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41. LookSmart - Directory - Victorian Literature Publications
which examines, supports, and critiques poetry from the victorian era. newsletter dedicated to the study of victorian culture, and Tell us how we re doing.
http://search.looksmart.com/p/browse/us1/us317834/us317898/us71741/us591345/us59
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YOU ARE HERE Home Lifestyle Books 19th Century ... Victorian
Victorian Literature Publications - Peruse these journals devoted to Victorian literature and magazines published during the Victorian Age.
Directory Listings About
  • British Early 19th-Century Periodicals at Minnesota
    View a list of and get info about the literary periodicals published during the Victorian Age and which now reside at the Univ. of MN's library.
    Germ, The

    Read all about this 1850 literary magazine put out by the Pre-Raphaelite circle, or see poems that were published in it at the time.
    Nineteenth-Century Literature

    See tables of contents from past and current issues of this journal, read articles from the sample issue, or search by author and title.
    Nineteenth-Century Studies

    Journal devoted to the literature and the arts of the 19th century offers submission and subscription info and a table of contents.
    Penny Magazine
    Leaf through various issues of this literary magazine published during the Victorian Age and read some of the things published in it. New York University publication explores literary and artistic aspects of the Victorian Era. Browse the contents of past issues.
  • 42. Victorian Era 1837-1901 Fashion History, Costume History And Social History
    in Ilfracombe as part of the celebrations for victorian week in 2002, 2003 on all content in Fashionera.com. E-Mail us if you have comments at pauline@fashion
    http://fashion-era.com/the_victorian_era.htm
    The Victorian Era
    By Pauline Weston Thomas for Fashion-Era.com
    Victorian Society
    Please scroll down Social history. The transition from Romantic to Victorian society. Queen Victoria's accession. The emergence of new conditions and new social classes. The importance of the railway network on ordinary lives and improved communications.
    Early Victorian Fashion 1837-1860
    Early Victorian fashion history overview. The changing silhouette and dating costumes in a long era. Fashion innovations, the cage crinoline and coal tar aniline dyes. Charles Worth and Haute Couture's birth.
    Mid-Late Victorian Fashion 1860-1901
    Victorian fashion history. The fashion silhouettes of 1860-1880, 1867-1875, 1878-1901 from crinoline to various bustle forms. The 1890s and early power dressing. Click on the headings to go to full pages
    Victorian Pictures of Victorian Mantelets and More Victorian Mantelets 1852 have been improved in the new section with line drawings and added text, but the original pages will remain here for a short time.

    43. The UnMuseum: Dinosaurs Of The Victorian Era
    the drawings made from their early study of dinosaur early fan of dinosaurs was Queen Victoria s husband, Prince of his connection with the us Geological Survey
    http://www.unmuseum.org/vdinos.htm
    Dinosaurs of the
    A early drawing of a Megalosaurus Science and dinosaurs became acquainted around 1815 through a gentleman named William Buckland . Buckland had acquired some large fossil bones from Stonefield quarries near Oxford, England. Buckland recognized these bones as belonging to what appeared to be a lizard of enormous size. He named his find Megalosaurus which means "Great Lizard." According to his calculations, the animal must have exceeded forty feet in length and weighed as much as a large elephant. Though Buckland was not the first person to find a Megalosaurus bone (Robert Plot described one as far back as 1676) he was the first to realize that these fossils belonged to an unknown class of huge reptiles. In 1842 Richard Owen , of England, wrote an article reviewing the fossil evidence of these large reptiles. By then three species were well known: Megaloasurus, Iguanodon , and Hylaeosaurus . Owen noted that all three animals had similar structures in their vertebrae and decided that they should all belong to a new sub-order of the Saurian order. He coined the term of this sub-order Dinosauria , or "terrible lizards" and the name stuck.

