Margaret is shocked by the "hellish" conditions of the cotton mills and the suffering of the working class. She forms a deep prejudice against the charismatic but stern mill owner, John Thornton (Richard Armitage), after witnessing him harshly discipline a worker. Key Moments:
Margaret Hale, a privileged Southerner, is uprooted when her father resigns from the clergy and moves the family to the dark, industrial Northern town of Milton.
Based on John Jakes’ bestseller, this American epic follows two families in the years leading up to the U.S. Civil War. North and South: Book I (1985) - TMDB
The contrast between Margaret’s idyllic memories of the South and the soot-covered reality of Milton.
Margaret befriends local mill worker Bessy Higgins and her union-activist father, Nicholas, gaining insight into the workers' struggles.
Her first encounters with Thornton are marked by misunderstanding, setting the stage for a slow-burn romance.