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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #54622 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/54622)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Reports Relating to the Sanitary Condition
-of the City of London, by John Simon
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Reports Relating to the Sanitary Condition of the City of London
-
-Author: John Simon
-
-Release Date: April 28, 2017 [EBook #54622]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK REPORTS--SANITARY CONDITION--LONDON ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chris Curnow, Harry Lamé and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
- Text between _underscores_ and =equal signs= represents text printed
- in italics and bold face, respectively. Small capitals have been
- changed to ALL CAPITALS.
-
- More transcriber’s notes may be found at the end of this text.
-
-
-
-
- REPORTS
- RELATING TO
- THE SANITARY CONDITION
- OF THE
- CITY OF LONDON.
-
- BY
- JOHN SIMON, F.R.S.
- SURGEON TO ST. THOMAS’S HOSPITAL, AND
- OFFICER OF HEALTH TO THE CITY.
-
- LONDON:
- JOHN W. PARKER AND SON, WEST STRAND.
- MDCCCLIV.
-
-
- LONDON:
- SAVILL AND EDWARDS, PRINTERS, CHANDOS STREET,
- COVENT GARDEN.
-
-
- TO
- LOUIS MICHAEL SIMON,
- OF THE STOCK EXCHANGE, LONDON, AND OF
- THE PARAGON, BLACKHEATH,
- I DEDICATE THIS REPRINT OF MY REPORTS:
- LOOKING
- LESS TO WHAT LITTLE INTRINSIC MERIT THEY MAY HAVE,
- THAN TO THE YEARS OF ANXIOUS LABOUR THEY REPRESENT:
- DEEMING IT FIT TO ASSOCIATE
- MY FATHER’S NAME
- WITH A RECORD OF ENDEAVOURS TO DO MY DUTY:
- BECAUSE IN THIS HE HAS BEEN MY BEST EXAMPLE;
- AND
- BECAUSE I COUNT IT THE HAPPIEST INFLUENCE IN MY LOT,
- THAT, BOUND TO HIM BY EVERY TIE OF GRATEFUL AFFECTION,
- I HAVE LIKEWISE BEEN ABLE, FROM MY EARLIEST CHILDHOOD
- TILL NOW--THE EVENING OF HIS LIFE,
- TO REGARD HIM WITH UNQUALIFIED AND INCREASING RESPECT.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- Page
- DEDICATION iii
-
- PREFACE vii
-
- FIRST ANNUAL REPORT 1
-
- FURTHER REMARKS ON WATER-SUPPLY 72
-
- SECOND ANNUAL REPORT 77
-
- THIRD ANNUAL REPORT 177
-
- FOURTH ANNUAL REPORT 211
-
- FIFTH ANNUAL REPORT 213
-
- APPENDIX OF TABLES ILLUSTRATING THE SANITARY CONDITION OF
- THE CITY OF LONDON. 264
-
- REPORT ON CITY BURIAL-GROUNDS 280
-
- REPORT ON EXTRAMURAL INTERMENTS 285
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-The following Reports, officially addressed to the Commissioners of
-Sewers of the City of London, were originally printed only for the use
-of the Corporation; and although, to my very great pleasure, they have
-been extensively circulated through the medium of the daily press, there
-has continued so frequent an application for separate copies that the
-surplus-stock at Guildhall has long been exhausted. Under these
-circumstances--believing the Reports may have some future interest, as
-belonging to an important educational period in the matters to which
-they refer, I have requested the Commission to allow their collective
-reprint and publication; and this indulgence having been kindly accorded
-me, I have gathered into the present volume all my Annual Reports,
-together with a special Report suggesting arrangements for extramural
-burial.
-
-From the nature of the work, I have not considered myself at liberty to
-make those extensive alterations of text which usually belong to a
-second edition. I have restricted myself to a few verbal corrections,
-and to rectifying or omitting some unimportant paragraph, here or there,
-in case its matter has been more fully or more correctly stated in parts
-of a subsequent Report. Frequently, where I have wished to explain or
-qualify passages in the text, I have added foot-notes; but these are
-distinguished as interpolations by the mark--J. S., 1854.
-
-My Reports lay no claim to the merit of scientific discovery. Rather,
-they deal with things already notorious to Science; and, in writing
-them, my hopes have tended chiefly towards winning for such doctrines
-more general and more practical reception. It has seemed to me no
-unworthy object, that, confining myself often to almost indisputable
-topics--to truths bordering on truism, I should labour to make trite
-knowledge bear fruit in common application.
-
-Nor in any degree do they profess to be cyclopædic in the subject of
-Preventive Medicine; for it is but a small part of this science that
-hitherto is recognised by the law; and that--so far as the metropolis is
-concerned, scarcely beyond the confines of the City. It would have been
-an idle sort of industry, to say much of places or of matters foreign to
-the jurisdiction of those whom I officially addressed.
-
-In re-publishing documents which proclaim extreme sanitary evils, as
-affecting the City, I think it right to draw attention to the dates of
-the several Reports, and to state that for the last five years many of
-these evils have been undergoing progressive diminution, of late at a
-rapid and increasing rate; while, at their worst, they represented only
-what I fear must be considered the present average condition of our
-urban population.
-
-This national prevalence of sanitary neglect is a very grievous fact;
-and though I pretend to no official concern in anything beyond the City
-boundaries, I cannot forego the present opportunity of saying a few
-words to bespeak for it the reader’s attention. I would beg any educated
-person to consider what are the conditions in which alone animal life
-can thrive; to learn, by personal inspection, how far these conditions
-are realised for the masses of our population; and to form for himself a
-conscientious judgment as to the need for great, if even almost
-revolutionary, reforms. Let any such person devote an hour to visiting
-some very poor neighbourhood in the metropolis, or in almost any of our
-large towns. Let him breathe its air, taste its water, eat its bread.
-Let him think of human life struggling there for years. Let him fancy
-what it would be to himself to live there, in that beastly degradation
-of stink, fed with such bread, drinking such water. Let him enter some
-house there at hazard, and--heeding where he treads, follow the guidance
-of his outraged nose, to the yard (if there be one) or the cellar. Let
-him talk to the inmates: let him hear what is thought of the bone-boiler
-next door, or the slaughter-house behind; what of the sewer-grating
-before the door; what of the Irish basket-makers upstairs--twelve in a
-room, who came in after the hopping, and got fever; what of the
-artisan’s dead body, stretched on his widow’s one bed, beside her living
-children.
-
-Let him, if he have a heart for the duties of manhood and patriotism,
-gravely reflect whether such sickening evils, as an hour’s inquiry will
-have shown him, ought to be the habit of our labouring population:
-whether the Legislature, which his voice helps to constitute, is doing
-all that might be done to palliate these wrongs; whether it be not a
-jarring discord in the civilisation we boast--a worse than pagan
-savageness in the Christianity we profess, that such things continue, in
-the midst of us, scandalously neglected; and that the interests of human
-life, except against wilful violence, are almost uncared for by the law.
-
-And let not the inquirer too easily admit what will be urged by less
-earnest persons as their pretext for inaction--that such evils are
-inalienable from poverty. Let him, in visiting those homes of our
-labouring population, inquire into the actual rent paid for
-them--dog-holes as they are; and studying the financial experience of
-Model Dormitories and Model Lodgings, let him reckon what that rent can
-purchase. He will soon have misgivings as to dirt being cheap in the
-market, and cleanliness unattainably expensive.
-
-Yet what if it be so? Shift the title of the grievance--is the fact less
-insufferable? If there be citizens so destitute, that they can afford to
-live only where they must straightway die--renting the twentieth
-straw-heap in some lightless fever-bin, or squatting amid rotten
-soakage, or breathing from the cesspool and the sewer; so destitute that
-they can buy no water--that milk and bread must be impoverished to meet
-their means of purchase--that the drugs sold them for sickness must be
-rubbish or poison; surely no civilised community dare avert itself from
-the care of this abject orphanage. And--_ruat cœlum_, let the principle
-be followed whithersoever it may lead, that Christian society leaves
-none of its children helpless. If such and such conditions of food or
-dwelling are absolutely inconsistent with healthy life, what more final
-test of pauperism can there be, or what clearer right to public succour,
-than that the subject’s pecuniary means fall short of providing him
-other conditions than those? It may be that competition has screwed
-down the rate of wages below what will purchase indispensable food and
-wholesome lodgment. Of this, as fact, I am no judge; but to its meaning,
-if fact, I can speak. All labour below that mark is masked pauperism.
-Whatever the employer saves is gained at the public expense. When, under
-such circumstances, the labourer or his wife or child spends an
-occasional month or two in the hospital, that some fever-infection may
-work itself out, or that the impending loss of an eye or a limb may be
-averted by animal[1] food; or when he gets various aid from his Board of
-Guardians, in all sorts of preventable illness, and eventually for the
-expenses of interment, it is the public that, too late for the man’s
-health or independence, pays the arrears of wage which should have
-hindered this suffering and sorrow.
-
- [1] Twenty years’ daily experience of hospital surgery enables me to
- say, from personal knowledge, that our wards and out-patient rooms are
- never free from painful illustrations of the effects of insufficient
- nutrition--cases, in fact, of chronic starvation-disease among the
- poor; such disease as Magendie imitated, in his celebrated
- experiments, by feeding animals on an exclusively non-azotised diet.
-
-Probably on no point of political economy is there more general
-concurrence of opinion, than against any legislative interference with
-the price of labour. But I would venture to submit, for the
-consideration of abler judges than myself, that before wages can safely
-be left to find their own level in the struggles of an unrestricted
-competition, the law should be rendered absolute and available in
-safeguards for the ignorant poor--first, against those deteriorations of
-staple food which enable the retailer to disguise starvation to his
-customers by apparent cheapenings of bulk; secondly, against those
-conditions of lodgment which are inconsistent with decency and health.
-
-But if I have addressed myself to this objection, partly because--to the
-very limited extent in which it starts from a true premiss, it deserves
-reply; and partly because I wish emphatically to declare my conviction,
-that such evils as I denounce are not the more to be tolerated for their
-rising in unwilling Pauperism, rather than in willing Filth; yet I doubt
-whether poverty be so important an element in the case as some people
-imagine. And although I have referred especially to a poor
-neighbourhood--because here it is that knowledge and personal refinement
-will have least power to compensate for the insufficiencies of public
-law; yet I have no hesitation in saying that sanitary mismanagement
-spreads very appreciable evils high in the middle ranks of society; and
-from some of the consequences, so far as I am aware, no station can call
-itself exempt.
-
-The fact is, as I have said, that, except against wilful violence, life
-is practically very little cared for by the law. Fragments of
-legislation there are, indeed, in all directions: enough to establish
-precedents--enough to testify some half-conscious possession of a
-principle; but, for usefulness, little beyond this. The statutes tell
-that now and then, there has reached to high places the wail of physical
-suffering. They tell that our law-makers, to the tether of a very scanty
-knowledge, have, not unwillingly, moved to the redress of some clamorous
-wrong. But--tested by any scientific standard of what should be the
-completeness of sanitary legislation; or tested by any personal
-endeavour to procure the legal correction of gross and glaring evils;
-their insufficiencies, I do not hesitate to say, constitute a national
-scandal, and, perhaps in respect of their consequences, something not
-far removed from a national sin.
-
-In respect of _houses_--here and there, under local Acts of Parliament,
-exist sanitary powers, generally of a most defective kind; pretending
-often to enforce amendments of drainage and water-supply; sometimes to
-provide for the cleansing of filthy and unwholesome tenements; in a few
-cases to prevent over-crowding; very rarely to ensure stringent measures
-against houses certified to be unfit for human habitation.
-Occasionally--but a few lines would exhaust the list, an application of
-the Public Health Act, or some really efficient local Act, has put it
-within reach of the authorities to do all that is needful under certain
-of these heads. But I know of no such town that would bear strict
-examination as to its possession of legal powers to fulfil, what I
-presume must be the principle contemplated by the law--that no house
-should be let for hire unless presenting the conditions indispensable
-for health, or be hired for more occupants than it can decently and
-wholesomely accommodate.[2] However this may be expressed, and in
-whatever laws embodied, local or general, I will venture to say that no
-Government should suffer a town, either to be without the means of
-enforcing this principle, or, having such means, to shirk their
-exercise. Our Constitution may properly concede that local
-representative authorities shall have their option whether, for sanitary
-purposes, to fall under a general law, or to have Local Improvement Acts
-of their own; but, in the present state of knowledge, it certainly seems
-incontestable that one or other of these alternatives should be
-compulsory, and that all Local Improvement Acts should be required, in
-their sanitary clauses, to come up to the standard of the Public Health
-Act of the time, whatever it may be.
-
- [2] In addition to the ordinary powers--given, for instance, in the
- Public Health or City Sewers Act, for abating accumulated nuisances
- and for enforcing wholesome constructional arrangements; a principal
- requirement of all bodies having jurisdiction for the public health
- is, that there should be vested in them some authority, _enabling them
- to regulate_, in the spirit of the Common Lodging House Act, _all
- houses which are liable to be thronged by a dangerous excess of low
- population_. Almost invariably such houses are of the class
- technically known as ‘tenement-houses,’ i. e., houses divided into
- several tenements or holdings; whereof each--though very often
- consisting but of a single small room, receives its inmates without
- any available restriction as to their sex or number, and without
- regard to the accommodation requisite for cleanliness, decency, and
- health. The inhabitants of such houses, especially where of the lower
- order of Irish, constantly lapse into the most brutal filthiness of
- habits, and live in almost incredible conditions of dirt,
- over-crowding, and disease. See sections of the following Reports,
- beginning severally at pages 44, 146, and 195. Powers for dealing with
- these evils might be given to Local Boards of Health, most usefully, I
- think, in some such form as the following: 1) that--in respect of any
- house occupied by more than one family, if it be situate in any court,
- alley, or other place having no carriage-way, and be not assessed to
- the poor-rate at a higher rental than £...... _per annum_; or if in it
- any occupied holding consist of only one room, provided the rent of
- such room do not exceed the sum of ......shillings per week, or if in
- it there reside, or within three months previous have resided, any
- person receiving parochial relief, medically or otherwise; on the
- certificate of a duly authorized medical officer, that any such house,
- or part thereof, is habitually in a filthy condition, or that from
- over-crowding or defective ventilation the health of its inmates is
- endangered, or that there has prevailed in it undue sickness or
- mortality of an epidemic or infectious kind; the Local Board may call
- upon its owner to register it in a book kept for this purpose; and in
- respect of all houses thus registered, the Local Board may make rules
- for periodical washing, cleansing, and limewhiting, and for the
- regular removal of all dust or refuse-matter, may fix the number of
- tenements into which it shall be lawful to divide any such house, or
- the total number of inmates who may at one time be received therein,
- may require its better ventilation by the construction of additional
- windows or louvres, and may from time to time make such other
- regulations and orders as they shall judge necessary for the
- maintenance of health and decency; and may recover from the owner or
- lessee of any such house penalties for neglect of any legal
- requisitions, rules, and orders, as aforesaid: 2) that--on the
- certificate of a duly authorised medical officer, that the condition
- of any house or room is such as to render probable the rise or the
- spread of infectious and dangerous disease among its inmates, the
- Local Board may cause the owner or lessee of such house to be summoned
- before a magistrate; who, after due hearing, or in default of the
- owner’s or lessee’s appearance, may order the house, or any part of
- it, to be evacuated of all tenants within such time as he shall judge
- fit, and not again to be tenanted till after licence from the Local
- Board given on the certificate of their medical officer that its
- causes of unhealthiness are abated; and the magistrate may enforce
- penalties for non-compliance with his order, as aforesaid: 3)
- that--after an Order in Council bringing into action the extraordinary
- clauses of the Nuisances Removal Act, the Local Board, on receiving
- the certificate of their medical officer that any house, or part of
- house, is in such condition as to be imminently dangerous to the lives
- of its inmates in respect of the prevailing epidemic, or any similar
- disease, may issue a peremptory order for its evacuation, and may
- recover, from the owner or lessee to whom such order is addressed,
- penalties for every day during which, or part of which, after such
- order, the house, or any part thereof, continues to be tenanted; nor,
- under like penalties, shall it be lawful, except after written licence
- from the Local Board, given as aforesaid, to allow such house to be
- re-occupied.
-
-Under circumstances like those just adverted to, may be found traces of
-enactment against _offensive and injurious trades_. Unregulated
-slaughtering throughout all London, except the City, tallow-melting in
-St. Paul’s church-yard, bone-boiling beside Lambeth Palace, may serve to
-illustrate the completeness and efficiency of these laws--even in our
-metropolitan area. Here we greatly lack some competent authority, on the
-part of the Government, to investigate all circumstances connected with
-such establishments, generally; to suggest laws for their prospective
-restriction, as to places wherein they may lawfully settle; and to frame
-regulations--enforceable by any Local Board of Health, for ensuring that
-all available measures be employed to mitigate their nuisance.
-Considering the circumstances under which many of these establishments
-have existed, no one can entertain a thought, that--even for the public
-health, they should be liable to the tyranny of an unconditional
-displacement. But if there existed--as undoubtedly there should exist,
-some skilled tribunal, competent to speak on the subject; then, I will
-venture to say, it might be quite in accordance with our English sense
-of liberty, that--after a certain condemnatory verdict by this tribunal,
-it should be open to the Local Board of Health to procure their
-expulsion, on payment of whatever compensation an ordinary jury might
-award.
-
-Again, with _factories_; thanks to Lord Shaftesbury’s indefatigable
-benevolence, the law has appointed an inspection of certain
-establishments, a restriction of their hours of labour, and some care
-against the dangers of unboxed machinery. And with mining also the law
-has interfered, chiefly as to the ventilation of mines; but hitherto so
-ineffectively that, while I write, the coal-miners are remonstrating
-with the Legislature on the thousand lives _per annum_ still sacrificed
-through the insufficient protection accorded them. If there be meaning
-in this legislation--if it imply any principle, the meaning and the
-principle require to be developed into a general law, that every
-establishment employing labour be liable to inspection and regulation in
-regard of whatever acts and conditions are detrimental or hazardous to
-life. If factory-children are cared for, lest they be over-worked; and
-miners, lest they be stifled; so, for those who labour with copper,
-mercury, arsenic, and lead, let us care, lest they be poisoned! for
-grinders, lest their lungs be fretted into consumption! for
-match-makers, lest their jaws be rotted from them by phosphorus! And
-here let it again be noticed, as in the class of cases last spoken of,
-how greatly wanted is some skilled tribunal, to form part of any lawful
-machinery which might ensure that, in these and similar instances, no
-precautions necessary to life are withheld through ignorance or
-parsimony.
-
-Against _adulterations of food_, here and there, obsolete powers exist,
-for our ancestors had an eye to these things; but, practically, they are
-of no avail. If we, who are educated, habitually submit to have copper
-in our preserves, red-lead in our cayenne, alum in our bread, pigments
-in our tea, and ineffable nastinesses in our fish-sauce, what can we
-expect of the poor? Can they use[3] galactometers? Can they test their
-pickles with ammonia? Can they discover the tricks by which bread is
-made dropsical[4], or otherwise deteriorated in value, even faster than
-they can cheapen it in price? Without entering on details of what might
-be the best organisation against such things, I may certainly assume it
-as greatly a _desideratum_, that local authorities should uniformly have
-power to deal with these frauds (as, of course, with every sale of
-decayed and corrupted food) and that they should be enabled to employ
-skilled officers, for detecting at least every adulteration of bread and
-every poisonous admixture in condiments and the like.
-
- [3] The proverbial dilutions of milk are not its only deteriorations.
- Cows are so ill kept in London, and in consequence so often sickly,
- that milk suffers--sometimes by mere impoverishment, sometimes by much
- graver derangements. If there were instituted a proper Inspection of
- Provisions, one function of its officers should be to visit
- cow-houses, and to prevent the distribution of milk thus damaged or
- infected. I suspect that a sanitary reform of these establishments
- would make a sensible difference to the nursery-population of the
- metropolis.
-
- [4] A chief artifice in the cheapening of bread is to increase its
- weight by various means which render it retentive of water. The other
- usual frauds consist in the employment of inferior flours--either not
- cereal, or damaged and partially deglutinised.
-
-In some respects this sort of protection is even more necessary, as well
-as more deficient, in regard to _the falsification of drugs_. The
-College of Physicians and the Apothecaries’ Company are supposed to
-exercise supervision in the matter; so that at least its necessity is
-recognised by the law. The security thus afforded is, in practice, null.
-It is notorious in my profession that there are not many simple drugs,
-and still fewer compound preparations, on the standard strength of which
-we can reckon. It is notorious that some important medicines are so
-often falsified in the market, and others so often mis-made in the
-laboratory, that we are robbed of all certainty in their employment.
-Iodide of potassium--an invaluable specific, may be shammed to half its
-weight with the carbonate of potash. Scammony, one of our best
-purgatives, is rare without chalk or starch, weakening it, perhaps, to
-half the intention of the giver. Cod-liver oil may have come from seals
-or from olives. The two or three drops of prussic acid that we would
-give for a dose may be nearly twice as strong at one chemist’s as at
-another’s. The quantity of laudanum equivalent to a grain of opium
-being, theoretically, 19 minims; we may practically find this grain, it
-is said, in 4.5 minims, or in 34.5. And my colleague, Dr. R. D. Thomson,
-who has much experience in these matters, tells me that of
-calamine--not indeed an important agent, but still an article of our
-pharmacopœia--purporting daily to be sold at every druggist’s shop,
-there has not for years, he believes, existed a specimen in the
-market.[5]
-
- [5] Dr. Thomson tells me that he has known white precipitate of
- mercury sold in hundred-weights as calomel, and in one case (he
- believes by accident or ignorance) as trisnitrate of bismuth. In my
- text I have endeavoured to adduce such illustrations as I suppose to
- be most notorious; but I may refer the reader to various interesting
- papers published, through the last two or three years, in the LANCET
- (_Analytical Sanitary Commission_) from one of which I quote the
- astounding instance, given above, of variations in the strength of
- laudanum. Mr. Thomas Taylor, of Vere Street, informs me that, whereas
- an ounce of laudanum should contain about four grains of morphia, he
- finds the actual quantity varying in different specimens from two
- grains to six; and that in two specimens of solid opium, outwardly
- alike and supposed to be of equal quality, he has found the per
- centage of morphia to vary from 3½ to 10. It requires little
- instruction in medicine to appreciate these facts.
-
-Again, with the _promiscuous sale of poisons_, what incredible laxity of
-government! One poison, indeed, has its one law. Arsenic may not be sold
-otherwise than coloured, nor except with full registration of the sale,
-and in the presence of a witness known to both buyer and vender.
-Admirable, so far as it goes! but why should arsenic alone receive this
-dab of legislation? Is the principle right, that means of murder and
-suicide should be rendered difficult of access for criminal purposes?
-Does any one question it? Then, why not legislate equally against all
-poisons?--against oxalic acid and opium, ergot and savin, prussic acid,
-corrosive sublimate, strychnine?
-
-Nor can our past legislators be more boastful of their labours for the
-_medical profession_--either for its scientific interests, or for the
-public protection against ignorance and quackery.[6] Nearly two dozen
-corporate bodies within the United Kingdom are said to grant licences
-for medical practice; and I hardly know whether it lessens or aggravates
-this confusion, that such licences are in many cases partial; that one
-licentiate may practise north of the Tweed, but nowise to the south;
-that one may practise in London, another only seven miles beyond it. Not
-that the licence seems much to matter! for innumerable poachers in all
-directions trespass on what the law purports to sell as a secured
-preserve for qualified practitioners: their encroachments are made with
-almost certain impunity; and--as for the titles of the Profession, any
-impostor may style himself _doctor_ or _surgeon_ at his will. Even where
-licences are held, conveying identical titles, they imply neither equal
-privileges (as I have said) nor even uniform education. The law has
-troubled itself little as to the terms on which they shall be granted;
-and the qualifications exacted from candidates--the conditions
-preliminary to their becoming eligible for licence, vary in so
-remarkable a degree among the many corporate bodies which are fountains
-of this honour, that the credentials conferred have really little
-meaning, apart from a context which the public is unable to supply. It
-is charged against particular institutions, that their degrees and
-licences are attained with a very inglorious facility; and when it is
-recollected that the issuing of such testimonials is a source--sometimes
-a chief source--of income to the corporations which grant them, it will
-be felt that at least there must exist great danger of this reproach
-being sometimes deserved. If a national title to practise medicine is to
-be granted by several Boards, and if yet the tenure of that title is to
-determine public confidence in favour of its holder, it would seem
-indispensable that some guarantee should be given for these several
-licences representing equal qualifications--some guarantee that the
-holder in each case possesses professional knowledge, and has enjoyed
-professional opportunities, at least above some uniform standard
-recognised as a _minimum_ qualification by all the diplomatising bodies.
-Indispensable, however, as this may seem, years of endeavour have failed
-to attain it. What is called _medical reform_ has been agitated longer
-than I can remember; and more than one minister has been willing to
-legislate for its promotion. Unfortunately the very magnitude of the
-evils has delayed their cure. With the constitution I have described--a
-system of conflicting jurisdictions, of licences without titles, and
-titles without licences, how could we escape internal dissension? how
-escape the antagonism, perhaps the jealousies, of rival corporations and
-of different professional classes? Home-Secretaries have had little
-leisure to fathom these things to the bottom. Unexamined and
-unadjudicated by any competent authority, such influences have
-bewildered public judgment, made statesmen regard us with despair,
-postponed legislative correction, and maintained us in a state of
-anarchy and confusion, best to be appreciated when we compare with our
-own the organisation and government of the legal profession.
-
- [6] Legislative passiveness towards scientific medicine is not the
- only evil we have to complain of. Surely, in selling Letters Patent
- for the protection of quack-medicines--in seeming to sanction and
- authenticate whatever lies their proprietor may post upon the wall,
- the State demeans itself into complicity with fraud, and soils its
- fingers with something fouler than the Vespasian tax. It illustrates
- the curious _forgetfulness_ shewn towards medicine by the Legislature,
- that this immoral practice of giving patents for pretended cures of
- disease should have been allowed to continue--as of course it must
- have continued, solely by oversight, till past the middle of the
- nineteenth century.
-
-And be it noted, how this reacts upon the State. So completely is our
-government dissevered from Science in general, and, most of all, from
-the sciences relating to Life, that, on such subjects, there exists not
-for state-purposes anything like a tribunal of appeal. The Legislature
-recognises no _Medical Authority_. Occasionally this fact stands out in
-painful conspicuousness, and brings most injurious results. In contested
-cases requiring scientific testimony--before Parliamentary Committees,
-for instance, and in a variety of legal proceedings,--instead of the
-Court having satisfactory power of referring particular questions to
-skilled impartial adjudicators, the uniform practice is, that scientific
-men are retained on opposite sides, to support partisan interests. The
-advantages, such as they are, which belong to this system, might, I
-believe, easily be obtained under altered arrangements: the
-disadvantages are glaring. It might be invidious to refer to
-illustrations of their reality: but it is of course impossible to doubt
-of the working of this system, that, in so far as it makes each witness
-feel himself engaged to maintain the views of his employer, it tends
-towards a moral prostitution and subornation of science. In the
-interests of truth, it would surely seem desirable that scientific
-evidence should be tendered, so far as may be, in a judicial spirit
-towards the suit; either that the technical point should be referred to
-a technical jury, or that the technical witness should be summoned at
-the Court’s discretion, should be examined in-chief by the Court, and
-should be subject only to such cross-examination as may procure the most
-complete statement of his knowledge on the matter in hand.
-
-Having said so much on the defects and the wrongs of our existing
-sanitary condition, perhaps I may venture to speak of the almost obvious
-remedy. ‘Almost obvious’ I say; for surely no one will doubt that this
-great subject should be dealt with by comprehensive and scientific
-legislation; and I hardly see how otherwise, than that it should be
-submitted in its entirety to some single department of the executive, as
-a sole charge; that there should be some tangible head, responsible--not
-only for the _enforcement_ of existing laws, such as they are or may
-become, but likewise for their _progress_ from time to time to the level
-of contemporary science, for their _completion_ where fragmentary, for
-their _harmonisation_ where discordant.
-
-If--as is rumoured, the approaching re-constitution of the General Board
-of Health is (after the pattern of the Poor-law Board) to give it a
-Parliamentary President, that member of the Government ought to be open
-to challenge in respect of every matter relating to health. What, for
-this purpose, might be the best subordinate arrangements of such a
-Board, it would take a volume to discuss. But at least as regards its
-constituted head, sitting in Parliament, his department should be, in
-the widest sense, to _care for the physical necessities of human
-life_. Whether skilled coadjutors be appointed for him or not;
-engineers--lawyers--chemists--pathologists; whether he be, as it were,
-the foreman of this special jury, or, according to the more usual
-precedent of our public affairs, collect advice on his own
-responsibility, and speak without quotation of other authority than
-himself, his voice, unless the thing is to be a sham, must represent all
-these knowledges.
-
-The people, through its representatives, must be able to arraign him
-wherever human life is insufficiently cared for.