    44. U.S. 1866-1920
    in the Gilded Age and Progressive era From Humanities Minnesota) History, Geneaology and Education (us Immigration and of the Gilded Age victorian Gender Issues
    http://web.uccs.edu/~history/index/shgape.html

    General Sources

    African Americans

    Immigration

    Business and Industry
    ... History 153, Fall 2000
    The Gilded Age and
    Progressive Era
    Research on the Web
    History 153, Fall 2000

    U.S. History Pages

    European, Asian/African
    The Dramas of Haymarket Best site on Haymarket Riot in Chicago in 1886 Triangle Shirt Waist Factory Fire A learning exhibit, with photos, documents, oral histories and archives. General Resources on the Gilded Age and Progressive Era
    Gilded Age and Progressive Era Internet Resources : Best list of resources, from Tennessee Technological Univ. site American Studies Mega-site for American history and literature at Georgetown University. Buffalo Bill's Wild West Shows Capitalism and Socialism in the Emergence of Modern America: The Formative Era, 1890s-1916 An article by Martin Sklar, published in 1993 in Italy. Cartoons of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era From Ohio State University. Chicago World's Fair of 1893 Crime Statistics for U.S. Cities, 1860-1920

    45. ~*~Chronology Of Important19th Century And Victorian Era Events And Innovations~
    Steamboat era begins. 1835 First assassination attempt against a us President; Jackson is Economic depression. -Victoria, age 18, becomes Queen of England.
    http://www.enoreo.on.ca/socialstudies/pioneer-virtual/chrono.html
    ENO Social Studies Main Page Apothecary Arrival and the Pioneer Era Babies ... Victorian Lace- An Excellent Source of Pioneer and Victorian Information and Pictures
    (This is American based and I am very interested in balancing it with Canadian content. Please contact me at dalehube@enoreo.on.ca if you have Canadian content to share) -US Capital moved from Philadelphia to Washington.
    -Land Act passed; frontier land could be purchased for as little as $160 for 320 acres. -Thomas Jefferson, President; Aaron Burr, Vice President.
    -John Chapman (Johnny Appleseed) spreads his seeds throughout Indiana, Illinois and Ohio -Gaslighting begins: London had gas streetlighting by 1807, Boston had 71 gaslights on its streets by 1835, and 180 by 1839, and most large towns had gaslighting by the 1870s. -West Point Military Academy established. -Vice President Burr kills Alexander Hamilton in a duel at Weehawken, New Jersey. -Jefferson begins second term: George Clinton, Vice President

    46. National History Standards - Era 1
    712. Explain us military and economic mobilization for war tensions and their consequences in the postwar era. of the ‘New Woman challenged victorian values
    http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/nchs/standards/era7-5-12.html
    United States History Standards
    for Grades 5-12 Click on the standard number to jump to the details for that standard. Era 7
    The Emergence of Modern America (1890-1930) Standard 1:

    How Progressives and others addressed problems of industrial capitalism, urbanization, and political corruption
    Standard 2:

    The changing role of the United States in world affairs through World War I
    Standard 3:

    How the United States changed from the end of World War I to the eve of the Great Depression Home Bring History Alive! World History Standards Grades 5-12
    History Standards Grades K-4
    ... Catalog
    Overview
    The study of how the modern United States emerged begins with the Progressive era. It deserves careful study because, among other things, it included the nation's most vibrant set of reform ideas and campaigns since the 1830s-40s. Progressives were a diverse lot with various agendas that sometimes jostled uneasily, but all reformers focused on a set of corrosive problems arising from rapid industrialization, urbanization, waves of immigration, and business and political corruption. Students can be inspired by how fervently the Progressives applied themselves to the renewal of American democracy. They can also profit from understanding the distinctively female reform culture that contributed powerfully to the movement. Two of the problems confronted by Progressives are still central today. First, the Progressives faced the dilemma of how to maintain the material benefits flowing from the industrial revolution while bringing the powerful forces creating those benefits under democratic control and while enlarging economic opportunity. Second, Progressives faced the knotted issue of how to maintain democracy and national identity amid an increasingly diverse influx of immigrants and amid widespread political corruption and the concentration of political power. Of all the waves of reformism in American history, Progressivism is notable for its nearly all-encompassing agenda. As its name implies, it stood for progress, and that put it squarely in the American belief in the perfectible society.

