Reading time:

1–2 minutes

Author Mark Beatty joins to explore three Victorians who shaped their era in very different ways yet rarely get the spotlight. We trace Grace Darling’s 1838 sea rescue and the birth of tabloid celebrity; Josephine Butler’s fearless campaign against the Contagious Diseases Acts and for raising the age of consent; and George Biddell Airy’s half-century as Astronomer Royal, standardising Greenwich Mean Time for a world on the move. It’s a conversation about media, morality, science, empire—and how private grief and public purpose can collide.

Mark’s trilogy on Darling, Butler and Airy is out now. If you can, please support independent bookshops or buy direct from the publisher.


Go Deeper: Visit our website at www.explaininghistory.org for articles and detailed explorations of the topics discussed.

▸ Join the Conversation: Our community of history enthusiasts discusses episodes, shares ideas, and continues the conversation. Find us on:

Get the weekly analysis

One piece every week connecting current events to their historical roots — free, every Tuesday.

Subscribe free →

Paid tier also available — deeper dives, full archive, essay guides.

If this was useful, there’s more where it came from.

Every week I publish one piece connecting a current event to its historical roots — free, every Tuesday. Paid subscribers get two additional deeper dives and full archive access.

Subscribe to Explaining History →

Leave a Reply

Discover more from Explaining History Podcast

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading