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Victorian Era Social

System.
By: Morgan Markowicz, Jake Sliter, and Danny
Perez.

The Main Three Social Classes.


Working Class
Middle Class
Upper Class

The thing that made them different from one another


was how much the worked.

Classes Interacting.
The classes never interacted with one another, they only
briefly saw each other at church.

How The Lower Class was Treated.


In church the upper classes sat in the front in reserved
pews, while the lower classes sat in the back. The lower
class was treated poorly.

Women of the Upper Class.


The expectations for women in the upper class were that
they were to have no sexual contact before marriage.

Professions for The Classes.


The working conditions for each of the classes were
quite different.

This is the Working class


working in a kitchen.

Professions for Working Class.


The working class worked almost all day and the
conditions were brutal.

These are the clothes


that the Working Class
wore.

Professions for Middle Classes


The middle class women took care of the home while
the men worked at a facility.

Professions for Upper Class


The upper class never worked. They had servants or
maids in every household to do the work for them

Sources
www.english.uwosh.edu
www.fashion-era.com
www.sites.google.com

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