    47. The Victorian Era
    extremities, and many other things that make us titter, it is As stated in the beginning, the victorian Age was It was, indeed, the precursor of the modern era.
    http://www.victoriaspast.com/FrontPorch/victorianera.htm
    The Victorian Era
    The Victorian Era (1837 - 1901)
    by Ilana Miller
    The Victorian era is generally agreed to stretch through the reign of Queen Victoria (1837-1901). It was a tremendously exciting period when many artistic styles, literary schools, as well as, social, political and religious movements flourished. It was a time of prosperity, broad imperial expansion, and great political reform. It was also a time, which today we associate with "prudishness" and "repression". Without a doubt, it was an extraordinarily complex age, that has sometimes been called the Second English Renaissance. It is, however, also the beginning of Modern Times. The social classes of England were newly reforming, and fomenting. There was a churning upheaval of the old hierarchical order, and the middle classes were steadily growing. Added to that, the upper classes' composition was changing from simply hereditary aristocracy to a combination of nobility and an emerging wealthy commercial class. The definition of what made someone a gentleman or a lady was, therefore, changing at what some thought was an alarming rate. By the end of the century, it was silently agreed that a gentleman was someone who had a liberal public (private) school education (preferably at Eton, Rugby, or Harrow), no matter what his antecedents might be. There continued to be a large and generally disgruntled working class, wanting and slowly getting reform and change. Conditions of the working class were still bad, though, through the century, three reform bills gradually gave the vote to most males over the age of twenty-one. Contrasting to that was the horrible reality of child labor which persisted throughout the period. When a bill was passed stipulating that children under nine could not work in the textile industry, this in no way applied to other industries, nor did it in any way curb rampant teenaged prostitution.

    48. Bucks CC - Centre For Buckinghamshire Studies - Launch Of Victorian Prisoners On
    and sentences, thus showing the wide variety of people convicted in the victorian era and for a diversity of crimes. Bill Torrens, Local studies Librarian at
    http://www.buckscc.gov.uk/archives/cbs/index.stm
    Centre for Buckinghamshire Studies
    Home
    Business

    Care Services

    Council Information
    ...
    Where to Find Us
    Victorian Prisoners in Buckinghamshire
    The New Online Internet Database of Victorian Prisoners was launched on 3rd April 2003
    On the 3rd April, Buckinghamshire Libraries and Heritage Service launched an Internet database 'The Victorian Prisoners in Buckinghamshire', an online resource of information taken from original records held at the Centre for Buckinghamshire Studies in Aylesbury.
    County Councillor, Mrs Margaret Dewar, Portfolio Holder for Community Services, who officially launched the database said, 'This innovative resource will provide a rare and invaluable insight into the lives of people in the Victorian era.'
    The database of entries are taken from the Aylesbury Gaol receiving books from the 1870s and includes details such as names, photographs, crimes and sentences, thus showing the wide variety of people convicted in the Victorian era and for a diversity of crimes.
    Bill Torrens, Local Studies Librarian at the Centre for Buckinghamshire Studies (right in above photo) gave a talk about the information in this database. Bill was responsible for extracting the information from the receiving books held in the Centre and creating the database.

    49. Pre-Dreadnought Preservation - Coastal Defense
    of the various harbor defenses from the victorian period seacoast defenses built in the modern era 18901950 See their database of Modern us Forts and Seacoast
    http://www.oz.net/~markhow/pre-dred/coastal.htm
    Pre-Dreadnought Preservation
    Coastal Defense from the Pre-Dreadnought Era
    Ten-inch guns on disappearing mounts at Fort Casey, Washington state.
    Source: The Coast Defense Study Group
      The Pre-Dreadnought Era saw significant changes in how coastal defenses were provisioned. Formerly, coastal defense installations had the upper hand against wooden hulled warships attacking land-based targets. Masonry forts armed with heavier guns than the pre-1860 warships could mount provided effective protection against attack from the sea. The advent of armored warships changed the balance of power between coast defenses and their naval attackers. Efficient steam engines allowed warships to position themselves more effectively against land-based targets. In addition, new ship-borne ordnance could quickly pulverize masonry forts designed before the 1860s. Coast defense theorists reacted with innovation and nation states with significant coastal installations to protect spent millions to improve their defenses. Mine fields, land-based torpedoes, dispersed cement casemates, disappearing gun platforms, and gigantic ordnance all were used to improve land-based defenses. This web page provides links to information on the many remaining coastal defense installations around the world which survive from the Pre-Dreadnought period. Due to their immense construction, many more coastal defense works have survived than have the warships which they were designed to defend against. Of interest to the historian, architect and the artillery enthusiast, these defense works are "the other half of the equation" in the amazing expansion of technology during the Pre-Dreadnought Era of naval history.

