Household Inventories Reassessed

ABSTRACT Contrary to previous belief, there are now known to be substantial numbers of household inventories for nineteenth-century England and Wales. This article discusses what, and how, this “new” source can add to our understanding of the domestic cultures of the period. It describes how these inventories, read through the lens of a material-culture approach in both aggregate and interpretive analysis, not only offer unprecedented grounded evidence for how a sample of “unremarkable” Victorians laid out and equipped the spaces of their homes but also bring to light stories of intention, choice, and change in the furnishing, equipment, use, and meaning of domestic spaces.

[1]  Danny Miller,et al.  Home Possessions , 2021 .

[2]  A. Doria Home , 2016, The Jerrie Mock Story.

[3]  Tom Fleischer The Victorian House Domestic Life From Childbirth To Deathbed , 2016 .

[4]  D. Hicks,et al.  Introduction: the place of historical archaeology , 2014 .

[5]  D. Green,et al.  THE FINAL RECKONING: USING DEATH DUTY RECORDS TO RESEARCH WEALTH HOLDING IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY ENGLAND AND WALES , 2013 .

[6]  L. Hoskins Social, Economic and Geographical Differences in Mid-Nineteenth-Century Homes: The Evidence from Inventories , 2013 .

[7]  P. Horn Childhood and child labour in the British Industrial Revolution , 2012 .

[8]  L. Hoskins Reading the inventory : household goods, domestic cultures and difference in England and Wales, 1841-81 , 2011 .

[9]  Catherine Richardson,et al.  History and Material Culture: A Student's Guide to Approaching Alternative Sources , 2010 .

[10]  J. Humphries Childhood and Child Labour in the British Industrial Revolution: List of figures , 2010 .

[11]  Emma. Ferry,et al.  'Decorations may be compared to doctors': An analysis of Rhoda and Agnes Garretts suggestions for house decoration (1876) , 2010 .

[12]  Jane Hamlett ‘The Dining Room Should Be the Man's Paradise, as the Drawing Room Is the Woman's’: Gender and Middle‐Class Domestic Space in England, 1850–1910 , 2009 .

[13]  Penny Sparke,et al.  Designing the modern interior: from the Victorians to today , 2009 .

[14]  Jane Hamlett The British Domestic Interior and Social and Cultural History , 2009 .

[15]  S. Frommer Dan Hicks and Mary C. Beaudry (eds), The Cambridge Companion to Historical Archaeology , 2013, European Journal of Archaeology.

[16]  P. Sparke The Modern Interior Revisited , 2008 .

[17]  A. Mayne On the Edges of History: Reflections on Historical Archaeology , 2008 .

[18]  P. Sparke The Modern Interior , 2008 .

[19]  A. Evans Enlivening the Archive: Glimpsing Embodied Consumption Practices in Probate Inventories of Household Possessions , 2008 .

[20]  A. Erickson Possession—and the other one‐tenth of the law: assessing women's ownership and economic roles in early modern England , 2007 .

[21]  Virginia Smith,et al.  Clean: A History of Personal Hygiene and Purity , 2007 .

[22]  M. Ponsonby Stories from Home: English Domestic Interiors, 1750–1850 , 2007 .

[23]  A. Mayne Review Essay: Tall Tales but True? , 2007 .

[24]  K. Forde,et al.  Design and the modern magazine , 2007 .

[25]  Emma Ferry,et al.  '...information for the ignorant and aid for the advancing...' Macmillan's 'Art at Home' series, 1876-83 , 2007 .

[26]  Deborah Anne Cohen,et al.  Household Gods: The British and Their Possessions , 2006 .

[27]  C. Grant,et al.  Imagined Interiors: Representing the Domestic Interior Since the Renaissance , 2006 .

[28]  D. Hicks,et al.  Material culture studies and historical archaeology , 2006 .

[29]  D. Hicks,et al.  The Cambridge Companion to Historical Archaeology , 2006 .

[30]  E. Ferry Home and away: domesticity and empire in the work of Lady Barker , 2006 .

[31]  Dan Hicks,et al.  Historical Archaeology and Buildings , 2006 .

[32]  J. Thirsk Production and consumption in English households, 1600–1750 , 2005 .

