The Price of Being Poor, Sick, and Female in Philadelphia 150 Years Ago | History for Sleep
In 1870s Philadelphia, being poor, female, and unwell was not three separate problems. It was one trap. A woman could work through cold rooms, chemical steam, bad air, and exhaustion for as long as her body held out, but the moment illness lasted too long, the whole structure around her began to fail at once: wages, rent, lodging, food, respectability, and the thin distance between independence and institutional charity. This video goes inside that fragile chain, where a cough was never just a cough, and where falling sick in a boarding house could quietly become a crisis of work, shelter, and survival before anyone called it one.

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