( Greater London Council & the Architectural Press, 1980).
  • F. Bédarida and A. Sutcliffe, ‘The Street in the Structure and Life of the City: Reflections onNineteenth- Century London and Paris’, Journal of Urban History, 6 (1980), 379–396.
  • G. T. Bloomfield, ‘No Parking Here to Corner: London Reshaped by the Automobile, 1911-61’, Urban History Review, 18 (1989).
  • M. C. Carr, ‘The Development of a Metropolitan Suburb: Bexley, Kent’, in F. M. L. Thompson, ed., The Rise of Suburbia (Leicester, 211), 211-267.
  • M. J. Daunton, House and Home in the Victorian City: Working-Class Housing, 1850-1914 (Ed-ward Arnold, 1983).
  • M. J. Daunton, ‘Health and Housing in Victorian London’, in W. F. Bynum and R. Porter, eds., Living and Dying in London (Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, Medical History Supplement no. 11, 126), 126-144.
  • R. Dennis, —Hard to Let” in Edwardian London', Urban Studies, 26 (1989), 77–89.
  • R. Dennis, ‘The Geography of Victorian Values: Philanthropic Housing in London, 1840-1900’, Journal of Historical Geography, 15 (1989), 140–154.
  • J. Foster, ‘How Imperial London Preserved its Slums’, International Journal of Urban and Re-gional Research, 3 (1979), 93–114.
  • P. L. Garside, ‘Intergovernmental Relations and Housing Policy in London, 1919-1970’, London Journal, 9 (1983), 39–57.
  • S. M. Gaskell, Model Housing from the Great Exhibition to the Festival of Britain (Mansell, 1986).
  • J. Glasman, ‘London Synagogues in the Late Nineteenth Century: Design in Context’, London Journal, 13 (1988), 143–155.
  • D. R. Green and A. G. Parton, 'Slums and Slum Life in Victorian England, London and Birming-ham at Mid-Century', in M. Gaskell, ed., Slums (Leicester, Leicester University Press, 17), 17-91.
  • C. Hamnett and W. Randolph, 'The Rise and Fall of London's Purpose-Built Blocks of Privately Rented Flats, 1853-1983', London Journal, 11 (1985), 160-175.
  • T. Hinchcliffe, Ilighbury New Park. A Nineteenth-Century Middle-Class Suburb', London Journal, 7 (1981), 29–44.
  • T. Hinchcliffe, —This Rather Foolish Piece of Panic Administration”. The Government's Flat Con-version Programme in London, 1919', London Journal, 19 (1995), 168-182.
  • M. Horsey, ‘London Speculative Housebuilding of the 1930s: Official Control and Popular Taste’, London Journal, 11 (1985), 147–159.
  • Alan A. Jackson, Semi-Detached London: Suburban Development, Life and Transport, 1900-1939 (Allen and Unwin, 1973).
  • Anthony Jackson, “Sermons in Brick": Design and Social Purpose in London Board Schools', London Journal, 18 (1993), 31–44.
  • M. Jahn, ‘Suburban Development in Outer West London, 1850-1900’, in (F. M. L. Thompson, ed., The Rise of Suburbia (Leicester, Leicester University Press, 93), 93-156.
  • H. L. Malchow, ‘Public Gardens and Social Action in Late Victorian London’, Victorian Studies (1985), 97-124.
  • M. Miller, ‘The Elusive Green Background. Raymond Unwin and the Greater London Regional Plan’, Planning Perspectives, 4 (1989), 15–44.
  • A. J. Mukhopadhyay, ‘The Politics of London Water’, London Journal, 1 (1975), 207–225.
  • D. J. Olsen, The Growth of Victorian London (Harmondsworth, Penguin, 1979).
  • D. J. Olsen, The City as a Work of Art: London, Paris, Vienna (New Haven, Yale University Press, 1986).
  • M. Paton, ‘Corporate East End Landlords — the Example of the London Hospital and the Mercers Company’, London Journal, 18 (1993), 113–128.
  • S. Pepper, `Ossulston Street: Early L.C.C. Experiments in High Rise Housing, 1925-1929', London Journal, 7 (1981), 45-64.
  • M. H. Port, ‘Form and Reform: the English School, 1870-1970, London Journal, 4 (1978), 252-259.
  • M. H. Port, 'Metropolitan Improvements. From Grosvenor Square to Admiralty Arch’, London Journal, 7 (1982), 194–206.
  • J. W. Rawcliffe, ‘Bromley: Kentish Market Town to London Suburb, 1841-1881’, in (F. M. L. Thompson, ed., The Rise of Suburbia (Leicester, Leicester University Press, 27), 27-92.
  • J. Roebuck, Urban Development in Nineteenth-Century London: Lambeth, Battersea and Wand-sworth (Colchester, Phillimore, 1979).
  • D. Rose, ‘Accumulation versus Reproduction in the Inner City: The Recurrent Crisis of London Revisited’, in M. Dear and A. J. Scott, eds., Urbanization and Urban Planning in Capitalist Society (Methuen, 339), 339-381.
  • K. D. Rubin, ‘The Four Per Cent Industrial Dwellings Company Ltd. Its Function and Its East End Developments, 1885-1901’, in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Histori-cal Society of England, 193), 193-204.
  • A. Saint, “Spread the People": the L.C.C.‘s Dispersal Policy 1889-1965’, in A. Saint, ed., Politics and the People of London. The London County Council, 1889-1965 (Hambledon Press, 215), 215-236.
  • A. Service, London, 1900 (St Albans, Crosby Lockwood Staples, 1979).
  • J. Sheail, “Taken for Granted” - the Inter-War West Middlesex Drainage Scheme', London Jour-nal, 18 (1993), 143–156.
  • K. J. Skilleter, ‘The Role of the Public Utility Societies in Early British Town Planning and Hous-ing Reform, 1901-1936’, Planning Perspectives, 8 (1993), 125–165.
  • R. V. Steffel, ‘The Boundary Street Estate: An Example of Urban Redevelopment by the London County Council, 1889-1914’, Town Planning Review (1976), 161-173.
  • J. Summerson, ‘The Victorian Rebuilding of the City of London’, London Journal, 3 (1977), 163–185.
  • A. Sutcliffe, 'Environmental Control and Planning in European Capitals, 1850-1914, London, Paris and Berlin', in I. Hammarstrom and T. Hall, eds., Growth and Transformation of the Modern City (Stockholm, Swedish Council for Building Research, 71), 71-88.
  • M. Swenarton, Houses Fit for Heroes: The Politics and Administration of Early State Housing in Britain (London, Heinemann, 1981).
  • F. M. L. Thompson, ed., The Rise of Suburbia (Leicester, Leicester University Press, 1982).
  • R. Thorne, ‘The White Hart Lane Estate: An L.C.C. Venture in Suburban Development’, London Journal, 12 (1986), 80–88.
  • D. E. B. Weiner, Architecture and Social Reform in Late Victorian London (Manchester, Manches-ter University Press, 1994).
  • J. White, Rothschild Buildings. Life in an East End Tenement Block, 1887-1920 (Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1980).
  • J. White, ‘Jewish Landlords, Jewish Tenants. An Aspect of Class Struggle within the Jewish East End, 1881-1914’, in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical Society of England, 205), 205-215.
  • James Winter, London's Teeming Streets, 1830-1914 (Routledge, 1993).
  • A. S. Wohl, The Eternal Slum: Housing and Social Policy in Victorian London (Edward Arnold, 1977).
  • J. A. Yelling, The Selection of Sites for Slum Clearance in London, 1875-1888, Journal of Histori-cal Geography, New Series 7 (1981), 197–202.
  • J. A. Yelling, `L.C.C. Slum Clearance Policies, 1889-1907', Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, New Series 7 (1982), 292-303.
  • J. Yelling, Slums and Slum Clearance in Victorian London (Allen & Unwin, 1986).
  • J. A. Yelling, ‘The Metropolitan Slum: London 1918-51’, in M. Gaskell, ed., Slums (Leicester, Leicester University Press, 186), 186-233.
  • J. A. Yelling, Slums and Redevelopment: Policy and Practice in England, 1918-1945, with particu-lar reference to London (U.C.L. Press, 1992).
  • K. Young and P. L. Garside, Metropolitan London. Politics and Urban Change, 1837-1981 (Ed-ward Arnold, 1983).