-
-He must be able to justify or to exterminate adulterations of food; to
-shew that alum ought to be in our loaves, or to banish it for ever; to
-shew that copper is wholesome for dessert, or to give us our olives and
-greengages without it; to shew that red-lead is an estimable condiment,
-or to divert it from our pepper-pots and curries.
-
-Similarly with drugs and poisons--the alternatives of life and death--a
-minister of Public Health would, I presume, be responsible for whatever
-evils arise in their unlicensed and unregulated sale. He would hardly
-dare to acquiesce in our present defencelessness against fraud and
-ignorance; in doses being sold--critical doses, for the strength of
-which we, who prescribe them, cannot answer within a margin of _cent.
-per cent._; or in pennyworths of poison being handed across the counter
-as nonchalantly as cakes of soap.[7] Surely, before he had been six
-months in office, he would have procured some enactment to remedy this
-long neglect of the legislature, by providing that the druggist’s trade
-be exercised only after some test of fitness, and in subjection to
-certain regulations.
-
- [7] Without referring to what may be considered rare--the sale of
- poison for the purposes of intended homicide, I may remind the reader
- of the very dreadful facts collected by the Commissioners on Trades
- and Manufactures, as to the immense sales of opium in our principal
- manufacturing towns, for the purpose of quieting--and with the effect
- of killing, children, while their poor mothers are absent from home in
- their several occupations.
-
-Within his province, likewise, it would fall to be cognisant of all that
-relates to the constitution of the Medical Profession. The difficulties
-which have baffled successive Home-Secretaries might soon find their
-solution in the less divided attention which he could bring to their
-study. Amid conflicting opinions and an apparent scramble for power, he
-would soon distinguish where might be the strife of jealousy and
-covetousness, where a truthful zeal for the honour and efficiency of
-medicine. I think he could not be long in curing our more scandalous
-anomalies. Probably--unless human bowels require other doctoring in
-London than in Manchester, he would manage that a doctor there should
-be a doctor also here; that no licence for the partial practice of
-medicine should be recognised--no licence admitting a man to do in
-Edinburgh what it would be a misdemeanour for him to do in Greenwich.
-And obviously, in order to this--since a professional diploma is the
-only criterion by which the public can measure the competence of those
-who seek their patronage, he would see that, as far as may be, the
-various licensing bodies exact from their candidates equal and
-sufficient qualifications; that the diploma entitling a man to call
-himself Surgeon or Physician, Accoucheur or Apothecary, mean the same
-thing--imply the same education, whether it be got in Scotland, Ireland,
-or England; and that any falsification of such diploma, or any
-unauthorised assumption of the title which implies its possession, be
-promptly punishable at law.[8]
-
- [8] This check at least seems indispensable, for the reason above
- given, that a professional diploma is the only criterion by which the
- public can measure professional competence; and for the validity of
- such a criterion, it therefore, I think, becomes the duty of a
- government, on behalf of the public, to provide. For anything beyond
- this (except in one particular case) the matter might take its natural
- course. No law can supersede a necessity for common sense in the
- subject; and medicine, I think, requires no _protection_. Let my
- neighbour, by all means, if he desire it, send for a green-grocer to
- reduce his dislocation or assuage his gout! and let him take the
- consequences of his folly, in a spoilt limb or in a hair’s breadth
- escape with his life. Only--let the green-grocer be punishable, if he
- seek this office under false pretences, calling himself by any title
- which implies a professional qualification. And, for what harm he may
- do--let him of course (as would, if necessary, the presidents of our
- colleges) be prepared to abide before judge and jury his trial for
- malpractice. But, in strict adhesion to the principle I have
- professed, that protection is wanted, not for the profession, but for
- the public, I would suggest one exception to what otherwise might be
- universal free-trade in medicine. I refer to the case of druggists;
- who, whenever the Legislature may awake to the necessity of regulating
- their trade, ought, I think, to be expressly prohibited from the
- treatment of disease. To an immense majority of our population--to all
- the under-educated classes, the druggist’s shop appears an emporium
- for medical skill, as well as for medical appliances. They probably
- have some vague overestimate of our art of healing, and think perhaps
- that the several bottles on the shelf correspond to the several
- ailments they can specifically cure. They ask for something “good for
- a dropsy,” or “good for a wasting,” or “good for a palpitation;” not
- knowing how much skill may be requisite to interpret the symptom; not
- knowing that, to our highest skill, there is no medicine thus
- indiscriminately, or even generally, “good.” At present almost
- universally, druggists, with no medical qualification, are tampering
- more or less with serious medical responsibilities; and the mischief
- thus occasioned--especially among the poorer classes, is a matter of
- notoriety, on which persons engaged in hospital practice would be
- competent and tolerably impartial witnesses. It is because this evil
- arises in the _almost inevitable ignorance_ of those who chiefly
- suffer from it, that, in accordance with the principle above
- suggested, I think it deserves consideration from the Legislature.
-
-Into the hands of this new minister--advised, perhaps, for such purposes
-by some permanent commission[9] of skilled person, would devolve the
-guardianship of public health against combined commercial interests, or
-incompetent administration. He would provide securities for excluding
-sulphur from our gas, and animalcules from our water. He would come into
-relation with all Local Improvement Boards, in respect of the sanitary
-purposes of their existence. To him we should look, to settle at least
-for all practical purposes the polemics of drainage and water-supply; to
-form opinions which might guide Parliament, whether street sewers really
-require to be avenues for men, whether hard water really be good enough
-for all ordinary purposes, whether cisternage really be indispensable to
-an urban water-supply.
-
- [9] There are many instances in my mind, some already adverted to,
- where the existence of a standing jury for scientific--especially for
- sanitary, purposes might be of great utility. It is an organisation
- which prevails extensively in France, under the name of _Conseils de
- Salubrité_; forming, in most of the large towns there, a constant
- board of reference for the municipality, in respect of sanitary
- regulations. _Mutatis mutandis_, it might become invaluable as an
- English institution, in respect of many matters touched upon in this
- sketch; and perhaps with some division of duties, into such as would
- best belong to a General Board of the kind, and such as might properly
- be vested in Local Boards. To determine the indispensable conditions
- of healthy lodgment; to examine the influence of trades and
- occupations, and to devise the regulations they may require, for the
- neighbourhood’s sake, or for their operatives’; to supervise the sale
- of food and drugs; to be cognisant of medical matters; would seem,
- either locally or generally, to require the co-operations of several
- skilled persons. But, though I have spoken of such, as indispensable
- jurors for these subjects, I do not forget that other interests than
- those of life may need to be consulted. For the fair representation of
- these, the lay faculty of _educated common-sense_ will fulfil an
- inestimable usefulness, if it may be there to mediate between science,
- which is sometimes crotchety, and trade, which is sometimes selfish.
-
-Organisations against epidemic diseases--questions of quarantine--laws
-for vaccination, and the like, would obviously lie within his province;
-and thither, perhaps, also his colleagues might be glad to transfer many
-of those medical questions which now belong to other departments of the
-executive--the sanitary regulation of emigrant ships, the ventilation of
-mines, the medical inspection of factories and prisons, the insecurities
-of railway traffic, _et hoc genus omne_.
-
-There is another subject respecting which I should reluctantly forego
-the present opportunity of saying something. To the philosopher,
-perhaps, any partial sanitary legislation--even for a metropolis, may
-seem of low importance, as compared with our commanding need that the
-general legislation of the country be imbued with deeper sympathies for
-life. Yet London is almost a nation in itself; and the good which might
-be effected by its sanitary regeneration would, even as example, be of
-universal influence. Now, at this moment, there seems a chance--such a
-chance as may not soon recur--for gaining a first step towards this
-consummation. The re-construction of the Metropolitan Commission of
-Sewers, on the principle of local representation, affords extraordinary
-facilities for providing London, at length, with an efficient sanitary
-government. For, while any administration for this purpose would
-require to be entrusted with very extensive and very stringent powers,
-it seems probable that such authority might by the public be willingly
-conceded to a body constituted, in great part, of persons representing
-local interests. The jurisdiction required would be substantially such
-as is already vested in the City Commissioners of Sewers, for the
-sanitary control of the city; the concession of which--because to a
-representative body--was never any matter of municipal dispute. In so
-vast a government as that of the metropolis, Local Boards of Health for
-its various sections would seem indispensable; it is presumed that these
-boards[10] would be represented in the general Commission; which, in
-conjunction with them, and including certain skilled assessors, might
-constitute a complete sanitary organisation, consultative and executive.
-
- [10] It would seem premature to discuss what might be the best
- constitution of such Local Boards for the metropolis; but it will
- appear to the reader, on a moment’s reflection, that there would be no
- difficulty in finding materials for their organisation. If, according
- to suggestions lately ventilated, municipal institutions should be
- given to the parts of London hitherto without them; these new
- corporations would probably have sanitary functions allotted them, and
- might readily become Local Boards of Health under such a constitution
- as I have sketched. If, on the other hand, our present non-municipal
- system were to be continued, probably our several Boards of Guardians
- might seem specially proper to act as Local Boards of Health; first,
- as being elected representative bodies, already invested with certain
- authority of the kind--as, for instance, under the Nuisances Removal
- Act; secondly, because various of their officers would be almost
- indispensable parts of any sanitary machinery. Indeed, my experience
- of such matters suggests it to me as not unimportant, that, under any
- arrangement which may be made, the jurisdiction of Local Boards of
- Health should, at least in area, be conterminous with Poor Law Unions;
- so that those who administer sanitary affairs--affairs which are
- always chiefly relative to the poor--may, as far as possible, in their
- several districts, come into relation with single sets of Poor Law
- officers.
-
-I have one word more to say about the Reports. They have been received
-by the public with such remarkable indulgence and favour, that I feel
-some anxiety lest I may seem to have plumed myself with other feathers
-than my own. Let me, therefore, at least in part, confess my debts.
-
-Before my first enlistment in the service of public health, others had
-fought this great cause with rare courage and devotion; establishing its
-main principles in a manner to require no corroboration, and to admit
-little immediate increase. The true patriarchs of the cause in this
-country are the present working members of the General Board of Health.
-The constitution of my city appointment is quite independent of this
-Board; but I should be acting an unworthy part if I refrained from
-acknowledging, that, in innumerable instances, I have gathered most
-valuable knowledge from the Board’s official publications, and that, in
-personal intercourse with its members and officers, I have had abundant
-reason to be grateful for information invariably given with that frank
-kindness which belongs to brotherhood in science, and to sympathy for
-common objects.
-
-I must likewise acknowledge constant obligations to the courtesy of the
-Registrar-General, and express with how much pleasure and instruction I
-have studied the works of his inestimable office. Especially I would
-offer my tribute of respect to Dr. Farr’s learning and industry, as well
-as to that capacity for generalisation which the world has long
-recognised in his eloquent and thoughtful writings.
-
-And, though this be not the place to boast of private friendships, I may
-venture to say that there are few topics relating to sanitary medicine
-that I have not enjoyed the advantage of discussing with men who have
-given genius, inquiry, and reflection to their development.
-
-Thank God! the number of persons capable of apprehending the cause, and
-ready to take interest in its promotion, is now daily on the increase.
-If some minister of Public Health could take his seat in the House of
-Commons--some minister knowing his subject and feeling it, I believe he
-would find no lack of sympathy and co-operation. The world abounds with
-admirable wishes and intentions, that vaguely miscarry for want of
-guidance. How many men can get no farther in their psalm of life than
-the question, _in quo corriget_. To such--not masters of the subject,
-but willing and eager to be its servants, an official leader might be
-everything: for in great causes like this, where the scandal of
-continued wrong burns in each man’s conscience, the instincts of justice
-thirst for satisfaction. What can we do or give--how shall we speak or
-vote, to lessen these dreadful miseries of sanitary neglect--is, at this
-moment, I believe, the fervent inquiry of innumerable minds, waiting, as
-it were for the word of command, to act.
-
-How much of this generous earnestness towards the cause exists in
-society--how much desire to grasp any reasonable opportunity of good has
-lately happened to fall under my notice. Last winter, when the signs of
-the times were making us fear that Cholera would presently again be
-epidemic in London, it was remembered that, in the greater part of the
-metropolis, nothing whatever had been done since the last invasion to
-give immunity against the returning disease. It was remembered--too
-late, how indescribably dreadful a thing is the epidemic prevalence of
-sudden death. And the poor were thought of--in their unprotectedness,
-their filth, their ignorance. Among the persons thus aroused, was a
-gentleman whom I reluctantly leave unnamed; saying of him only, that,
-from a distinguished position in official life, he had retired to
-literary enjoyments, amid which he bears the imputation of many
-unacknowledged writings which charm and instruct the public. When the
-rumours of the pestilence began, he too heard and read and became
-aghast. The notion that ‘in a skilful, helpful, Christian country
-nothing should be done’ against these impending dangers--that the poor
-should be left ‘defenceless, huddled together in some dismal district,
-not more helpful than women’--was felt by him, he wrote, ‘deeply as a
-disgrace;’ and he pleaded that, ‘on a great and pressing occasion, it
-remains for the thoughtful, the rich, and the benevolent, to try and do
-these needful things for the people.’[11] Let us, he urged, endeavour to
-meet this shameful reproach; let us combine voluntary charitable
-assistance for extemporaneous sanitary measures, rapid, though partial;
-let us get a hundred thousand pounds and do what we can in aid of local
-authorities in the poorest districts--in Bethnal Green, in Shoreditch.
-Eventually this plan was abandoned, at least for the time. There was
-argued against it, that prompt legislation might do more good, with less
-exoneration of local responsibility. Whether rightly or wrongly, the
-latter view was acted on; and in accordance with it, the gentleman first
-adverted to (waving his own hopes and wishes in the matter) took active
-part in framing suggestions,[12] which Lord Palmerston had expressed
-himself willing to accept, for modifying the laws of Nuisance and
-Disease-Prevention to a form more suitable for the apprehended
-emergency. But, in the meantime, what had happened? The author of the
-plan, as it were at a moment’s notice, had seemed to draw round himself
-half the intellectual and moral strength of the metropolis. Himself
-setting aside the literary ambition of his life, he found others ready
-to meet him with their several self-sacrifices. Over-worked men of
-science and of business, who afford no time to relaxation; favourites of
-society, who might have been suspected of mere shuddering at distasteful
-subjects; men of high laborious rank in Church and State; poets; heads
-of professions; minds that guide the tastes and morals of the country,
-or feed its imagination; not least, the invalid from his distant
-wintering-place; men, in short, immersed in all kinds and grades of
-occupation, were either bodily present at the deliberations referred to,
-or were writing about the plan in terms of warm interest, anxious to
-promote whatever usefulness could be shown them. About the means there
-was discussion--about the object, none; nor lukewarmness. All were
-competing, by gifts of time and labour, to snatch some opportunity of
-serving this neglected cause.
-
- [11] I quote from a pamphlet printed by him for private circulation.
- It was entitled ‘_Health-Fund for London; some Thoughts for next
- Summer: by Friends in Council_.’
-
- [12] These have since been laid before the House of Lords, on the
- motion, I think, of Lord Harrowby, who took much interest in the
- subject.
-
-Such--to return to my text--such, I am deeply assured, would be the
-spirit which a minister of Public Health would find abundantly on his
-side in Parliamentary discussion, and in the Press. There is no
-attachment to the incongruities I have sketched as belonging to our
-abortion of a sanitary system. Still less is there any want of feeling
-for the poor--any reluctance to raise their state and better their
-circumstances--any unconsciousness that these things are great solemn
-duties. On the contrary, everywhere there is the conviction that
-_something_ must be done; everywhere a waiting for authority to say
-_what_. But, the trumpet giving an uncertain sound, who can prepare
-himself to battle? Knowledge, and method, and comprehensiveness, are
-wanted--the precise, definite, categorical impulses of a Parliamentary
-leader, who can recognise principles and stick to them.
-
-And for such a minister, what a career! It would be idleness to speak of
-the blessings he could diffuse, the anguish he could relieve, the
-gratitude and glory he could earn. A heathen can tell him this. _Homines
-enim ad Deos nullâ re propius accedunt quam salutem hominibus dando.
-Nihil habet nec fortuna tua majus quam ut possis, nec natura tua melius
-quam ut velis, conservare quam plurimos._
-
- Upper Grosvenor Street,
- May 15th, 1854.
-
-
-
-
- REPORTS
- RELATING TO
- THE SANITARY CONDITION
- OF THE
- CITY OF LONDON.
-
-
-
-
-FIRST ANNUAL REPORT.
-
-
-TO THE HON. THE COMMISSIONERS OF SEWERS OF THE CITY OF LONDON.
-
- _November 6th, 1849._
-
- GENTLEMEN,
-
-During the 52 weeks dating from October 1st, 1848, to September 29th,
-1849, there died of the population of the City of London 3763 persons.
-
-The rate of mortality, estimated from these _data_ for a population of
-125,500, would be about the proportion of 30 deaths to every thousand
-living persons.[13]
-
- [13] The Census of 1851, compared with that of 1841, would lead me to
- believe that in 1848-9 the population of the City must have been about
- 129,000. With this correction, the death-rate would have been about
- 29·16 _per_ thousand.--J. S., 1854.
-
-The lowest suburban mortality recorded in the fifth volume of the
-Registrar-General’s Reports, for the year then under estimation, gave a
-rate of 11 in the thousand; and we might perhaps be justified in
-adopting that rate as a _minimum_ for the purpose of sanitary
-comparison.
-
-According to this standard (undoubtedly a very superior one) it would
-appear that, during the last year, death has prevailed in the City of
-London with nearly three times its recognised _minimum_ of severity.
-
-But, to avoid all sources of fallacy, I will allow a very ample margin
-to this estimate; I will take 15 per thousand as a fair standard of
-mortality, and will assume that last year’s deaths in the City have
-amounted to only double their normal proportion.
-
-Probably no one contends that the lower rate of mortality, as
-illustrated at Dulwich or Sydenham, indicates an over-healthy condition
-of the locality to which it refers. Probably no one argues that human
-life, in those healthier districts, is prolonged beyond enviable limits.
-Surely, on the contrary, every one who can measure the large amount of
-misery and destitution which results from a high rate of mortality, will
-think it most desirable that, by every means within the scope of
-sanitary science, exertion should be made to reduce the higher rate to
-the level of the lower.
-
-Therefore, Gentlemen, I venture to assure myself, that I shall but have
-anticipated the wishes of this Hon. Court, in preparing for your
-consideration a statement of those circumstances, which apparently
-conspire to determine the larger mortality of the City of London.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In order to prevent any misapprehension of my remarks, I think it well
-to observe that, in commenting on this mortality, I purposely avoid
-instituting any comparison between it and the mortality of those urban
-districts which immediately adjoin us: for the object of my comparison
-is not to illustrate how, by similar or worse circumstances, an equally
-great mortality may have been procured elsewhere; but rather to suggest
-how, by other and better sanitary arrangements here, our present high
-mortality may be diminished.
-
-Indeed, while I speak of the causes of that high mortality which
-distinguishes the City of London from the healthier sub-districts I have
-cited, it will be obvious that many of my observations do not apply to
-the City of London exclusively, but admit of equal application to
-various other central districts of the metropolis;--relating, in fact,
-generally to the characteristic evils of all urban residences.
-
-With those other districts I have nothing to do; but I wish it to be
-understood, that in describing the City as healthy or unhealthy, I am
-not comparing it with Holborn, or Whitechapel, or Bermondsey, or other
-urban localities, where--whatever the relative badness of the places,
-the scale of comparison would be essentially vicious, and the results of
-comparison worthless. It is my object to test the salubrity of the City
-by comparison with a superior standard, in order that some definite aim
-may appear, towards which to direct the endeavours of sanitary
-improvement.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Starting, then, from our Registrars’ Returns, I invite you to inquire
-with me, how it has come to pass that within the City of London there
-have died in the last year twice as many persons as it seems necessary
-that there should die; and whence has arisen the apparent anomaly, that
-here--in the very focus of civilization, where the resources of curative
-medicine are greatest, and all the appliances of charitable relief most
-effectual, still, notwithstanding these advantages, there has passed
-away irrevocably during the year so undue a proportion of human life.
-
-Let it not be imagined that the word _cholera_ is a sufficient answer to
-these questions, or that its mention can supersede the necessity for
-sanitary investigation. Let it, on the contrary, be observed that the
-epidemic which has visited us, extends its ravages only to localities
-previously and otherwise hostile to life; so that, while all regions of
-the globe in succession are shadowed by its dark transit, the healthiest
-districts of each region remain utterly unharmed in presence of the
-pestilence. Compare, for instance, the cholera mortality in a healthy
-suburban sub-district with that of an unhealthy urban one. Dulwich and
-the parish of St. Ann’s, Blackfriars, in the City of London, are
-probably nearly equal in population: in the former, there was not a
-single death from cholera; in the latter, the deaths from this cause
-alone were at the rate of twenty-five to every thousand of the
-population. Dulwich is one of the healthiest sub-districts within the
-bills of mortality; St. Ann’s belongs to one of the unhealthiest
-sub-districts of the City of London; and the cholera visited each in
-proportion to its ordinary healthiness.
-
-Such is the general rule; and accordingly I would suggest to you that
-the presence of epidemic cholera, instead of serving to explain away the
-local inequalities of mortality, does, in fact, only constitute a most
-important additional testimony to the salubrity or insalubrity of a
-district, and renders more evident any disparity of condition which may
-previously have been overlooked. The frightful phenomenon of a periodic
-pestilence belongs only to defective sanitary arrangements; and, in
-comparing one local death-rate with another, it is requisite to remember
-that, in addition to the ordinary redundance of deaths which marks an
-unhealthy district, there is a tendency from time to time to the
-recurrence of epidemic pestilence, which visits all unhealthy districts
-disproportionately, and renders their annual excess of mortality still
-more egregious and glaring.
-
- * * * * *
-
-As materials which may aid you to estimate the sanitary defects of the
-City, I subjoin two tables[14] illustrating the relative mortality of
-the several sub-districts. The first of these tables indicates
-numerically the local distribution of the year’s deaths, and gives their
-proportion to the population of each district and sub-district. The
-second relates particularly to the last quarter, and illustrates the
-pressure of the epidemic. The two together furnish a synoptical view of
-the several rates of mortality, as calculated for the entire City, for
-the Unions separately, for the sub-districts separately; and for the
-last quarter of the year separately. In the tedious process of
-constructing these tables, I have been careful to avoid every source of
-inaccuracy, and believe that they present you with a true measure of the
-health of the City during the past year.
-
- [14] I have not reprinted these tables quite as here described. The
- local distribution of the 3763 deaths of the year is given in the
- Appendix, No. III.; and the sub-district death-rates of the year, as
- nearly as I can get them, in a note overleaf, page 6. The high
- mortality of this summer quarter (in which 1395 persons died) will be
- best appreciated by the reader in referring to Appendix, No. XIV.;
- where it can be compared with the mortality of similar periods of time
- in the four other years there accounted for.--J. S., 1854.
-
-From these comparative tables it will be observed, that the high
-mortality of the population does not affect the entire City equally;
-that, in some of its portions, the rate of death approaches the
-_minimum_ standard much more nearly than in others; that in those
-districts where the general rate is best, the temporary aggravation
-from epidemic causes has likewise been least; and that our aggregate
-City rate, either for ordinary times or for a period of epidemic
-disease, is compounded from the joint result of several very different
-proportions. Reference to the Registrar-General’s tables will enable any
-one to see that the ordinary rate of mortality for the West London Union
-is a fourth higher than the rate for the City of London Union, while the
-rate for the East London Union bears a still higher proportion; and
-these very different rates are, as it were, merged in the one aggregate
-rate, struck for the whole City, as comprising the three unions referred
-to. It will be obvious, therefore, that many parts of the City are much
-healthier than this aggregate rate would signify, while others are much
-unhealthier. In regard of last year, for instance, the aggregate rate of
-mortality was (as I have stated) 30 per thousand of the general
-population of the City: but if this rate be analysed by examination of
-the sub-district mortality, it will be seen that in one sub-district the
-rate of death stood nearly as low as 20; that in another sub-district of
-the same union it rose to 36, and in a third sub-district (of another
-union) to within a small fraction of 40.[15]
-
- [15] On account of changes of population shown by the subsequent
- Census, these figures would require correction. The death-rates _per_
- thousand in the several sub-districts were probably about as follows,
- viz.:--
-
- ------------------+-------------+------------------------------
- EAST LONDON UNION.|W. L. UNION. | CITY OF LONDON UNION.
- ---------+--------+------+------+-----+-----+------+-----+-----
- St. |Cripple-|North.|South.|S. W.|N. W.|South.|S. E.|N. E.
- Botolph. | gate. | | | | | | |
- ---------+--------+------+------+-----+-----+------+-----+-----
- 26½ | 32 | 34 | 41 | 38 | 22 | 24 | 21⅔ | 22
- ---------+--------+------+------+-----+-----+------+-----+-----
-
- J. S., 1854.
-
-If it were possible to furnish you with statistics derived from a still
-smaller sub-division of each district, these points would be infinitely
-more manifest. In some limited localities of the City you would probably
-find an approximation to the average mortality of suburban districts;
-while in other spots, if they were isolated for your contemplation, you
-would see houses, courts, and streets where the habitual proportion of
-deaths is far beyond the heaviest pestilence-rate known for any
-metropolitan district aggregately--localities, indeed, where the
-habitual rate of death is more appalling than any which such averages
-can enable you to conceive.
-
-These facts are quite unquestionable, and I have felt it my duty to
-bring them under your notice as pointedly and impressively as I can;
-feeling assured, as I do, that so soon as you are cognisant of them,
-every motive of humanity, no less than of economical prudence, must
-engage you to investigate with me, whether or not there may lie within
-your reach any adoptable measures for lessening this large expenditure
-of human life, and for relieving its attendant misery. It is, therefore,
-with the deepest feeling of responsibility that I proceed to fulfil the
-main object of my First Annual Report, by tracing these effects to their
-causes, and by explaining to you, from a year’s observation and
-experience, what seem to me the chief influences prevailing against life
-within the City of London.
-
- * * * * *
-
-My remarks for this purpose will fall under the following heads, viz.:--
-
- I. Defective house-drainage;
-
- II. Incomplete and insufficient water-supply;
-
- III. Offensive or injurious trades and occupations;
-
- IV. Intramural burials;
-
- V. Houses insusceptible of ventilation, and absolutely unfit for
- habitation;
-
- VI. The personal habits of the lowest classes, and the influence of
- destitution in increasing their mortality.
-
-In treating of these topics, I shall not pretend to bring before you all
-the details on which my opinions are founded, or to enumerate under each
-head those infinite individual instances which require sanitary
-correction. It is my wish at this time to submit to you only such
-general considerations as may show you the largeness of the subject, its
-various ramifications, and its pressing importance; and it is my hope
-that these considerations may suffice to convince you of the necessity
-which exists in the City of London for some effective and permanent
-sanitary organisation.
-
-
-HOUSE-DRAINAGE.
-
-I. It is not in my power to lay before you any numerical statement of
-the proportion of drained to undrained houses. From such information as
-I possess, I may venture to speak of imperfect house-drainage as having
-been a general evil in all the poorer districts of the City; and the
-latest intelligence on the subject leads me to consider this great evil
-as but very partially removed. So far as I can calculate from very
-imperfect materials, I should conjecture that some thousands of houses
-within the City still have cesspools connected with them. It requires
-little medical knowledge to understand that animals will scarcely thrive
-in an atmosphere of their own decomposing excrements; yet such, strictly
-and literally speaking, is the air which a very large proportion of the
-inhabitants of the City are condemned to breathe. Sometimes, happily for
-the inmates, the cesspool in which their ordure accumulates, lies at
-some small distance from the basement-area of the house, occupying the
-subsoil of an adjoining yard, or if the privy be a public one, of some
-open space exterior to the private premises. But in a very large number
-of cases, it lies actually within the four walls of the inhabited house;
-the latter reared over it, as a bell-glass over the beak of a retort,
-receiving and sucking up incessantly the unspeakable abomination of its
-volatile contents. In some such instances, where the basement story of
-the house is tenanted, the cesspool lies--perhaps merely boarded
-over--close beneath the feet of a family of human beings, whom it
-surrounds uninterruptedly, whether they wake or sleep, with its fetid
-pollution and poison.
-
-Now, here is a removable cause of death. These gases, which so many
-thousands of persons are daily inhaling, do not, it is true, in their
-diluted condition, suddenly extinguish life; but, though different in
-concentration, they are identically the same in nature with that
-confined sewer-gas which, on a recent occasion, at Pimlico, killed those
-who were exposed to it with the rapidity of a lightning stroke. In their
-diluted state, as they rise from so many cesspools, and taint the
-atmosphere of so many houses, they form a climate the most congenial for
-the multiplication of epidemic disorders, and operate beyond all known
-influences of their class in impairing the chances of life.
-
-It may be taken as an axiom for the purposes of sanitary improvement,
-that every individual cesspool is hurtful to its vicinage; and it may
-hence be inferred how great an injury is done to the public health by
-their existence in such numbers, that parts of the City might be
-described as having a cesspool-city excavated beneath it.
