Having grown up in London and rural southern England, Margaret Hale
moves with her father to the northern industrial city of Milton. She is
shocked by the poverty she encounters and dismayed by the unsympathetic
attitude of the textile-mill owner John Thornton, whose factory workers
are engaged in an acrimonious strike. Against this backdrop of social
unrest, the relationship between the two is tumultuous, and it takes
further upheaval and tragedy for them to see each other in a different
light.
First serialized in Dickens's magazine Household Words in the same
period as Hard Times, North and South shares its famous
counterpart's concern with the inequality and hardship generated by the
Industrial Revolution in northern England, while at the same time
creating one of the nineteenth century's most memorable and engaging
female protagonists in Margaret Hale.