6 Local government and local politics

  • F. H. A. Aalen, ‘Lord Meath, City Improvement and Social Imperialism’, Planning Perspectives, 4 (1989), 127–152.
  • G. Alderman, London Jewry and London Politics, 1889-1986 (Routledge, 1989).
  • S. Beattie, A Revolution in London Housing. L.C.C. Housing Architects and their Work, 1893-1914 (Greater London Council & the Architectural Press, 1980).
  • K. D. Brown, ‘London and the Historical Reputation of John Burns’, London Journal, 2 (1976), 226–238.
  • K. D. Brown, John Burns (Royal Historical Society, 1977).
  • N. H. Buck, 'The Analysis of State Intervention in Nineteenth-Century Cities: the Case of Munici- pal Labour Policy in East London, 1886-1914', in M. Dear and A. J. Scott, eds., Urbanization and Urban Planning in Capitalist Society (Methuen, 501), 501-535.
  • M. Clapson, ‘Localism, the London Labour Party and the L.C.C. between the Wars’ in A. Saint,ed., Politics and the People of London. The London County Council, 1889-1965 (Hambledon Press, 127), 127-146.
  • G. C. Clifton, ‘Members and Officers of the L.C.C., 1889-1965’, in A. Saint, ed., Politics and thePeople of London. The London County Council, 1889-1965 (Hambledon Press, 1), 1-26.
  • G. C. Clifton, Professionalism, Patronage and Public Service in Victorian London. The Staff of theMetropolitan Board of Works, 1856-1889 (Athlone Press, 1992).
  • A. Clinton and P. Murray, ‘Reassessing the Vestries: London Local Government, 1855-1900’, in A. O'Day, ed., Government and Institutions in the post-1832 United Kingdom (Lewiston, Edwin Mellen Press, 1995).
  • John Davis, Reforming London. The London Government Problem, 1855-1900 (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1988).
  • John Davis, ‘The Progressive Council, 1889-1907’, in A. Saint, ed., Politics and the People of London. The London County Council, 1889-1965 (Hambledon Press, 27), 27-48.
  • S. M. Gaskell, Model Housing from the Great Exhibition to the Festival of Britain (Mansell, 1986).
  • J. Gillespie, `Municipalism, Monopoly and Management: the Demise of “Socialism in One County”, 1918-1933' in A. Saint, ed., Politics and the People of London. The London County Council,1889-1965 (Hambledon Press, 103), 103-126.
  • S. Goss, Local Labour and Local Government, A Study of Changing Interests, Politics and Policy in Southwark, 1919-1982 (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 1988).
  • A. Hardy, ‘Public Health and the Expert: the London Medical Officers of Health, 1856-1900’, in R. M. McLeod, ed., Specialists, Administrators and Professionals, 1860-1919 (Cambridge, Cam-bridge University Press, 128), 128-142.
  • T. Hinchcliffe, —This Rather Foolish Piece of Panic Administration”. The Government's Flat Con-version Programme in London, 1919', London Journal, 19 (1995), 168-182.
  • P. Hollis, 'Julies Elect. Women in Local Government, 1865-1914 (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1987).
  • M. Horsey, ‘London Speculative Housebuilding of the 1930s: Official Control and Popular Taste’, London Journal, 11 (1985), 147–159.
  • H. Jones, ‘Conservatives and the L.C.C. after 1934’, in A. Saint, ed., Politics and the People of London. The London County Council, 1889-1965 (Hambledon Press, 237), 237-250.
  • S. Laurence, ‘Moderates, Municipal Reformers and the Issue of Tariff Reform, 1894-1934’, in A. Saint, ed., Politics and the People of London. The London County Council, 1889-1965 (London, the Hambledon Press, 93), 93-102.
  • E. Lebas, —When Every Street Became a Cinema”. The Work of Bermondsey Borough Council's Public Health Department, 1923-1953', History Workshop Journal, 39 (1995), 42-66.
  • L. Marks, ‘Medical Care for Pauper Mothers and their Infants. Poor Law Provision and Local Demand in East London, 1870-1929’, Economic History Review, 46 (1993), 518–542.
  • J. Marriott, The Culture of Labourism. The East End Between the Wars (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 1991).
  • A. J. Mukhopadhyay, ‘The Politics of London Water’, London Journal, 1 (1975), 207–225.
  • D. Owen (ed. by R. McLeod, with contributions by D. Reeder, D. Olsen and F. Sheppard), The Government of Victorian London, 1855-1889: The Metropolitan Board of Works, the Vestries and the City Corporation (Cambridge Ma., Harvard University Press, 1982).
  • S. Pennybacker, “The Millennium by Return of Post”, Reconsidering London Progressivism, 1889-1907', in D. Feldman and G. Stedman Jones, Metropolis: London. Histories and Representations since 1800 (Routledge, 129), 129-162.
  • S. D. Pennybacker, A Vision for London, 1889-1914: Labour, Everyday Life and the L.C.C. Experi-ment (Routledge, 1995).
  • D. H. Porter and G. C. Clifton, ‘Patronage, Professional Values and Victorian Public Works: Engi-neering and Contracting the Thames Embankment’, Victorian Studies, 31 (1988), 319–350.
  • M. Richardson, ‘Education and Politics: The London Labour Party and Schooling between the Wars’, in A. Saint, ed., Politics and the People of London. The London County Council, 1889-1965 ( Hambledon Press, 147), 147-166.
  • J. Roebuck, Urban Development in Nineteenth-Century London: Lambeth, Battersea and Wand-sworth (Colchester, Phillimore, 1979).
  • G. Rose, ‘Imagining Poplar in the 1920s: Contested Concepts of Community’, Journal of Histori-cal Geography, New Series 15 (1990), 425–437.
  • A. Saint, ed., Politics and the People of London. The London County Council, 1889-1965 (Hamble-don Press, 1989).
  • A. Saint, ‘Technical Education and the Early L.C.C.’, in A. Saint, ed., Politics and the People of London. The London County Council, 1889-1965 ( Hambledon Press, 71), 71-92.
  • A. Saint, Spread the People”, the L.C.C.‘s Dispersal Policy 1889-1965’ in A. Saint, ed., Politics and the People of London. The London County Council, 1889-1965 (Hambledon Press, 215), 215-236.
  • J. Schneer, ‘Politics and Feminism in “Outcast London”. George Lansbury and the First London County Council Election’, Journal of British Studies, 30 (1991), 63–82.
  • T. Segars, ‘Working for London's Fire Brigade, 1889-1939’, in A. Saint, ed., Politics and the People of London. The London County Council, 1889-1965 (London, the Hambledon Press, 167), 167-186.
  • J. Sheldrake, ‘The L.C.C. Hospital Service’, in A. Saint, ed., Politics and the People of London. The London County Council, 1889-1965 (London, the Hambledon Press, 187), 187-198.
  • T. B. Smith, ‘In Defence of Privilege: The City of London and the Challenge of Municipal Reform, 1875-1890’, Journal of Social History, 27 (1993), 59–83.
  • R. V. Steffel, ‘The Boundary Street Estate: An Example of Urban Redevelopment by the London County Council, 1889-1914’, Town Planning Review (1976), 161-173.
  • Survey of London, County Hall (Survey of London Monograph 17, Athlone Press, 1991).
  • M. Swenarton, Houses Fit for Heroes: The Politics and Administration of Early State Housing in Britain (Heinemann, 1981).
  • M. Thompson, ‘Social Policy and the Management of the Problem of Mental Deficiency in Inter-War London’, London Journal, 18 (1993), 129–142.
  • R Thompson, Socialists, Liberals and Labour: The Struggle for London, 1885-1914 (Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1967).
  • C. Waters, ‘Progressives, Puritans and the Cultural Politics of the Council, 1889-1914’, in A. Saint, ed., Politics and the People of London. The London County Council, 1889-1965 (Hambledon Press, 49), 49-70.
  • J. A. Yelling, The Selection of Sites for Slum Clearance in London, 1875-1888', Journal of His-torical Geography, New Series 7 (1981), 197–202.
  • J. A. Yelling, `L.C.C. Slum Clearance Policies, 1889-1907', Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, New Series 7 (1982), 292-303.
  • J. Yelling, Slums and Slum Clearance in Victorian London (Allen & Unwin, 1986).
  • J. A. Yelling, ‘The Metropolitan Slum: London 1918-51’, in M. Gaskell, ed., Slums (Leicester, Leicester University Press, 186), 186-233.
  • J. A. Yelling, Slums and Redevelopment: Policy and Practice in England, 1918-1945, with particu-lar reference to London (U.C.L. Press, 1992).
  • K. Young, Local Politics and the Rise of Party: The London Municipal Society and the Conserva-tive Intervention in Local Elections, 1894-1963 (Leicester, Leicester University Press, 1975).
  • K. Young, `Metropology Revisited: on the Political Integration of Metropolitan Areas', in K. Young, ed., Essays on the Study of Urban Politics (Macmillan, 1975).
  • K. Young and P. L. Garside, Metropolitan London. Politics and Urban Change, 1837-1981 (Ed-ward Arnold, 1983).