-
-I beg most earnestly to press on the consideration of your Hon. Court,
-the extreme importance of proceeding with all convenient speed to alter
-this very faulty construction, and to substitute for it an arrangement
-compatible with the health of the population.
-
-While addressing you on this subject, and while congratulating your Hon.
-Court on the fact, that public attention is so much directed to a matter
-in which your exertions are certain to effect large and salutary reform,
-I cannot refrain from expressing a wish, that more accurate knowledge
-prevailed among the public as to the history and jurisdiction of the
-nuisance in question. It seems constantly to be forgotten, that your
-responsibility in the matter dates but from last January. The
-cesspool-nuisance has been the slow growth of other less enlightened
-ages, not in the City merely, but in the whole metropolis, and in all
-other towns in England. The extreme injury which it inflicts on the
-health of the population, and the vital necessity of abating that
-injury, are points which only began to claim attention in this country
-about ten years ago; and which have since but very slowly been forcing
-their way (chiefly through the indomitable zeal and perseverance of Mr.
-Chadwick) into that share of notice which they deserve. House-drainage
-with effective water-supply, are the remedies which can alone avail; and
-it is only during the present year that authority to enforce these
-measures has been vested by the Legislature in any public bodies
-whatsoever.
-
-Before the month of January last, when your increased jurisdiction was
-established, it appears to me that, for the existence of cesspools in
-the City, you had no more responsibility than for the original site of
-the metropolis, or for the architecture of Westminster Abbey.
-
-During the last ten months, however, the care of effective
-house-drainage has rested solely and entirely with your Hon. Court; for
-two of those ten months, I thought it desirable, on account of the
-epidemic, that no considerable disturbance of the soil should take place
-in the construction of new works; in the remaining eight months, two
-miles of new sewer were formed, and 900 houses were drained for the
-first time.
-
-If the house-drainage of the City had depended for its completion, even
-since that time, solely on the labours of this Commission, no doubt it
-would have proceeded at a far quicker pace. How effectively your Hon.
-Court had prepared for the best application of your increased powers, is
-sufficiently evinced in the 45 miles of sewerage, ramifying through all
-the districts of your jurisdiction, ready at every point to receive the
-streams of private drainage, and leaving to the owners of house-property
-(with few exceptions) no excuse for their non-performance of these
-necessary works. I believe the extent of public sewerage within the City
-to be quite unparalleled, and to furnish facilities of the rarest kind
-for the abolition of cesspools, and for the establishment of an improved
-system of house drainage. But, Gentlemen, while you have exerted
-yourselves to the utmost in the application of your increased authority,
-and have directed your staff of officers, from first to last, to proceed
-with all possible despatch in enforcing sanitary improvement in the
-matter now under consideration, the intentions of your Court and the
-industry of its officers have been in a great measure frustrated by the
-passive resistance of landlords. Delays and subterfuges have been had
-recourse to by the owners of house-property, in order to avoid
-compliance with the injunctions of the Commission; and the temporary
-interruption of works, which occurred in August and September,
-prevented these evasions from being dealt with as otherwise they would
-have been.
-
-Now, however, the course is again open. For some weeks your Hon. Court
-has directed that all works of drainage and sewerage shall proceed; many
-are already in progress; and I can see no reason why, within a year from
-the present time, the number of cesspools and of undrained houses within
-the City of London should not be reduced to a very small proportion.
-
-Everything, however, in this respect will depend on the spirit of
-_thoroughness_ with which the Act of Parliament is enforced; and I would
-strongly recommend, in all cases of non-drainage or other non-compliance
-with the terms of notice, that no indulgence whatever should be conceded
-to landlords beyond the time specified in the notification of the Court;
-that no difference should be recognised between a ‘notice’ and ‘a
-peremptory notice;’ that all notices should be ‘peremptory;’ and that, a
-certain period for performance having been allowed to the landlord, on
-the very day of that period’s expiration, the work, if undone, should be
-given over for completion by the workmen of the Commissioners of Sewers,
-in accordance with the 61st clause of the Act of Parliament. In favour
-of the adoption of this principle, I can adduce no stronger argument
-than my conviction, that its non-adoption would insure a sacrifice of
-human life, in exact proportion to the procrastination allowed; and
-that, too, in a matter where henceforth your responsibility is undivided
-and your power absolute.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In order to give efficiency to whatever improvements of house-drainage
-may be instituted, the present system of water-supply will require to
-undergo very extensive modifications; for at present in the poorer
-tenements, even where some show of house-drainage is made, the
-arrangements are constantly rendered inoperative from insufficiency or
-absence of water. To this matter, however, I shall presently revert.
-
-Another most important _desideratum_ in connexion with the sewerage of
-the City is that, if possible, some more perfect system of trapping
-should be devised, or that, in some way or other, the sewers should be
-ventilated effectively and inoffensively.[16] At present there are
-frequent complaints of offensive exhalation from gratings in the open
-ways of the City; and it will be obvious to your Hon. Court, that all
-which I have urged on the subject of cesspool-exhalations must apply
-equally to those which are emitted from sewers. The impediments to
-effective trapping are almost insuperable; but I believe that when the
-water-supply of the City is very largely increased, washing the drains
-amply and incessantly, the evil complained of will undergo a sensible
-diminution.
-
- [16] This subject is adverted to, with more detail, in the next year’s
- Report.--See page 104.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In further connexion with my present subject, I would also solicit
-attention to the fact that the sanitary purposes of drainage are but
-imperfectly achieved, where the outfall of sewerage is into a tidal
-river passing through the heart of a densely peopled metropolis. I
-should be stepping beyond my province, if I were to say much respecting
-the schemes now before the public for dealing with the difficulty to
-which I here refer, inasmuch as those schemes involve questions of
-engineering and machinery, on which I am incompetent to form an opinion.
-But I can have no hesitation in stating it as a matter greatly to be
-desired in the City of London, that the noble river which ebbs and flows
-beneath its dwellings should cease to be the drainpool of our vast
-metropolis; and that the immeasurable filth which now pollutes the
-stream should be intercepted in its course, and be conveyed to some
-distant destination, where instead of breeding sickness and mortality,
-it might become a source of agricultural increase and national
-wealth.[17]
-
- [17] This subject is more particularly dwelt upon in the last Report;
- page 261.
-
-I would venture, likewise, to express an opinion that the City of London
-is peculiarly interested in the accomplishment of this great public
-work, not only on general grounds relating to the conservancy of the
-river, but likewise and especially on sanitary grounds, by reason of the
-large bank-side population, subjects of the City, who now, instead of
-deriving advantage from their nearness to the stream, are constantly
-disgusted and injured by its misuse.
-
-While the consideration of this most important measure is pending, I
-would invite attention to some circumstances, by which even the present
-evil is needlessly aggravated.
-
-In the first place the sewers are of defective length, so that during
-the ebb of the tide their contents, as they escape, are suffered to flow
-in a stream of some length across the mud of the retreating river. The
-stream, together with the mud which it saturates, and the open mouth of
-the sewer, evolve copious and offensive exhalations, and I would
-recommend that measures be taken for abatement of the nuisance. This
-purpose, as concerns the sewer, would be fulfilled by the addition, in
-each instance, of a sufficient length of brick or cast-iron work, to
-prolong the canal beyond low water mark; but the great extent of mud
-which is left uncovered at each tide, and which during the present
-pollution of the river is a source of extreme nuisance and of disease,
-constitutes an evil for which no remedy can be found till the stream
-shall be narrowed and embanked.
-
-Meanwhile, the complaints which reached the Committee of Health during
-the summer, together with the results of my own inspection, lead me to
-believe that the several small docks which lie along the City bank of
-the river from the Tower to the Temple, fulfil little really useful
-purpose; that they are to a great extent used as laystalls for their
-vicinage; that copious deposits and accumulations of filth take place in
-them; that they are a nuisance and injury, except to the very few who
-are interested in their maintenance; and that it would be of public
-advantage that they should be filled up.
-
-
-WATER-SUPPLY.
-
-II. I am sure that I do not exaggerate the sanitary importance of water,
-when I affirm that its unrestricted supply is the first essential of
-decency, of comfort, and of health; that no civilization of the poorer
-classes can exist without it; and that any limitation to its use in the
-metropolis is a barrier, which must maintain thousands in a state of the
-most unwholesome filth and degradation.
-
-In the City of London the supply of water is but a fraction of what it
-should be. Thousands of the population have no supply of it to the
-houses where they dwell. For their possession of this first necessary of
-social life, such persons wholly depend on their power of attending at
-some fixed hour of the day, pail in hand, beside the nearest stand-cock;
-where, with their neighbours, they wait their turn--sometimes not
-without a struggle, during the tedious dribbling of a single small pipe.
-Sometimes there is a partial improvement on this plan; a group of houses
-will have a butt or cistern for the common use of some scores of
-inmates, who thus are saved the necessity of waiting at a standcock, but
-who still remain most insufficiently supplied with water. Next in the
-scale of improvement we find water-pipes laid on to the houses; but the
-water is turned on only for a few hours in the week, so that all who
-care to be adequately supplied with it must be provided with very
-spacious receptacles. Receptacles are sometimes provided: and in these,
-which are often of the most objectionable description, water is retained
-for the purposes of diet and washing, during a period which varies from
-twenty-four to seventy-two hours. One of the most important purposes of
-a water-supply seems almost wholly abandoned--that, namely, of having a
-large quantity daily devoted to cleanse and clear the house-drains and
-sewers; and in many cases where a waste-pipe has been conducted from the
-water-butt to the privy, the arrangement is one which gives to the
-drainage little advantage of water, while it communicates to the water a
-well-marked flavour of drainage.
-
-I consider the system of intermittent water-supply to be radically bad;
-not only because it is a system of stint in what ought to be lavishly
-bestowed, but also because of the necessity which it creates that large
-and extensive receptacles should be provided, and because of the
-liability to contamination incurred by water which has to be retained
-often during a considerable period. In inspecting the courts and alleys
-of the City, one constantly sees butts, for the reception of water,
-either public, or in the open yards of the houses, or sometimes in their
-cellars; and these butts, dirty, mouldering, and coverless; receiving
-soot and all other impurities from the air; absorbing stench from the
-adjacent cesspool; inviting filth from insects, vermin, sparrows, cats,
-and children; their contents often augmented through a rain water-pipe
-by the washings of the roof, and every hour becoming fustier and more
-offensive. Nothing can be less like what water should be than the fluid
-obtained under such circumstances; and one hardly knows whether this
-arrangement can be considered preferable to the precarious chance of
-scuffling or dawdling at a standcock. It may be doubted, too, whether,
-even in a far better class of houses, the tenants’ water-supply can be
-pronounced good. The cisternage is better, and all arrangements
-connected with it are generally such as to protect it from the grosser
-impurities which defile the water-butts of the poor; but the long
-retention of water in leaden cisterns impairs its fitness for drinking;
-and the quantity which any moderate cistern will contain is very
-generally insufficient for the legitimate requirements of the house
-during the intervals of supply. Every one who is personally familiar
-with the working of this system of intermittent supply, can testify to
-its inconvenience; and though its evils press with immeasurably greater
-severity on the poor than on the rich, yet the latter are by no means
-without experience on the subject.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The following are the chief conditions in respect of water supply, which
-peremptorily require to be fulfilled:--
-
-1. That every house should be separately supplied with water, and that
-where the house is a lodging-house, or where the several floors are let
-as separate tenements, the supply of water should extend to each
-inhabited floor.
-
-2. That every privy should have a supply of water, applicable as often
-as it may be required, and sufficient in volume to effect, at each
-application, a thorough flushing and purification of the discharge-pipe
-of the privy.
-
-3. That in every court, at the point remotest from the sewer-grating,
-there should be a standcock for the cleansing of the court; and
-
-4. That at all these points there should always and uninterruptedly be a
-sufficiency of water to fulfil all reasonable requirements of the
-population.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Now, if my statements are accurate with regard to the imperfect manner
-in which thousands participate in the distribution of water, even for
-their personal necessities; if my statements are again accurate with
-respect to house-drainage, and to the immense increase of water
-distribution which must accompany any improvement in this respect--and I
-am quite prepared, if necessary, to adduce ample evidence on these
-subjects; if, again, it be considered that the appreciation of water by
-the multitude, who have so long suffered from lack of it, will lead to a
-vast augmentation of its domestic use; then, I apprehend, it cannot be
-doubted that the subject of water-supply to the City is one that
-requires now to be looked at almost as though it were to-day broached
-for the first time.
-
-Those important conditions, which I just enumerated as urgently
-requiring fulfilment, may certainly be accomplished, so far as
-mechanical construction is concerned, in more than one way. It may be
-possible, no doubt, in further compliance with the principle of
-intermittent supply, to furnish every tenement in the City with a
-cistern of proper dimensions, and with its usual appurtenances of
-ballcock, waste-pipe, &c.; but this, I need hardly say, would be a
-process involving a vast expenditure of money, and hardly to be
-recommended on the mere ground of conformity with what has hitherto been
-done in the matter. It may be possible, on the other hand, to convert
-the whole water-supply of the City into a system of uninterrupted
-supply, and to construct all new works in conformity with this system.
-
-I beg to suggest that the choice between these alternatives is one of
-immense and very urgent importance to the sanitary welfare of the City;
-and I would earnestly commend it to the best consideration of your Hon.
-Court.
-
-The system of a constant supply is now no longer a novelty. In
-Philadelphia, in New York, in Nottingham, in Preston, in Glasgow, in
-Newcastle, in Bristol, and in various other places, this system has been
-adopted; its practicability and its advantages have been amply
-demonstrated.[18] Five years ago, when evidence on the subject was given
-before the House of Commons, it appeared that in the city and suburbs of
-Philadelphia 25,816 houses were supplied at an average rate of five
-dollars per house; that in Preston more than 5,000 houses were supplied
-continually at high-pressure, and that the company was increasing its
-tenants at the rate of 400 annually; that in Nottingham about 8,000
-houses, containing a population of 35,000 persons, were supplied in the
-same manner; and in respect of many other towns, public experience has
-been equally extensive and satisfactory. About a month ago, the Sanitary
-Committee of the last-mentioned town published what I may call a report
-of congratulation on their freedom from cholera, which had visited the
-town with great severity in 1832. They detail the measures by which
-Nottingham has been rendered a healthy town, and the first item in that
-enumeration stands thus:--‘An unlimited supply of wholesome filtered
-water, forced, by day and night, at high pressure, through all the
-streets to the tops of almost all the houses, at a cost, for the
-dwellings of the poor, of about five shillings per week.’
-
- [18] It seems almost unnecessary to remind the reader that five more
- years have added infinite additional testimony to that mentioned in
- the text as existing in 1849; and that, two years ago, in a special
- Act of Parliament, it was enjoined on the Water Companies of the
- Metropolis that, within seven years, they should follow the precedent
- so extensively established. In the face of such evidence--with the
- knowledge that Manchester has a constant supply and that Glasgow is
- arranging one, it certainly tests one’s credulity to hear it rumoured
- that our Metropolitan Water-Merchants are hoping to resist that
- requirement, on the ground that such a supply in London would be
- _impossible_.--J. S., 1854.
-
-On the relative merits or demerits of the two competing systems of
-supply, I have only to speak so far as their adaptation to sanitary
-purposes is concerned. In this respect, I have no hesitation in saying
-that the system of constant supply is immeasurably superior to its
-rival; so superior, that unless competent engineering authorities should
-decide on its practical inapplicability to the City of London, I would
-strongly recommend its adoption as the only one, in my judgment, by
-which the growing necessities of the population can be fully and
-effectively satisfied.
-
-
-OFFENSIVE AND INJURIOUS TRADES.
-
-III. With respect to offensive trades and occupations pursued within the
-city of London, my task of recommendation is an easy one. To any person
-conversant with the simplest physiological relations of cause and
-effect, it is quite notorious that the decomposition of organic matter
-within a certain distance of human habitations unfailingly tends to
-produce disease; and every one who is competent by knowledge and
-impartiality to pronounce an opinion on the subject, must feel that no
-occupation which ordinarily leaves a putrid refuse, nor any which
-consists in the conversion or manufacture of putrescent material, ought,
-under any circumstances, to be tolerated within a town.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1. First, in regard to slaughter-houses, I may remind you that, on the
-23rd of January last, when your Hon. Commission first met under the new
-Act of Parliament, I recommended to you on sanitary grounds, that in
-such rules as you might make for the regulation of slaughter houses, all
-underground slaughtering should be absolutely prohibited. It was laid
-down, however, that your Act of Parliament would not enable you to
-establish this restriction, which (it was argued) would be equivalent to
-a direct suppression of many existing slaughter-houses.[19]
-
- [19] Slaughtering in cellars was rendered illegal by the amended City
- Sewers Act, 1851, and since that year has been entirely discontinued
- in the City. See page 192.--J. S., 1854.
-
-Considering that, in my first recommendations to the Commission I ought
-to confine myself to objects attainable by means of the Act of
-Parliament then just coming into operation, I felt myself precluded for
-the time from entering on the subject (however important in itself) of
-the total abolition of urban slaughtering. Now, however, while treating
-generally of sanitary improvement for the City, I can have no hesitation
-in repeating an opinion which I have already submitted to the
-Health-Committee of the Common Council; and I beg accordingly to state,
-that I consider slaughtering within the City as both directly and
-indirectly prejudicial to the health of the population;--_directly_,
-because it loads the air with effluvia of decomposing animal matter, not
-only in the immediate vicinity of each slaughter-house, but likewise
-along the line of drainage which conveys away its washings and fluid
-filth; _indirectly_, because many very offensive and noxious trades are
-in close dependence on the slaughtering of cattle, and round about the
-original nuisance of the slaughter-house, within as narrow limits of
-distance as circumstances allow, you invariably find established the
-concomitant and still more grievous nuisances of gut-spinning,
-tripe-dressing, bone-boiling, tallow-melting, paunch-cooking, &c. Ready
-illustrations of this fact may be found in the gut-scraping sheds of
-Harrow-alley, adjoining Butchers’-row, Aldgate; or in the Leadenhall
-skin-market, contiguous to the slaughtering places, where the stinking
-hides of cattle lie for many hours together, spread out over a large
-area of ground, waiting for sale, to the great offence of the
-neighbourhood.
-
-Such evils as those to which I have adverted are inseparable from the
-process of slaughtering, however carefully and cleanlily conducted; and
-they may easily be aggravated to an unlimited extent by defects in
-drainage, in water supply, or in ventilation, or by the slovenly habits
-and impunctuality of those to whom the removal of filth and offal is
-intrusted.
-
-In short, I believe it to be quite impossible, so to conduct the process
-of slaughtering within the City of London as to remove it from the
-category of nuisances, or to render it harmless to the health of the
-population; and I believe it to be equally impossible so to superintend
-the details of its performance as to prevent them, where
-ill-administered, from rising into considerable and fatal importance
-among the promoting causes of epidemic and infectious disease.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is scarcely necessary, after this expression of my opinion, that I
-should say how strongly I would recommend that measures should be taken
-for the discontinuance of all slaughtering within the City; and that,
-with the abolition of slaughtering, all establishments which deal with
-animal matter approaching putrefaction, and all sheds and stalls for the
-continued keeping of cattle, should likewise be prohibited and
-suppressed.
-
-The number of slaughter-houses at present registered and tolerated
-within the City amounts to 138, and in 58 of these the slaughtering
-occurs in vaults and cellars. How overwhelming an amount of organic
-decomposition must be furnished by these establishments, can neither be
-estimated nor conceived; but the influence of that decomposition admits
-of being measured in its effects on the population, and in the high
-zymotic mortality which denotes an atmosphere over-laden with organic
-poison.
-
-Before leaving this subject, I think it right very briefly to allude to
-an argument which is often objected to the view here stated. The
-objector looks to a particular district, or to a particular
-slaughter-house, and says that the mortality of the district is an
-average one; or he points to Mr. A. or Mr. B.--the butcher or the
-butcher’s man, saying, ‘Who can be healthier than A. or B.? Surely, if
-the pursuit be injurious, these men ought to have been poisoned long
-ago.’ Now, to this I reply;--first, as regards the men employed in these
-crafts, we have no statistics of any value to decide on their mortality,
-and judgment on the matter cannot be deduced from some half-dozen cases,
-known to any of us individually; but, further, if we admit (which I by
-no means know to be the case) that they are persons of average longevity
-and healthiness, then it must be remembered that their activity, their
-out-door exercise, and, above all, their unlimited supply of animal
-food, are circumstances conducing to give them health beyond the average
-of their station; and it must be remembered that these palliating
-circumstances, though they may counteract the evil for those persons
-most nearly concerned in it, contribute nothing towards deodorising the
-neighbourhood, or towards preserving its poorer inhabitants from the
-depressive influence of putrid emanations.
-
-And, as regards the district--although we have certain evidence that
-organic decomposition is a chief cause of disease, yet we do not
-invariably find disease generated in immediate proximity to the source
-of nuisance. Drainage beneath the soil, and currents of air above it,
-convey the materials of decomposition to a distance; and if the
-particular slaughter-houses be placed on a high level amidst the
-surrounding City, so that their drainage be effectual and their
-ventilation complete, then obviously their influence must be sought for,
-not so much in any special aggravation of the local mortality, as in
-certain remoter effects of their diffused emanation; in effects, namely,
-which are discoverable along their lines of drainage and ventilation,
-and in the various consequences of a highly zymotic atmosphere generally
-through the entire town.
-
- * * * * *
-
-2. With regard to such trades as are considered to be simply offensive,
-and where the evidence of injury to health is indirect and uncertain, I
-can hardly doubt that a wise legislation would exclude them also from
-the circle of the metropolis. Tallow-melting, whalebone-boiling,
-gas-making, and various other chemical proceedings, if not absolutely
-injurious to life, are nuisances, at least in the ordinary language of
-the law, or are apt to become such. It is the common right of the
-neighbourhood to breathe an uncontaminated atmosphere; and, with this
-common right, such nuisances must, in their several degrees, be
-considered to clash. It might be an infraction of personal liberty to
-interfere with a proprietor’s right to make offensive smells within the
-limits of his own tenement, and for his own separate inhalation; but
-surely it is a still greater infraction of personal liberty when the
-proprietor, entitled as he is to but the joint use of an atmosphere
-which is the common property of his neighbourhood, assumes what is
-equivalent to a sole possession of it, and claims the right of diffusing
-through it some nauseous effluvium which others, equally with himself,
-are thus obliged to inhale. Such, as it appears to me, is the rational
-view of this matter; and although I am not prepared to speak of these
-trades in the same terms as I applied to slaughtering and its kindred
-occupations,--although, that is to say, I cannot speak of them as
-injurious to health on any large scale, yet I would respectfully submit
-to your Hon. Court that your Act of Parliament empowers you to deal with
-such nuisances in respect of their being simply offensive.[20]
-
- [20] City Sewers Act, 1848, § 113.
-
- * * * * *
-
-3. Under the same head, I would likewise beg leave to suggest whether it
-might not be practicable for your Hon. Court to regulate the operation
-of establishments which evolve large volumes of smoke. The exterior
-dirtiness and dinginess of London depend mainly on this cause; and the
-same influence, by rendering domestic cleanliness difficult and
-expensive, creates an additional impediment to its cultivation. People
-naturally despair of cleansing that which a day’s exposure to the
-atmosphere blackens again with soot; or they keep their windows shut,
-breathing a fusty and unwholesome air, in the hope of excluding the
-inconvenience. Now, when it is remembered that all the smoke of London
-is but so much wasted fuel, it must surely be felt that the enforcement
-of measures for its consumption would be to the interest of all parties;
-amply economizing to the manufacturer whatever might be the trifling
-expense of appropriate arrangements, while it would relieve the public
-of that which, called by the mildest name, is a nuisance and a source of
-heavy expense.
-
-
-INTRAMURAL BURIAL.
-
-IV. The subject of intramural burial is the next on which I have to
-report, as affecting the health of the City.
-
-In compliance with an order of the Health Committee, I have examined as
-fully as circumstances would allow into the requirements of the City of
-London in respect of burial accommodation, and the result of my inquiry
-obliges me to express my conviction, that the City can no longer with
-safety or propriety be allowed to furnish intramural interment to its
-dead.
-
-In all those larger parochial burying-grounds where the maintenance of a
-right to bury can be considered important,--in all such, and in most
-others, too, the soil is saturated and super-saturated with animal
-matter undergoing slow decomposition. There are, indeed, few of the
-older burial-grounds of the City where the soil does not rise many feet
-above its original level, testifying to the large amount of animal
-matter which rots beneath the surface. The vaults beneath churches are,
-in many instances, similarly overloaded with materials of putrefaction,
-and the atmosphere, which should be kept pure, and without admixture for
-the living, is hourly tainted with the fœtid emanations of the dead. For
-the most part, houses are seen to rise on all sides in immediate
-contiguity to the burial-ground, forbidding the possibility of even such
-ventilation as might diminish the evil; and the inhabitants of such
-houses complain bitterly, as they well may, of the inconvenience which
-they suffer from this confined and noxious atmosphere.
-
- * * * * *
-
-With respect to burial in vaults, which prevails to a very great and
-dangerous extent in this City, I may observe that, among persons who are
-ill-informed on the subject, there exist erroneous notions as to the
-preservation of bodies under these circumstances. They are supposed,
-from the complete closure of their coffins, to remain unchanged for
-ages, like the embalmed bodies of Egypt and Peru; or at least--if
-perhaps they undergo some interior and invisible change (as the
-chrysalis within its sheath) that there is no interference with the
-general arrangement, no breach in the compactness of the envelope.
-Nothing can be less correct than this supposition.
-
-It is unnecessary that I should detail to you the process of decay, as
-it occurs within the charnel-house; nor need I inquire for your
-information whether indeed it be true, as alleged, that part of the duty
-of a sexton consists in tapping the recent coffins, so as to facilitate
-the escape of gases which otherwise would detonate from their
-confinement. It is sufficient to state, that--whether such be or be not
-the duty of the functionary in question, the time certainly comes,
-sooner or later, when every corpse buried in the vault of a church
-spreads the products of its decomposition through the air as freely as
-though no shell had enclosed it. It is matter of the utmost notoriety
-that, under all ordinary conditions of vault-sepulture, the wooden case
-of the coffin speedily decays and crumbles, while the interior leaden
-one, bending with the pressure of whatever mass may be above it (or
-often with its own weight) yields, bulges, and bursts, as surely as
-would a paper hat-box under the weight of a laden portmanteau.
-
-If the accuracy of this description be doubted, let inquiry be made on a
-large scale after the coffins of 40 years back[21]--let it be seen how
-many will appear! If, on the contrary, its accuracy be granted, then I
-apprehend nothing further need be urged, to establish the importance of
-abolishing a system which maintains on so large a scale the open
-putrefaction of human remains within places of frequent resort, and in
-the midst of populous habitations.
-
- [21] Perhaps the expressions in my text are somewhat too general; not
- indeed as to the fact of the coffins _ultimately_ giving vent to their
- fœtid contents (which is the real point at issue) but as to the time
- within which this occurs. In the dryer and better kept vaults, a
- longer period certainly elapses than that suggested; in the worse,
- probably a shorter one. The sooner or later is of little practical
- importance: but, on re-perusing my Report, I think it right to add
- this qualification.--J. S., 1854.
-
-It is a very serious matter for consideration, that close beneath the
-feet of those who attend the services of their church, there often lies
-an almost solid pile of decomposing human remains, co-extensive with the
-area of the building, heaped as high as the vaulting will permit, and
-generally (as I have shown) but very partially confined. And if it be
-the case, as perhaps it may be, that the frequenters of the place of
-worship do not complain of any vitiation of their atmosphere, or perhaps
-do not experience it, not the less is it true that such a vitiation
-occurs, and--whether to the special detriment of the congregation or
-not, contributes to the overladen putrefactiveness of our London
-atmosphere.
-
-In respect of such vaults, I do not consider that the mere cessation of
-burial in them will be sufficient; seeing that at the present moment
-they contain amongst them many thousand coffins, as yet tenanted by the
-materials of decomposition; and year after year, if left in their
-present state, these will be poisoning the air with successive
-instalments of their progressive decay. It seems to me quite
-indispensable that some comprehensive measure should be undertaken, for
-abolishing at once and for ever all burial within the City of London.
-Conjointly with the general application to Parliament, for prohibition
-of further intramural sepulture, I would recommend that authority be
-obtained by the City for its several parishes to procure the decent
-removal to extramural cemeteries of such coffins as already occupy their
-vaults; or, failing this measure, I would recommend that all coffins now
-lying within vaults, be walled up in their present resting-places with
-uniform impermeable masonry. For very obvious reasons, I should prefer
-the former plan to the latter.[22]
-
- [22] Probably the most successful attempt at hermetical enclosure of
- organic matters would not reach beyond effecting a postponement of
- their diffusion through the atmosphere. The true principles for burial
- of the dead lie rather in recognising their decomposition as
- inevitable, and in providing only lest it be offensive or injurious to
- the living. This is best attained by interment in a well-chosen soil,
- at a depth proportioned to the qualities of the ground; with no
- pretence of everlasting coffins and impenetrable cerements; but with
- ample vegetation above, to relieve the upper earth from whatever
- products of decay may mount and mingle there; and especially with
- thorough drainage below, so that down-currents of air and rainfall may
- freely traverse the putrefactive strata, ventilating and washing the
- soil, and diffusing its organic contents through deeper levels, till
- their oxidation is complete and their new inodorous combinations are
- discharged in watery solution.--J. S., 1854.