    50. Victoriana.Com, Study Center: Victorian Gardening
    In the us, there are several companies from which seeds and plants of old Cheryl Hurd has been writing about the late victorian era for more than six years, and
    http://www.victoriana.com/library/garden/hurd.html
    Victoriana.Com
    Study Center
    STUDY CENTER
    Articles
    19th C. Links

    Harper's Bazar
    ...
    Museum Links

    SPECIAL FEATURES A Victorian Christmas
    Victorian Weddings
    ANTIQUE MARKETPLACE
    Shop for antiques!
    ...
    Victorian Animated Graphics
    1. Lawn
    A front and rear lawn were considered imperative in a formal garden. Cottage gardens and woodland gardens were more informal, and lawns were not such a requisite. The large expanses of lawn on estates were trimmed by gang mowers, drawn by horses. The push mower, for more modest lawns, was patented during Victoria's reign.
    2. Trees
    Trees were used primarily to shade important parts of the house where direct sun was unwelcome, such as a dining room or veranda. Trees were also used to frame the carriage drive or approach to the house. In the city, trees were often planted along the street to aid in privacy. Weeping trees and those with interestingly colored or shaped leaves were popular and used strategically to draw the eye. Depending upon climate, one might collect exotic trees and "display" them as part of the lawn decor. Most often these exotics were kept in conservatories.
    3. Shrubs

    51. History In Focus: Victorian Page
    History in Focus The victorian era l about l home l. The Irish in victorian Britain the Local Dimension Review by given) who behaves very well to us in the
    http://www.history.ac.uk/ihr/Focus/Victorians/
    History in Focus: The Victorian Era l about l home l Queen Victoria reigned 1837 - 1901
    T his first edition of History in Focus begins with a look at the nineteenth century, marking the centenary of the death of Queen Victoria. Roy Porter's statement 'Modern times dawned with the nineteenth century' points to the relevance of an age in which can be seen the origins of our current economic, political and social structure.
    Discover Men and Women Ireland Asylums Law and order ... Ancestors Resources Books Web Sites Reviews Research Victorian
    Diaries Headmaster Mother Actor Young Lady Trace your
    Victorian
    Ancestors Guide
    Introduction
    by Anne Shepherd Queen Victoria (1819-1901) was the first English monarch to see her name given to the period of her reign whilst still living. The Victorian Age was characterised by rapid change and developments in nearly every sphere - from advances in medical, scientific and technological knowledge to changes in population growth and location. Over time, this rapid transformation deeply affected the country's mood: an age that began with a confidence and optimism leading to economic boom and prosperity eventually gave way to uncertainty and doubt regarding Britain's place in the world. Today we associate the nineteenth century with the Protestant work ethic, family values, religious observation and institutional faith.

    52. History In Focus: Victorian Page
    era l home l about l victorian era l back . Exiles of Erin The Irish in victorian London, Manchester The answers to such questions, moreover, tell us as much
    http://www.history.ac.uk/ihr/Focus/Victorians/macraild.html
    History in Focus: The Victorian Era l home l about l Victorian Era l back Book Review: Author's Response Book Title The Great Famine and Beyond: Irish Migrants in Britain in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries Author Donald MacRaild Reviewer Paul O'Leary Publisher Dublin, Irish Academic Press, 2000
    pp. xii, 303 Paul O'Leary has written a very gracious review of my edited book and I am delighted to be able to respond to it. O'Leary's own work in the field is well-known and well-respected, not least the major monograph he has just published which fills what was an enormous gap in our appreciation of the complexities of Irish migration and community building in Wales. ( Immigration and Integration: The Irish in Wales, 1798-1922 , University of Wales Press, 2000). In taking up issues raised by O'Leary, I must state outright that what I offer here is a collection of my own opinion and thoughts. So, while I will pick up on issues he raises in discussing other contributors' essays, what I say is not necessarily what the individual authors would have said. O'Leary offers telling insights into all aspect of the Irish migrant experience. The volume was intended to have a distinct comparative strand and this is noted, and discussed, in the review. There is no question in my mind that comparative history is important; like O'Leary, I, too, am surprised that so little genuinely comparative research has been conducted in the field. Other migrant groups, such as Bailly's Italians, have been the subject of comparative analysis. When writing my chapter on the possibilities of studying Irish migrants as part of the wider Atlantic economy, I was echoing ideas put forward by Lyn Lees (albeit briefly) in the first chapter of her study of the Irish in London (

    53. Study Abroad - SUNY Brockport- Victorian Literature
    immerse themselves in the worlds of victorianera authors and their stories by studying victorian society and program cost in us$ varies; please visit our
    http://www.studyabroaddirectory.com/listingsp3.cfm/listing/13313
    England city: Various
    country: England term: Summer
    dates: Summer SUNY Brockport- Victorian Literature
    visit the web site by clicking here!
    SUNY College at Brockport