7 Education

  • M. E. Bryant, The London Experience of Secondary Education (Athlone Press, 1986).
  • W. Devereux, Adult Education in Inner London, 1870-1980 (Shepeard-Walwyn and the Inner Lon- don Education Authority, 1982).
  • N. Harte, The University of London, 1836-1986. An Illustrated History (Athlone Press, 1986).
  • N. Harte and J. North, eds., The World of U.C.L. (University of London Press, 1991).
  • J. D. Hirst, ‘Vision Testing in London: A Rehearsal for the School Medical Service’, Journal of Educational Administration and History, 14 (1982), 23–29.
  • P. Hollis, Ladies Elect. Women in Local Government, 1864-1914 (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1987).
  • J. S. Hurt, Elementary Schooling and the Working Classes, 1860-1918 (Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1979).
  • Anthony Jackson, -Sermons in Brick": Design and Social Purpose in London Board Schools',London Journal, 18 (1993), 31–44.
  • A. W. Jones, Lyulph Stanley. A Study in Educational Politics (Waterloo, Ontario, Wilfrid LaurierUniversity Press, 1979).
  • S. King, ‘Technical and Vocational Education for Girls: a Study of the Central Schools of London, 1918-1939’, in P. Summerfield and E. J. Evans, eds., Technical Education and the State since 1850. Historical and Contemporary Perspectives (Manchester, Manchester University Press, 77), 77-96.
  • D. Leinster-Mackay, “The Case Against Diggleism...” Some Musings Concerning Criticisms of Quasi-“Thatcherite” Policies in the London School Board of the 1890s', Journal of Educational Administration and History, 22 (1990), 8–15.
  • D. Leinster-Mackay, 'The Continuing Religious Difficulty in Late Victorian and Edwardian En-gland: a Case of Gratuitous Advice from the Antipodes', History of Education, 19 (1990), 123–137.
  • J. Lewis, ‘Parents, Children, School Fees and the London School Board, 1870-1890’, History of Education, 11 (1982), 291–312.
  • W. E. Marsden, ‘Schools for the Urban Lower Middle Class: Third Grade or Higher Grade?’, in P. Searby, ed., Educating the Victorian Middle Class (Leicester, History of Education Society, 45), 45-56.
  • W. E. Marsden, ‘Residential Segregation and the Hierarchy of Elementary Schooling from Charles Booth's London Surveys’, London Journal, 11 (1985), 127–146.
  • W. E. Marsden, Unequal Educational Provision in England and Wales: the Nineteenth-Century Roots (Woburn Press, 1987).
  • N. Marsh, The History of Queen Elizabeth College: One Hundred Years of University Education in Kensington (King's College London, 1986).
  • J. Martin, “Hard-headed and large-hearted”; Women and the Industrial Schools, 1870-1933', His-tory of Education, 20 (1991).
  • T. May, ‘The Other Harrovians: Local Boys at Harrow School in the Nineteenth Century’, in P. Searby, ed., Educating the Victorian Middle Class (Leicester, History of Education Society, 86), 86-112.
  • J. E. B. Munson, ‘The London School Board Election of 1894’, British Journal of Educational Studies, 23 (1975), 7–23.
  • I. Osborne, ‘Achievers of the Ghetto: The Education of Jewish Immigrants’ Children in Tower Hamlets, 1870-1914', in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical Society of England, 163), 163-172.
  • M. H. Port, ‘Form and Reform: The English School, 1870-1970’, London Journal, 4 (1978), 252–259.
  • M. Richardson, 'Education and Politics: The London Labour Party and Schooling between the Wars', in A. Saint, ed., Politics and the People of London. The London County Council, 1889-1965 (Hambledon Press, 147), 147-166.
  • D. Rubinstein, ‘Socialization and the London School Board, 1870-1904: Aims, Methods and Public Opinion’, in P. McCann, ed., Popular Education and Socialization in the Nineteenth Century (Meth-uen, 231), 231-264.
  • A. Saint, Technical Education and the Early L.C.C., in A. Saint, ed., Politics and the People of London. The London County Council, 1889-1965 (Hambledon Press, 71), 71-92.
  • S. Singer, ‘Jewish Education in the Mid-Nineteenth Century: A Study of the Early Victorian Lon-don Community’, Jewish Quarterly Review, 77 (1986), 163–178.
  • F. M. L. Thompson, ed., The University of London and the World of Learning, 1836-1986 (Hamble-don Press, 1990).
  • A. Turnbull, “So Extremely Like Parliament":- The Work of the Women Members of the London School Board, 1870-1904', in London Feminist History Group, The Sexual Dynamics of History: Men's Power, Women's Resistance (Pluto Press, 120), 120-33.
  • D. E. B. Weiner, Architecture and Social Reform in Late Victorian London (Manchester, Manches-ter University Press, 1994).

8 Police, Crime & Public Order

  • G. D. Anderson, Fascists, Communists and the National Government. Civil Liberties in Great Brit-ain, 1931-1937 (Columbia, University of Missouri Press, 1983).
  • D. Ascoli, The Queen's Peace: the Origins and Development of the Metropolitan Police, 1829-1979(Hamish Hamilton, 1979).
  • V. Bailey, The Metropolitan Police, the Home Office and the Threat of “Outcast London”, in V. Bailey, ed., Policing and Punishment in Nineteenth-Century Britain (Croom Helm, 94), 94-125.
  • J. Ballhatchet, ‘The Police and the London Dock Strike of 1889’, History Workshop Journal, 32 (1991), 54–68.
  • P. Chassaigne, `L'Infanticide a Londres a l'Epoque Victorienne: Essai d'Approche Quantitative',Annales de la Demographie Historique (1990), 227-237.
  • Jennifer Davis, ‘The London Garotting Panic of 1862: a Moral Panic and the Creation of a Crimi-nal Class in Mid-Victorian England’, in V. A. C. Gatrell, B. Lenman and G. Parker, eds., Crime and the Law: the Social Context of Crime in Western Europe (Europa, 190), 190-214.
  • Jennifer Davis, ‘A Poor Man's System of Justice: the London Police Courts in the Second Half ofthe Nineteenth Century’, Historical Journal (1984), 309-335.
  • Jennifer Davis, ‘From “Rookeries” to “Communities": Race, Poverty and Policing in London, 1850-1985’,History Workshop, 27 (1989), 66–85.
  • Jennifer Davis, ‘Jennings’ Buildings and the Royal Borough: the Construction of the Underclass inMid-Victorian England', in D. Feldman and G. Stedman Jones, eds., Metropolis: London. Histories and Representations since 1800 (Routledge, 11), 11-39.
  • R. Harrison, ‘New Light on the Police and the Hunger Marchers’, Bulletin of the Society for the Study of Labour History, 37 (1978), 17–50.
  • A. R. Higginbotham, -Sin of the Age”. Infanticide and Illegitimacy in Victorian London', Victo-rian Studies, 32 (1989), 319–337.
  • C. Holmes, ‘East End Crime and the Jewish Community’, in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical Society of England, 109), 109-123.
  • P. Jenkins, ‘Before the Krays: Organised Crime in London, 1920-1960’, Criminal Justice History, 9 (1988), 209–230.
  • W. R. Miller, 'Never on a Sunday. Moralistic Reformers and the Police in London and New York, 1830-1870', in D. H. Bayley, ed., The Police and Society (Beverley Hills, Sage, 127), 127-148.
  • J. N. Morris, ‘A Disappearing Crowd? Collective Action in Late Nineteenth-Century Croydon’, Southern History, XI (1989), 90-113.
  • S. Petrow, Policing Morals: the Metropolitan Police and the Home Office, 1870-1914 (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1994).
  • B. Porter, The Origins of the Vigilant State. The London Metropolitan Police Special Branch before the First World War (Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1987).
  • D. C. Richter, Riotous Victorians (Athens, Ohio, Ohio University Press, 1981).
  • R. Samuel, East End Underworld: Chapters in the Life of Arthur Harding (Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1981).
  • K. R. M. Short, The Dynamite War: Irish-American Bombers in Victorian Britain (Dublin, Gill & Macmillan, 1979).
  • Shpayer-Makov, ‘Le Profil Socio-économique de la Police Metropolitaine de Londres à la fin du XIXeme Siècle’, Revue d'Histoire Moderne et Contemporaine, 39 (1992), 662-678.
  • R. Sindall, Street Violence in the Nineteenth Century. Media Panic or Real Danger? (Leicester, Leicester University Press, 1990).
  • P. T. Smith, Policing Victorian London: Political Policing, Public Order and the Victorian Metro-politan Police (Westport CT, Greenwood Press, 1985).
  • J. Stevenson, The B.U.F., the Metropolitan Police and Public Order', in K. Lunn and R. Thurlow, eds., British Fascism: Essays on the Radical Right in Inter-War Britain (Croom Helm, 135), 135-149.
  • R. D. Storch, 'Police Control of Street Prostitution in Victorian London: a Study in the Context of Police Action', in D. H. Bayley, ed., The Police and Society (Beverley Hills, Sage, 49), 49-72.
  • N. Tomes, 'A Torrent of Abuse: Crimes of Violence Between Working-Class Men and Women in London, 1840-1875', Journal of Social History, 11 (1978), 328-346.
  • J. Walkowitz, City of Dreadful Delight: Narratives of Sexual Danger in Late Victorian London (Chicago, Chicago University Press, 1992).
  • J. White, ‘Police and People in London in the 1930s’, Oral History, 11 (1983), 34–41.