-
-Intramural burial is an evil, no doubt, that varies in its intensity
-according to the numbers interred; becoming appreciable in its effects
-on health, so far as the rough measure of statistics can inform us, only
-when many interments occur annually, or when ground is disturbed wherein
-much animal matter had previously been left to decay. But, be the evil
-large or little in any particular case, evil undoubtedly it is in all,
-and an unmitigated evil.
-
-The atmosphere in which epidemic and infectious diseases most readily
-diffuse their poison and multiply their victims is one, as I have
-already often stated, in which organic matters are undergoing
-decomposition. Whence these may be derived signifies little. Whether the
-matter passing into decay be an accumulation of soaking straw and
-cabbage leaves in some miserable cellar, or the garbage of a
-slaughter-house, or an overflowing cesspool, or dead dogs floated at
-high water into the mouth of a sewer, or stinking fish thrown overboard
-in Billingsgate-dock, or the remains of human corpses undergoing their
-last chemical changes in consecrated earth, the previous history of the
-decomposed material is of no moment whatever. The pathologist knows no
-difference of operation between one decaying substance and another; so
-soon as he recognises organic matter undergoing decomposition, so soon
-he recognises the most fertile soil for the increase of epidemic
-diseases; and I may state with certainty, that there are many
-churchyards in the City of London where every spadeful of soil turned up
-in burial sensibly adds to the amount of animal decomposition which
-advances too often inevitably around us.
-
-Nor can I refrain from adding, as a matter claiming attention, that, in
-the performance of intramural interment, there constantly occur
-disgusting incidents dependent on overcrowdedness of the burial-ground;
-incidents which convert the extremest solemnity of religion into an
-occasion for sickness or horror; perhaps mingling with the ritual of the
-Church some clamour of gravediggers who have mis-calculated their space;
-perhaps diffusing amidst the mourners some nauseous evidence and
-conviction, that a prior tenant of the tomb has been prematurely
-displaced, or that the spade has impatiently anticipated the slower
-dismembering of decay. Cases of this nature are fresh in the memory of
-the public; cases of extreme nuisance and brutal desecration in place of
-decent and solemn interment; and it is unnecessary that I should revive
-the record of transactions inconsistent with even the dawn of
-civilisation.[23]
-
- [23] It happened that during the few months preceding the presentation
- of this Report, there had occurred some of the most flagrant and
- disgusting illustrations of the evils adverted to.--J. S., 1854.
-
- * * * * *
-
-From the circumstances which I have mentioned, it can hardly fail to
-appear most desirable to you, that the use of some spacious and open
-cemetery at a distance from the City should be substituted for the
-present system of intramural interment, and the urgency of this
-requirement will be demonstrated all the more cogently, when it is
-remembered that the annual amount of mortality in the City averages
-above 3000, and that under the present arrangements every dead body
-buried within our walls receives its accommodation at the expense of
-the living, and to their great detriment.
-
-In recommending that consideration be given, at as early a period as
-possible, to the means for establishing some sufficient municipal
-cemetery (a consideration which, for obvious reasons, must be prior to
-any Parliamentary proceedings for the prohibition of intramural
-interments) there are three points to which, even now, I think it
-advisable to advert, as essential to the admissibility of such a plan. I
-would submit, first, that the site of any such cemetery must be
-sufficiently remote from the metropolis to obviate any repetition of the
-present injury to a resident population; and I hardly know how this
-purpose can be attained, without going some distance beyond the
-immediate suburbs of London as indicated by the Bills of
-Mortality:--secondly, that the space required for the proper inhumation
-of the dead of the City of London[24] would be not less than 54 acres;
-and, thirdly, I would suggest that the charter of such an establishment
-ought to contain provisions against the erection of houses within a
-certain distance of the burial-ground, so that this may at all times and
-under all circumstances be surrounded, exterior to its wall, by a
-considerable belt of land totally devoid of resident population. The
-absence of such a provision as the last would very soon lead to the
-extramural cemetery becoming _intramuralised_ by the growth of a new
-suburb around it, and would again evince, by new and unnecessary
-illustrations, how incompatible with each other are the Dead and the
-Living as tenants of one locality.
-
- [24] See Special Report on Extramural Interment, page 285.
-
-
-HOUSES PERMANENTLY UNFIT FOR HABITATION.
-
-V. Under the last heads of my Report I have touched on matters, which
-(in so far as they cannot be adjusted without Parliamentary
-interference) may be considered to lie beyond the present jurisdiction
-of the Commissioners of Sewers; and the topic which I now approach may,
-perhaps, be considered equally foreign to the scope of your ordinary
-functions.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I have to report that there are houses and localities within the City
-which are irremediably bad;--places, which the uninterrupted presence of
-epidemic disease has stamped as absolutely unfit for human habitation;
-places, where drainage and water-supply, indeed, are defective, but
-where the perfection of these necessaries might exist, in all
-probability, without giving healthiness to the inhabitants. The
-predominant evil in the localities referred to is their thorough
-impossibility of ventilation.
-
-While treating of the manner in which noxious emanations are conveyed to
-a distance, and are enabled to diffuse their influence over a whole
-town, instead of concentrating it in some single slaughter-house or
-burial-ground, I indirectly suggested what I have now to illustrate;
-that all the evils of all the nuisances in existence acquire their
-utmost local intensity of action when the diffusion of their gaseous
-products is interfered with, and when, from absence of ventilation,
-these are retained in the immediate vicinity of their source.
-
-The inhabitants of open streets can hardly conceive the complicated
-turnings, the narrow inlets, the close parallels of houses, and the high
-barriers of light and air, which are the common characteristics of our
-courts and alleys, and which give an additional noxiousness even to
-their cesspools and their filth. There are very few who, without
-personal verification, would credit an account that might be given of
-the worst of such dwelling-places. Let any one, however, who would do
-full justice to this frightful subject, visit the courts about
-Bishopsgate, Aldgate, and the upper portion of Cripplegate, which
-present some of the worst, though by no means the only instances of
-pestilential residence. A man of ordinary dimensions almost hesitates,
-lest he should immovably wedge himself, with whomsoever he may meet, in
-the low and narrow crevice which is called the entrance to some such
-court or alley; and, having passed that ordeal, he finds himself as in a
-well, with little light, with less ventilation, amid a dense population
-of human beings, with an atmosphere hardly respirable from its closeness
-and pollution. The stranger, during his visit, feels his breathing
-constrained, as though he were in a diving-bell; and experiences
-afterwards a sensible and immediate relief as he emerges again into the
-comparatively open street.
-
-Now, I am prepared to show that there are many, very many, courts within
-the City, to which the above description accurately applies; courts and
-alleys hemmed in on all sides by higher houses; having no possibility of
-any current of air; and (worst of all) sometimes so constructed back to
-back, as to forbid the advantage of double windows or back doors, and
-thus to render the house as perfectly a _cul-de-sac_ out of the court,
-as the court is a _cul-de-sac_ out of the next thoroughfare.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is surely superfluous to observe, that these local conditions are
-utterly incompatible with health. Among their dense population, it is
-rare to see any other appearance than that of squalid sickness and
-misery; and the children, who are reproduced with the fertility of a
-rabbit-warren, perish in early infancy. In the worst localities probably
-not more than half the children born survive their fifth year, and of
-the 3763 deaths registered last year in the City of London generally,
-1410 were at or under seven years of age.
-
-The diseases of these localities are well marked. Scrofula more or less
-completely blights all that are born: often extinguishing life
-prematurely; in childhood, by hydrocephalus; in youth, by pulmonary and
-renal affections, which you read of as consumption and dropsy; often
-scarring and maiming where it does not kill, and rendering life
-miserable by blindness, decrepitude, or deformity; often prolonging
-itself as a hereditary curse in the misbegotten offspring of those who,
-under such unnatural conditions, attain to maturity and procreation.
-
-Typhus prevails there too, not as an occasional visitor, but as an
-habitual pestilence.
-
-It is impossible for me, by numbers, to give you an exact knowledge of
-the fatality of such spots; because, in the greater part of the City,
-hospitals, dispensaries, and private practice, divide with the
-parochial officers the treatment of the sick, and diminish the returns
-of sickness which those officers would otherwise have to show. But this
-I may tell you, as an illustration of what I mean;--that in the few
-houses of Seven-Step-alley and its two offsets, (Amelia-place and
-Turner-square,) there occurred last year 163 parochial cases of fever;
-in Prince’s-place and Prince’s-square, 176 cases--think, Gentlemen, if
-this had occurred in Southampton-place and Russell-square! that behind
-the east side of Bishopsgate, in the very small distance from
-Widegate-street to New-street, there were 126 cases; that behind the
-west side, from Primrose-street to Half-moon-street, there were 245
-cases; that the parish of Cripplegate had 354 cases over and above the
-number (probably a very large one) treated by private practitioners, by
-hospitals, and especially by dispensaries. Similarly, though with less
-perfect information, I am enabled to trace fever to a terrible extent in
-very many other localities of the City, even on the verge of its better
-residences, and close behind its wealthiest thoroughfares; in
-Plumtree-court, in Plough-court and place, in Poppin’s-court,
-Neville’s-court, Blackhorse-alley, Union-court, Plough-court in Holborn,
-Field-lane; in the courts right and left of King-street, Smithfield, in
-Hanging-sword-alley and its vicinity, in Peahen-court, in Bell-alley and
-its neighbourhood, in Priest’s-alley, in Beer-lane, in Friar’s-alley, in
-Bromley’s-buildings, and in the whole large space which stretches from
-Ludgate-hill to beside the river.
-
-And in most of these localities, in addition to other sanitary errors,
-there predominates that particular one to which I am now inviting your
-attention--the absence, namely, of sufficient ventilation.
-
-It was in districts such as these, that in the year 1665, the Great
-Plague of London found the readiest facilities for its reception; and it
-was by the destruction of such districts that the Great Fire of the
-following year rendered the utmost conceivable service to the sanitary
-progress of the people, and completed their emancipation from the
-horrors of an unparalleled pestilence. Long intervening years have
-sufficed to reconstruct these miserable habitations almost after their
-first type, and to re-exemplify all the evils which belong to them; so
-completely indeed, that if the infection of that same plague should
-light again amongst us, I scarcely know why it might not traverse the
-City and decimate its population as quickly and as virulently as before.
-Meanwhile, however, typhus with its kindred disorders, and the
-occasional epidemics of influenza and cholera, maintain their attachment
-to the soil, and require no further re-inforcement from the pestilence
-of other climates. From these fatal diseases we no longer hope to be
-rescued by the recurrence of the former casualty. The almost two
-centuries which have elapsed since the period referred to, have taught
-men better methods than a general conflagration for remedying such
-evils; and it is a satisfaction to believe that the wisdom and humanity
-of the Corporation of the City of London will apply those methods with
-effect.
-
-As a palliative measure, applicable in many of the least aggravated
-instances, I may suggest the removal of unnecessary walls which
-intercept the current of air from place to place; the formation of
-counter-openings in various blind courts; and, not least, in regard of
-many houses thus situated, the admission of light and air by additional
-windows. I cannot pass this portion of the subject without recording my
-opinion that the operation of the window-tax is in direct opposition to
-the sanitary interests of the people; and I must venture to express my
-hope that some different method of assessment may presently be adopted,
-in place of one which presses on the occupier in proportion to the
-healthiness of his tenement.[25] I think it very desirable, indeed
-almost indispensable, that your Hon. Court should have the power, under
-certain circumstances, to order and enforce the opening of additional
-windows in houses occupied by large numbers of persons, when your
-Officer of Health may report their ventilation defective; and if it
-should seem expedient to you to seek this authority from the
-Legislature, it might with the greatest advantage be accompanied by some
-concession from her Majesty’s Government, to the effect that the
-formation of additional windows, occurring thus under your orders for
-the immediate necessities of health and life, should not occasion any
-further assessment on the occupiers of the house.
-
- [25] I ought not to pass this page without a grateful mention of Lord
- Duncan’s name in connexion with the removal of the Window Tax, at
- length happily effected. It remains, however, greatly to be desired,
- in respect of certain specifiable houses inhabited by the poorer
- classes, that Local Boards of Health should have power to enforce
- improvements of ventilation.--J. S., 1854.
-
- * * * * *
-
-But, Gentlemen, within the City of London there exist, to a very large
-extent, architectural evils for which no such palliative treatment is
-possible; evils against which I would venture to say (borrowing a
-metaphor from my profession) that no safety can be found except in
-amputation.
-
-To dwell in hovels like pits, low-sunken between high houses, hemmed in
-by barriers which exclude every breath of direct ventilation--this can
-never be otherwise than a cause of sickness and mortality to those whose
-necessities allot them such residence; and, if it be an incontrovertible
-fact that subsistence in closed courts is an unhealthy and short-lived
-subsistence in comparison with that of the dwellers in open streets,
-then, I apprehend, it cannot be doubted that such a manner of life ought
-to be dealt with as a great evil, and ought as much as possible to be
-interrupted.
-
-A surveyor’s inspection of the City would reveal to you many places
-answering to the description I have given; places to which no
-ventilation could arrive except by removal of whole streets of houses
-which wall them in.
-
-To remove the well-constructed houses of the City, in order that its
-wretched courts and alleys should participate in the blessings of light
-and air, might seem one method of conquering the difficulty which is
-before you; but I apprehend the opposite alternative, of proceeding to a
-gradual suppression of all residence in the former class of dwellings,
-may more naturally have your approbation.
-
-To the latter aim, sooner or later, the sanitary efforts of the
-Corporation must be directed.
-
-There are many parts of the City where great and immediate advantage
-would arise from an expenditure of money applied solely to the purpose
-of destruction; parts, where the purchase of an entire court, or series
-of courts, for the sole object of pulling down houses, and leaving open
-spaces in their stead, would be the cheapest as well as the most
-effective manner of dealing with their sanitary difficulties. And I have
-earnestly to suggest for your consideration, that proceedings of this
-nature will require to be pursued to a very great extent, and at a large
-annual expense, within the City, before the cleanliness and habitability
-of its poorer localities will stand in their legitimate proportion to
-the modern stateliness of thoroughfare and grandeur of public buildings
-which attest the magnificence of the Corporation.
-
-I would, therefore, beg to recommend that a survey be made of the worst
-districts which I have specified, with a view to the immediate purchase
-and destruction of some considerable portion of the court-property lying
-in them; and, still more, I would urge that this is an exertion, which
-for some years must proceed systematically, in order to thin the density
-of a population which now breeds pestilence and augments mortality by
-its overcrowding and excess.
-
-I am aware that considerable difficulties lie in the way of
-accomplishing an object of this sort with immediate rapidity. It is my
-great hope, however, that the principle may be distinctly recognised;
-and that the City will not tolerate within its municipal jurisdiction
-the continuance of houses absolutely incompatible with healthy
-habitation. This principle being once established, and a certain annual
-expenditure devoted to enforce it, I feel assured that within a few
-years opportunities will have arisen for that outlay to have been made
-in the most judicious manner, and for its results amply to have
-demonstrated the advantages of the system which I recommend.
-
-
-SOCIAL CONDITION OF THE POOR.
-
-VI. Last, and not least, among the influences prejudicial to health in
-the City of London, as elsewhere, must be reckoned the social condition
-of the lower classes; and I refer to this the more especially, because
-often, in discussion of sanitary subjects before your Hon. Court, the
-filthy, or slovenly, or improvident, or destructive, or intemperate, or
-dishonest habits of these classes, are cited as an explanation of the
-inefficiency of measures designed for their advantage. It is constantly
-urged, that to bring improved domestic arrangements within the reach of
-such persons is a waste and a folly; that if you give them a
-coal-scuttle, a washing-basin, and a watercloset, these several utensils
-will be applied indifferently to the purposes of each other, or one to
-the purposes of all; and that meanwhile the objects of your charitable
-solicitude will remain in the same unredeemed lowness and misery as
-before. Now it is unquestionable, and I admit it,--that in houses
-containing all the sanitary evils which I have enumerated--undrained,
-and waterless, and unventilated--there do dwell whole hordes of persons,
-who struggle so little in self-defence against that which surrounds
-them, that they may be considered almost indifferent to its existence,
-or almost acclimated to endure its continuance. It is too true that,
-among these classes, there are swarms of men and women, who have yet to
-learn that human beings should dwell differently from cattle; swarms, to
-whom personal cleanliness is utterly unknown; swarms, by whom delicacy
-and decency in their social relations are quite unconceived. Men and
-women, boys and girls, in scores of each, using jointly one single
-common privy; grown persons of both sexes sleeping in common with their
-married parents; a woman suffering travail in the midst of the males and
-females of three several families of fellow-lodgers in a single room; an
-adult son sharing his mother’s bed during her confinement;--such are
-instances recently within my knowledge (and I might easily adduce
-others) of the degree and of the manner in which a people may relapse
-into the habits of savage life, when their domestic condition is
-neglected, and when they are suffered to habituate themselves to the
-uttermost depths of physical obscenity and degradation.
-
-Here again, as in an earlier part of my Report, I think it requisite to
-remark, that I do not mean in any degree to suggest that the evils
-adverted to present themselves within the City to a greater extent than
-in sundry other parts of the metropolis. My sphere of duty lies within
-the City boundary, and it would be an impertinence in me to comment,
-either favourably or unfavourably, on districts which lie within another
-jurisdiction than that of the Commission which I have the honour to
-address. Simply to guard myself against the possibility of being
-misunderstood, I again draw attention to the fact that I studiously
-refrain from instituting comparisons with other metropolitan localities.
-Let me likewise observe that I am far from insinuating, or suspecting,
-that the majority of the poorer population of the city has fallen to
-that extreme debasement which I have just illustrated as affecting some
-portion (perhaps not an inconsiderable portion) of the poorest; but I
-dare not suppress my knowledge that such instances exist, nor can I
-refrain from stating my belief, that ignorance and poverty will soon
-contribute to increase them, if sanitary and social improvement do not
-co-operate against their continuance.
-
-Contemplating such cases, I feel the deepest conviction that no sanitary
-system can be adequate to the requirements of the time, or can cure
-those radical evils which infest the under-framework of society, unless
-the importance be distinctly recognised, and the duty manfully
-undertaken, of improving the social condition of the poor.
-
-Those who suffer under the calamitous sanitary conditions which I have
-disclosed, have been led, perhaps, to consider them as inseparable from
-poverty; and after their long habituation to such influences, who can
-wonder if personal and moral degradation conform them more and more to
-the physical debasement of their abode? In the midst of inevitable
-domestic filth, who can wonder that personal cleanliness should be
-neglected? In an atmosphere which forbids the breath to be drawn freely,
-which maintains habitual ill health, which depresses all the natural
-spring and buoyancy of life, who can wonder that frequent recourse
-should be had to stimulants, which, however pernicious in themselves,
-still for a moment dispel the malarious languor of the place, give
-temporary vigour to the brain, and cheer the flagging pulses of a
-poisoned circulation? Who can wonder that habits of improvidence and
-recklessness should arise in a population, which not only has much
-ignorance and prejudice amongst it, but is likewise often unaccustomed
-to consideration and kindness? Who can wonder that the laws of society
-should at times be forgotten by those whom the eye of society habitually
-overlooks, and whom the heart of society often appears to discard?
-
-I believe that now there is a very growing feeling abroad, that the poor
-of a Christian country can no longer, in their own ignorance and
-helplessness, be suffered to encounter all the chances which accompany
-destitution, and which link it often indissolubly to recklessness,
-profligacy, and perdition. The task of interfering in behalf of these
-classes, however insensible they may be of their own danger and frequent
-degradation, begins at length to be recognised as an obligation of
-society; and as such an interference may be fraught with the utmost
-advantage to sanitary progress, I shall now proceed to point out the
-manner in which, with this view only, it may most usefully and most
-humanely be made.
-
-First of all I would point out to you, that within your Act of
-Parliament there are contained some enactments on this subject which
-might be of great value, were it not for their very limited
-application:--‘Whereas the owners and keepers of lodging-houses of an
-inferior description, for the accommodation of mendicants, strangers,
-and other persons for the night, or other short periods, allow the same
-to be crowded, by receiving more lodgers than such lodging-houses are
-adapted to contain with a due regard to health,’ therefore, and for some
-other reasons enumerated in the 91st clause, it is enacted that you may
-require the registration, and may order the periodical inspection of
-such houses; that you may from time to time fix and determine the number
-of lodgers who may be accommodated in each lodging-house; that you may
-issue ‘rules or instructions regarding health, cleanliness, and
-ventilation;’ that you may ‘order that a ticket, containing the number
-of lodgers for which the house is registered,’ together with your rules
-and regulations, ‘shall be hung up, or placed in a conspicuous part of
-each room into which lodgers are received;’ and finally, ‘that if any
-keeper of such lodging-house shall offend against any of these
-provisions, he shall be liable for each such offence to a penalty not
-exceeding 5_l._, and the like penalty for every day after the first upon
-which any such offence shall be continued.’ The spirit of these
-enactments is excellent; but unhappily the definition given at the end
-of the clause excludes from the operation of the law those very cases
-which most need to fall within it. ‘Common lodging-house’ (it runs)
-‘shall, for the purposes of this act, mean any public lodging-house, not
-being a licensed victualling-house, in which persons are harboured or
-lodged for hire, for a single night, or for less than a week at one
-time, or in which any room is let for hire to be occupied by more than
-one family at one time.’ Lodging-houses, according to this definition,
-are (I am informed) hardly to be found within the City of London; and
-the clause has remained, and seems in its present form likely to remain,
-quite inoperative. If, in any future renewal or amendment of your Act,
-the definition could be modified in such a manner, that the powers given
-in respect of lodging-houses should be extended to all the poorer
-tenements of the City, where the several floors are let separately at a
-weekly rent, the clause in question would be rendered one of the most
-serviceable in the Act, and one of the most general application. In its
-present form, the clause barely enables you to deal with the temporary
-bed-accommodation of trampers and vagrants,--a class happily not very
-numerous in the City; while, modified in the manner I suggest, it would
-put under your sanitary regulation the whole household economy of the
-permanent industrial population of the City; and, if effectively worked,
-would conduce beyond all estimation to the physical, social, and moral
-improvement of that class.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Secondly, and as a matter of even higher importance, I would beg you to
-consider the incalculable good which may be conferred on the poorer
-classes of society, by the direct educational influence of those in
-better and more enlightened circumstances than their own. When I say
-that all the social errors to which I now more particularly refer, would
-gradually but swiftly vanish under the influence of education, I do not
-mean that the cure would lie in learning to read and to write and to
-sum:--though these attainments, of course, would largely increase the
-power, usefulness, and market value of their possessor. The education to
-which I refer, as an all-important influence for sanitary progress, is
-that which would consist in exhibiting to the lowest classes of society
-frequent practical evidences of the attainability and the advantages of
-higher civilization; an education which, by model and examples, would
-lead them to know cleanliness from dirt, decency from grossness, human
-propriety from brutish self-abandonment; an education which, by sensible
-experience, would teach them to feel the comfort and the profit of
-sanitary observances, and would apply their instinct of
-self-preservation to the deliberate avoidance of disease.
-
-It is in this point of view, gentlemen, that I would solicit your
-attention to the useful and philanthropic exertions of three societies
-which have been established during the last few years, with the object
-of improving the condition of the labouring classes; and I would venture
-to suggest that the course which those societies have adopted in various
-parts of the metropolis, is one that might with the utmost advantage be
-pursued within the City of London.
-
-The establishment of _Model Dwelling_ and _Lodging-houses_, and of
-_Public Baths_ and _Laundries_, for the use of the labouring population,
-is now no longer a matter of recent speculation. Under the beneficent
-auspices of the Societies to which I have referred, the following
-experiments have been tried:--
-
-The Committee for promoting the establishment of Baths and Wash-houses,
-having at first Mr. W. Cotton, and then Sir H. Dukinfield, for its
-Chairman, and including in its number, with other influential persons,
-several members of this Corporation, founded, at great pains and
-expense, a model institution at Goulston-square, Whitechapel. In spite
-of many circumstances conspiring to render this first and experimental
-establishment particularly expensive, it has more than supported itself
-by the small payments of the poor; and its arrangements are sufficiently
-extensive for it to have given in one day as many as 932 baths. This
-fact, having occurred in the first year of its establishment, shows how
-much the poor must have appreciated the additional comfort placed within
-their reach; and I may add that, from the first opening of the building,
-the annual receipts have been progressively on the increase. Somewhat
-earlier, and under the influence of the same parent-committee, though
-specially directed by a branch-committee, a similar establishment was
-founded in George-street, Euston-square. During the year 1848 the number
-of payments made here for bathing was 111,788; the number of payments
-for washing in the laundries, 246,760. This establishment has not only
-proved self-supporting, but has been enabled to accumulate a large
-surplus, which is now being applied to enlarge and improve the building.
-At Glasshouse-yard, near the entrance to the London Docks, there has
-been founded, on the same model, a small establishment of free baths and
-washhouses for the destitute poor. It was opened in May, 1845. In the
-first year the baths given amounted to 27,662; the usings of the laundry
-to 35,840; and its total working expenses were covered by £378.
-
-No language, however eloquent--no comment, however instructive, could
-equal the significance of the figures which I have cited as illustrating
-the great utility of these institutions; and, as regards their pecuniary
-success, it is impossible to furnish you with better testimony than is
-comprised in the fact, that the Guardians of the Poor in a great
-metropolitan parish[26] have recently, out of the poor-rates, founded an
-institution of this nature. They have become witnesses to the financial
-economy of that sanitary and social boon. In their establishment, which
-is not only self-supporting, but amply remunerative, the poor are
-enabled to have baths at an expense of a penny for a cold bath, and
-twopence for a warm bath; and the women are enabled to do their washing,
-ironing, and drying, with an unlimited water-supply, and with other
-arrangements of most admirable completeness, at an expense of only
-twopence for the first two hours, during which they occupy the separate
-chambers allotted to them. A very considerable proportion of the expense
-is covered by the receipts for baths given at the higher price of
-sixpence, and with some additional luxuries, to persons of a higher
-grade in society than those who use the ordinary baths; the former,
-though used by a different class of persons, being sought with almost as
-much avidity as the latter.
-
- [26] St. Martin’s in the Fields.
-
-In the sanitary point of view, I probably need not insist much on the
-advantages which these establishments have conferred. You will hardly
-doubt how good and wholesome a thing it has been for so many thousands
-to have had the means of cleanliness; who, in the absence of such
-facilities, must often have carried about their persons accumulations
-that one sickens to think of; and whose narrow, crowded chambers must
-constantly have steamed with wash-tubs, and been hung round with reeking
-clothes.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Next, very briefly, let me allude to what has been done in respect of
-the habitations of the poor; first, by the Society for the Improvement
-of the Condition of the Labouring Classes, under the patronage of their
-Majesties the Queen and the Queen Dowager, with the Prince Albert for
-its President, and Lord Ashley for its Chairman; secondly, by the
-Metropolitan Association for Improving the Dwellings of the Industrious
-Classes, under the Chairmanship of Sir Ralph Howard, and with a
-committee which, like that of the former society, includes many of the
-best and wisest, as well as the highest persons of the country. Under
-the influence of these societies the following experiments have been
-made:--
-
-In the Old Pancras-road a very large building has been erected, to
-accommodate 110 families separately and distinctly, in sets of two and
-three rooms each. Each set of rooms has its own boiler, range, oven, and
-coalbox; its separate scullery, in which are sink, cistern, and
-dust-shaft; its own watercloset, its own ample supply of water, and many
-other conveniences. The rents vary from 3_s._ 6_d._ to 5_s._ per week
-for a set of two rooms; and from 4_s._ 9_d._ to 6_s._ 3_d._ for a set of
-three rooms. The founders of this establishment have recently purchased
-land at the end of Spicer-street, Spitalfields, on which to erect a
-lodging-house for 300 single men, and also houses for families.
-
-In the Lower-road, Pentonville, houses of three different classes have
-been built, on the same general principle of furnishing every
-convenience and sanitary requisite. They accommodate, on the whole, 23
-families and 30 single women--widows, or of advanced age. The entire
-houses for families, with all the above-mentioned conveniences, are at a
-rent of 6_s._, having a good-sized living room, two bedrooms, with
-additional enclosed recesses for children’s beds, a yard at the back of
-the house, and the joint use of a wash-house and drying yard. A floor of
-two rooms is rented at 3_s._ 6_d._, and a single room by a single person
-at 1_s._ 6_d._
-
-In George-street, St. Giles’s, a model lodging-house has been
-established, affording accommodation to 104 single men, and combining
-everything essential to such an establishment. The ventilation and
-drainage have been carefully attended to; an ample supply of water is
-provided, gas extends through the house, the dormitories are arranged so
-as to keep their inmates private from each other; there are
-washing-closets fitted up with every requisite for cleanliness; there is
-a bath-room supplied with hot and cold water; there are a kitchen and
-wash-house furnished with all appropriate utensils, a pantry-hatch, with
-separate, ventilated, and secure compartments for the food of each
-inmate; in the pay-office is a small well-selected library, for the
-service of the lodgers, and the use of a spacious coffee-room is
-likewise for their common convenience. Their pay is 4_d._ per night, or
-2_s._ a week--an amount little above the ordinary rent paid for the most
-miserable accommodation in a trampers’ lodging-house.