    350 New Campus Drive
    Morgan III
    Brockport, New York 14420
    United States
    phone:
    fax:
    web site:
    visit SUNY College at Brockport's web site by clicking here subject area: Literature description: Participants in this three-week program will immerse themselves in the worlds of Victorian-era authors and their stories by studying Victorian society and customs. Participants will be stepping out of the classroom and studying in and among the places where these writers lived and the places they wrote about. program cost in us$: varies; please visit our web site back new search send this page to a friend other study abroad listings from SUNY College at Brockport - Multi-Country, Various Locations SUNY Brockport- Internships Abroad Australia, Throughout Australia SUNY Brockport - Australia Australia, Canberra SUNY Brockport: Australian National University Australia, Canberra SUNY Brockport: University of Canberra Australia, Darwin

    54. Victorian Station's Recommended Sites
    RSVP You are cordially invited to join us for afternoon tea. victorian Friends A cozy place to study the victorian era and hopefully bring a little bit
    http://www.victorianstation.com/links.html
    19th Century Site Directory
    This page is dedicated to all 19th century enthusiasts who have used their creativity to develop a non-profit web site in order to share their love of Victoriana with others. At the moment they are listed alphabetically. We applaud the hard work involved in creating these sites and hope you enjoy visiting them.
    Submit your personal site If you are looking to purchase items to decorate or renovate your home please click on the link above. A Victorian Passage: Lovely Victorian photos, etiquette and other delights. Complete Victorian: We are a group of Victorian at heart people that love the look, romance, and manners of the Victorian era. Agraphica Graphics: 100% free Graphics, link back required please. Victorian, art, animals, flowers,angels,etc Benning's Victorian Age: A Victorian Site from a Man's perspective, with Sports, Art, and History, as well as Music of the Age. I trust you'll enjoy your visit. B J's Design Shoppe: Free graphics and border sets with a Victorian theme.

    55. Remembering With Love
    Austin and others who wrote so well of this era. and my greatgreat- grandmother a victorian Woman of the going and all the unknowns that lay ahead of us.
    http://www.fortunecity.com/millennium/principal/627/victorian.html
    web hosting domain names email addresses The log cabin shown above was erected by my ancestors when they first came to Nebraska in 1870s. It stood for many
    years, as a reminder to them of what it was like. This was their *second* home the first one being a dugout to get them
    through the winter till they could build. For a wonderful letter written by Alonzo Monk who moved here as a young lad
    with his family telling of their life please click here. You will most assuredly get a different picture of the *Victorian Era*
    as he tells of his life for a span covering several years from the 1870's through early 1900s. To Read The Letter Please Click Here I love it too, that image we have of the “Victorian Era”. Willowy women rushing to and fro with their parasols blousing in the wind, dainty waists accented by bustles, hair finely coiffured atop their heads, pearls decorating their sweet little ear lobes, etc. Sure, it does make a pretty picture and we, as present day Americans, have quite fallen in love with that image. Perhaps it’s due to the influence of the novels and movies of Jane Austin and others who wrote so well of this era. For whatever reason, we have conjured up a very romanticized version of this time period. Though the lovely Victorian mansions, beautifully attired men and women and such DID exist in some of the larger cities of America...they are only a tiny, tiny part of life in Victorian America. Mary Ann Fetterly Monk
    The lady who homesteaded
    the cabin shown above...

    56. 19th Century US History Sites
    of 190 works documenting the formative era of California s 1893 Chicago World s Fair; The victorian Society in America; study of major 19th century us historians
    http://www.wsu.edu/~amerstu/19th/hist.html
    19th Century U.S. History Sites Online
    1776 to 1860 (including selected colonial sites)

