Yes.
The novel this is based on was written more than 150 years ago, by Elizabeth Gaskell, and is also called "North and South". It is still being reprinted regularly and available for a few quid (or Euro or Dollars).
It's available for free as an ebook on Amazon.com
It's available for free as an ebook on Amazon.com
Milton is a fictional town in the north of England, but modelled after the real Manchester, which was one of the industrial centres in the 19th century.
User Supergran wrote this on the board for North & South:
"I've just watched a re-run of an episode of "How We Built Britain" about life in 19th century Northern England. Working on the principle that a knowledge of the historical background deepens one's appreciation and enjoyment of a film or book, I thought N&S lovers might be interested in a few facts. Manchester (the fictional Milton) grew from 50,000 in the 1780's to over 300,000 by the 1840's as people flocked to the cities to find work in the new factories and mills. They found unpaved streets, without drains or sewers, so covered with refuse and excrement (sorry!) as to be almost impassable. In 1841, the average life expectancy in Manchester was 26 and a half years, which was the lowest in Britain since the Plague in the Middle Ages. In the mills, children ran back and forwards under the machines to retie the cotton or to get rid of rubbish. One mill owner said he never knowingly employed children under the age of 9! People's living conditions were appalling. The programme showed an old cellar, windowless and airless, in which it is believed 16 families lived together. So when Margaret came to Milton from the rural South, she wasn't being "soft" or a wimp. She was truly shocked, and rightly so.
Gradually, things began to improve. In the 1850's, a textile manufacturer and millionaire by the name of Titus Salt decided to create a model village which he called Saltaire. He opened a factory employing 3000 people. Then he built neat little houses for them (a far cry from the Manchester slums). He also built a church, a school, a hospital, even retirement homes for the elderly! Salt took more care over his worker's environment than any other mill owner at the time and it worked. I like to think that John Thornton, armed now with the means to reopen his mill AND with his newfound humanity (learned from his friendship with Higgins) will do something similar with Margaret at his side."
"I've just watched a re-run of an episode of "How We Built Britain" about life in 19th century Northern England. Working on the principle that a knowledge of the historical background deepens one's appreciation and enjoyment of a film or book, I thought N&S lovers might be interested in a few facts. Manchester (the fictional Milton) grew from 50,000 in the 1780's to over 300,000 by the 1840's as people flocked to the cities to find work in the new factories and mills. They found unpaved streets, without drains or sewers, so covered with refuse and excrement (sorry!) as to be almost impassable. In 1841, the average life expectancy in Manchester was 26 and a half years, which was the lowest in Britain since the Plague in the Middle Ages. In the mills, children ran back and forwards under the machines to retie the cotton or to get rid of rubbish. One mill owner said he never knowingly employed children under the age of 9! People's living conditions were appalling. The programme showed an old cellar, windowless and airless, in which it is believed 16 families lived together. So when Margaret came to Milton from the rural South, she wasn't being "soft" or a wimp. She was truly shocked, and rightly so.
Gradually, things began to improve. In the 1850's, a textile manufacturer and millionaire by the name of Titus Salt decided to create a model village which he called Saltaire. He opened a factory employing 3000 people. Then he built neat little houses for them (a far cry from the Manchester slums). He also built a church, a school, a hospital, even retirement homes for the elderly! Salt took more care over his worker's environment than any other mill owner at the time and it worked. I like to think that John Thornton, armed now with the means to reopen his mill AND with his newfound humanity (learned from his friendship with Higgins) will do something similar with Margaret at his side."
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- How many seasons does North & South have?1 season
- How many episodes does North & South have?4 episodes
- When did North & South end?December 5, 2004
- How long is North & South?1 hour
- What is the IMDb rating of North & South?8.6 out of 10
- Who stars in North & South?
- Who created North & South?
- Who wrote North & South?
- Who directed North & South?
- Who was the producer of North & South?
- Who was the composer for North & South?
- Who was the executive producer of North & South?
- Who was the cinematographer for North & South?
- What is the plot of North & South?North and South is a four-part adaptation of Elizabeth Gaskell's love story of Margaret Hale, a middle-class southerner who is forced to move to the northern town of Milton.
- Who are the characters in North & South?Bessy Higgins, Capt. Maxwell Lennox, Dixon, Edith Shaw, Fanny Thornton, Frederick Hale, Hannah Thornton, Henderson Worker, Henry Lennox, John Boucher, and others
- What genre is North & South?Drama and Romance
- How many awards has North & South been nominated for?1 nomination
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