-
-At 76, Hatton-garden, a lodging-house for 57 single women has recently
-been opened, consisting of three floors of dormitories, divided into
-separate compartments, and a basement fitted up with kitchen, washhouse,
-bath, pantry, safes, &c.
-
-In Charles-street, Drury-lane, three tenements, originally separate,
-have been converted into a single lodging-house for 82 single men, on
-the same general plan and at the same rent as that in George-street, St.
-Giles’s.
-
-All the lodging-houses are furnished; and the inmates are supplied with
-utensils for their food and other purposes, which must be returned, or
-made good, at their leaving.
-
-In all these lodging-houses rules exist for the purpose of insuring
-cleanliness, sobriety, carefulness, and general propriety of conduct;
-any infraction of which subjects the offender to immediate expulsion.
-For the sake of those who choose to avail themselves of the opportunity,
-Scripture readings are appointed to take place in the common room every
-evening at 9 o’clock; and copies of the Scriptures, with other
-well-chosen books, are left in charge of the superintendent for
-distribution among the lodgers, in the hope that they may thus be
-induced to occupy their leisure to advantage.
-
-In the construction of all these establishments, equally, the greatest
-pains have been taken to bring sanitary science to bear on the comfort,
-and convenience, and health of the inmates. Ventilation, drainage,
-facilities for decency and for cleanliness, have in every instance been
-made the leading considerations of the architect.[27]
-
- [27] The advantages of these admirable institutions may now be spoken
- of from longer experience. In a very remarkable pamphlet just
- published by Dr. Southwood Smith, _On the Results of Sanitary
- Improvement_, it is recorded that there has been no case of typhus
- fever in any one of the model-dwellings since they were first opened,
- and that their exemption from cholera has been as complete as from
- typhus. In the Metropolitan Buildings, during three years, the average
- annual mortality has been only 1·36 per cent. For a lower class of
- population, very similar advantages have been procured by the
- regulations of the Common Lodging-House Act. Dr. Smith mentions that
- in 1308 regulated metropolitan lodging-houses (numbering at least
- 25,000 lodgers) there had not occurred a single case of fever during
- the quarter ending the 23rd of October; yet, before they were under
- regulation, twenty cases of fever have been received into the London
- Fever Hospital from some one single house in the course of a few
- weeks.--J. S., 1854.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In regard of these model houses and model lodgings, it would, I think,
-be a great error to estimate their benefit as merely relative to the
-number of persons at any one time inmates of them. No doubt it is a
-great advantage that they furnish, at the ordinary prices of the day, or
-at a still lower price, so excellent accommodation to several hundreds
-of persons; and it is a still greater good (particularly in regard of
-those established for single men and single women) that they drill their
-inmates into decent and orderly habits, and accustom them to a high
-standard of household-accommodation, which will probably influence their
-subsequent married lives in the same desirable direction. But,
-indirectly, their utility has a far wider scope. They stand in bright
-contrast to the dark features of filth and unwholesomeness which environ
-them; they familiarise the poorest classes generally with all the
-practical advantages of cleanliness; they show that dirt is not
-inevitable; they therefore create and foster among the humblest members
-of society, a laudable discontent with defective sanitary arrangements;
-and they establish a strong public opinion, grounded on experience, in
-favour of those conditions of cleanliness and comfort, which determine
-the maintenance of health.
-
- * * * * *
-
-That all the great results of sanitary science can be applied in their
-utmost perfectness to the dwellings of the poor, for the payment of a
-rent often below, and never above, the average given for some miserable
-doghole, that poisons its inhabitants, is a truth of immense importance,
-deserving the widest dissemination, and pregnant with the most hopeful
-promise. Such advantages spring from and illustrate the economical
-application of the associative principle; they cannot be obtained
-otherwise than by the application of capital, in such an amount as lies
-only within the compass of wealthy corporations, or is reached by the
-voluntary combination of several private purses. While the labouring
-classes are abundantly able to maintain these institutions when
-established, and to render them amply remunerative to those whose
-capital has first founded them, it is obvious that no power of
-association lying within their means can suffice to originate such work.
-
-The task of initiation rests with others. And therefore it is,
-gentlemen, that on this occasion I have been induced to bring under your
-notice, as a most important part of my subject, the outline of what has
-been done in the matter of Model Dwellings and Public Baths and
-Washhouses. Feeling assured that establishments of this nature are of
-infinite utility in the several respects I have enumerated; feeling
-assured that, beyond their immediate operation on the health of inmates
-and users, they also tend, by their indirect educational influence, to
-improve the social habits, to promote the civilization, to elevate the
-general tone and character of the labouring classes, I earnestly
-recommend them to your attention; hoping that you may either yourselves
-confer on the poor population of the City the advantage of your
-patronage and succour in this respect, or else may transfer the matter
-to the jurisdiction of the Common Council, with all the influence and
-authority in its favour which your recommendation would insure.
-
-
-SUGGESTIONS FOR SANITARY ORGANISATION IN THE CITY.
-
-Having now enumerated the sanitary evils of the City, and the remedies
-which appear to my mind most appropriate for their removal, it becomes
-desirable that, in concluding, I should point out to you the
-organisation which seems necessary to be adopted during the gradual
-transition of the City from its present to a healthier state;--an
-organisation which may render this transitional period as short as
-possible, and may most effectually contribute to mitigate, for the time,
-the pressure of such evils as cannot immediately be removed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The object of this organisation lies in a word; Inspection--gentlemen,
-inspection of the most constant, most searching, most intelligent, and
-most trustworthy kind, is that in which the provisional management of
-our sanitary affairs must essentially consist.
-
-I presume I may take for granted that, in some form or other, a
-_Committee of Health_ will exist, either as a Committee of the Court of
-Common Council, or as one of this Hon. Court. I may, perhaps, further
-assume that such a Committee will have authority to entertain all
-subjects relative to the sanitary improvement of the City, and to make
-thereon such recommendations as shall seem fit to them; and, further,
-that they will make it their business to receive periodical
-intelligence, as complete as possible, on all variations in the public
-health, and on all circumstances likely to affect it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In order that any Committee, acting for sanitary purposes within the
-City, shall have a reasonable chance of success in its endeavours for
-the public good, the following means of information will be necessary
-for its use:--
-
- * * * * *
-
-1. That an account should be kept, corrected year by year, of every
-house within the City; as to the area of building, the number of floors,
-rooms, and windows; as to its ventilation; as to its drainage,
-water-supply, and other facilities for cleanliness; as to its method of
-occupation, and number of inhabitants:
-
- * * * * *
-
-2. That from this account there should be made out, at least twice
-yearly, a list of houses and streets remaining in an objectionable
-sanitary state; and a list, also, of such as may have been remedied to
-the satisfaction of the Committee since the formation of their last
-preceding list:
-
- * * * * *
-
-3. That, while trades injurious to health or offensive to their
-neighbourhood are suffered to continue within the City, there should be
-given periodical reports on the condition of such establishments, to the
-end that they may be so maintained as to be least detrimental to the
-public health:
-
- * * * * *
-
-4. That a record of every death registered as occurring in the
-population of the City should lie before the Committee; and
-
- * * * * *
-
-5. I consider it quite indispensable, that they should likewise receive
-the largest and most accurate returns which can be procured of all
-sickness occurring among the poorer classes; and (particularly in
-respect of all epidemic, endemic, and infectious disorders) that the
-medical practitioner who communicates the fact of illness, should
-likewise report the existence of any local causes, or other influences
-of general operation, which have tended to produce, or are tending to
-continue, such illness.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the subject of returns of the nature last referred to, I have
-already, on various occasions, submitted my opinion to the judgment of
-your Hon. Court. A year ago, in the first Report which I had the honour
-to make here, and in various discussions which during some months
-followed the reception of that Report, I stated how necessary I deemed
-such returns, for the purpose of guiding and justifying the various
-recommendations which it would become my duty to lay before you. The
-period which has since elapsed, including its three months of
-pestilence, has furnished me with the strongest confirmation of those
-views. As I formerly stated by anticipation, so now I repeat from
-experience, that nothing deserving the name of sanitary administration
-can exist in the City, without accurate periodical intelligence of all
-such sickness (at least) as comes under parochial treatment; or without
-such reports on the local sanitary conditions, and on other causes of
-disease, as were desired to accompany that intelligence.
-
-When the matter was previously under your consideration, it was argued
-that the reception of such intelligence formed no part of your functions
-as a Commission for draining, lighting, paving, and cleansing the City
-of London; that all sanitary matters, beyond these and the like, were
-foreign to your proper sphere of operation; and that your funds, raised
-by rates from the citizens of London, could not with propriety be
-applied to meet the expenses of such an arrangement. On this question of
-jurisdiction and finance I shall, of course, hazard no opinion. I would
-simply beg to repeat, with regard to so much of the matter as lies
-within my own professional province, that the intelligence in question
-is absolutely necessary for the present progress of sanitary measures
-within the City; that no Health-Committee can exist for a month without
-it; nor can any officer, having proper respect for his character,
-consent to be considered responsible for the health of a population,
-whose illnesses he learns only from their posthumous record in the
-death-register.
-
-During the recent prevalence of cholera, the Health-Committee of the
-Common Council complied for the time with my recommendation, and
-established a system of daily reports, rendered still more serviceable
-by free personal intercourse between myself and the several gentlemen
-having medical charge of the three City unions. What needed to be daily
-during a period of pestilence, might fitly become a weekly communication
-at all other times. I have already reported to the Health-Committee, and
-I beg to reiterate here, that the advantages derived from that system of
-communication were such as could have been attained in no other way.
-
-I may remind you that each of the gentlemen referred to, serving under
-the Poor Law, works within a certain small and definite district; that
-he is therefore peculiarly competent to speak on the state of the
-population in that district, on their habits and necessities, on their
-customary condition of health, and on their liability to epidemic
-disease; and that the total staff of these officers, taken collectively,
-representing the medical practice of the whole city, can supply exactly
-that kind of detailed and precise information which is most serviceable
-to your Officer of Health, in guiding him to those more general and
-comprehensive conclusions which it is his business to lay before you.
-These gentlemen are the habitual medical attendants of the poorer
-classes; day by day, in the unobtrusive beneficence of their calling,
-they pass from house to house, and from court to court--the constant
-recipients of complaint, or the constant observers of ground of
-complaint--amid all that destitute population on whose condition you
-require to be informed. They are in the constant presence of the
-pestilences which reign in our worst localities; they are the chief
-treaters of endemic disease within the City--of that disease which, by
-its proportion, measures the success of sanitary changes, or indicates
-their failure; and it has been the professional education of these
-gentlemen, as it is their business, to trace such effects to their
-causes. Their reports would be the authenticated statements of
-experienced medical practitioners, familiarly conversant with their
-several respective localities.
-
-If it were your wish and object, with utter indifference to expense, to
-organise the best scheme for procuring to yourselves from time to time a
-succession of accurate and trustworthy reports on the state of health,
-and condition of dwellings, in the several districts of the City;--if
-you were willing to engage a large number of non-medical persons who
-should give their whole time to the duty of exploring and reporting on
-that state, I am persuaded that this expensive and cumbrous proceeding
-would have a smaller measure of success than that which I submit to you,
-and which consists essentially in availing yourselves of the local
-knowledge and daily observations of a staff of officers, already
-organised and in active occupation for the very purposes in question.
-
-That such intelligence, embracing weekly returns from the eleven
-parochial surgeons of the City of London, and including their comments
-on the local causes of prevailing disease, would involve an annual
-expenditure of money,[28]--and that this expenditure, sooner or later,
-and in some form or other, would be derived from the rate-paying portion
-of the community, are facts which cannot be doubted. But that the
-expenditure would be a judicious one; that it is indispensable to the
-effective working of any Health-Committee, or any Health-Officer within
-the City; that it would be the first step to the mitigation of the
-disorders reported on; that it would disclose evils which else must
-escape recognition and remedy; that in a few years it would render our
-general mortality of 3 per cent. on the entire population of the City a
-matter of history and a warning, instead of its being, as now, a present
-and awful reality; that in lessening sickness and death, it would stay
-a large source of pauperism, would diminish the number of occasional and
-habitual claimants of Union relief, and would become a measure of real
-and considerable economy;--these are points on which, with the utmost
-sense of official responsibility, I beg to record my deliberate
-conviction.
-
- [28] When the matter was last under consideration of the
- Commissioners, it appeared that the expense of such an arrangement
- would be about £250 annually.--J. S., 1854.
-
-Accordingly, I have to recommend that any Committee, which may undertake
-the administration of sanitary affairs for the City, shall be furnished
-as completely as possible with information of the nature I have
-specified.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another element to which I think it necessary to advert, in connexion
-with a future sanitary organisation for the City, is this,--that some
-permanent arrangement should be made, by which the maintenance of
-exterior and interior cleanliness, the enforcement of scavengers’
-duties, the suppression of nuisances, and the like, should be brought
-under habitual and systematic surveillance; one, by which all breaches
-of your present or future sanitary regulations may be quickly detected,
-and may be visited with their appropriate penalties as speedily and as
-certainly as possible. I am induced the rather to bring this subject
-before you, as complaints of scavengers’ duties being neglected have
-reached me at every turn. I am informed that it is usual for them to
-refuse to remove dirt and rubbish from houses, according to the terms of
-their contract, except on the tenants’ payment of an additional
-gratuity; and it must be obvious to your Hon. Court that the
-arrangements which you have made by contract for this purpose are
-virtually defeated, as regards the poorer population, when the removal
-of refuse-matter is made contingent on the gift of beer-money by those
-whose means are so restricted.
-
-It is in respect of matters of this sort, and of such only, that I think
-the services of the Police-Force might usefully be employed. Their want
-of special education, and their employment in other duties, are
-circumstances which appear to me quite conclusive for objecting to their
-utilisation as sanitary reporters. But while I entertain the opinion
-that their employment in the latter direction would be both fruitless
-and inconvenient, I would submit that their numbers and their diffusion
-through the City qualify them well to act against all causers of
-nuisance, as they act against other offenders, both detectively and
-preventively; and I would venture to repeat a suggestion, which I made
-in January last, ‘that the police should consider it part of their duty,
-to report on every nuisance within their knowledge, and on every
-infraction of such sanitary rules as this Court may establish.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-Here, Gentlemen, terminates the list of subjects which, on this
-occasion, I have thought it my duty to bring before you. Long as the
-enumeration may have appeared, I can assure you that my present Report
-bears a small proportion, in point of dimensions, to the very large and
-very various mass of materials on which it is founded. In compressing it
-within the narrowest limits consistent with intelligibility, and in
-excluding from it nearly all details on the matters treated of, I have
-consulted the convenience of your Hon. Court, notwithstanding the
-greater labour and difficulty of execution which belong to the plan I
-have adopted. At any time, in Court or in Committee, when you may wish
-to pursue the subject, I shall be ready to enter at far greater length,
-and with more elaborate minuteness, on any of those subjects which, at
-the present opportunity, I have only sketched for your general
-information.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the matters which I have enumerated, some lie distinctly within your
-province, as assigned by the Act of Parliament; while others may be
-thought to lie, just as distinctly, without that province. In affairs
-strictly under your jurisdiction, and within the present scope of the
-law, there remains very much to achieve. The complete enforcement of
-house-drainage, till every house washes itself into the sewer; the more
-general distribution of water, till every individual within the City has
-an abundant supply within his immediate reach; the effective
-preservation of public cleanliness; the construction and maintenance of
-sewerage, paving, lighting, for all the streets, courts and passages of
-this great City;--these constitute an immense amount of responsibility
-and labour. Those other objects to which I have referred, are partly
-such as cannot be accomplished without the further interference of the
-Legislature. It is a point solely for the discretion of your Hon. Court
-to determine, how far you may be willing to enlarge the sphere of your
-sanitary operations, and to undertake the difficulties of a new
-campaign.
-
- * * * * *
-
-To your Officer of Health the Act of Parliament allows no such option.
-‘Whereas the health of the population, especially of the poorer
-classes, is frequently injured by the prevalence of epidemical and other
-disorders,’ therefore it is appointed for his duty that he shall report
-on whatsoever ‘injuriously affects the health of the inhabitants of the
-City,’ and that he shall ‘point out the most efficacious mode of
-checking or preventing the spread of contagious or other epidemic
-disease.’ Actuated by obligation of the duty thus expressed in your Act
-of Parliament, after full reflection on all that those expressions
-imply, and with the deepest sense of the responsibility belonging to one
-who is honoured with the task of advising the first Corporation of the
-country in respect of its sanitary proceedings, I have been compelled,
-in the course of my present Report, to trench upon many subjects which
-do not customarily fall under your consideration, and which (as I have
-stated) may by some be considered as utterly foreign to your
-jurisdiction and province.
-
-It rests with your Hon. Court to determine what course you will adopt in
-respect of such departments of the great sanitary scheme;--whether you
-will retain them under your consideration, and will assume the
-responsibility of dealing with them in proportion to their magnitude and
-importance, or will transfer them to the Court of Common Council for the
-less restricted deliberation of that body.
-
-Let me once more declare my profound conviction of their importance to
-the health and welfare of the City.
-
-To provide an inoffensive outfall for the sewerage of our vast
-population; to render the river a source of unqualified advantage; to
-give wide extension and sounder principles to the system of
-water-supply; to suppress all trades and occupations which taint the
-atmosphere with materials of organic decomposition; to abate the
-nuisance of smoke; to provide the facilities for extramural interment,
-and to procure the prohibition of all further burial amidst our living;
-to improve the domestic arrangements of the poor, and to insure for them
-an adequate supervision; to establish public baths and laundries, which
-may offer the utmost facilities and inducement for the maintenance of
-personal cleanliness; to hinder the occupation of houses which breed
-pestilence; to destroy such as are irremediably hostile to health, and
-to disperse the stifled population of courts and alleys; to substitute
-for such slums as we hope to depopulate and destroy, but in open streets
-and with perfect ventilation, houses and lodgings, which not only shall
-offer to the labouring classes every convenience essential to health and
-decency and comfort, but shall likewise serve as models of household
-economy for the whole district in which they stand;--these, Gentlemen,
-are the aims, briefly recapitulated, for the sake of which I have been
-obliged, as it were casually in my Report, to touch on many subjects
-perhaps foreign to your jurisdiction, but lying at least on the confines
-of your province, and remaining with you now either to retain or to
-transfer.[29]
-
- [29] Perhaps, to make these passages intelligible, the reader should
- be apprised that the business of the Corporation is considered in a
- great variety of Committees, which thus have their several and
- particular provinces. Of the many matters adverted to, as foreign to
- the ordinary functions of the Commission of Sewers, some might belong
- to the _City-Lands_ Committee, some to the _Improvement_, some to the
- _Finance_, some to the _Navigation_, some to the _Markets_ Committee,
- and so on. Obviously it would have been out of my place to touch on
- these details of jurisdiction; and I therefore urged only the
- essentially _municipal_ character of the several improvements I
- advocated.--J. S., 1854.
-
- * * * * *
-
-That the subject of sanitary improvement in its widest scope, and with
-all that even incidentally relates to it, is one which, according to the
-ancient constitution of the City, rightfully belongs to the authorities
-of the Corporation, in some one or other of their municipal
-relations--that it belongs to them equally as their privilege and their
-duty, cannot for a moment be questioned. And if your Hon. Court should
-determine on a negative opinion as regards yourselves, and should decide
-on transferring these matters to the Common Council, I venture to hope
-that your influence may accompany them in their course, and may procure
-for them the consideration they deserve.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Gentlemen, the history of the City of London is full of great examples
-of public service. It records many a generous struggle for the Country
-and for the Constitution; it records a noble patronage of arts and
-letters; it records imperial magnificence and Christian liberality; but
-never, within the scope of its annals, has the Corporation had so grand
-an opportunity as now for the achievement of an unlimited good. Because
-of the City’s illustrious history, and because of the vast wealth and
-power which have enabled it so often to undertake the largest measures
-of public utility and patriotism,--therefore it is, that the
-expectations of the country may well be fixed on the City of London in
-regard of this, the distinguishing movement of modern times--the
-movement to improve the social condition, and to prolong the lives of
-the poor.
-
-Those who are familiar with the many abiding monuments of your civic
-munificence and splendor, may well expect that, in approaching this
-all-important question, the counsels of the City will be swayed by high
-and generous considerations.
-
-In the great objects which sanitary science proposes to itself,--in the
-immense amelioration which it proffers to the physical, to the social,
-and indirectly to the moral condition of an immense majority of our
-fellow-creatures, it transcends the importance of all other sciences,
-and in its beneficent operation seems most nearly to embody the spirit
-and to fulfil the intentions of practical Christianity.
-
-Ignorant men may sneer at its pretensions; weak and timorous men may
-hesitate to commit themselves to its principles, so large in their
-application; selfish men may shrink from the labour of change, which its
-recognition must entail; wicked men may turn indifferently from
-considering that which concerns the health and happiness of millions of
-their fellow-creatures. To such men an appeal would indeed be useless.
-But, to the Corporation of the City of London--whether as assembled in
-its entire Parliament, or as represented within the confines of this
-Court--to the Corporation which, on so many occasions, has attained
-patriotic ends by great expenditure and sacrifice; to men earnest,
-strong-minded, and practical, having much consideration for their
-fellow-creatures, and having little consideration for personal toil or
-municipal expense, so only that they may fulfil a great Christian duty,
-and may confirm the gratitude with which history records their frequent
-services to our kind;--to such a Corporation, and to such men, the
-Country looks for the perfection of a sanitary scheme which shall serve
-as model and example to other municipal bodies undertaking the same
-responsibility; and to such a Corporation and to such men do I,
-likewise, your Officer of Health, respectfully and confidently address a
-well-founded appeal.
-
- I have the honour,
-
- &c., &c.
-
-
-
-
-FURTHER REMARKS ON WATER-SUPPLY.
-
-
- ADDRESSED TO THE HEALTH-COMMITTEE OF THE HON. THE COMMISSIONERS OF
- SEWERS OF THE CITY OF LONDON, PURSUANT TO A REFERENCE--
-
- “_What would be a sufficient supply of water to the houses and
- premises within the City, and the best principle upon which to effect
- such supply?_”
-
- _February 21, 1850._
-
- GENTLEMEN,
-
- Such further observations on the subject of ‘Water-Supply to the City’
- as you have desired me to lay before you, I have now the honor to
- submit, in as condensed a form as possible.
-
- * * * * *
-
-First, I may remind you, that in my report of last November, which still
-remains under your consideration, I stated the following ‘as the chief
-conditions in respect of Water-Supply, which peremptorily require to be
-fulfilled.
-
-‘1. That every house should be separately supplied with water; and that,
-where the house is a lodging-house, or where the several floors are let
-as separate tenements, the supply of water should extend to each
-inhabited floor.
-
-‘2. That every privy should have a supply of water, applicable as often
-as it may be required, and sufficient in volume to effect at each
-application a thorough flushing and purification of the discharge-pipe
-of the privy.
-
-‘3. That in every court, at the point remotest from the sewer-grating,
-there should be a stand-cock for the cleansing of the court; and
-
-‘4. That at all these points there should always and uninterruptedly be
-a sufficiency of water to fulfil all reasonable requirements of the
-population.’
-
-In re-organising the system of water-supply there are some other
-purposes, of a more public nature than these, which would likewise claim
-your attention: such as (1) an improved arrangement for meeting all
-accidents and emergencies of fire; (2) an efficient distribution of
-water to all common urinals and privies; (3) a sufficiency of supply for
-any public baths and wash-houses, which may be hereafter erected; and
-(4) an ample surplus to be at the disposal of the Commission for the
-cleansing of streets and sewers.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In order that those domestic purposes, which I first enumerated, should
-be adequately fulfilled, the supply of water ought, practically
-speaking, to be without limit to any individual consumer. It is the
-tendency of the system of constant supply, and constitutes a
-distinguishing advantage of that system, that it fulfils this important
-condition without any increase, or perhaps rather with a diminution, of
-the total draught of water for a large population.
-
-The average of requirement (estimated from the consumption of large
-communities) would probably be about 12 gallons per person per diem;
-making an amount, for the total population of the City, of about 1½
-million gallons per diem. Assuming this estimate to be correct, a point
-which I would beg you to observe is the following: that, although there
-might be very little fluctuation in the _total quantity consumed_, and
-although it might remain constant at the figure I have given, yet in the
-items of individual consumption, making up this gross amount, there
-would be almost infinite varieties. One family would habitually consume
-twice as much water as another family of the same size: one family would
-consume six gallons per person on five days of the week, and would
-require all its remaining quota on the other two days; and so forth.
-These differences and caprices of individual requirement do not sensibly
-affect the total quantity consumed in a given week by a population of
-130,000 persons; one consuming more, another less, the first
-counterbalances the last in forming the materials for a fair personal
-average; and a source of supply calculated from such an average for a
-large population would, practically speaking, be unlimited to each
-individual consumer, provided only that it were so distributed, that
-each consumer could draw from the common stock at his own time and
-according to his own necessity. This advantage is obviously lost under
-the present system of intermittent supply, which compels a larger total
-distribution than would else be requisite, entails the expensive and
-unwholesome necessity for storage, and yet is notoriously fraught with
-the inconveniences of a restricted source, or a defective supply.
-
-I have no sufficient data for judging with precision what quantity of
-water might be required to fulfil all those public purposes of
-cleanliness and of protection from fire, to which I have adverted. The
-supply would require to be _practically_ inexhaustible; but the
-consumption, on an average of the four seasons, would probably lie
-considerably within half a million of gallons per diem.
-
-When the distribution of water is brought into its proper relations with
-the drainage of the City--that is, when the arrangements of domestic
-drainage are completed, in conformity with the intentions of the Act of
-Parliament, and when all the water, distributed for private consumption,
-is made to traverse and to cleanse all the channels of house-drainage,
-it is probable that a smaller quantity of water than is now consumed
-will suffice for the flushing of sewers, and for other so-called
-sanitary purposes.
-
-The quantity at present supplied to the City by its two Water-Companies
-is perhaps much in excess of the two millions of gallons per diem, which
-I have estimated as a sufficiency for our population; but the
-distribution is so unequal, and the waste of the intermittent system so
-incalculably great, that the effect produced on the population is, to a
-very great extent, that of scarcity.
-
- * * * * *
-
-With regard to the _principle of supply_ on which I have been desired to
-report, it seems certain to my mind, from such evidence as I can collect
-on the subject, that the system of continuous supply at high-pressure
-promises advantages which can never be realized under the present system
-of intermittent supply. There are many matters connected with the
-comparison of these two systems, which lie beyond my sphere of
-professional observation, and on which I would not be bold enough to
-offer any opinion to your Committee. The sanitary points, on which alone
-I would venture to insist, as benefits in the system of continuous
-supply, are--first, the practical inexhaustibility of the source, and
-secondly, the absence of necessity for storage. If these benefits are
-attainable, and especially if (as alleged) they can be obtained at a
-material economy of expenditure, as compared with the present system,
-there can be little doubt as to which should obtain the preference.
-
-If your Committee should wish, it would be easy to prepare for your
-examination a digested summary of such scientific evidence as has been
-given on these points: or it might be expedient, if such a course would
-be more satisfactory to you, that some person in your confidence should
-undertake to visit and inspect one or more of the towns where the
-system of continuous supply is in operation, and where direct
-information can be gathered on the very important particulars of its
-practical efficiency and success. But, at all events, whether your
-Committee should wish or should not wish this personal investigation to
-be undertaken, I would suggest, that it might be satisfactory to you and
-serviceable to the inquiry in which you are engaged, if you would
-procure a report from some eminent hydraulic engineer, practically
-conversant with the system of continuous supply, who might furnish you
-with conclusive testimony as to the admissibility of this system within
-the City, and as to the advantages and disadvantages, sanitary and
-economical, which might attend its adoption here, as compared with that
-which has hitherto prevailed.
-
-It appears to me that at the present time the system of continuous
-supply might, provisionally, receive a fair trial in the City, in
-respect of some of those poorer habitations, which are now for the first
-time about to be supplied with water and drainage. The Water-Companies
-would probably not object, if desired by the Commission, to supply a
-hundred houses, experimentally, with constant pressure from their mains.
