
Betwixt The Sheets: The History of Sex, Scandal & Society Inside Europe's Biggest Red Light District
Feb 21, 2025
Caroline West, author of "Wrong Women: Selling Sex in Monto, Dublin's Forgotten Red Light District," shares insights on Dublin's Monto, Europe's largest red light district from 1860 to 1925. She discusses the challenges and resilience of sex workers, their tight-knit community amid hardship, and their surprising influence on fashion trends. The conversation highlights the complex morality surrounding sex work and the historical stigma faced by women labeled as 'fallen,' while emphasizing ongoing battles for recognition and rights in today's society.
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Unethical Experiments Fueled Medical Advances
- Some physicians experimented by inoculating women with syphilis or gonorrhea to observe symptoms.
- These unethical trials contributed to later treatments, leaving victims forgotten despite wider medical gains.
Poverty Drove Entry; Community Sustained Women
- Poverty, famine and limited options funneled many women into Monto as a survival strategy.
- Sex work coexisted with communal support, hustles, and layered class stratification within the district.
Magdalene Laundry Bordering Monto
- The Magdalene Laundry bordered Monto and processed many 'fallen' women, sometimes laundering brothel sheets.
- Women were shorn, clothed in brown sacks and institutionalized for life in those facilities.