9 Poverty and Philanthropy

  • S. Alexander, ‘The Fabian Women's Group, 1908-1952’, in her Becoming a Woman and Other Essays in Nineteenth and Twentieth-Century Feminist History (Virago, 149), 149-158.
  • F. Barret-Ducrocq, Pauvreté, Charité et Morale a Londres au X1Xème Siècle: Une Sainte Violence(Paris, Presses Universitaires de France, 1991).
  • V. Belcher, The City Parochial Foundation, 1891-1991: a Trust for the Poor of London (Aldershot,Scolar Press, 1991).
  • E. C. Black, The Social Politics of Anglo-Jewry, 1880-1920 (Oxford, Blackwell, 1988).
  • A. Briggs and A. Macartney, Toynbee Hall: the First Hundred Years (Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1983).
  • S. M. Gaskell, Model Housing from the Great Exhibition to the Festival of Britain (Mansell, 1986).
  • D. R. Green, 'A Map for Mayhew's London: the Geography of Poverty in the Mid-Nineteenth Century', London Journal, 11 (1985), 115–126.
  • D. R. Green, People of the Rookery: a Pauper Community in Victorian London (King's CollegeLondon, Department of Geography Occasional Paper 26, 1986).
  • D. R. Green, Economic Change and Poverty in London, 1790-1870 (Aldershot, Scolar Press, 1995).9.10 E. P. Hennock, ‘Poverty and Social Theory in England: the Experience of the 1880s’, Social His-tory, 1 (1976), 67-92.
  • E. P. Hennock, ‘Concepts of Poverty in the British Social Surveys from Charles Booth to Arthur Bowley’, in M. Bulmer, K. Bales and K. K. Sklar, eds., The Social Survey in Historical Perspec-tive, 1880-1940 (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 189), 189-216.
  • R. Humphreys, Scientific Charity in Victorian London. Claims and Achievements of the Charity Organisation Society, 1869-1890 (London School of Economics, Economic History Department Working Paper no. 14/93, 1993).
  • L. H. Lees, Poverty and Pauperism in Nineteenth-Century London (Leicester, Leicester University Press, 1988).
  • L. H. Lees, ‘The Survival of the Unfit: Welfare Policies and Family Maintenance in Nineteenth-Century London’, in P. Mandler, ed., The Uses of Charity. The Poor on Relief in the Nineteenth-Century Metropolis (Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press, 68), 68-122.
  • J. Lewis, ‘The Place of Social Investigation, Social Theory and Social Work in the Approach to late Victorian and Edwardian Social Problems: the Case of Beatrice Webb and Helen Bosanquet’, in M. Bulmer, K. Bales and K. K. Sklar, eds., The Social Survey in Historical Perspective, 1880-1940 (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 148), 148-169.
  • J. Lewis, Women and Social Action in Victorian and Edwardian England (Aldershot, Edward Elgar, 1991).
  • L. Marks, ‘Medical Care for Pauper Mothers and their Infants. Poor Law Provision and Local Demand in East London, 1870-1929’, Economic History Review, 46 (1993), 518–542.
  • R. Marx, ‘Les Trompettes de la Charité’, in M. Chariot and R. Marx, eds., Londres, 1851-1901: L'Ere Victorienne ou le Triomphe des Inégalités (Paris, Editions Autrement, 181), 181-187.
  • R. McKibbin, ‘Social Class and Social Observation in Edwardian England’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 28 (1978), 175–200.
  • S. Meacham, Toynbee Hall and Social Reform: the Search for Community, 1880-1914 (New Ha-ven, Yale University Press, 1987).
  • F. K. Prochaska, ‘Body and Soul: Bible Nurses and the Poor in Victorian London’, Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research, 60 (1987), 336–348.
  • F. K. Prochaska, Philanthropy and the Hospitals of London: the King's Fund, 1897-1990 (Oxford, the Clarendon Press, 1992).
  • D. A. Reeder, ed., Charles Booth's Descriptive Map of London Poverty, 1889 (London Topographi-cal Society, 1984).
  • E. Ross, ‘Hungry Children, Housewives and London Charity, 1870-1918’, in P. Mandler, ed., The Uses of Charity. The Poor on Relief in the Nineteenth-Century Metropolis (Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press, 161), 161-196.
  • P. A. Ryan, Poplarism, 1894-1930' in P. Thane, ed., The Origins of British Social Policy (Croom Helm, 56), 56-83.
  • P. A. Ryan, ‘Politics and Poor Relief: East London Unions in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twen-tieth Centuries’, in M. E. Rose, ed., The Poor and the City. The English Poor Law in its Urban Context, 1834-1914 (Leicester, Leicester University Press, 134), 134-172.
  • G. Stedman Jones, Outcast London: a Study of the Relationship between Classes in Victorian So-ciety (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1971).
  • M. Vicinus, Independent Women. Work and Community for Single Women, 1850-1920 (Virago, 1985).
  • K. Waddington, ‘Bastard Benevolence: Centralisation, Voluntarism and the Sunday Fund 1873-1898’, London Journal, 19 (1995), 151–167.
  • J. White, “Penniless and Without Food”. Unemployment in London Between the Wars', in G. Alderman and C. Holmes, eds., Outsiders and Outcasts: Essays in Honour of William J. Fishman (Duckworth, 119), 119-135.