-The Commission might select for its experiment some of those courts
-about Cripplegate or Bishopsgate, where the drainage, as well as the
-water-supply, requires to be constructed anew: some, where there have
-hitherto been undrained cesspools, and where the water-supply has been
-from a stand-cock. Should this suggestion be found feasible, I would
-recommend that the details of its execution should be carried out under
-the joint superintendence of your Surveyor and myself, and that we
-should afterwards report to you its results, as material for guiding
-your decision with regard to the general supply of the City.
-
-Mr. Quick, Engineer to the Southwark Water-Works, in a letter which is
-appended to Sir William Clay’s pamphlet, has recently suggested various
-arrangements for an uninterrupted supply, and these have no doubt been
-under your Surveyor’s consideration. I may add, too, that there are at
-present upwards of 40 houses within the City constantly supplied from
-the mains of the East London Water-Works; but as these are not houses of
-the poorest description, it is possible that they may not constitute so
-satisfactory a proof of the feasibility of the constant supply, or so
-complete an illustration of the detailed arrangements for its
-employment, as could be given by the experimental construction I have
-suggested.
-
-While the supply remains, as at present, an interrupted one for the City
-generally, I would recommend that the Commission should procure from the
-Water-Companies an arrangement for the delivery to occur, under no
-circumstances, less than daily; and that Sunday should form no exception
-to this arrangement. Many tenants of the Water Companies at present
-receive their supply only on alternate days, Sunday counting as a _dies
-non_, so that a necessity is entailed in such cases for a three days’
-storage of water.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Whether the _quality_ of water supplied to the City by the existing
-Companies is such as it ought to be, or whether some purer source of
-supply may be found; whether their neglect of filtration,
-notwithstanding the important weight of testimony given in its favor, be
-not a serious dereliction of their duty to the public; whether the
-sanitary interests of the consumers of this first necessary of life can
-be properly protected, while at variance with those of the great trading
-companies which hold a virtual monopoly of the supply; whether it would
-not be an immense boon to the Citizens of London, that the control of
-the water-supply should be vested in the same jurisdiction as the
-drainage, paving, and sanitary cleansing of the district; are questions
-which have forced themselves closely on my attention while considering
-the sanitary affairs of the City, and on which I hope shortly to lay
-some special observations before this Committee or before the Court.
-
-I defer dwelling on these subjects at present, partly because they were
-not mentioned in your Committee’s specific reference; partly because I
-think it desirable to wait for the issue of the experiment which I have
-suggested with regard to the competing system of supply; and partly
-because I have reason to know that at the present moment a very
-extensive series of chemical investigations is proceeding under orders
-of the Government, with a view to ascertain the purest possible sources
-for the water-supply of the metropolis. The results of this inquiry, so
-far as they have transpired, appear to me so infinitely important in
-their relation to some of the questions just alluded to, that I think it
-expedient under the circumstances to wait for such new light as may
-accrue to our knowledge from the completion of these researches, before
-I touch the chemical division of the subject.
-
- I have, &c. &c.
-
-
-
-
-SECOND ANNUAL REPORT.
-
-
- TO THE HON. THE COMMISSIONERS OF SEWERS OF THE CITY OF LONDON.
-
- _November 26th, 1850._
-
- GENTLEMEN,
-
-In obedience to that clause in your Act of Parliament under which my
-office is constituted, and which enjoins on your Officer of Health that
-he shall ‘report periodically upon the Sanitary condition of the City,’
-I now submit to your Hon. Court my annual statement on this subject.
-
-
-I. MORTALITY OF THE CITY OF LONDON.
-
-During the fifty-two weeks, dated from September 30th, 1849, to
-September 28th, 1850, there died of the population under your charge
-2752 persons. The rate of mortality, estimated from these _data_, for a
-population[30] of 125,500, would indicate somewhat less than twenty-two
-deaths (21·92) out of every thousand living persons.
-
- [30] With the required correction for increase of population, the
- death-rate was probably about 21·25 _per_ 1000.
-
-Last year it was my painful duty to record the ravages of pestilence,
-then indeed hardly terminated, under the pressure of which our general
-death-rate had arisen to the alarming height of thirty in the thousand.
-On this present occasion, I have the happier task of laying before you
-the evidences of a mortality lessened considerably below its habitual
-average; and I rejoice in congratulating your Hon. Court on the
-testimony thus borne to the success of your sanitary exertions. For
-although, without question, some large share of this striking
-improvement may have depended on circumstances beyond our cognizance or
-control; although it may in part be but an instance of that tendency to
-periodical alternations of activity and repose which we recognise in
-disease, as in other operations of nature; although I should be
-over-sanguine if I believed, and premature if I stated, that your
-sanitary measures during the past twelve months had wrought such a
-change in the City as to ensure a continuance of this year’s comparative
-healthfulness; yet I may venture without hesitation to assure you, that
-the labours of the Commission have been fruitful of real and
-demonstrable advantage to the health of the people; that a sensible
-diminution has occurred in the physical causes of disease; and that,
-from various and disinterested sources, I hear grateful mention of
-improvements which you have effected.
-
-In confirmation of this assurance, I may inform your Hon. Court that, in
-collecting my materials for the present statement, I solicited from the
-Union-Surgeons of the whole City of London certain particulars of
-information which they were peculiarly able to furnish; I inquired of
-them, namely, whether, during the past year, there had prevailed among
-the poorer classes in their several districts more or less than the
-ordinary pressure of epidemic, endemic, and infectious disease; and
-whether, in case of such difference having been observed, they could
-refer it, either for better or worse, to any changes recently wrought
-in the physical conditions of their respective neighbourhoods. They have
-had the kindness to furnish me with the information requested of them;
-and their replies testify with remarkable uniformity, both to the
-abatement of disease within their several provinces of practice, and to
-the considerable dependence of that improved condition of health on
-sanitary works effected under your auspices.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In order to form a correct estimate of the average mortality in any
-district, it is indispensable that one’s records should extend over many
-years. Thus only is it that fallacies can be avoided which arise from
-the alternate pressure and remittance of epidemic disease. The havoc
-effected by a periodical visitation of influenza, cholera, or plague,
-varies, in like manner as the ordinary death-rate varies, in different
-localities; and its variation contributes importantly to fix the
-healthiness or unhealthiness of such localities. But obviously, if we
-wish for practical purposes to calculate an annual rate of mortality,
-and to decide, in respect of any district, what are the chances of life
-for its population, we must distribute the peculiar mortality of the
-pestilence-period over those years which intervene between visitations
-of the pestilence.
-
-Hitherto, in respect of the City of London, I have the record of only
-two years; two years differing from one another in the proportion of 30
-to 22, and the mean mortality deduced from that biennial period would be
-26 per thousand per annum.[31] I am, of course, unable to tell you with
-certainty whether that ratio be the true average death-rate of the City;
-but I incline to believe that an average calculated from a longer
-period, with less abrupt fluctuations, would give a lower figure as the
-accurate one.
-
- [31] On account of corrections already adverted to, this mean
- death-rate should be reduced, probably to 25.2.
-
-In future years, so long as I may have the honour of reporting to the
-Commission, I purpose proceeding, step by step, to the construction of a
-cyclical average from the materials which will constantly be increasing;
-and I trust that many years may elapse before any approach shall again
-be made to the high death-rate with which the cycle commenced.
-
-It may be useful, for the sake of comparison, that I should remind your
-Hon. Court of some of the more important differences which prevail
-throughout the country, in regard to the local rates of mortality. The
-extreme rates recorded in the Registrar-General’s last publication,
-relating to the septennial period 1838-44, give 14 per thousand per
-annum as the lowest average, and 33½ as the highest average, for a
-population male and female in equal proportion. The low average belongs
-to a district in Northumberland, numbering 27-28,000 inhabitants; the
-high average is assigned to Liverpool. For the whole south-east division
-of England (comprising more than a million and a half of inhabitants)
-the death-rate is but 19; while in parts of the division it falls very
-considerably below this average. I have thrown these and some similar
-comparisons into a tabular form, which may perhaps be interesting to
-you.[32]
-
- [32] Vide page 84.
-
-Possibly it may occur to you that these comparisons are devoid of
-practical application--that it is unreasonable to suppose we can
-mitigate our London death-rate to the likeness of a selected country
-mortality--that the circumstances of the two populations are essentially
-and unalterably dissimilar--that the advantages of the one cannot be
-given to the other--that the traditional ‘threescore years and ten’ of
-human life are allotted only to rustic existence--that the right of
-participating in the higher civilisation of the metropolis, or of
-trading in its larger market, is not too dearly purchased by the tax of
-half or a third of one’s fair expectation of life.
-
-On general grounds I should not hesitate to combat this objection, and
-should feel sure of convincing you of its invalidity. I should argue (as
-indeed I have already argued here) that the main conditions which
-constitute the unhealthiness of towns are definite, palpable, removable
-evils; that dense over-crowding of a population--that intricate
-ramification of courts and alleys, excluding light and air--that
-defective drainage--that the products of organic decomposition--that
-contaminated water and a stinking atmosphere, are distinct causes of
-disease and death; that each admits of being definitely estimated in its
-numerical proportion to the total mortality which it contributes to
-cause; that each is susceptible of abatement or removal, which will at
-once be followed by diminution of its alleged effects on the health of
-the population. Likewise, I should argue, that if there indeed exist,
-attached to a metropolitan residence, some really unavoidable and
-necessary disadvantages to life (a point which however I am not prepared
-to concede) there are likewise, as respects the poor, some peculiar
-advantages to counterbalance those evils; that in urban communities the
-operations of charitable relief are largest and least remitting; that
-the resources of medicine for curing what cannot be prevented are
-likewise readiest and most effective.
-
-On all these general grounds I should be prepared to maintain that a
-lowness of mortality which has been attained in any considerable rustic
-population, may be attained by an urban population, if only the
-removable evils be removed, if only the practicable good be made
-practical.
-
-Surely too, above all, I would maintain this possibility in respect of
-our capital--the treasury as she is of all means for progress in
-civilisation, the stronghold of all applicable knowledge. Let but the
-wealth, the science, the energy, and the benevolence of the metropolis
-deal with removable causes of death as they have dealt with subjects
-infinitely more difficult, infinitely less promising, and certainly of
-not greater importance; and few competent persons will doubt that the
-mortality of London might speedily be reduced to the level of any
-district-mortality yet recorded by the Registrar-General.
-
-There may be those in your Hon. Court who will hesitate to accept for
-themselves the firm conviction which I entertain on this subject; or
-who, at least, will withhold their assent from the line of argument
-which I have advanced. To them, what I have now to state may be more
-conclusive than any other consideration: viz., during the year on which
-I am reporting, there was one sub-district of the City of London
-Union--one comprising from twelve to thirteen thousand inhabitants, in
-which (after including a due proportion of deaths which had occurred in
-the union-workhouse at Mile-end) the mortality stood only at 15 in the
-thousand; one in which, if those extramural deaths had been excluded,
-the local death-rate for the year would have been only 13·32.[33]
-
- [33] These figures require some correction for decrease of population
- in the sub-district referred to: the death-rate, inclusive of
- workhouse mortality, was nearly 16, and exclusive of that mortality,
- nearly 14 _per_ thousand.--J. S., 1854.
-
-For an illustration of low and enviable death-rates, I need then no
-longer appeal to Northumberland, or to our south-eastern
-counties--though, no doubt, their septennial periods of low mortality
-are valuable corroborations of any inference which could be drawn from
-our more restricted experience;--but I may point to the last year’s
-death-rate in the north-west sub-district of the City of London Union as
-one of rare excellence, and may content myself with wishing that that
-partial rate might become universal for the City, and might be the
-permanent expression of its average mortality.
-
-A detailed consideration of our sickness and mortality during the last
-year suggests to me a few other remarks, which may, I think, be of
-practical utility to your Hon. Court.
-
-First, as regards the ages at which death occurs; the respective
-proportions of _timely_ and _untimely_ deaths may, generally speaking,
-be inferred from the local death-rates. In general terms, we know a high
-death-rate indicates that many die before their time--indicates that a
-proportion of the population, more or less considerable, instead of
-reaching old age, becomes prematurely blighted and extinguished. In
-order to illustrate this subject to you more exactly, I append a table
-in which the deaths of the last two years are classified according to
-the ages at which they occurred. Of 3763 persons whose deaths are
-recorded in my last Report, 1243 died under the age of five years: of
-2752 deaths registered in the present year, 1032 belong to the same
-early period of life.
-
-The City of London appears peculiarly fatal to infant life. Reference to
-the Registrar-General’s last septennial record shows that of every 1000
-male children under five years of age within the City of London
-(aggregately) nearly 113 die in each year; and the portion of this rate
-which is deduced from the East and West London Unions is as high as 119
-in the thousand. In the subjoined table,[34] which illustrates some
-points of comparative mortality, I have endeavoured to show the extreme
-and disproportionate amount of this pressure on infant life. In
-referring (for instance, in regard of the City of London Union) to the
-last three columns of that table, you will observe that the mortality of
-children at the age stated, during the septennial period, was 1/2·66 of
-the entire mortality, although their class numerically constituted only
-1/11·09 of the entire population; so that they died at more than four
-times (4·17) the rate which would have fallen to them as simple
-participators in the average mortality of their district. The actual
-infant mortality of the past year holds the same proportion to the
-general mortality as in the Registrar-General’s septennial period, being
-1/2·66 of the whole.
-
- [34]
-
- +--------------+---------+--------+----------+----------+-----------+
- | Places. | General | Death- | Out of | Out of | By what |
- | | death- | rate | entire | entire | multiple |
- | | rate | _per_ | living | mortality| is the |
- | | _per_ |thousand|population| what | mortality |
- | | thousand| _per | what |proportion|of children|
- | | _per | annum_ |proportion| occurs | under five|
- | | annum_. |of male | is under | under | years in |
- | | |children|five years|five years| excess of |
- | | | under | of age? | of age? |the average|
- | | | five | | | mortality |
- | | | years | | | of all |
- | | | of age.| | | ages? |
- +--------------+---------+--------+----------+----------+-----------+
- |City of London| | | | | |
- |Union | 21 | 101 | 1/11·09 | 1/2·66 | 4·17 |
- |E. and W. Lon-| | | | | |
- |don Union | 26¾ | 101 | 1/9·02 | 1/2·24 | 4·02 |
- |Metropolis | 25 | 93 | 1/8·45 | 1/2·45 | 3·45 |
- |Holborn | 26 | 115 | 1/8·98 | 1/2·20 | 4·08 |
- |St. Giles | 27 | 122 | 1/9·85 | 1/2·24 | 4·39 |
- |St. Martin | 24 | 120 | 1/10·64 | 1/2·42 | 4·39 |
- |Bristol | 29 | 107 | 1/8·73 | 1/2·53 | 3·45 |
- |Liverpool | 33 | 143 | 1/7·35 | 1/1·91 | 3·85 |
- |Lancashire | 26¾ | 102 | 1/7·19 | 1/2·02 | 3·56 |
- |Surrey | 18 | 48 | 1/7·98 | 1/3·22 | 2·48 |
- |South-east | | | | | |
- |divn. of | | | | | |
- |England | 19 | 52 | 1/7·76 | 1/3·03 | 2·56 |
- |Glendale } | | | | | |
- |Bellingham } | 14 | 28 | 1/10·32 | 1/3·99 | 2·58 |
- |Haltwhistle } | | | | | |
- +--------------+---------+--------+----------+----------+-----------+
-
-Lest any undue importance should be ascribed to the influence of bad or
-inappropriate articles of diet in producing this large infant mortality,
-I may inform you that the rate of death is highest during that very
-early period of life when the child depends for nourishment on its
-mother; so that, of a thousand male children in the first year of life
-there die within the district of the City of London Union 242; within
-that of the East and West London Unions, 276.
-
-The causes which thus decimate the young population of London are the
-common conditions of district unhealthiness--the conditions which it
-lies within the scope of sanitary legislation to amend. But, inasmuch as
-the few days of these wretched children are passed mainly within doors,
-so their high mortality constitutes the readiest and least fallacious
-evidence of the unwholesomeness of the dwellings in which they die: and
-hence I am acquainted with no correcter material for estimating the
-sanitary condition of a district than is afforded by the death-rate of
-its infant population.
-
-Secondly, with regard to the alleged _particular causes of death_; I
-have extracted from our general registry, and have grouped in a separate
-table, those cases of death from acute disease which seem peculiarly due
-to physical causes affecting large numbers of persons.
-
-There are deaths by cholera, epidemic diarrhœa, and dysentery, of which
-during the biennial period we have had nearly 900; by fever, of which we
-have had 284; by erysipelas and puerperal fever, of which we have had
-84; by small-pox, of which we have had 50; and cases of this sort
-partake of the nature of deaths by violence, not only because they are
-abrupt and untimely, but because they are _avoidable_. If in the
-instances which I have specified it were possible to make inquiry into
-the antecedent circumstances of the dead, you would find irrefragable
-evidence that life was lost in each individual instance by the operation
-of removable causes--by the foolhardy neglect of some familiar
-precaution, or by the obstinate retention of some notorious ill. The
-death of a child by small-pox would in most instances call for a verdict
-of ‘homicide by omission’ against the parent who had neglected daily
-opportunities of giving it immunity from that disease by the simple
-process of vaccination; the death of an adult by typhus would commonly
-justify still stronger condemnation (though with more difficulty of
-fixing and proportioning the particular responsibility) against those
-who ignore the duties of property, and who knowingly let, for the
-occupation of the poor, dwellings unfit even for brute tenants,
-dwellings absolutely incompatible with health. In addition to the
-diseases which I have named, there are others which owe their chief
-malignity and numerical largeness of fatality, though not their
-existence, to local and removable causes. The proportionate mortality
-from scarlatina, measles, and hooping-cough, is greatest when the
-general death-rate is greatest. Under similar circumstances, too, we
-find among the infant population a frequency and fatality of other
-diseases, not commonly accounted specific, which warrant us in
-considering them to be mainly of endemic and avoidable origin. Such are
-the hydrocephalus and convulsions, the diarrhœa, bronchitis, and
-pneumonia of infants; often indeed referred to the irritation of
-teething, but prevailing in different localities with so marked a
-proportion to the causes of other endemic disease that we may be sure of
-their partial and considerable dependence on those local and obviable
-causes. I dwell on this aspect of the subject, and particularly invite
-the attention of your Hon. Court to the table[35] which illustrates it,
-because it is in respect of these diseases that your exertions have
-already effected valuable improvements for the health of the City, and
-because the future registry of such cases will attest year by year the
-further progress of your sanitary reforms. In examining this index of
-preventable deaths you will notice that those from fever are fewer by 29
-_per cent._ in the year just terminated than in the previous twelve
-months; that those from scarlatina are 75 _per cent._ fewer; those from
-infantile zymotic disorders nearly 40 _per cent._ fewer; those from
-erysipelas and puerperal fever 9 _per cent._ fewer. Small-pox, it is
-true, is doubled; but the prevention of this disease rests, out of your
-jurisdiction, in the exercise of individual discretion. Under the item
-of infantile diarrhœa (included in the tenth column) there is likewise
-an increase of nearly a third;[36] an exception probably dependent on
-the fact that, during last year, many deaths which might have swelled
-this column were (on account of the then prevalent influence) catalogued
-under the head of epidemic diarrhœa or cholera.
-
- [35] _Appendix_, No. IX.
-
- [36] In the column referred to, this is concealed by the marked
- diminution, during the present year, of other disorders classed with
- infantile diarrhœa. Their reduction maintains the total of that column
- (notwithstanding the difference of diarrhœa) considerably less for
- this year than for last.
-
-I should be misleading your Hon. Court, and practising a deception which
-next year’s registry would expose, if I pretended that the striking
-difference between the two years’ several totals of preventable deaths
-(a difference which, leaving cholera out of the question, probably
-amounts to a diminution of 30 _per cent._ on the sum of last year) had
-resulted wholly, or even chiefly, from sanitary improvement, and could
-be interpreted as the evidence of permanent physical changes around the
-dwellings of our poorer population. I guard you against this impression
-now, because, however satisfactory it might be as a momentary belief, it
-would lead to subsequent disappointment; and any future rise in the
-proportion of these deaths would induce the erroneous, but
-disheartening, supposition that your later sanitary steps had been less
-successful than the first. In all these matters, and especially in
-analysing the details of a death-registry, it is requisite (as I have
-already stated) to deal with cycles of many years. Periods of
-pestilence are habitually followed by periods of diminished mortality:
-partly because population is diminished, and especially that share of
-the population which suffers most from obviable causes of disease;
-partly because the great alarm of death has induced vigilance and
-precaution, public and private, against the occasions and beginnings of
-illness. And, beyond both these circumstances, there are others which we
-cannot analyse or explain, though we have scientific certainty of their
-operation; circumstances which seem to ensure a comparative quiescence
-of the ordinary causes of zymotic disease during those periods which
-next succeed the prevalence of certain fatal epidemics.[37]
-
- [37] For the professional reader I may here throw out a
- hint--referring to the doctrine of epidemic disease stated in the
- Fifth Annual Report, that this apparent healthiness of districts after
- certain epidemic invasions probably bears relation to a temporary
- exhaustion of their zymotic atmosphere under the action of a specific
- ferment, and is in some respects analogous to that immunity from an
- infected fever which belongs to an individual who has recently
- suffered its attack. See also page 235.--J. S., 1854.
-
-Nevertheless, that the sanitary condition of the City has undergone
-considerable improvement within the last two years is a fact which no
-one can gainsay; and that a considerable share of the mitigation in
-mortality arises from this improvement cannot reasonably be questioned.
-If even a third of the mitigation in question, if a reduction of ten
-_per cent._ on the preventable mortality of the City, may be inferred
-from the materials which I lay before you, it is indeed matter for the
-utmost congratulation; and a continuance of the same reduction year by
-year, perpetuated (as doubtlessly it may be) by a continuance of the
-same exertions, would soon raise the City of London above all fear of
-comparison, on the ground of healthiness, with urban or suburban
-populations.
-
-Thirdly, I would beg the attention of your Hon. Court to those very
-important _local differences_ of death-rate which may be deduced from a
-study of our death-register. I have already had the pleasure of citing
-to you the low rate of mortality which has prevailed during the last
-year in the north-west sub-district of the City of London Union. The
-rate of death in the north division of the West London Union was nearly
-double that proportion; and between these extreme terms of disparity
-there were many intermediate degrees.
-
-Similar inequalities of mortality were observable in last year’s record.
-In the healthiest sub-district of the City the year’s death-rate was
-about 22 in the thousand; while in the worst it stood above 41; and for
-the whole West London Union exceeded 38.[38]
-
- [38] I have here availed myself of the corrections given in the note
- of page 6.
-
-Mainly and essentially these local differences of mortality depend on
-the proportion in which _preventable deaths_ enter into the total; the
-differences, however partial, depending on the operation within certain
-districts, of removable deleterious influences which do not exist in
-certain other districts.
-
-In classifying for your consideration the deaths which, during the last
-two years, have depended on epidemic, endemic, and infectious diseases,
-I have thought it desirable to distribute them according to the
-municipal divisions of the City. Strongly believing, as I have
-endeavoured to express, that this class of deaths is for the main part
-preventable, I have thought it would interest the representatives of the
-several Wards, and would more directly enlist their sympathies for
-sanitary progress, if I could enable them at a glance to recognise the
-ratio in which their respective constituencies contribute to this annual
-death-roll. I have included in the table, under eight different heads,
-all those acute diseases which depend in an important degree on local
-causation, either for their existence or for their fatality. It will be
-obvious, even to the unprofessional reader, that local causes are not of
-equal prevalence in respect of all the diseases there tabulated. Some
-(as fever and cholera) would not be known at all under perfect sanitary
-arrangements; others (as scarlatina, measles, and hooping-cough) would
-be far less malignant in their attacks; others (as those classified in
-the tenth and twelfth columns) would no doubt exist under the most
-perfect physical circumstances, but would probably prevail in numbers
-quite inconsiderable as compared with those actually observed.
-
-On consulting this table[39], it will be observed that in _Cordwainers_’
-Ward, during the last year, not a single death occurred from the causes
-referred to, and in the preceding year of epidemic visitation, only
-five; that in _Cornhill_ Ward there have been only two such deaths in
-each of these years; that in _Coleman-street_ they have been 66; in
-_Queenhithe_, 59; in _Portsoken_, 143; in _Aldersgate Within_, 30; in
-_Aldersgate Without_, 179; in _Cripplegate Within_, 80; in _Cripplegate
-Without_, 299; in _Bishopsgate Within_, 60; in _Bishopsgate Without_,
-329; in _Farringdon Within_, 153; in _Farringdon Without_, 845.
-
- [39] Page 167.
-
-I am unable to state with accuracy, in these several instances, what
-proportion subsists between the preventable mortality and the number of
-living persons, for I have no means of ascertaining precisely the
-population of the separate Wards; and without this knowledge it is
-impossible to arrange them in a scale of comparative healthiness. I need
-hardly remind your Hon. Court that the Wards differ very considerably in
-their magnitude; so that the largest majority of cases occurring in one
-Ward (as in Farringdon Without) must not unconditionally be taken to
-imply that the Ward, _in proportion to its population_, suffers more
-deaths than one in which the apparent number is less considerable. In
-the table to which these remarks refer, I have endeavoured to give you
-the means of comparing (at least approximatively) the healthiness of
-your several departments, by entering against the name of each Ward the
-number of holdings for which it stands assessed to your rate. This
-entry, with some trifling modifications specified in the table, may be
-taken to express the number of houses contained in each Ward of the
-City: thus it furnishes indirectly the means for estimating the local
-population.
-
-It will be noticed, that the more glaring inequalities which I have
-adduced are in some degree due to the epidemic of last year, which did
-not press uniformly on all parts of the City. It may, however, likewise
-be observed, that the chief operation of that epidemic was to
-exaggerate, but not importantly to misrepresent, the features of each
-locality; that the habitual sanitary proportions of districts to each
-other were for the most part preserved; that (with a qualification to
-which I shall presently revert) the Wards numbering fewest deaths last
-year numbered also fewest this year.
-
-In my last Report, when the cholera had scarcely subsided, when men’s
-minds were full of apprehension on the subject, and when it seemed only
-too possible that, with the recurrence of autumn, we might again suffer
-from its invasion, I was unwilling to dwell too pointedly on the
-wonderful pertinacity with which that disease fixes itself on particular
-localities, and tends to re-appear in them on each new occasion of its
-rise. Believing that no extemporaneous measures could counteract these
-local preferences of the epidemic, I refrained from a course which would
-have produced no good result (unless indeed it had depopulated certain
-spots of the City), and which might have caused unavailing and hurtful
-alarm. Now, however, I think it right to tell you that the local
-predilections of this dreadful disease are so marked and so obstinate,
-that we may almost certainly predict in what parts of the metropolis it
-would tend to arise on any renewed visitation. We may anticipate that at
-any such time its latent power of destruction will kindle again in the
-districts, the streets, the houses, perhaps even in the very rooms,
-where it recently prevailed, _unless the determining local conditions
-shall previously have been annulled_.
-
-It would be ridiculous if I should pretend to carry you into any medical
-consideration of this subject, or should make my present Report the
-vehicle of a professional argument; but I may very briefly acquaint you
-with such generalisations as will justify you in pursuing a particular
-course with respect to the haunts of cholera. While doing so, I hope
-your Hon. Court will believe that I have devoted to this very serious
-subject the best consideration of which I am capable, and have done my
-utmost to arrive at conclusions which may be fruitful of practical good.
-
-Cholera visited no localities of which it could be said, that they were
-generally healthy; but still there seemed to be something peculiar and
-specific in the kind of local unhealthiness which determined its
-invasion. On the one hand, it is unquestionably true that many habitual
-seats of fever were visited by cholera; on the other hand, many of the
-worst fever-nests in the whole metropolis were unaffected by it; and it
-struck with extreme severity in a class of houses habitually exempt from
-fever. See, for instance, how malignantly it prevailed along the line of
-Farringdon and New Bridge streets, and in Fleet-street and Ludgate hill,
-where their line intersects that just mentioned; and here, you will
-observe, not only in those obscure and ill-ventilated courts and
-by-ways, where fever is the familiar visitant of a hungry and crowded
-population; but also, and very strikingly, in spacious and airy houses,
-situate along the main thoroughfare of the City, and inhabited by
-opulent tradesmen, by members of the various professions, or by officers
-of assurance-companies. Other infective diseases which habitually
-desolate the former class of dwellings are almost unknown in the latter.
-Cholera came as a startling exception. _Within the infected district_
-(fulfilling the classical description of pale death) it trod with equal
-foot the gates of rich and poor.[40]
-
- [40]
-
- ---- Æquo pulsat pede pauperum tabernas Regumque turres.
-
- I think it very important that this fact should be fully recognised.
- In London it has often been overlooked, from the accident that our
- most infectable districts happen to contain an excess of poor
- population. But even here it is quite easy to note that the disease
- spreads irrespectively of pauperism or privation; and in other cities,
- (Paris and Copenhagen, for instance) where the quarters of rich and
- poor are less apart than in London, cholera has killed its full share
- of dignitaries and capitalists.--J. S., 1854.
