HistMuse

HistMuse

The 1952 Smog and Radical Invention of Environmental Law

24 min · 10 de may de 2026
portada del episodio The 1952 Smog and Radical Invention of Environmental Law

Descripción

In this episode, we dive into the 1952 Great Smog of London, the five-day disaster that turned ordinary city air into a mass killer and helped force a radical rethink of the state’s responsibility to protect public health. From coal smoke and trapped weather systems to the deaths of thousands and the legal aftermath that led to the Clean Air Act of 1956, this is the story of how one environmental catastrophe helped shape modern environmental law.

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episode How Britain Got Rich From American Slavery artwork

How Britain Got Rich From American Slavery

How did a country that loves to talk about freedom and law build its early wealth on a system of brutal exploitation? In this episode of Histmuse, we dive into the uncomfortable truth behind the rise of the British Empire. We explore how the Atlantic slave trade wasn't just a distant colonial project—it was a massive economic engine that built modern Britain. From the merchants of Liverpool and the bankers of London to the sugar plantations of the Caribbean, discover how human suffering financed the Industrial Revolution and shaped the geography of British wealth. And we uncover the shocking twist of 1833: when slavery was finally abolished, the British government paid a massive 20 million pound bailout—not to the enslaved, but to the slave owners. Follow Histmuse for more deep dives into the hidden history of wealth, money, and power.

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