10 The Working Class, Labour Politics and Trade Unionism

  • G. Alderman, ‘The Political Impact of Zionism in the East End of London before 1940’, in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical Society of England, 1981), 225-231, amended version in London Journal, 9 (1983), 35-38.
  • S. Alexander, ‘Women's Work in Nineteenth-Century London, 1820s-1860s’, in J. Mitchell and A. Oakley, eds., Rights and Wrongs of Women (Harmondsworth, Penguin, 1976), reprinted in her Becoming a Woman and Other Essays in Nineteenth and Twentieth-Century Feminist History (Virago, 3), 3-56.
  • T. G. Ashplant, `London's Working Men's Clubs, 1875-1914', in E. Yeo and S. Yeo, eds., Popular Culture and Class Conflict, 1590-1914, Explorations in the History of Labour and Leisure (Brigh-ton, Harvester Press, 241), 241-270.
  • J. Ballhatchet, ‘The Police and the London Dock Strike of 1889’, History Workshop Journal, 32 (1991), 54–68.
  • E Barret-Ducrocq, Pauvreté, Charité et Morale a Londres au XIXème Siècle: Une Sainte Violence (Paris, Presses Universitaires de France, 1991).
  • L. Barrow, ‘The Homerton Social Democratic Club, 1881-2’, History Workshop Journal, 5 (1978), 188–200.
  • L. Barrow, Independent Spirits, Spiritualism and English Plebeians, 1850-1910 (Routledge and Paul, 1986).
  • F. Bédarida, ‘Urban Growth and Social Structure in Nineteenth-Century Poplar’, London Journal, 1 (1975), 159–188.
  • C. Bermont, Point of Arrival. A Study of London's East End (Methuen, 1975).
  • N. Branson, Poplarism, 1919-1925: George Lansbury and the Councillors' Revolt (Lawrence & Wishart, 1979).
  • J. Bush, Behind the Lines: East London Labour, 1914-1919 (Merlin, 1984).
  • M. Clapson, ‘Localism, the London Labour Party and the L.C.C. between the Wars’, in A. Saint, ed., Politics and the People of London. The London County Council, 1889-1965 (Hambledon Press, 127), 127-146.
  • S. Creighton, ‘Battersea and New Unionism’, South London Record, 4 (1989), 31–46.
  • G. Crossick, An Artisan Elite in Victorian Society: Kentish London, 1840-1880 (Croom Helm, 1978).
  • Jennifer Davis, ‘Jennings’ Buildings and the Royal Borough: the Construction of the Underclass in Mid-Victorian England', in D. Feldman and G. Stedman Jones, Metropolis: London. Histories and Representations since 1800 (Routledge, 11), 11-39.
  • John Davis, ‘Radical Clubs and London Politics, 1870-1900’, in D. Feldman and G. Stedman Jones, eds., Metropolis: London. Histories and Representations since 1800 (Routledge, 103), 103-128.
  • B. Eichengreen and S. Freiwald, 'From Survey to Sample: Labour Market Data for Interwar Lon-don', Historical Methods Newsletter, 18 (1985), 125–136.
  • W. J. Fishman, East End Jewish Radicals, 1875-1914 (Duckworth, 1975).
  • W. J. Fishman, `Jewish Immigrant Anarchists in East London, 1870-1914', in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical Society of England, 233), 233-254.
  • W. J. Fishman, East End 1888. A Year in a London Borough among the Labouring Poor (London, Duckworth, 1988).
  • R. Fitzgerald, ‘Employers’ Labour Strategies, Industrial Welfare and the Response to New Union-ism at Bryant and May, 1888-1930', Business History, 31 (1989), 48-65.
  • K. Fuller, Radical Aristocrats: London Busworkers from the 1880s to the 1980s (Lawrence & Wishart, 1985).
  • J. Gillespie, Toplarism and Proletarianism. Unemployment and Labour Politics in London, 1918-1934', in D. Feldman and G. Stedman Jones, eds., Metropolis: London. Histories and Representations since 1800 (Routledge, 163), 163-188.
  • J., Gillespie, ‘Municipalism, Monopoly and Management: the Demise of “Socialism in One County”, 1918-1933’, in A. Saint, ed., Politics and the People of London. The London County Council, 1889-1965 (Hambledon Press, 103), 103-126.
  • D. Glynn, ‘Exploring Outcast London: Assisted Emigration to Canada, 1886-1914’, Histoire Sociale/Social History , 15 (1982), 209–238.
  • D. R. Green, ‘Street Trading in London: A Case Study of Casual Labour, 1830-1860’, in J. H. Johnson and C. Pooley, The Structure of Nineteenth Century Cities (Croom Helm, 129), 129-152.
  • D. R. Green, People of the Rookery: a Pauper Community in Victorian London (King's College London, Department of Geography Occasional Paper 26, 1986).
  • D. R. Green and A. G. Parton, 'Slums and Slum Life in Victorian England: London and Birming-ham at Mid-Century', in M. Gaskell, ed., Slums (Leicester, Leicester University Press, 17), 17-91.
  • A. J. Kershen, Uniting the Tailors: Trade Unionism amongst the Tailors of London and Leeds, 1870-1939 (Ilford, Frank Cass, 1995).
  • P. Kirkham, The London Furniture Trade, 1700-1870 (Furniture History Society, 1988).
  • P. Kirkham, R. Mace and J. Porter, Furnishing the World: the East London Furniture Trade, 1830-1980 (Journeyman Press, 1987).
  • P. E. Malcolmson, ‘Getting a Living in the Slums of Victorian Kensington’, London Journal, 1 (1975), 28–55.
  • J. Marriott, The Culture of Labourism. The East End Between the Wars (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 1991).
  • J. McCalman, ‘Respectability and Working-Class Politics in Late Victorian London’, Historical Studies, 19 (1980), 108–124.
  • H. McLeod, Class and Religion in the Late Victorian City (London, Croom Helm, 1974).
  • M. Mills, ‘The Gas Workers’ Strike in South London, 1889', South London Record, 4 (1989), 6-21.
  • T. Olcott, ‘Dead Centre: The Women's Trade Union Movement in London, 1874-1914’, London Journal, 2 (1976), 33–50.
  • H. Oliver, The International Anarchist Movement in Late Victorian London (London, Croom Helm, 1983).
  • S. D. Pennybacker, A Vision for London, 1889-1914: Labour, Everyday Life and the L.C.C. Experi-ment (London, Routledge, 1995).
  • G. Phillips and N. Whiteside, Casual Labour: the Unemployed Question in the Port Transport Industry, 1880-1970 (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1985).
  • G. Rose, ‘Locality, Politics and Culture: Poplar in the 1920s’, Environment and Planning, D (So-ciety and Space), 6 (1988), 151–168.
  • G. Rose, ‘Locality Studies and Waged Labour, an Historical Critique’, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, New Series 14 (1989), 317–328.
  • G. Rose, ‘Imagining Poplar in the 1920s: Contested Concepts of Community’, Journal of Histori-cal Geography, New Series 15 (1990), 425–437.
  • E. Ross, ‘Survival Networks. Women's Neighbourhood Sharing in London before World War I’, History Workshop Journal, 15 (1983), 4–27.
  • E. Ross, “Fierce Questions and Taunts”. Married Life in Working-Class London, 1870-1914', in D. Feldman and G. Stedman Jones, eds., Metropolis: London. Histories and Representations since 1800 (Routledge, 219), 219-244.
  • E. Ross, Love and Toil. Motherhood in Outcast London, 1870-1918 (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1993).
  • P. A. Ryan, Toplarism, 1894-1930', in P. Thane, ed., The Origins of British Social Policy (Croom Helm, 56), 56-83.
  • P. A. Ryan, ‘Politics and Poor Relief: East London Unions in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twen-tieth Centuries’, in M. E. Rose, ed., The Poor and the City. The English Poor Law in its Urban Context, 1834-1914 (Leicester, Leicester University Press, 134), 134-172.
  • R. Samuel, East End Underworld: Chapters in the Life of Arthur Harding (Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1981).
  • J. Schmiechen, Sweated Industries and Sweated Labour: The London Clothing Trades, 1860-1914 (London, Croom Helm, 1984).
  • E. Smith, ‘East End Tailors, 1918-1939: An Aspect of the Jewish Workers’ Struggle', Jewish Quar-terly, 34 (1987).
  • H. F. Srebrnik, ‘Communism and Pro-Soviet Feeling among the Jews of East London, 1935-45’, Immigrants and Minorities, 5 (1986), 285–304.
  • H. F. Srebrnik, London Jews and British Communism, 1935-1945 (Ilford, Vallentine Mitchell, 1995).
  • G. Stedman Jones, Outcast London: a Study of the Relationship between Classes in Victorian So-ciety (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1971).
  • G. Stedman Jones, Working-Class Culture and Working-Class Politics in London, 1870-1900: Notes on the Remaking of a Working Class, 1870-1900', Journal of Social History, 7 (1974), reprinted in his Languages of Class (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1983).
  • Survey of London, vol. 43, Poplar, Blackwall and the Isle of Dogs: The Parish of All Saints (Ath-lone Press, 1994).
  • D. Thom, ‘Free from Chains? The Image of Women's Labour in London, 1900-1920’, in D. Feld-man and G. Stedman Jones, eds., Metropolis: London. Histories and Representations since 1800 (Routledge, 85), 85-99.
  • J. White, ‘Campbell Bunk: A Lumpen Community in London Between the Wars’, History Work-shop Journal, 8 (1979), 1–49.
  • J. White, Rothschild Buildings. Life in an East End Tenement Block, 1887-1920 (Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1980).
  • J. White, ‘Police and People in London in the 1930s’, Oral History, 11 (1983), 34–41.
  • J. White, The Worst Street in North London. A Social History of Campbell Bunk, Islington, Between the Wars (Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1986).
  • J. White, Penniless and Without Food”. Unemployment in London Between the Wars', in G. Alderman and C. Holmes, eds., Outsiders and Outcasts: Essays in Honour of William J. Fishman (Duckworth, 119), 119-135.
  • S. Williams, ‘Urban Popular Religion and the Rites of Passage’, in H. McLeod, ed., Religion in the Age of Great Cities, 1830-1930 (Routledge, 216), 216-236.