-
-Personal peculiarities, or vicious habits, or temporary indiscretion,
-may often have determined its choice of a victim; low nourishment--even
-temporary emptiness and exhaustion, very manifestly invited its attack;
-but, speaking generally, I may say that it was a disease prevailing over
-a certain patch of ground, and (within this limit) tending to strike
-equally, or nearly equally, in all classes of habitations. Crowdedness
-of dwellings, defective ventilation, squalor of inhabitants, and many
-forms of local nuisance, which are omnipotent in giving occasion to
-fever, and in adding malignity to many disorders of its class, did not
-by themselves exert so marked and specific a power in determining the
-onset of cholera.
-
-What then were the conditions determining its local preference?
-Consideration of its statistics, or inspection of a cholera-map, enables
-one, with some confidence, to answer--a peculiar condition of soil, of
-which dampness is one sure and invariable character, and organic
-decomposition (promoted by dampness) probably another.[41] Its local
-affinities have much analogy to those of ague, and often appear
-identical in their range with the sphere of malarious infection. Our
-entire metropolis, built down to the very margins of a large river--of a
-river, too, which, at each retreating tide, exposes acres of mud
-saturated with the reeking sewage of an immense population, is placed
-generally in circumstances not unfavourable to the development of the
-disease; and its several parts will be liable to suffer especially, in
-proportion as they are exposed to these general circumstances, or to
-special circumstances of their own of a like nature. The lower level of
-districts on the south side of the river, their attendant failure of
-natural land-drainage, the consequent soddenness of a soil from which
-likewise the materials of house refuse were never efficiently removed,
-accounted sufficiently for the frightful epidemic mortality which
-prevailed in those quarters of the metropolis.
-
- [41] After three years’ further inquiry I find no reason to modify
- this general description: but, as regards the local circumstances
- which determine the specified condition of soil and atmosphere, I have
- been able to extend my information; and the subject is therefore
- better treated in my Fifth Annual Report than in the paragraphs here
- following above.--J. S., 1854.
-
-If you now look to the disease as it raged within your own jurisdiction,
-you will observe its fatality in two especial directions. First, in the
-line I have indicated to you, northward from Blackfriars Bridge, in a
-band of two or three hundred yards width; _there_, in the parallelogram
-which lies along the main road, from Stonecutter-street to Bridewell
-Hospital, were 76 deaths; _there_, in the little clump of houses forming
-the angle of Farringdon-street and Holborn-hill, were 17 deaths;
-_there_, in a square space behind twenty-seven shop fronts in
-Fleet-street, were 57 deaths; _there_, in the small parish of St. Ann’s,
-Blackfriars, were deaths at the rate of 25 to every thousand of its
-population. This was incomparably the most afflicted portion of your
-territory. Those who are acquainted with the ancient geography of the
-City will readily conjecture a reason; they will remember when ‘the
-course of water running at London under Old-bourne bridge and Fleet
-bridge, into the Thames, was of such bredth and depth that ten or twelve
-ships, navies at once with merchandises, were wont to come to the
-foresaid bridge of Fleet, and some of them unto Old-bourne bridge;’ they
-will remember how this broad river (like the Thames of our day) was
-thronged on both sides with population; how (again like the Thames) it
-was a draining river, probably with wide banks of putrefying mud; how
-many fruitless attempts were made to cleanse and preserve its channel;
-but how (in Stow’s day) ‘the brooke, by meanes of continuall
-incrochments upon the banks, and casting of soylage into the stream, was
-become worse cloyed than ever it was before.’ Where that _soylage_ was
-cast, and where, since the days referred to, so many habitations have
-arisen that no sign of stream remains visible to the wayfarer above
-ground, its traces still remain below. Throughout at least a large
-portion of this district, the sub-soil (your Surveyor informs me)
-consists of black mud, the bed of the ancient river, in which are set
-the foundations of the modern houses. The river, which centuries ago
-fulfilled for a large population those vile uses which now pollute the
-Thames, has gradually yielded its foul banks to the residence of a
-growing population; and the sanitary relations of that population are
-exactly such as might be imitated, if the volume of the Thames were
-henceforth slowly reduced, and if those banks of mud which are now
-exposed only at low water, were simultaneously converted into the site
-of permanent habitations.
-
-The history of the stream at Walbrook is, I believe, not dissimilar; but
-there is this marked difference between the two cases, that the
-comparative declivity of the latter district has allowed its soil to
-acquire a dryness and healthiness which have never been reached on the
-banks of the Fleet. For, owing to the extreme lowness of level in this
-district, the tidal influence of the Thames is very inconveniently felt;
-the cellars of houses are habitually exposed to dampness, even to
-flooding; and probably the whole porous sub-soil, at least as far north
-as your jurisdiction extends, is maintained in a sodden and malarious
-state.
-
-With respect to the second part of the City in which considerable groups
-of cholera cases were observed, it has a not dissimilar peculiarity. I
-refer to that northern part of the City which extends (on the other side
-of London Wall) from Bishopsgate to Aldersgate. The epidemic prevailed
-there with far less severity than in the Fleet district, but still with
-a preference which easily shows itself in a cholera-map. At the
-intersection of Whitecross-street by Beech-lane, in a space that the
-point of one’s finger would hide in Wyld’s large map, there were 12
-deaths: in that small portion of the City which lies north of Barbican
-and Beech-street there were 40 deaths: in the immediate vicinity of
-Half-moon-street, Bishopsgate, 60 deaths, of which more than half were
-in the workhouse. Now, certainly, in all this space (and probably still
-further in both directions, east and west) without the former gates of
-the City, there is a marked local character. It is a reclaimed
-marsh.[42] Throughout this district, in the olden times of the City,
-there lay (says Stow) ‘a moorish rotten ground, unpassable but for
-cawswaies purposely made to that intent;’ and one reads how ‘divers
-dikes were cast, and made to drein the waters of the said Moorefields,
-with bridges arched over them, whereby the said field was made somewhat
-more commodious, but yet it stood full of noisome waters;’ till
-gradually ‘by divers sluces was this fenne or moore made maine and hard
-ground, which before, being overgrowne with flagges, sedges, and rushes,
-served to no use;’ while ‘the farther grounds beyond Finsbury Court were
-so over-heightened with laystalls of dung, that divers windmills were
-thereon set, the ditches were filled up, and the bridges overwhelmed.’
-
- [42] I have reason to believe that this statement, though founded on
- the authority of Stow, is erroneous, for so much of the district as
- lies west of Moorgate-street; and that the main cause of this locality
- suffering so severely from cholera must have lain in those very
- extensive defects of house-drainage, which more recently I have become
- better able to appreciate. With the kind assistance of Mr. Haywood, I
- have been enabled to look over the memoranda which are kept in his
- office, of deep cuttings of soil made in the construction of sewers by
- himself and his predecessor, Mr. Kelsey. These sections do not by any
- means tally with Stow’s description of the Moor, as extending in part
- ‘from without the postern called Cripplegate, even to the river of
- Wels;’ for here at least there is no trace of any such condition of
- soil.--J. S., 1854.
-
-It is not as matter of literary curiosity that I quote these passages of
-your old historian, but simply that I may avail myself of his accurate
-local knowledge for the explanation and the cure of a serious existing
-evil. For if, as I believe, the unfortunate preference for certain
-localities evinced by the recent epidemic be, _primâ facie_, a reason
-for doubting the effectiveness of their sub-soil drainage, and if the
-ancient records of the City assure one that these very localities are
-such as, from conditions then in active operation, would be liable to
-retain, perhaps for an indefinite period, the materials of malarious
-poison, useful and practical deductions may be drawn. And as the
-liability to this severe recurrent epidemic is an extreme detriment to
-the population of such localities--one too, which, if unremoved, must
-inevitably lead to the deterioration of property, as well as to the
-sacrifice of life, I know that your Hon. Court will be solicitous to
-adopt whatever remedial measures are possible.
-
-To those measures I shall presently return, having here dealt with the
-question only as it relates to the distribution of our mortality, and
-explains the preponderance of a large class of deaths in some special
-districts of the City.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the Tables which accompany this portion of my Report, I have arranged
-in a synoptical form, convenient for reference, the chief facts of our
-sanitary statistics to which I have invited your attention.
-
-In the first[43] you will read a summary of the deaths as they have
-occurred, male and female, in the several districts and sub-districts of
-the City, during each quarter of the past year.
-
- [43] _Appendix_, No. IV.
-
-In the second[44] table the deaths of the year are classified according
-to the ages at which they befell.
-
- [44] Now incorporated in the general table, _Appendix_, No. VIII.
-
-In the third table,[45] for the sake of comparison in respect both of
-general and of infant mortality, I have arranged the statistics of
-certain other localities side by side with our own.
-
- [45] Now inserted at page 84.
-
-In the fourth[46] (to which I have already especially referred) is
-contained an enumeration, according to the several Wards of the City, of
-those deaths, during the last two years, which have arisen in
-consequence of acute disease partially or entirely preventable.
-
- [46] Page 167.
-
-In tables of this nature perfection is at present impossible; partly
-because of trifling changes in the population which often occur, but
-rarely can be estimated; partly because of the slovenly manner in which
-deaths are occasionally recorded. While, therefore, I would not consider
-myself responsible for their absolute and infinitesimal accuracy
-(consisting as they do of so many and so various details) I may assure
-your Hon. Court that all proper pains have been taken to render them for
-every useful purpose correct and trustworthy: and that I believe them,
-in all essential particulars, truthfully to represent whatsoever I have
-sought to embody in them.
-
-The annual ratio of deaths within your district; the local differences
-of that ratio; the proportion of infantile mortality; the amount of
-preventable disease; and, in all these respects, a comparison of parts
-of the City with each other, and of the whole City with other inhabited
-districts,--these are the materials on which your judgment must be
-formed as to the necessity of sanitary measures, whether for the entire
-City, or for its component parts: and as a main object of the
-appointment which I have the honour to hold is that I should furnish you
-with materials for forming that judgment, so I may probably stand
-excused for troubling you with these considerations at such great
-length.
-
-
-II. THE CAUSES AND THE PREVENTION OF ENDEMIC DISEASE.
-
-According to the method adopted in my last Annual Report, I now proceed
-to offer you such observations as another year’s experience may justify,
-on those physical influences which prevail against life within the City
-of London, and on such remedial measures as seem aptest to remove them.
-
-
-_Sub-soil Drainage, House-Drainage, and Sewerage._
-
-1. In respect of drainage, I have already adverted to those unwholesome
-conditions which prevail along the low-lying valley of the ancient
-Fleet, and have mentioned to you that frequent incursions of the river
-aggravate whatever mischief is inherent in the soil, by maintaining it
-as a perpetual swamp, and by favoring in it a constant succession of
-putrefactive changes. I have likewise illustrated to you the probability
-that, in some of the higher portions of the City, chiefly in the
-Out-Wards of Cripplegate and Bishopsgate, there still survive some
-properties of that old malarious fen, from which these districts were
-originally reclaimed. Stow seems in his day to have had misgivings on
-this subject; for after describing the improvements that had been
-effected there, and the gradual levelling and heightening of the ground,
-he adds, ‘it seemeth to me that if it be made level with the battlements
-of the city wall, yet will it be little the dryer, such was then the
-moorish nature of that ground.’
-
-From a consideration of this former geography of the place, and from
-observation of the diseases which prevail there, I am led to think it
-highly probable, that some of its sanitary defects depend less on
-defective house-drainage than on a still marshy undrained condition of
-the ground itself, and that these defects would be removed by an
-efficient application of sub-soil drainage.
-
-I would therefore respectfully recommend to you, under this head, that
-the state of soil in the specified districts be referred to competent
-authorities, and that such measures be adopted as inquiry may prove
-requisite, for relieving those parts where the sub-soil drainage is
-imperfect, and for protecting the house-foundations, and sewers, and
-sub-soil adjacent to the river, from being soaked or flooded by the
-tide.
-
- * * * * *
-
-2. With respect to house-drainage, I have no addition to offer to those
-remarks which I submitted to you in my last Report. Your Hon. Court has
-fully recognised that immense peril to life which is connected with the
-presence of cesspools beneath houses, and which depends on their
-poisonous emanations. At the commencement of the present year, your
-Surveyor stated that he might take ‘5414, as a fair approximation of the
-number of cesspools’ then in existence within the square mile of the
-City of London. This proportion, dangerously large as without doubt it
-is, presented an important diminution from the number which existed a
-year previously, when your Commission first obtained from the
-Legislature authority to enforce their closure; and it may reasonably be
-anticipated that at the termination of this present year, a still
-further abatement will be recorded in the magnitude of that destructive
-nuisance.
-
- * * * * *
-
-3. Notwithstanding the variety of stink-traps to which you have given
-trial, and notwithstanding the fact (recorded by your Committee of
-Health on the Surveyor’s authority) that ‘there does not exist within
-your jurisdiction a single gully which is untrapped,’ there continue to
-be frequent complaints of offensive exhalations from the sewers.
-
-The mechanical difficulties in this matter of trapping have appeared to
-be, from the nature of the case, almost insuperable. It may, indeed,
-easily be conceived, how incompatible are the common uses of a
-gully-hole with such fineness of adjustment and delicacy of balance as
-would render the apparatus air-tight from within, and effectually
-preclude an escape of the gaseous contents of a sewer. Under such
-circumstances, your Hon. Court has desired that I should express my
-opinion, how far a different course might be adopted in respect of these
-exhalations; how far, namely, they might be neutralised within the
-sewers; how far it might be chemically feasible, and in a sanitary point
-of view expedient, that a systematic use should be made of deodorising
-agents; so that any gas escaping from the sewers should at least be
-divested of its original smell.
-
-On this subject, I would submit to you the following considerations. As
-respects its feasibility (putting aside as foreign to my province all
-questions of the expense, and all details of the daily arrangement) a
-first and obvious objection is this: Granted in the abstract, that
-sewer-gases can be converted by appropriate agents into inodorous
-compounds; in the practical application of these agents, you would find
-impediments with which you are already familiar. Theoretically, there
-may be no difficulty in providing air-tight traps; practically there is
-said to be every difficulty. Just as that mechanical problem has
-defeated you in practice, so would the chemical one; and for the same
-reason. The fulfilment of either problem is a matter of nice adjustment.
-In proportion as your gully-hole is exquisitely trapped, it becomes
-liable to obstruction; it loses its use as an inlet to the sewer, nearly
-in the same measure as it becomes an effective obstacle to regurgitant
-gases. Similarly, in proportion as these alleged deodorisers might
-succeed in completely stifling the characteristic odour of sewage, they
-would be liable to diffuse perfumes peculiarly their own, and to
-establish, in the vicinity of gully-holes, the alternation of a new
-nuisance with the old. To proportion with accuracy the introduction of
-these chlorinous preparations to the amount of refuse traversing the
-sewers--an amount varying most considerably at different hours of the
-day, seems to me quite a visionary hope. Failing such accurate
-proportions, I am not prepared to say that the result would be useful;
-and I accordingly consider the scheme as not chemically feasible.
-
-Further--as involving an important sanitary principle, I would say, that
-the great object which must be aimed at is not the mere chemical
-neutralisation of certain stinks which arise within your jurisdiction,
-but the closest possible limitation, and the promptest possible removal
-of all those materials which are decomposed into fœtid products.
-Admirable, no doubt, is that arrangement by which Nature, stationing a
-sense of smell at the inlet of our breath, cautions us by this vigilant
-sentinel against the inhalation of many poisonous airs; but, in respect
-of organic decomposition, I am in no degree satisfied that its odorous
-products are its only, if even its principal, agents of injury; nor have
-I any reason to suppose that the real detriment to health which arises
-from breathing the miasms of sewers or marshes, of cesspools,
-burial-grounds, or slaughter-houses, would in any important degree be
-lessened by the mere mitigation of fœtor in their effluvia. Offensive as
-these are, they at least answer the useful purpose of warning us against
-the other poisons with which they are associated.
-
-Let me likewise take the opportunity of correcting a misapprehension,
-which, by the use of an inappropriate word, is sometimes shown to exist
-on this subject. The agents in question are spoken of as
-_dis-infectant_. As there is no scientific reason whatever for believing
-that they in any degree interfere with the spread of epidemic or
-infectious disease, and as an erroneous opinion on this point may lead
-to the neglect of measures which are truly precautionary and useful, I
-think it well to state explicitly, for your information, that I have no
-evidence of their possessing any other utility, in the respects under
-consideration, than simply and singly that of removing stink from the
-atmosphere around them.
-
-For reducing to a _minimum_ the exhalations which arise from sewers and
-house-drains, it appears to me that the following are the essential
-principles: First, to render the current through them as rapid as
-possible; and, above all, by every care for their form, their junctions,
-their slope, and their material, to provide against the occurrence of
-obstructions and deposit: Secondly, to employ in their construction, so
-far as may be possible, such substances as are porous in the least
-procurable degree; such as consequently will be least apt to imbibe and
-retain in their interstices any considerable impregnation from the fœtid
-fluids running over them at intervals; such, too, as will be least
-likely to permit soakage into the surrounding soil: Thirdly, by reducing
-the size of drains and sewers to the lowest dimensions compatible with a
-full performance of their uses, to diminish to the utmost the extent of
-their interior evaporating surface, and of those large chambers which
-they now offer for the evolution, retention, and diffusion of gases.
-
-To the application of these principles (together with a sufficient and
-appropriate distribution of water) far more than to chemical agents, or
-to the invention of mechanical traps, I believe that you must look for
-rendering inodorous the vicinity of your numerous gully-holes. I content
-myself with stating them to you, as a practical deduction from physical
-laws, without venturing to offer any opinion on the degree in which they
-are applicable within your jurisdiction, or on the manner in which they
-should be applied. For although, as principles, they have their
-foundation in physics, and although their importance to sanitary
-improvement is beyond measure great, all details relating to their
-application lie out of my province, and belong to a class of subjects in
-which your Surveyor’s opinion will, of course, be infinitely more useful
-to you than mine.
-
-
-_Water-Supply._
-
-During the past year, as in the preceding one, I have given frequent
-consideration to the subject of water-supply within the City.
-
-I have already endeavoured to convey to you the deep sense which I
-entertain of its importance, and I have every reason to believe that
-your Hon. Court recognises, at its full weight, the necessity of
-providing for the City of London a supply of water which in quantity
-shall be ample, in quality pure, in distribution constant and
-accessible.
-
-In my former Annual Report, and in some remarks subsequently addressed
-to your Committee of Health, I dwelt especially on such defects of our
-present system as relate to the quantity and distribution of water;
-endeavouring to illustrate the insufficiency of its supply to the poorer
-tenements of the City, and the extreme inconvenience which is entailed
-on their inmates, sometimes by dependence on a common tap, sometimes by
-the troublesome, expensive, and unwholesome necessity of storing water.
-
-In reverting to this subject, I may correct a fallacy which is apt to
-prevail with respect to the abundance of supply. I have no reason
-whatever to doubt that a very liberal allowance of water is daily pumped
-into the City--enough, or more than enough, so far as I know, to fulfil
-all necessary purposes.
-
-But those purposes are not fulfilled by it. A certain large figure is
-stated as representing the average quantity daily driven through the
-mains of the City; this quantity is divided by the number of residents
-within your area, and the inference is drawn that each individual inmate
-of the City has at his disposal 25 gallons a day; or (after deduction
-for public purposes and the like) 21¼ for his domestic supply. As an
-arithmetical conclusion from the premises this may be true: nothing can
-be less accurate as a practical representation of the facts. An average
-amount of three million gallons _per diem_ may, or may not, be pumped
-through the mains of the City: but to calculate the _available
-water-supply_ from this dividend, without previous deduction for the
-immense escape of _un-available water_ by waste-pipes or otherwise,
-gives a most fictitious result. The large waste which naturally arises
-in the system of intermittent supply has been well illustrated by some
-evidence given by Mr. Lovick before the late Metropolitan Commission of
-Sewers, in respect of a particular block of nearly 1200 houses.[47] Some
-of the houses were of the higher, and many of the poorer class, but the
-average might be stated to be of the middle class, and to present a fair
-example of an urban population. The drainage of all these houses was
-discharged through one main sewer. The run of water through this sewer
-was carefully watched and gauged every hour, during the night as well as
-the day, on days when the water was on, that is to say, when the
-intermittent supplies were delivered, and also on the ordinary days,
-when the consumption of the houses was from butts and cisterns, into
-which the intermittent supplies were delivered. The gaugings of the
-discharge of waste water into the sewer were checked by gaugings of the
-consumption of water from the butts and cisterns, during the interval of
-the delivery of the supply by the company. It was ascertained that the
-average quantity discharged _per diem_ through the sewers was 44½
-gallons per house; but it appeared that, on the days when the
-intermittent supplies of water were on, the quantity discharged _per
-diem_ was 209 gallons _per_ house. The waste in this district from
-defects in house apparatus of distribution, incident to an intermittent
-supply of water, was, on the water days, three and three quarter times
-greater than the consumption on those days.
-
- [47] General Board of Health Report on Supply of Water to the
- Metropolis, page 120.
-
-No similar gaugings have, I believe, been made within the City; so I am
-unable to tell you with accuracy what are the proportions of waste and
-consumption. In an interview with your Committee on Health, when they
-were collecting information on the subject, Mr. Mylne, the engineer of
-the New River Company, stated (as a reason against fulfilling some
-object desired by the Committee) that within the City of London, in
-connexion with its distributing apparatus, there existed for the escape
-and waste of water, during the period of supply, ‘at least 10,000 open
-cocks.’
-
-Assuming the accuracy of this statement, I doubt whether the average
-available supply of water for domestic purposes within the City can
-possibly exceed a quarter of its alleged quantity; and I am persuaded
-that there must be large numbers of persons to whom the enjoyment even
-of that reduced average is utterly unknown. Your Hon. Court, observing
-the incalculable waste, and knowing that the cost of water-supply (as of
-all other commodities) must of necessity vary according to the quantity
-supplied, can appreciate the consequences of so much fruitless
-expenditure.
-
-I would beg likewise to observe to you that this unapplied flood of
-water is in itself not unobjectionable. It would be of questionable
-advantage if the drainage of the City were so perfect as to carry all
-away without inundation of the soil; while under opposite circumstances,
-in every quarter where drainage is absent or faulty, evil must arise
-from the extensive and habitual infiltration of moisture.
-
-On the extreme inconvenience which attends the storage of water in the
-poorer habitations of the City, I have already reported to you, and will
-now only add that increased experience has given much confirmation to my
-view. Their receptacles are generally such as contribute to the
-contamination of water, and are constantly so arranged as to invite an
-admixture of the most varied impurities.
-
-In the large proportion of them, which are open casks, one sees
-habitually a film of soot floating on the surface; one sees (if indeed
-one can see so deeply into water which is often turbid and opaque) that
-filth and rubbish lie at the bottom; one sees the interior of the cask
-itself dirty and mouldering.
-
-I now merely glance at this part of the subject, because you have
-already on other occasions allowed me to state my knowledge at greater
-length. But there is one evil in particular to which I would beg leave
-to advert. Those works of drainage which are established under your
-orders depend for their efficiency on a proper supply of water; and in
-every case where you enforce the construction of house-drains, you order
-that those drains shall be served efficiently with water. Your wishes on
-this subject are nominally complied with by those on whom your orders
-are served, but are often virtually evaded by a filthy and ineffectual
-contrivance. The butt or cistern of the house--that on which the inmates
-depend for their supply of fresh and pure drinking-water, is placed in
-immediate contiguity to the privy, so as to reduce the requisite length
-of connecting pipe to the fewest possible number of inches; the
-application of water is not made discretionary on the users of the
-privy, nor are any of the cheap and common self-acting contrivances
-introduced; but the waste-pipe of the butt or cistern is conducted into
-the discharge-pipe of the privy, so that, _periodically_, with a
-frequency varying according to the arrangements of the water-company,
-the arrears of excrement are removed, so far as the overflow of the
-water-receptacle may have power to dislodge and propel them. Frequent
-evidence has been before me of the insufficiency of this arrangement:
-and, in addition to its actual failure (on the reasons of which your
-Surveyor can speak more competently than I) there is strong reason to
-object to its prevalence on other grounds. Water, as you probably know,
-is a very active absorbent of many gaseous materials; and the open
-butts, which are thus placed in immediate contact and communication with
-privies, must rapidly become infected by their foulness. I need not
-explain to you how injurious an addition this is to the other
-objectionable incidents of water-storage, or how unattractive as a
-beverage to the poor inhabitants of the City must be this vapid,
-privy-flavoured stuff.
-
-For this arrangement I can suggest to your Hon. Court no easy
-alternative or remedy, so long as the distribution of water continues to
-be on its present intermittent plan: but it is matter for extreme regret
-that, by circumstances over which you have no control, the success of
-your sanitary measures should be seriously diminished. By the
-enforcement or execution of house-drainage, your Hon. Court has
-conferred great advantages on many districts of the City; but it is my
-duty to tell you that, in my judgment, the present condition of the
-water-trade contributes to neutralise those advantages, and constitutes
-a restriction on your power of doing good.
-
-As respects the evils to which I have just adverted, unquestionably they
-admit of abatement by devoting separate water-receptacles to the very
-different uses of diet and drainage. But the expense of additional
-cisterns in tenements so poor cannot be considered trifling; and I
-believe that your Hon. Court would hesitate, even if you have the power,
-to enforce this double burthen on the owners of house-property, at a
-time when one may reasonably hope that the necessity for cisterns will
-be superseded.
-
-There can be no doubt on the extreme degree in which it is desirable for
-the poor of the City of London, that water should be delivered to their
-houses on the principle of constant supply, and that they should thus be
-relieved from the expensive and unwholesome necessity of storing it in
-small quantities and in improper receptacles. That it is _desirable_ is
-a certainty within my official knowledge and on which therefore I can
-give an opinion of my own. That it is _practicable_ is not within my
-official knowledge; for in this part of the question are involved
-various considerations of hydraulic engineering, on which I am
-incompetent to offer an opinion. But I cannot ignore the fact, that in
-many parts of England and Scotland the practicability of a constant
-supply has been evinced by the very conclusive evidence of its success.
-To some such instances I alluded in my last Report, and from the present
-year I can quote you a striking additional one. At Wolverhampton, in
-1849, the system of supply, which had previously been intermittent, was
-made continuous. Instead of waste ensuing on the change, its immediate
-effect was a reduction of 22 _per cent._ on the quantity consumed. So
-great had been the unpopularity of the intermittent system of supply,
-that at the time of the change the company had not more than 600
-customers. Immediately on the adoption of the new system, their
-customers increased, and within ten months had risen to 1400. This
-increase was continuing up to the date of the Report (May 4th, 1850), at
-which time they were adding to the number of their customers at the rate
-of 50 each week. The above facts (as is well observed by the resident
-engineer, Mr. Marten) may be taken as a fair test that the system of
-continuous supply is one of superior adaptation to the domestic wants of
-the public.
-
-This case is but an inconsiderable fraction of the evidence which lies
-before the public on the subject of continuous supply. With such
-evidence before me, in contrast to what I observe of the distribution of
-water within the City of London, I cannot refrain from repeating to your
-Hon. Court my confirmed and deliberate opinion that our method of supply
-is essentially bad, and that it withholds from the poorer population of
-the City a large proportion of those sanitary advantages which it is the
-object of water to confer. No doubt it will occur to you that against
-evils of this nature--evils arising in the conflictive interests of
-water-buyer and water-seller, the first principles of commerce imply a
-resource; and that in this matter, as in others of the sort, a customer
-holds in his own hands the remedy for his dissatisfaction. But although
-the supply of water, in the hands of the powerful companies who vend it,
-is in many respects a common transaction of trade, and as such is in
-theory open to competition, yet I would beg to point out to your Hon.
-Court that, in regard of the City under your jurisdiction, no such check
-and no such stimulus as competition can virtually be said to exist. In
-every practical sense the sale of water is a monopoly. The individual
-customer, dwelling in Cripplegate or in Farringdon, who is dissatisfied
-with his bargain in water, can go to no other market; and however
-legitimate may be his claim to be supplied with this prime necessary of
-life at its cheapest rate, in the most efficient manner, and of the best
-possible quality, your Hon. Court, hitherto, possesses no power to
-enforce it.
-
-All who have given impartial consideration to the subject seem to concur
-as to the advantages which result from a control over the supply and
-distribution of water being possessed by those who are responsible for
-the drainage and cleanliness of a district. These different duties are
-in such essential relation to each other that they would seem almost of
-necessity to require a single direction and control. House-drainage
-pre-supposes water-supply; water-supply pre-supposes house-drainage; the
-efficiency of either implies their mutual adaptation; just as the
-circulation of blood within an animal body implies uninterrupted
-continuity of arteries and veins, each harmonising with the uses of the
-other, to ensure the efficiency of the whole. But while the works of
-drainage executed under your orders lose much of their sanitary
-usefulness for want of an effectual water-supply, your Hon. Court has no
-power of interference in the matter, closely associated as it is with
-the performance of your other functions. These anomalies would be
-removed, and a most beneficial power over the distribution of water
-would be vested in the hands of your Commission, if in the renewal of
-your Act of Parliament you procured authority to represent the citizens
-in this matter. All the advantages which could possibly be gained by
-competition, together with many benefits which no competition could
-ensure, would thus be realised to the population under your charge; if,
-namely, a clause were inserted in your Bill, empowering you, at your
-discretion, to contract corporately with any person or any company for
-the supply of water to the City of London.