[33]  Michael Mckeon The Secret History of Domesticity: Public, Private, and the Division of Knowledge , 2005 .

[34]  Mrinalini Sinha BOOK REVIEW: E. M. Collingham.IMPERIAL BODIES: THE PHYSICAL EXPERIENCE OF THE RAJ, C. 1800-1947. Cambridge: Polity, 2001. , 2003 .

[35]  J. Flanders The Victorian House : Domestic Life from Childbirth to Deathbed , 2003 .

[36]  Mary Ann Elston,et al.  Purity and pollution: gender, embodiment and Victorian medicine , 2003, Medical History.

[37]  G. Lees-Maffei Studying Advice: Historiography, Methodology, Commentary, Bibliography , 2003 .

[38]  J. Pridmore Imperial bodies : the physical experience of the Raj, c 1800-1947, E.M. Collingham : book review : general , 2003 .

[39]  Linda J. Young Middle-class culture in the nineteenth century : America, Australia and Britain , 2003 .

[40]  Charles E. Orser Jnr Encyclopedia of Historical Archaeology , 2002 .

[41]  L. Walker Home Making: An Architectural Perspective , 2002, Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society.

[42]  T. Laqueur :A Man's Place: Masculinity and the Middle-Class Home in Victorian England , 2001 .

[43]  Ben Highmore,et al.  Wild Things: The Material Culture of Everyday Life , 2001 .

[44]  E. M. Collingham Imperial Bodies: The Physical Experience of the Raj, C.1800-1947 , 2001 .

[45]  S. Lawrence,et al.  Ethnographies of place: a new urban research agenda , 1999, Urban History.

[46]  Mimi Hellman Furniture, Sociability, and the Work of Leisure in Eighteenth-Century France , 1999 .

[47]  S. Pennell CONSUMPTION AND CONSUMERISM IN EARLY MODERN ENGLAND , 1999, The Historical Journal.

[48]  T. Meldrum Domestic service, privacy and the eighteenth-century metropolitan household , 1999, Urban History.

[49]  Jennifer Dawn Melville,et al.  The use and organisation of domestic space in late seventeenth-century London , 1999 .

[50]  Danny Miller,et al.  Acknowledging consumption : a review of new studies , 1997 .

[51]  P. King Pauper Inventories and the Material Lives of the Poor in the Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries , 1997 .

[52]  P. Glennie CONSUMPTION WITHIN HISTORICAL STUDIES , 1996 .

[53]  L. Aiello Family fortunes , 1995, Nature.

[54]  Stana Nenadic MIDDLE-RANK CONSUMERS AND DOMESTIC CULTURE IN EDINBURGH AND GLASGOW 1720–1840 , 1994 .

[55]  J Ogden,et al.  Behind closed doors. , 1993, Nursing times.

[56]  Joanna Banham,et al.  Victorian Interior Design , 1991 .

[57]  A. Hood “Culture and Comfort: People, Parlors, and Upholstery, 1850–1930.” Strong Museum, 1 Manhattan Sq., Rochester, NY 14607 , 1989 .

[58]  Roy Porter,et al.  Concepts of cleanliness: changing attitudes in France since the Middle Ages , 1989, Medical History.

[59]  Katherine C. Grier,et al.  Be it Ever So Humble@@@Making the American Home: Middle-Class Women & Domestic American Culture, 1840-1940@@@Culture & Comfort: People, Parlors, and Upholstery, 1850-1930 , 1989 .

[60]  Lorna Weatherill,et al.  Consumer Behaviour and Material Culture in Britain, 1660-1760 , 1988 .

[61]  F. Driver Moral geographies: social science and the urban environment in mid-nineteenth century England , 1988 .

[62]  Adrian Forty,et al.  Objects of desire , 1986 .

[63]  P. Corfield,et al.  Rooms and room use in Norwich housing, 1580–1730 , 1982 .

[64]  Stefan Muthesius,et al.  The English terraced house , 1982 .

[65]  R. Firth The Best Circles: Society, Etiquette and the Season , 1974 .

[66]  Hector Gavin Sanitary ramblings, being sketches and illustrations of Bethnal green : a type of the condition of the metropolis and other large towns , 1848 .