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[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/casualty_1906.jpg]]

Broadcast internationally as ''London Hospital'', this is a SpinOff InNameOnly of ''Series/{{Casualty}}'' that aired as a SundayEveningDramaSeries.

This is dramatization of the hospital records of the London Hospital (located in Whitechapel in the East End) focusing on the equivalent location as its modern counterpart (the Receiving Room, although we see wards too) save that all the cases and characters are historically accurate.

The show consists of a single episode (1906), a three part series (1907), and a six part series (1909)
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!!This series provides examples of:

* AllergicToLove: Bedford Fenwick has a panic attack because he CannotSpitItOut [[spoiler:to Miss Luckes]]. The "love" part is not outright stated but implied by the sheer awkwardness of the scene.
%%* BaitAndSwitchTyrant: Ada from ''1907'' through to ''1909''.
%%* BenevolentBoss: Sydney Holland.
* {{Bookends}}: Episode 5 of ''1909'' starts and ends with a "Scrub" mopping the floors.
%%* BrainyBrunette: Ethel.
* BritishStuffiness: ''1907'' shows that Miss Luckes seems to be suffering as a result of this and being MarriedToTheJob.
* ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: Probationer Veveers, who was the [[TokenMinority token]] South Asian.
* ColourCodedForYourConvenience: Probationers wear lilac, nurses have pink and ward sisters wear blue.
* CustomUniform: Matron
* CPRCleanPrettyReliable: Averted, in that CPR didn't exist back then. When a child's heart stops after a problem with the anaesthesia, Silvester's method (which involves moving the arms back and forth) is used instead. This method is now banned in the UK.
* DangerousWorkplace: A lot of the patients' injuries are caused by workplace accidents. As this is set in the pre-antibiotic era, the hospital itself is a dangerous place to work at -- infection is a real risk, as is injury from handling still-imperfect medical technology such as crude x-ray machines.
%%* DocuDrama
%%* DrJerk: Mr Dean.
* [[invoked]]DudeNotFunny: {{Lampshaded}} by Dr. Ingrams after Culpin ropes him into anaesthetising a patient [[spoiler:so they can treat her for the side-effects of an illegal abortion without alerting the police]].
-->'''Dr. Culpin''': I'll buy you a pint tonight, two if you can bring her round.\\
'''Dr. Ingrams''': That is '''not''' funny.
* DumbBlonde: Probationer {{Chuck|CunninghamSyndrome}} was replaced in ''1909'' by Nurse Ansett, the token blonde who [[IdiotBall couldn't do anything right for an episode,]] including thinking, in regards to Women's Suffrage, [[StrawmanBall "Things work best when everyone knows their place."]]
%%* TheEdwardianEra: Complete with the hats (on occasion).
%%* EvilMatriarch: Matron has her moments.
%%* FalseStart:
%%* FlorenceNightingaleEffect: [[spoiler:Laura and Saul.]]
* FromBadToWorse: The revelation of EverybodyKnewAlready that the viewers and most of the characters are in on [[spoiler: Dr. Culpin is training Ethel to be a doctor]] leads to the audience learning the hospital's [[BigSecret big]] [[EverybodyKnewAlready Not Secret]]: [[spoiler: They don't train female doctors because at some point in the past, Matron Luckes attempted to become a doctor and failed, and therefore propagates the view that [[IfICantHaveYou "the profession is not suited to women"]]]].
%%* HeadbuttOfLove: [[spoiler: Miss Luckes and Sydney Holland.]]
* HeroicBSOD: Ada, [[spoiler: when she loses her engagement ring in a vat of porridge]].
* HookerWithAHeartOfGold: Anna Baker, or at least it's heavily suggested that that is her line of work.
* HospitalHottie: Despite the fact that the nurses' uniforms leave '''everything''' to the imagination. This was, of course, the norm for the time.
* KickTheDog: Matron seems to enjoy sending Ethel away to private nursing way, ''way'' too much:
--->'''Ethel''': (reading her letter of introduction in abject horror)... Condition -- piles.\\
'''Matron''': Remember to warm your hands.
* MarriedToTheJob: All the nurses are compelled to do this, to the point where they get the sack if they are found out to be married, although this was, for the most part, TruthInTelevision until TheSixties. Ada seems to cope the worst with it.
%%* MedicalDrama:
* MomentKiller: Subverted: a "scrub" is seen at the end interrupting [[spoiler:the kiss between Ethel and Dr. Culpin, although if anything this intensifies the moment rather than kills it]].
* MoodWhiplash: The finale of ''1909'' has a serious case of this, although it's not ''entirely'' to its detriment.
* MustHaveCaffeine: Ethel, studying into the wee small hours, stops for a moment and utters just one word:
---> "Tea."
%%* MyBiologicalClockIsTicking: Ada towards the end of ''1909''.
* OneOfOurOwn: [[spoiler:Ethel contracts scarlet fever and is sent to isolation.]]
* OnlySaneEmployee: Miss Luckes somewhat, considering that she seems to spend most of her time attempting to steer the nurses, particularly Ada and Ethel, away from protocol-related disaster as well as nervous breakdowns and very little time on the wards. TruthInTelevision, Matron Luckes was a real person and in any case the Matron was more or less the manager of the hospital's medical staff at the time.
* PeriodDrama
* PoliticallyCorrectHistory: Completely averted. You've got plenty of racist views being expressed here.
* ProfessorGuineaPig: Creator/AntonLesser's psychiatrist character asks someone to perform an operation on him in order to experience the emotions the patients go through prior to operations. He also cuts a nerve in his arm, believing that it may never reconnect, [[spoiler:only to find that it does regrow]].
* QuintessentialBritishGentleman: All the male medics. Mr. (Hurry) Fenwick is probably the best example of the trope, whereas Dr. Culpin is closest to the real thing.
* SecretRelationship: [[spoiler:Ethel and Dr. Culpin. But as is the want of said SecretRelationship, [[EverybodyKnewAlready it doesn't stay that way for long]], although no one besides the couple conclusively knows the full extent of the relationship]]
%%* SecurityCling: Inverted:%%Quotes aren't context.
%%-->'''Ethel''': [[spoiler:What are you thinking now?]]\\
%%'''Dr. Culpin''': [[spoiler:How much I'd like to come over there...and hold you.]]
* ShipTease: The very tail end (before the factoids) of the season finale of ''1909''. [[spoiler:They even use the same background music from the kiss in the previous episode.]]
* ShowWithinAShow: ''The Merry Peasant'' -- a light opera, back in the days when "light opera" [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin really did mean]] "light opera".
%%* StockBritishPhrases:
%%* TeamMom: Ada in ''1909'' to the rest of the nurses.
%%* TimeSkip: Between the series.
* UnequalPairing: [[spoiler:Ethel and Dr. Culpin.]] It starts out unequal but eventually segues into a slightly more equal TeacherStudentRomance.
%%* WillTheyOrWontThey: [[spoiler: Ethel and Dr. Culpin]].
* YiddishAsASecondLanguage: This is the East End of London of the 1900s, which had a very considerable Eastern European Jewish population.
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