11 The Middle and Upper Classes

  • P. J. Atkins, ‘The Spatial Configuration of Class Solidarity in London's West End, 1792-1939’, Urban History Yearbook, 17 (1990), 36–65.
  • P. J. Atkins, ‘How the West End was Won: the Struggle to Remove Street Barriers in Victorian London’, Journal of Historical Geography, New Series 19 (1993), 265–277.
  • S. Baudemont, ‘La Gentry, sa Saison, ses Rites’, in M. Charlot and R. Marx, eds., Londres, 1851-1901: L'Ere Victorienne ou le Triomphe des litigant& (Paris, Editions Autrement, 93), 93-99.
  • M. C. Carr, The Development of a Metropolitan Suburb: Bexley, Kent', in (F. M. L. Thompson, ed., The Rise of Suburbia (Leicester, 211), 211-267.
  • Y. Cassis, Banquiers de la City a l'Epoque Edouardienne, 1890-1914 (Geneva, Librairie Droz, 1984), translated as City Bankers, 1890-1914 (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1994).
  • Y. Cassis, La City de Londres, 1870-1914 (Paris, Belin, 1987).
  • Y. Cassis, ‘Financial Elites in Three European Centres: London, Paris, Berlin, 1880s-1930s’, Busi-ness History, 33 (1991), 53–71.
  • G. C. Clifton, ‘Members and Officers of the L.C.C., 1889-1965’, in A. Saint, ed., Politics and the People of London. The London County Council, 1889-1965 (Hambledon Press, 1), 1-26.
  • G. C. Clifton, Professionalism, Patronage and Public Service in Victorian London. The Staff of the Metropolitan Board of Works, 1856-1889 (Athlone Press, 1992).
  • J. Cox, The English Churches in a Secular Society: Lambeth, 1870-1930 (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1982).
  • D. Duman, The Foreign and Colonial Bars in the Nineteenth Century (Croom Helm, 1984).
  • T. F. M. Hinchcliffe, Ilighbury New Park. A Nineteenth-Century Middle-Class Suburb', London Journal, 7 (1981), 29–44.
  • M. Horsey, ‘London Speculative Housebuilding of the 1930s: Official Control and Popular Taste’, London Journal, 11 (1985), 147–159.
  • M. Jahn, ‘Suburban Development in Outer West London, 1850-1900’, in (F. M. L. Thompson, ed., The Rise of Suburbia (Leicester, Leicester University Press, 93), 93-156.
  • T. Jeffery, ‘The Suburban Nation. Politics and Class in Lewisham’, in D. Feldman and G. Stedman Jones, eds., Metropolis: London. Histories and Representations since 1800 (Routledge, 189), 189-216.
  • H. McLeod, Class and Religion in the Late Victorian City (Croom Helm, 1974).
  • J. N. Morris, Religion and Urban Change, Croydon, 1840-1914 (Woodbridge, Boydell Press for Royal Historical Society, 1992).
  • A. Offer, Property and Politics, 1870-1914: Landownership, Law, Ideology and Urban Develop-ment in England (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1981).
  • D. Pam, A History of Enfield, vol. II - 1837-1914 (Enfield, Enfield Preservation Society, 1992).
  • D. Pam, A History of Enfield, vol. III - 1914-1939 (Enfield, Enfield Preservation Society, 1994).
  • M. J. Peterson, The Medical Profession in Mid-Victorian London (Berkeley, University of Califor-nia Press, 1978).
  • D. H. Porter and G. C. Clifton, 'Patronage, Professional Values and Victorian Public Works: Engi-neering and Contracting the Thames Embankment'. Victorian Studies, 31 (1988), 319–350.
  • J. W. Rawcliffe, ‘Bromley: Kentish Market Town to London Suburb, 1841-1881’, in (F. M. L. Thompson, ed., The Rise of Suburbia (Leicester, Leicester University Press, 27), 27-92.
  • Survey of London, vol. 39, The Grosvenor Estate in Mayfair, I. General History (Athlone Press, 1977).
  • F. M. L. Thompson, ed., The Rise of Suburbia (Leicester, Leicester University Press, 1982).

12 Women and the Family

  • S. Alexander, Women's Work in Nineteenth-Century London, 1820s-1860s', in J. Mitchell and A. Oakley, eds., Rights and Wrongs of Women (Harmondsworth, Penguin, 1976), reprinted in her Be-coming a Woman and Other Essays in Nineteenth and Twentieth-Century Feminist History (Virago, 3), 3-56.
  • S. Alexander, ‘Becoming a Woman in London in the 1920s and 1930s’, in D. Feldman and G. Stedman Jones, Metropolis: London. Histories and Representations since 1800 (Routledge, 1989), 245-271, reprinted in her Becoming a Woman and Other Essays in Nineteenth and Twentieth-Century Feminist History (Virago, 1994).
  • S. Alexander, ‘Why Feminism? The Women of Longhorn Place’, in her Becoming a Woman and Other Essays in Nineteenth and Twentieth-Century Feminist History (Virago, 135), 135-148.
  • S. Alexander, ‘The Fabian Women's Group, 1908-1952’ in her Becoming a Woman and Other Essays in Nineteenth and Twentieth-Century Feminist History (Virago, 149), 149-158.
  • F. Barret-Ducrocq, ‘The London Biblewomen and Nurses Mission, 1857-1880, Class Relations/Women's Relations’, in B. J. Harris and J. McNamara, eds., Women and the Structure of Society (Durham NC, Duke University Press, 1984).
  • F. Barret-Ducrocq, L'Amour sous Victoria (Paris, Plon, 1989), translated as Love in the Time of Victoria (Harmondsworth, Penguin Books, 1989).
  • P. Chassaigne, `L'Infanticide a Londres a l'Epoque Victorienne: Essai d'Approche Quantitative', Annales de la Demographie Historique (1990), 227-237.
  • E. Fox, ‘The Jewish Maternity Home and Sick Room Helps Society, 1895-1939: a Reply to Lara Marks’, Social History of Medicine, 4 (1991), 117–122.
  • A. R. Higginbotham, Sin of the Age”, Infanticide and Illegitimacy in Victorian London', Victo-rian Studies, 32 (1989), 319-337.
  • F. Hunt, ‘Opportunities Lost and Gained: Mechanization and Women's Work in the London Book-binding and Printing Trades’, in A. John, ed., Unequal Opportunities (Oxford, Blackwell, 71), 71-94.
  • A. J. Kershen, Uniting the Tailors: Trade Unionism amongst the Tailors of London and Leeds, 1870-1939 (Ilford, Frank Cass, 1995).
  • S. King, ‘Technical and Vocational Education for Girls: A Study of the Central Schools of London, 1918-1939’, in P. Sununerfield and E. J. Evans, eds., Technical Education and the State since 1850. Historical and Contemporary Perspectives (Manchester, Manchester University Press, 77), 77-96.
  • L. H. Lees, ‘The Survival of the Unfit: Welfare Policies and Family Maintenance in Nineteenth-Century London’, in P. Mandler, ed., The Uses of Charity. The Poor on Relief in the Nineteenth-Century Metropolis (Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press, 68), 68-122.
  • J. Lewis, ‘The Place of Social Investigation, Social Theory and Social Work in the Approach to late Victorian and Edwardian Social Problems: The Case of Beatrice Webb and Helen Bosanquet’, in M. Bulmer, K. Bales and K. K. Sklar, eds., The Social Survey in Historical Perspective, 1880-1940 (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 148), 148-169.
  • J. Lewis, Women and Social Action in Victorian and Edwardian England (Aldershot, Edward Elgar, 1991).
  • L. Marks, ‘Dear Old Mother Levy's: The Jewish Maternity Home and Sick Room Helps Society, 1895-1939’, Social History of Medicine, 3 (1990), 61–88.
  • L. Marks, ‘Ethnicity, Religion and Health’, Social History of Medicine, 4 (1991), 123–126.
  • L. Marks, ‘The Luckless Waifs and Strays of Humanity: Irish and Jewish Immigrant Unwed Moth-ers in London, 1870-1939’, Twentieth Century British History, 3 (1992), 113–137.
  • L. Marks, ‘Medical Care for Pauper Mothers and their Infants. Poor Law Provision and Local Demand in East London, 1870-1929’, Economic History Review, 46 (1993), 518–542.
  • L. Marks, Model Mothers: Jewish Mothers and Maternity Provision in East London, 1870-1939 (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1994).
  • L. Marks, —They're Magicians": Midwives, Doctors and Hospitals. Women's Experiences of Child-birth in East London and Woolwich in the Interwar Years', Oral History, 23 (1995), 46-53.
  • J. Morris, ‘The Characteristics of Sweating: The late Nineteenth Century London and Leeds Tai-loring Trade’, in A. John, ed., Unequal Opportunities (Oxford, Blackwell, 95), 95-121.
  • A. Newman, ‘Synagogues of the East End’, in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical Society of England, 217), 217-221.
  • D. E. Nord, “Neither Pairs nor Odds": Female Community in Late Nineteenth Century London', Signs, 15 (1990), 733–754.
  • R. O'Day, ‘Before the Webbs: Beatrice Potter's Early Investigations for Charles Booth's Inquiry’, History, 78 (1993), 218–242.
  • T. Olcott, ‘Dead Centre: The Women's Trade Union Movement in London, 1874-1914’, London Journal, 2 (1976), 33–50.
  • K. Robbins, `La Hiérarchie des Prostitués', in M. Charlot and R. Marx, eds, Londres, 1851-1901, L'Ere Victorienne ou le Triomphe des Inégalités (Paris, Editions Autrement, 144), 144-156.
  • E. Ross, ‘Survival Networks. Women's Neighbourhood Sharing in London before World War I’, History Workshop Journal, 15 (1983), 4–27.
  • E. Ross, ‘Labour and Love: Rediscovering London's Working-Class Mothers, 1870-1918’, in J. Lewis, ed., Labour and Love, Women's Experience of Home and Family, 1850-1940 (Oxford, Black-well, 73), 73-96.
  • E. Ross, "'Fierce Questions and Taunts”. Married Life in Working-Class London, 1870-1914', in D. Feldman and G. Stedman Jones, eds., Metropolis: London. Histories and Representations since 1800 (Routledge, 219), 219-244.
  • E. Ross, ‘Hungry Children: Housewives and London Charity, 1870-1918’, in P. Mandler, ed., The Uses of Charity. The Poor on Relief in the Nineteenth-Century Metropolis (Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press, 161), 161-196.
  • E. Ross, Love and Toil. Motherhood in Outcast London, 1870-1918 (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1993).
  • J. Schmiechen, Sweated Industries and Sweated Labour: The London Clothing Trades, 1860-1914 (Croom Helm, 1984).
  • J. Schneer, ‘Politics and Feminism in “Outcast London”. George Lansbury and the First London County Council Election’, Journal of British Studies, 30 (1991), 63–82.
  • D. Thom, ‘Free from Chains? The Image of Women's Labour in London, 1900-1920’, in D. Feld-man and G. Stedman Jones, eds., Metropolis: London. Histories and Representations since 1800 (Routledge, 85), 85-99.
  • D. Thom, `Tommy's Sister: Women at Woolwich in World War I., in R. Samuel, ed., Patriotism, The Making and Unmaking of British National Identity, vol. II, Minorities and Outsiders (Rout-ledge, 144), 144-157.
  • A. Turnbull, —So Extremely Like Parliament": The Work of the Women Members of the London School Board, 1870-1904', in London Feminist History Group, The Sexual Dynamics of History: Men's Power, Women's Resistance (Pluto Press, 120), 120-33.
  • M. Vicinus, Independent Women. Work and Community for Single Women, 1850-1920 (Virago, 1985).
  • J. Walkowitz, City of Dreadful Delight: Narratives of Sexual Danger in Late Victorian London (Chicago, Chicago University Press, 1992).