    57. Victorian Links: Organizations
    ladies brought together through a shared love of the victorian era. 2001 Hits 230). Visits With a victorian LadyTM Kindred of those who have gone on before us.
    http://www.victorianlinks.com/links/Organizations/
    Home What's New Miss Mary's Picks Marketplace ... Top : Organizations
    Victorian Links: Organizations
    Listings:
    • Australian Victorian Studies Association - The Australasian Victorian Studies Association is organised to promote the activities and research of scholars in Victorian studies. Membership is open to all those who are interested in the study of nineteenth-century culture of the Victorian period. (Added: 26-Jun-2001 Hits: 107)
    • Society for the Study of Nineteenth-Century Ireland - The purpose of the Society is to promote research into Nineteenth-Century Ireland. Its membership is open to scholars both from Ireland and other countries. It welcomes members from a wide range of disciplines: literature, history, economics, geography, sociology, theology, women's studies etc. It thus seeks to foster an inter-disciplinary approach to Ninteenth-Century Irish studies. (Added: 14-May-2001 Hits: 104)
    • The Gibson Girls - The Gibson Girls are on online community of young ladies who appreciate a finer place in time, when manners and morals ruled the day, and afternoon tea and etiquette played a role in everyday lives. (Added: 22-Feb-2001 Hits: 344)
    • The Gilded Lily - The Gilded Lily is a periodical for women with a passion for the past. Journalistic article covering a wide range of topics for the time spanning 1800 thorugh 1940.

    58. Women's Work In The 19th Century
    This site covers the real victorian era of England of victorian women compiled by the victorian Women Writers that contains over 7500 us feminist organizations
    http://pigseye.kennesaw.edu/~ccaldwel/victoria.htm
    Women's Work in the 19th Century
    Welcome! This site is a bibliography of Web sites related to the work of women in the 19th century. The original bibliography was a class handout that provided an exceptional resource for our study of "Women's Work in the 19th Century" in the Fall of 1997. Offered as an interdisciplinary class, "Women's Work" included English 368 and History 490 at Kennesaw State University, in Kennesaw, Georgia. Additionally, this class was linked to History 493 at Armstrong State University in Savannah, Georgia, through the GSAMS teleconferencing network.
    The class featured the use of technology in and out of the classroom, utilizing not only the GSAMS distance learning network, but also PowerPoint presentations, digital photography, the World Wide Web, and a class-wide e-mail listserv. Questions about this site or about the class can be sent to Dr. Robbins . Should you know of other sites that need to be included here, let us know!
    We encourage you to BOOKMARK this page for current and future use.
    We don't know how you got here, but we hope that you will return often: Bookmark Now!

    59. Victorian Historical Links
    of a site that you feel would compliment this list, please contact us The Complete victorian Learn all about everyday life in the victorian era, the rules of
    http://www.deltacom-design.co.uk/victoriana_historical.htm
    The Victorian Era Historical Links We have spent a deal of time searching the Internet to bring together a selection of educational and informative sites that we feel will be of interest to our visitors. We will update this as we find new sites. If you have or know of a site that you feel would compliment this list, please contact us
    Hearthstone
    The world's first home to be lighted by a central hydroelectric station.
    Saturday June 26th
    Family Festival
    10:00 am - 4:00 pm A day devoted to leisure, 19th century style. Tour Hearthstone and find out how the Victorians spent their free time then participate in some of those activities yourself! Learn how to make paper-works, play marbles on the lawn, listen to music on the front porch and so much more.
    There is so much more to this house, we really do suggest you visit this web site and if possible visit the house. Press Release Washoe couple will offer chance to 'live the cowboy life' This article ran on April 9 th in Reno Nevada Jon and Linda Walters as members of the Comstock Compadres, LLC, purchased the land and together all six members are developing the Old Yella Dog Ranch and Cattle Company on the site of a Nevada ghostown (22 miles east of Cedarville, CA).

    60. Victoriana
    The Study is dedicated to the education and research of costume Flowers had a message of their own Step back in time with us to the victorian era And enjoy
    http://mywebpages.comcast.net/kellis1/victoriana.htm
    If I could have picked my era, it would have been the Victorian Age . There is nothing quite like the detailed beauty of everything from the hugest mansion to the tiniest exquisite little button that was created during that time period. Under construction... Victorian animated gif "Lady in Corset" by:
    Victoriana.com, A Victorian Antique Marketplace
    "A Victorian Christmas"
    at Victoriana.com
    A Victorian Antique Marketplace
    [Note from Karen: They don't have the Christmas section up now, but I'm sure they will bring it back when we get closer to December] This entire website is a marvel, but Oooooohhhh! the Victorian Christmas section is an absolute MUST if you yearn to duplicate a little bit of that elegance from the past in your own home this holiday season. The subsections are: Decorating, Entertaining, Christmas Cards, Victorian Gifts, Child's Christmas, Victorian Crafts and List of Links. Each one could keep you occupied for hours exploring; I had a

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