13 Minority Communities and Racism

  • G. Alderman, ‘The Political Impact of Zionism in the East End of London before 1940’, in A. Aldzerman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical Society of England, 1981), 225-231, amended version in London Journal, 9 (1983), 35-38.
  • G. Alderman, London Jewry and London Politics, 1889-1986 (Routledge, 1989).
  • G. Alderman, ‘Power, Authority and Status in British Jewry: the Chief Rabbinate and Shechita’, in G. Alderman and C. Holmes, eds., Outsiders and Outcasts: Essays in Honour of William J. Fish-man (Duckworth, 12), 12-31.
  • R. Ashton, Little Germany: Exile and Asylum in Victorian England (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1986).
  • C. Bermont, Point of Arrival. A Study of London's East End (Methuen, 1975).
  • E. C. Black, The Social Politics of Anglo-Jewry, 1880-1920 (Oxford, Blackwell, 1988).
  • J. Bush, ‘East London Jews and the First World War’, London Journal, 6 (1980), 147–161.
  • M. Charlot, ‘Le Spleen des Exiles Français’, in M. Charlot and R. Marx, eds., Londres, 1851-1901, L'Ere Victorienne ou le Triomphe des Inégalités (Paris, Editions Autrement, 48), 48-56.
  • N. Cohen, ‘Dr Thomas and the Milkman’, in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical Society of England, 53), 53-58.
  • J. Cooper, ‘Two East End Jewish Families: The Blomsteins and the Isenbergs’, in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical Society of England, 59), 59-73.
  • N. Davies, ‘The Poles in Great Britain, 1914-1919’, Slavonic and Eastern Studies Review, 50 (1972), 63–89.
  • G. Davis, The Irish in Britain, 1815-1914 (Dublin, Gill & Macmillan, 1991).
  • A. Ebner, ‘The East End as seen through the Pages of the Jewish Chronicle — a Preliminary Paper’, in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical Society of England, 281), 281-293.
  • T. M. Endelman, ‘Native Jews and Foreign Jews in London, 1870-1914’, in D. Berger, ed., The Legacy of Jewish Migration: 1881 and its Impact (New York, Brooklyn College, 109), 109-129.
  • T. M. Endelman, 'Communal Solidarity and Family Loyalty among the Jewish Elite of Victorian London', Victorian Studies, 28 (1985), 491–526.
  • D. Englander, ‘Booth's Jews: The Representation of Jews and Judaism in Life and Labour of the People of London’, Victorian Studies, 32 (1989), 551–573.
  • J. Farrell, ‘The German Community in Nineteenth-Century East London’, East London Record, 13 (1990), 2–8.
  • D. Feldman, ‘Jews in London, 1880-1914’, in R. Samuel, ed., Patriotism, The Making and Unmak-ing of British National Identity, vol. II, Minorities and Outsiders (Routledge, 207), 207-229.
  • D. Feldman, ‘The Importance of Being English: Jewish Immigration and the Decay of Liberal England’, in D. Feldman and G. Stedman Jones, eds., Metropolis: London. Histories and Repre-sentations since 1800 (Routledge, 56), 56-84.
  • D. Feldman, Englishmen and Jews. Social Relations and Political Culture, 1840-1914 (New Ha-ven, Yale University Press, 1994).
  • I. Finestein, ‘Joseph Frederick Stern, 1865-1934. Aspects of a Gifted Anomaly’, in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical Society of England, 1981), 75-98, re-printed in his Jewish Society in Victorian England (Vallentine Mitchell, 327), 327-349.
  • I. Finestein, ‘Selig Brodetsky, 1888-1954: The Prodigy from Fashion Street’, in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical Society of England, 99), 99-107.
  • W. J. Fishman, East End Jewish Radicals, 1875-1914 (Duckworth, 1975).
  • W. J. Fishman, ‘Jewish Immigrant Anarchists in East London, 1870-1914’, in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical Society of England, 233), 233-254.
  • E. Fox, ‘The Jewish Maternity Home and Sick Room Helps Society, 1895-1939: A Reply to Lara Marks ’, Social History of Medicine, 4 (1991), 117–122.
  • L. Germain, `L'East End de Yaacov Revinski', in M. Charlot and R. Marx, eds., Londres, 1851-1901: L'Ere Victorienne ou le Triomphe des Inégalités (Paris, Editions Autrement, 85), 85-92.
  • J. Glasman, ‘London Synagogues in the Late Nineteenth Century: Design in Context’, London Journal, 13 (1988), 143–155.
  • J. Green, A Social History of the Jewish East End in London, 1914-1939 (Lewiston, Edwin Mellon Press, 1991).
  • C. Holmes, ‘East End Anti-Semitism, 1936’, Bulletin of the Society for the Study of Labour His-tory, 32 (1976), 26–33.
  • C. Holmes, ‘East End Crime and the Jewish Community’, in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical Society of England, 1981), 109-123,
  • C. Holmes, ‘The Chinese Connection’, in G. Alderman and C. Holmes, eds., Outsiders and Out-casts: Essays in Honour of William J. Fishman (Duckworth, 71), 71-93.
  • C. T. Husbands, ‘Geographical Continuities in Vigilantist and Extreme Right-Wing Political Behav-iour’, London Journal, 8 (1982), 3–26.
  • R. Kalman, ‘The Jewish East End, Where was it?’, in A, Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical Society of England, 3), 3-15.
  • A. Kushner, `Jew and Non-Jew in the East End of London: Towards an Anthropology of “Every-day” Relations', in G. Alderman and C. Holmes, eds., Outsiders and Outcasts: Essays in Honour of William J. Fishman (Duckworth, 32), 32-52.
  • A. Lai, R. Little and P. Little, ‘Chinatown Annie: The East End Opium Trade, 1920-1935, the Story of a Woman Opium Dealer’, Oral History, 14 (1986), 18–30.
  • L. H. Lees, Exiles of Erin. Irish Migrants in Victorian London (Manchester, Manchester University Press, 1979).
  • T. P. Linehan, ‘The British Union of Fascists in Hackney and Stoke Newington, 1933-1940’, in G. Alderman and C. Holmes, eds., Outsiders and Outcasts: Essays in Honour of William J. Fishman (Duckworth, 136), 136-166.
  • V. D. Lipman, ‘Jewish Settlement in the East End, 1840-1940’, in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical Society of England, 17), 17-40.
  • V. D. Lipman, ‘The Booth and New London Surveys as Source Material’, in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical Society of England, 41), 41-49.
  • K. Lunn, ‘Parliamentary Politics and the “Jewish Vote” in Whitechapel, 1906-1914’, in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical Society of England, 255), 255-265.
  • L. Marks, 'Dear Old Mother Levy's: The Jewish Maternity Home and Sick Room Helps Society, 1895-1939', Social History of Medicine, 3 (1990), 61-88.
  • L. Marks, ‘Ethnicity, Religion and Health’, Social History of Medicine, 4 (1991), 123–126.
  • L. Marks, ‘The Luckless Waifs and Strays of Humanity, Irish and Jewish Immigrant Unwed Moth-ers in London, 1870-1939’, Twentieth Century British History, 3 (1992), 113–137.
  • L. Marks, Model Mothers: Jewish Mothers and Maternity Provision in East London, 1870-1939 (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1994).
  • N. Merriman, ed., The Peopling of London. Fifteen Thousand Years of Settlement from Overseas (Museum of London, 1993).
  • A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical Society of England, 1981).
  • I. Osborne, ‘Achievers of the Ghetto: The Education of Jewish Immigrants’ Children in Tower Hamlets, 1870-1914', in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical Society of England, 163), 163-172.
  • P. Panayi, ‘Anti-German Riots in London During the First World War’, German History, 7 (1989), 184–203.
  • P. Panayi, The Enemy in Our Midst: Germans in Britain During the First World War (Oxford, Berg, 1991).
  • P. Panayi, ‘The German Poor and the Working Classes in Victorian London’, in G. Alderman and C. Holmes, eds., Outsiders and Outcasts: Essays in Honour of William J. Fishman (Duckworth, 53), 53-70.
  • P. Panayi, German Immigrants in Britain During the Nineteenth Century; 1815-1914 (Oxford, Berg, 1995).
  • H. Pollins, A History of the Jewish Working Men's Club and Institute (Oxford, Ruskin College, 1981).
  • H. Pollins, ‘East End Working Men's Clubs Affiliated to the Working Men's Club and Institute Union, 1870-1914’, in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical So-ciety of England, 173), 173-192.
  • K. D. Rubin, ‘The Four Per Cent Industrial Dwellings Company Ltd. Its Function and Its East End Developments, 1885-1901’, in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Histori-cal Society of England, 193), 193-204.
  • M. A. Shepherd, ‘How Petticoat Lane became a Jewish Market’, in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical Society of England, 125), 125-131.
  • K. R. M. Short, The Dynamite War: Irish-American Bombers in Victorian Britain (Dublin, Gill & Macmillan, 1979).
  • S. Singer, ‘Jewish Education in the Mid-Nineteenth Century: A Study of the Early Victorian Lon-don Community’, Jewish Quarterly Review, 77 (1986), 163–178.
  • E. Smith, ‘East End Tailors, 1918-1939: An Aspect of the Jewish Workers’ Struggle', Jewish Quar-terly, 34 (1987).
  • E. Smith, ‘Jewish Responses to Political Antisemitism and Fascism in the East End of London, 1920-1939’, in A. Kushner and K. Lunn, eds., Traditions of Intolerance: Historical Perspectives on Fascism and Race Discourse in Britain (Manchester, Manchester University Press, 53), 53-71.
  • E. Smith, ‘Jews and Politics in the East End of London, 1918-1939’, in D. Cesarani, ed., The Making of Modern Anglo-Jewry (Oxford, Basil Blackwell, 1990).
  • E. Smith, ‘Class, Ethnicity and Politics in the Jewish East End, 1918-39’, Transactions of the Jewish Historical Society of England, 32 (1990-2), 355-369.
  • L. Sponza, Italian Immigrants in Nineteenth-Century Britain: Realities and Images (Leicester, Le-icester University Press, 1988).
  • H. E Srebrnik, ‘Communism and Pro-Soviet Feeling among the Jews of East London, 1935-45’, Immigrants and Minorities, 5 (1986), 285–304.
  • H. F. Srebrnik, London Jews and British Communism, 1935-1945 (Ilford, Vallentine Mitchell, 1995).
  • J. Stevenson, ‘The B.U.F., the Metropolitan Police and Public Order’, in K. Lunn and R. Thurlow, eds., British Fascism, Essays on the Radical Right in Inter-War Britain (Croom Helm, 135), 135-149.
  • R. Swift and S. Gilley, eds., The Irish in the Victorian City (Croom Helm, 1985).
  • R. Swift and S. Gilley, eds., The Irish in Britain, 1815-1939 (Pinter, 1989).
  • J. White, Rothschild Buildings. Life in an East End Tenement Block, 1887-1920 (Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1980).
  • J. White, ‘Jewish Landlords, Jewish Tenants. An Aspect of Class Struggle within the Jewish East End, 1881-1914’, in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical Society of England, 205), 205-215.

14 Religion

  • L. Barrow, Independent Spirits: Spiritualism and English Plebeians, 1850-1910 (Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1986).
  • J. Cox, The English Churches in a Secular Society: Lambeth, 1870-1930 (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1982).
  • D. B. McIlhiney, A Gentleman in Every Slum: Church of England Missions in East London, 1837-1914 (Albion Park Pa., Pickwick, 1988).
  • H. McLeod, Class and Religion in the Late Victorian City (Croom Helm, 1974).
  • J. N. Morris, Religion and Urban Change: Croydon, 1840-1914 (Woodbridge, Boydell Press for Royal Historical Society, 1992).
  • A. Newman, ‘Synagogues of the East End’, in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical Society of England, 217), 217-221.
  • J. S. Reed, “Ritualism Rampant in East London": Anglo-Catholicism and the Urban Poor', Victo-rian Studies, 31 (1988), 375–408.
  • S. Williams, ‘Urban Popular Religion and the Rites of Passage’, in H. McLeod, ed., Religion in the Age of Great Cities, 1830-1930 (Routledge, 216), 216-236.

15 Culture, Leisure and Recreation

  • T. G. Ashplant, `London's Working Men's Clubs, 1875-1914', in E. Yeo and S. Yeo, eds., Popular Culture and Class Conflict, 1590-1914, Explorations in the History of Labour and Leisure (Brigh-ton, Harvester Press, 241), 241-270.
  • P. Bailey, ‘Custom, Capital and Culture in the Victorian Music Hall’, in R. D. Storch, ed., Popular Culture and Custom in Nineteenth-Century England (Croom Helm, 1982).
  • P. Bailey, Music Hall: the Business of Pleasure (Milton Keynes, Open University Press, 1986).
  • K. E. Beckson, London in the 1890s. A Cultural History (New York, Norton, 1993).
  • John Davis, ‘Radical Clubs and London Politics, 1870-1900’, in D. Feldman and G. Stedman Jones, eds., Metropolis: London. Histories and Representations since 1800 (Routledge, 103), 103-128.
  • K. Gore, ‘Shaftesbury Avenue, les Feux de la Rampe’, in M. Chariot and R. Marx, eds., Londres, 1851-1901: L'Ere Victorienne ou le Triomphe des Inégalités (Paris, Editions Autrement, 129), 129-137.
  • C. P. Korr, ‘West Ham United Football Club and the Beginnings of Professional Football in Lon-don, 1895-1914’, Journal of Contemporary History, 13 (1978), 211–232.
  • A. Light and R. Samuel, ‘Doing the Lambeth Walk’, in R. Samuel, ed., Patriotism, The Making and Unmaking of British National ldendity, vol. III, National Fictions (Routledge, 262), 262-271.
  • H. L. Malchow, ‘Public Gardens and Social Action in Late Victorian London’, Victorian Studies, 28 (1985), 97–124.
  • H. Pollins, A History of the Jewish Working Men's Club and Institute (Oxford, Ruskin College, 1981.
  • H. Pollins, ‘East End Working Men's Clubs Affiliated to the Working Men's Club and Institute Union, 1870-1914’, in A. Newman, ed., The Jewish East End, 1840-1939 (Jewish Historical So-ciety of England, 173), 173-192.
  • S. Shipley, ‘Tom Causer of Bermondsey: A Boxer Hero of the 1890s’, History Workshop Journal, 15, 28-59.
  • J. Springhall, “A Life Story for the people?": Edwin J. Brett and the London “Low Life” Penny Dreadfuls of the 1860s', Victorian Studies, 33 (1990), 223–247.
  • G. Stedman Jones, Working-Class Culture and Working-Class Politics in London, 1870-1900: Notes on the Remaking of a Working Class, 1870-1900', Journal of Social History, 7 (1974), reprinted in his Languages of Class (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1983).
  • P. Summerfield, ‘The Effingham Arms and the Empire: Deliberate Selection in the Evolution of the Music Hall in London’, in E. Yeo and S. Yeo, eds., Popular Culture and Class Conflict, 1590-1914, Explorations in the History of Labour and Leisure (Brighton, Harvester Press, 209), 209-240.
  • C. Waters, ‘Progressives, Puritans and the Cultural Politics of the Council, 1889-1914’, in A. Saint, ed., Politics and the People of London. The London County Council, 1889-1965 (Hambledon Press, 49), 49-70.
  • D. E. B. Weiner, ‘The People's Palace. An Image for East London in the 1880s’, in D. Feldman and G. Stedman Jones, eds., Metropolis: London. Histories and Representations since 1800 (Routledge, 40), 40-55.

16 Social Surveys and Social Observation

  • K. Bales, ‘Charles Booth's Survey of Life and Labour of the People of London, 1889-1903’, in M. Bulmer, K. Bales and K. K. Sklar, eds., The Social Survey in Historical Perspective, 1880-1940 (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 66), 66-110.
  • M. Bulmer, K. Bales and K. K. Sklar, The Social Survey in Historical Perspective, 1880-1940 (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1991).
  • M. Cullen, ‘Charles Booth's Poverty Survey — Some New Approaches’, in T. C. Smout, ed., The Search for Wealth and Stability. Essays in Economic and Social History Presented to M. W Flinn (Basingstoke, Macmillan, 243), 243-262.
  • B. Eichengreen and S. Freiwald, ‘From Survey to Sample: Labour Market Data for Interwar Lon-don’, Historical Methods Newsleatter, 18 (1985), 125–136.
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17 London and the Nation

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