-
-In the Public Health Act (passed simultaneously with yours) an enactment
-of this nature exists, authorising local boards of health to ‘provide
-their district with such a supply of water as may be proper and
-sufficient,’ and for this purpose ‘to contract with any person
-whomsoever to do and execute all such works, matters, and things as
-shall be necessary and proper, and to require that houses shall be
-supplied with water,’ and to ‘make and levy water rates upon the
-premises, at a rate not exceeding twopence per week.’ With a power like
-this in your hands, you would easily enforce for the City of London
-whatever method of supply you might deliberately believe to be best; and
-you would then be enabled and entitled, in the application of other
-clauses in your Act, to require of landlords acting under your orders,
-a far completer, though less expensive, improvement of their property
-than you are yet in a position to obtain.
-
-In submitting to your Hon. Court my views as to the expediency of your
-having a controlling power over the supply of water, I am glad to find
-myself supported by the recorded opinion of the present Lord Mayor,
-himself formerly the Chairman of a Commission of Sewers; and I am
-induced to believe that such an addition to your functions might not be
-objectionable to the water companies, as I observe that Sir William
-Clay, the chairman of two metropolitan companies, has expressed himself
-strongly on its ‘great and obvious convenience.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-2. Of equal importance with anything which relates to the distribution
-of water are those momentous questions which relate to its _quality_,
-and which tend to determine its fitness for human consumption.
-
-Considering the great share of public attention which these questions at
-present very properly obtain, the many projects which are broached for
-improving the quality of our metropolitan supply, and the importance of
-your being in a position to decide as to the merits of any plan which
-may affect the City of London, I have thought it desirable in this
-Report to submit to you some general observations on the subject. During
-the last few months, I have accordingly been collecting such information
-as might, in my judgment, be useful for this purpose. In pursuing one
-portion of my inquiry--that which relates to the chemical constitution
-of certain waters, I have availed myself of the permission of your Hon.
-Court to procure a limited amount of assistance from some one more
-conversant than myself with the practice of analysis. For this purpose I
-have addressed myself to Mr. Thomas Taylor, lately Lecturer on Chemistry
-at St. Thomas’s Hospital, a gentleman on whose skill and impartiality I
-can implicitly trust. His account of the very careful analyses which he
-has made is subjoined to my Report.[48] Concurrently with the experience
-of other chemists, it has furnished me with material for many of the
-conclusions which I am about to lay before you.
-
- [48] See page 168.
-
-The water which is supplied by the New River and East London companies
-for the consumption of the City of London is substantially of one kind.
-The River Lea, on which the East London Company entirely depends,
-furnishes likewise much of the supply conveyed by the New River.[49] The
-springs in which the latter originate are of the same chemical kind as
-those which contribute to the Lea; and the artificial aqueduct runs its
-forty miles of course through much the same country as the natural
-river. Chemically, therefore, one description may apply to both; and I
-the rather speak of them conjointly, as any extension of its resources
-for our supply which the New River might obtain, would apparently be
-provided by increasing considerably its present draught from the Lea.
-
- [49] It appears that the New River Company at present derives about
- two-thirds of its supply from the River Lea, and proposes to draw from
- this source a still larger proportion. Any chemical difference of
- quality in the City pipe-water (as between that supplied by the New
- River and that by the East London Company) would probably not exceed
- those limits of difference which prevail in respect of waters gathered
- _under varying circumstances_ from one and the same source.
-
-The pipe-water consumed in the City has for its general chemical
-character, that it contains a considerable quantity of carbonate of
-lime, held in solution by an excess of carbonic acid. To this and
-another salt of lime (the sulphate) the water chiefly owes the property
-which is complained of under the name of _hardness_: it is by reason of
-these salts, namely, that it decomposes a certain large proportion of
-whatever soap is used with it; preventing the formation of a lather,
-till those salts are exhausted by a wasted proportion of soap, by
-boiling or otherwise, and hindering to that extent the several purposes
-for which soap is employed. You are probably aware that soda is
-extensively used in the laundry, as an antidote to this objectionable
-quality of hard waters; and the excess of its employment tends, by
-corrosion, very observably to hasten the destruction of washed articles
-of dress. In the same measure as water possesses the property of
-decomposing soap, its utility as an universal solvent is impaired; it
-extends to various other substances which one seeks to dissolve in it
-(especially to many vegetable matters) that same disposition to waste
-them in the form of insoluble precipitates. Its conveniences for the
-purposes of cooking and manufacture are _pari passu_ diminished.
-
-Of the actual extent of which these disadvantages are sustained within
-the City of London, I have no means of forming an exact opinion; but
-statements are before the public (from the general correctness of which
-I have no reason to withhold reliance and belief) rating the pecuniary
-loss to the metropolis, in the two articles of soap and tea, at a very
-high figure. You will see from Mr. Taylor’s observations the proportion
-in which waste occurs, as regards one of these articles; namely that,
-for the production of a lather in washing, the pipe-water of the City of
-London, used without boiling, consumes from 13 to 19 times as much soap
-as distilled water would consume.[50]
-
- [50] It has been alleged that, by the use of soft water, the saving in
- soap would probably be equivalent to the whole of the money at present
- expended on water-supply; and that in the article of tea, the economy
- would amount to about one-third of the tea now consumed in the
- metropolis. It strikes me as possible that, in forming these
- estimates, the argument may have proceeded too much from a
- consideration of the hardness of London waters in their unboiled
- state; and that sufficient allowance may not have been made for the
- change which boiling produces. If boiling were prolonged for some
- hours before culinary or detergent use of the water, the results (for
- tea or soap) would be identical with those produced under the
- employment of soft water. Notoriously this precaution is not taken:
- but to avoid disputable ground, I confine myself to _the fact of
- considerable pecuniary loss_, arising from the cause in question, and
- I avoid any attempt to determine its exact amount.
-
-The chemical constitution of these waters occasions another
-inconvenience. Their carbonate of lime is held in solution (in the
-chemical form of bicarbonate) by an excess of carbonic acid: under the
-influence of heat this excess is gradually disengaged and driven off;
-consequently, as they approach the boiling point, they begin to
-precipitate the earthy salt which that gas was instrumental in
-dissolving. Each gallon of water under these circumstances would deposit
-from ten to fifteen grains of earthy matter on the interior of whatever
-vessel might contain it, or on the surface of whatever solid--linen or
-mutton, might be contained in the boiler. Hence arises the well-known
-_furring_ of vessels in which such waters have habitually been boiled.
-
-I refrain from dwelling on the economical considerations which arise in
-these points of the subject, as very obvious inferences from the result
-of chemical analysis; and I pass to other matters more strictly within
-my own province of observation.
-
-Is water thus constituted in any degree detrimental to the health of
-those who drink it? It is not in a single word that this question can be
-fairly answered. Almost insuperable difficulty belongs to it, from the
-absence of any statistical method by which we might isolate the
-water-drinking portion of our population, and might compare them, in
-regard of the diseases to which they are liable, with similar sections
-of population in soft-water districts and in harder-water districts.
-Obviously, no other method of comparison can be unobjectionable; and, in
-arguing the subject from such materials as I have, I can pretend to
-nothing more than a rational approximation to truth.
-
-Except in the comparatively few instances where active medicinal agents
-are naturally dissolved in a water, its effects, if injurious, would be
-so slow as to elude ordinary observation. If, as is exceedingly
-probable, the same constitution of water as impairs its solvency out of
-the body, do likewise operate against its being the most eligible
-menstruum or dissolvent for processes occurring within the body--such
-processes I mean as attend the act of digestion; if the lime and other
-hardening ingredients which waste soap in our laundries, and tea in our
-parlours, do similarly waste within us those organic agencies by which
-our food is dissolved and converted; any result arising from this source
-would be of gradual operation, would not easily admit of being traced to
-its source, and (except in susceptible persons) would rarely produce
-such symptoms as might immediately draw attention to their cause. The
-ill effects (whatever they may be) arising from the use of hard waters
-must be looked for in chronic impairment of digestion, and in those
-various derangements of nutrition in distant parts (the skin and teeth
-particularly) which follow as secondary results on such chronic
-disorder. It would be ridiculous to look for the operation of an
-ill-chosen water, after its habitual use during two centuries, as though
-one were inquiring for the symptoms of an acute poison. The signs that
-are to be ascertained among a population, if such signs exist, are those
-which would evidence a premature exhaustion of the power of digestion,
-and would testify that the machine on which we depend for that power had
-been exposed to unnecessary and avoidable fatigue. This, I believe, is
-the utmost which Medicine, proceeding from theoretical grounds, would
-venture to say on the subject.
-
-Perhaps I need not inform you that indigestion, with all that follows
-from it, is so frequent in the metropolis, in persons after the first
-strength of youth, that, for large classes of society, a perfect
-discharge of the natural process of digestion (such a discharge of it as
-a lecturer would describe to be the exact type and intention of Nature),
-is exceptional and rare. Unquestionably, in large numbers of cases, wine
-and beer and spirits, rather than water, have to do with this effect.
-Unquestionably, other influences of metropolitan life--and, not least,
-the mental wear and tear which belong to its large excitement,
-contribute immensely to this chronic derangement of health; but there
-are reasons likewise for believing, that the quality of water consumed
-is not a matter of indifference to the result. We cannot but give it an
-important place among those influences of health or unhealth which we
-consider _local_; and we cannot refuse to recognise the fact, that in
-recommending our patients (as we do often recommend them) to try ‘change
-of air’ for complaints which baffle us by their obstinacy, so long as
-the subject of them remains in London, the course on which we rely for
-success implies ‘change of water,’ equally with that other change to
-which more popular importance is attached.
-
-In illustration of this view, I may quote to you the experience of two
-other towns. Dr. Sutherland stated, in evidence before the General Board
-of Health, that having lived for a number of years at Liverpool (where
-the water is said to be of about the same degree of hardness as ours),
-he had long entertained a conviction that ‘the hard water, in a certain
-class of constitutions, tends to produce visceral obstructions; that it
-diminishes the natural secretions, produces a constipated or irregular
-state of the bowels, and consequently deranges the health. He had
-repeatedly known these complaints to vanish on leaving the town, and to
-re-appear immediately on returning to it, and it was such repeated
-occurrences which fixed his attention on the hard selenitic water of the
-new red sandstone as the probable cause, as he believed it to be, of
-these affections.’ (Rep. p. 51). And Dr. Leach, of Glasgow, stated
-before the same Board, as the result in that town of two years’
-experience of a substitution of soft for hard drinking-water, that in
-his opinion, ‘dyspeptic complaints had become diminished in number;’
-and that it had ‘been observed, since this change, urinary diseases have
-become less frequent, especially those attended by the deposition of
-gravel.’
-
-Inferences useful for ourselves cannot be drawn from statements like the
-above, on the fullest assumption of their accuracy, without comparing
-the waters referred to with our own, more completely than is done by the
-one characteristic of ‘hardness;’ and there may likewise be other
-qualifications requisite for an application of the analogy. But those
-disorders of health which are specified by the gentlemen quoted, as
-produced by the use and diminished by the disuse of hard waters, are
-such as might very probably stand in the relation of effect to their
-alleged cause; results, namely, primary and secondary, of disordered
-digestion.
-
-Practically, I may tell you, that there are many individuals whose
-stomachs are extremely sensitive to the impression of hard water, who
-derive immediate inconvenience from its use, and who refuse to drink it
-without artificial reduction of its objectionable quality. I may
-likewise inform you that a physician, recently deceased, whose knowledge
-of indigestion and its chronic effects (especially in relation to the
-skin and urinary organs) was most profound and accurate, and whose
-consulting practice in such disorders was for many years almost a
-monopoly (I mean Dr. Prout) was in the habit of enjoining on his
-patients the use of distilled water. He evidently considered that the
-consumption of such waters as are habitually drunk in the metropolis was
-detrimental, at least to an enfeebled digestion. This is an opinion
-which, I have reason to believe, is generally entertained by medical
-practitioners in London.
-
-It may not be irrelevant to mention to you (since the influence of
-imagination or of artificial habits can have little to do with this
-result) that horses are liable to be much inconvenienced by hard water,
-if unaccustomed to its use; and it is, I believe, notorious that grooms
-in charge of racers habitually take the trouble of conveying with them,
-to their temporary racing stables, a supply of the accustomed water.
-Veterinary surgeons say that under the continued use of hard water,
-which horses will avoid if possible, their coats become rough and
-staring;--an effect, I may observe, analogous to those skin-disorders of
-the human subject which are apt to occur from impairment of the
-digestive functions.
-
-Taking into account all these considerations, together with others of a
-more technical description; and believing that water is eligible for
-human consumption in proportion as it is free from the admixture of any
-material foreign to its simple elementary constitution--exception being
-made only of so much dissolved air as will render it sparkling and
-palatable; I entertain no doubt that a water, devoid of considerable
-hardness, would (_cæteris paribus_) for the purposes of cooking and
-drinking, be far preferable to that which the companies now distribute
-through the City of London.
-
-Hitherto, however, I have spoken of the waters supplied to the City,
-merely as regards that large impregnation of earthy material which they
-gather from their source; and I have criticised them only in respect of
-that admixture. Their essential chemical quality is one native to the
-soil from which they are derived; and whatever censure thus far belongs
-to them could only have been avoided by the selection of a different
-source. Chemistry, in the days of Morrys and Myddleton, was not
-sufficiently advanced to inform the water-merchants of a city on those
-different conditions which determine the fitness of a soil to serve as
-the natural or artificial _gathering-ground_ of a supply; and by which
-(as they vary in different localities) hardness is imparted to the
-rain-fall of one district, while softness is preserved for that of
-another.
-
-But there are other evils belonging to these waters, less appreciable
-indeed by chemistry, but open to universal observation, and meriting
-unqualified blame. They are conducted to the metropolis in open
-channels; they receive in large measure the surface-washing, the
-drainage, and even the sewage of the country through which they pass;
-they derive casual impurities from bathers and barges; they are liable
-to whatever pollutions mischievous or filthy persons may choose to
-inflict on them; and then on their arrival in the metropolis (after a
-short subsidence in reservoirs, which themselves are not
-unobjectionable) are distributed, without filtration, to the public.
-Whatever chemistry may say on this subject (and I need not remind you of
-very powerful causes of disease which lie beyond its cognisance), I
-cannot consider it matter of indifference, that we drink--with whatever
-dilution, or with whatever imperfect oxidation, the excremental and
-other impurities which mingle in these sources of our supply. Such
-admixtures, though in their _quantity_ less, are in their _quality_
-identical with those which render Thames-water, as taken at London
-Bridge, inadmissible for domestic consumption, and which occasion it,
-when stored for sea-use, to undergo, before it becomes fit to drink, a
-succession of offensive changes strictly comparable to putrefaction.
-
-In this slovenly method of conveyance and distribution there is a
-neglect of common precaution for the purity and healthfulness of the
-supply, which I must report to you as highly objectionable: and
-this--the method of supply to our great metropolis, strikes one the more
-with astonishment and disgust, as one reflects on the long experience
-and admirable models which past centuries in foreign countries have
-supplied; and especially, as one remembers those colossal works which,
-more than two thousand years ago, were constructed under the Roman
-government, for the cool and cleanly conduction of water.
-
-The present imperfections of knowledge forbid me to cite, as definite
-causes of disease, the contaminations to which I have adverted: I cannot
-say to you--pointing to our classified list of sickness and mortality,
-_this_ depends on drinking the diluted drainage of Hertford, _that_ on
-the contributions of Ware. Indeed I know that, under the influence of
-the river and the atmosphere, very considerable changes occur in the
-materials thus furnished, tending eventually to render them inert; and
-if injury to life occur from their ingestion, it is probably only under
-peculiar and exceptional conditions, increasing their quantity, or
-delaying their oxidation. In protesting against their continued
-distribution as articles of diet, I therefore insist less on inferences
-deducible from medicine, and shall probably have the concurrence of your
-Hon. Court in grounding my appeal on the common principles of taste.
-
-On the incidental contaminations to which the pipe-water consumed within
-the City becomes liable, by reason of its storage in receptacles both
-foul in themselves and surrounded by causes of foulness, I have already
-addressed you; and I have shown to you the dependence of this evil on
-the system of intermittent supply as adapted to the houses of the poor.
-
-Of other sources of water-supply existing within the City of London,
-there are many of small extent in the form of superficial springs. These
-are eagerly sought after, sometimes from a distance, on account of their
-coolness and sparkling condition. In the Appendix[51] you will find an
-account of one of these waters--that in the vicinity of Bishopsgate
-church, which is very much drunk in that quarter of the City. Any praise
-given to it illustrates exceedingly the fallacy of popular judgment on
-such subjects, and shows how easily those qualities of coolness and
-freshness, which are absent from stored waters, impose on the palate,
-and induce a preference to be given to waters which are relatively most
-objectionable.
-
- [51] See page 170.
-
-The chemical faults which belong to our London pipe-water are possessed
-in a far greater degree by this water of Bishopsgate pump, and the
-latter has moreover some vices which are absent from the former; but the
-vapidity and fustiness of water which has been stored in cisterns are so
-repugnant to the taste, that the water chemically preferable is not in
-practice preferred.
-
-To the use of waters of this description, within a large city, there is
-always much objection. In addition to extreme hardness, which in London
-they universally possess, they are liable, in a dangerous degree, to
-become contaminated by the leakage of drains, and by other sources of
-impurity; as, for instance, where situated within the immediate vicinity
-of grave-yards they derive products of animal decomposition from the
-soil.[52] Very recently, a celebrated pump within the City of London,
-that adjoining St. Bride’s church-yard, has been abandoned on account of
-such impregnations. Or perhaps I should rather say (for the difference
-again illustrates the readiness with which the palate is deceived or
-corrupted) that it was not _abandoned_--for till almost the last moment
-the neighbours adhered to it with fondness; but the parochial
-authorities--alarmed by the proximity of cholera--caused its handle to
-be locked.
-
- [52] This is illustrated in the analysis of Bishopsgate pump-water,
- just alluded to. The very large quantity of _nitrates_, there referred
- to that water, must be due to the oxidation of human bodies in the
- adjoining soil, which serves in part as gathering-ground to the
- spring. I should fear that, during rain-fall, this oxidation of
- organic compounds may not always have completed itself, and that
- materials of decomposition _still in progress of decay_ may thus often
- be mingled in the water. [I have lately had occasion to recommend that
- the use of Aldgate pump should be discontinued on account of its water
- containing, in addition to a large quantity of alkaline nitrate, so
- much unoxidised organic matters, as were sufficient to give it a foul
- taste.--J. S., 1854.]
-
-As an available source of supply to the City of London, the use of deep
-(Artesian) wells has been recommended: the clearness and softness of
-these waters, together with their freedom from organic matters, having
-concurred to suggest their employment. I feel bound to express the
-strongest opinion against the fitness of these waters for the purpose of
-beverage. They uniformly contain a considerable proportion of medicinal
-ingredients; they are capable of exerting definite and demonstrable
-influence over the natural actions of the body; and information is
-before me of various injury to health, affecting large numbers of
-persons, arising from the continued dietetic use of such waters.
-
-In addressing your Hon. Court on the subject of water-supply for the
-City, it is impossible that I should do otherwise than advert to the
-fact, that, during the last few months, under the auspices of Her
-Majesty’s government, as represented for sanitary purposes by the
-General Board of Health, a plan has been gradually maturing itself, for
-the supply of the entire metropolis with pure soft water. Founding
-itself on very extensive investigations as to the qualities of water, as
-to the influence of soils on its chemical composition, as to the
-relation between streams and rain-fall, as to the hydraulic principles
-of distribution, and the like, this plan proposes to gather water in
-certain silicious soils, which can impart to it the least possible
-admixture of foreign ingredients; to conduct it in closed channels, with
-every precaution for its perfect purity; and to distribute it throughout
-the metropolis, at a rate which shall be from 30 to 50 _per cent._ less
-than our present water-charges. The proposed area for the collection of
-this supply is in the extensive range of sandy soil in the south of
-Surrey, extending around Farnham, about ten miles in each direction.
-Since the publication of the first Report made on this subject by the
-General Board of Health, unremitting inquiry has been advancing, under
-their direction, into all details of the plan; and the Hon. William
-Napier, who, with others, has been engaged in the investigation of the
-proposed sources, has advocated an important modification, which
-promises to reduce very considerably the anticipated expense of the
-undertaking. The essential and most important principles which governed
-the Board, in arranging their plan, were, first, to seek their supply
-in a silicious soil, where little soluble material could exist for its
-contamination; secondly, to take possession of the water so near to its
-source that all its original purity might be preserved; and, during
-conduction, to isolate it from those contaminations which are incidental
-to the onward passage of a stream through miles of promiscuous country.
-To fulfil these indications, there were two conceivable courses; and
-studious local inquiries could alone determine which of them was
-preferable: on the one hand, if the streams which represent the natural
-drainage of the country should be found uniformly pure and copious, they
-might admit of being conducted bodily into the artificial river of
-supply: on the other hand, it might be requisite to carry the
-interference of art still further, to absorb the filtering moisture of
-this large sand-district before it had become confluent into streams,
-and thus from day to day, by extensively ramified works of artificial
-sub-drainage, to derive immediately from the soil, the varying
-contributions of rain-fall and dew. The Board, apparently solicitous for
-the completer security of their plan, preferred to estimate its cost on
-the latter very expensive supposition; they allowed apparently for the
-diffusion of drain-pipes over 150 square miles of country, and for a
-reservoir which should contain storage of water equivalent to a very
-long metropolitan consumption. The later examination, made by Mr. Napier
-and confirmed by others, tends and appears to show, that these large
-sources of expense may be avoided; that the waters may be collected of
-unusual purity and softness, where they have united themselves into
-rivulets of considerable volume; that the gauged and estimated discharge
-of these rivulets is sufficient day by day for the needs of the
-metropolis, according to the largest construction of those needs; that
-capillary drain-pipes and very extensive storage-room may thus be
-dispensed with; and that under the modification of arrangement suggested
-by these facts, some very large reduction might be inferred for the
-total estimate of this comprehensive plan.
-
-Many of these particulars are already before the public; but in a matter
-of so much importance to the health of the City, as that of
-participating in a supply of pure water, collected and distributed on
-the soundest principles, and sold at the cheapest rate, I did not think
-it would become me, as your Officer of Health, to remain an indolent
-auditor. I have felt it my duty to inform myself, so far as I could, on
-the real merits of this scheme, and on its probable relation hereafter
-to the sanitary condition of the metropolis. I have spent three days on
-the site of the proposed sources, and many other days in informing
-myself on all the bearings of the subject. I have likewise collected
-water from a proposed tributary of the future supply, which has been
-analysed, and which shows (as my Appendix will illustrate to you) a
-remarkable and rare excellence. On one occasion of visiting the country,
-I was accompanied by Mr. T. Taylor, and we made on the spot a sufficient
-number of extemporaneous examinations, to assure us that the essential
-features, shown in the more elaborate analysis, are (as geological
-considerations would lead us to believe) the general characters of water
-throughout the district.
-
-On any other than the sanitary relations of this subject I can have
-nothing officially to say; but, confining myself to these relations, I
-may certify to your Hon. Court that the water in question is, in my
-judgment, of a quality admirably suited for domestic purposes; that its
-distribution through the City of London would conduce to the health and
-comfort of the population; and that the principles, proposed by the
-Board for its collection and conveyance, appear to me such as sanitary
-science, in its present condition, should counsel for the water-service
-of the metropolis.
-
-There is, however, one aspect of the subject which must not pass
-unconsidered. Water that is free from earthy ingredients requires a
-peculiar distributory apparatus. If conveyed in leaden pipes with access
-of air, or if stored in leaden cisterns, it corrodes the metal of which
-they are composed, and is liable to derive from this source an
-impregnation very hazardous to life. Under certain circumstances,
-especially under alternations of air and water (such as occur in the
-intermittent supply), or where organic impurities are held in solution
-or suspension, or probably where from any cause uncombined carbonic acid
-is present, even the hardest waters are not free from this risk.
-Speaking generally, however, it affects soft water chiefly; distilled
-water most of all: and the Farnham water (in common with all pure water)
-is decidedly liable to this empoisonment, if used with leaden apparatus
-of conduction and storage. In my Appendix you will find some interesting
-particulars on this head; and you will observe that with experiments
-conducted by Mr. Taylor in imitation of the constant supply (i. e. with
-total submersion of the metal) the formation of carbonate of lead in the
-Farnham water was exceedingly gradual. This concurs with the alleged
-experience of Aberdeen, where it is said by Professor Clark to have been
-found (to my mind, by a somewhat dangerous trial) that pure and soft
-water, _distributed on the principle of constant supply_, does not
-exert on the leaden pipes any action injurious to the health of the
-population. You will likewise observe, that when hard water, as at
-present employed in the City, is softened by boiling, it acquires this
-property of pure water, and becomes capable of acting on lead; and here
-is an important observation, as it has been proposed by similar
-artificial means, employed on a very large scale, to soften all the
-water now distributed in the metropolis.
-
-Obviously, as regards one and all of the many proposals for supplying
-water destitute of hardening ingredients, any chemical process, or any
-change of source, which might lead to the distribution of such pure
-water through the metropolis, could not be considered as a single and
-separate reform, but must be undertaken conjointly with such alterations
-in the distributive arrangements as might be requisite for removing from
-the new plan _any chance, however slight or remote, of injuring the
-population by metallic poison_.
-
-What those alterations must be, it would now be premature to decide. The
-experience of Aberdeen might seem to suggest, that the system of
-constant supply (on all other accounts so eminently desirable for the
-metropolis) would in itself, if accompanied by the total disuse and
-prohibition of leaden cisternage, give sufficient security against the
-danger in question; or, on the other hand, further inquiry may show it
-to be quite indispensable for a safe distribution of the new supply,
-that leaden pipage should be entirely superseded by the use of some
-non-metallic material, as earthenware or glass. Should this change
-become necessary, its adoption would no doubt be facilitated by the
-comparative cheapness of these preferable materials.
-
-
-_Offensive or injurious Trades._
-
-With respect to offensive or injurious trades and occupations pursued
-within the City of London, you were reminded by your Committee of
-Health, in their Report of March 26th, ‘that upon your attempting to put
-in force the powers of your Act of Parliament in reference thereto, it
-was found that considerable difficulties were opposed to your efforts.
-Sufficient powers (the Report proceeds to say) are not given by the City
-of London Sewers Act to meet some of the cases alluded to, while other
-legal and technical objections presented themselves to the enforcement
-of the powers in question.’ The Committee concluded their Report by
-‘pointing out to you the necessity, when the question of renewing your
-Act should come into consideration, of procuring additional powers which
-may enable you effectually to remedy those evils.’
-
-On the grounds thus expressed by your Committee, I avail myself of the
-present opportunity for bringing the subject again under your notice.
-
-In my former Report I spoke particularly of those trades and occupations
-which deal with animal substances liable to decomposition; and in
-expressing my knowledge of their danger to the health of an urban
-population, I argued that no occupation which ordinarily leaves a putrid
-refuse, nor any which consists in the conversion or manufacture of
-putrescent material, ought, under any circumstances, to be tolerated
-within a town. To that subject I now revert, only to assure your Hon.
-Court that the past year has given me no reason to alter my opinion. But
-the trades to which I wish, on this occasion, more especially to request
-your attention, are those which are complained of on the ground of
-their offensiveness, rather than of their injury to health--as nuisances
-rather than as poisons. During the year, I have received a very
-considerable number of complaints of this nature; some of them perhaps
-frivolous, but many well-founded and reasonable.
-
-At the head of this class of evils stands the flagrant nuisance of
-smoke. Those members of the Court who have visited foreign capitals
-where other fuel than coal is employed, will remember the contrast
-between their climate and ours--will remember (for instance even in
-Paris) the transparence of air, the comparative brightness of all
-colour, the visibility of distant objects, the cleanliness of faces and
-buildings, instead of our opaque atmosphere, deadened colours, obscured
-distance, smutted faces, and black architecture. Those, even, who have
-never left our metropolis, but who, by early rising or late going to
-rest, have had opportunities of seeing a London sunrise, can judge, as
-well as by any foreign comparison, the difference between London as it
-might be, and London as it is. Viewed at dawn and at noon-day, the
-appearances contrast as though they were of different cities and in
-different latitudes. Soon after daybreak, the great factory shafts
-beside the river begin to discharge immense volumes of smoke; their
-clouds soon become confluent; the sky is overcast with a dingy veil; the
-house-chimneys presently add their contributions; and by ten o’clock, as
-one approaches London from any hill in the suburbs, one may observe the
-total result of this gigantic nuisance hanging over the City like a
-pall.
-
-If its consequences were confined to rendering London (in spite of its
-advantages) the unsightliest metropolis in Europe, to defacing all works
-of art, and rendering domestic cleanliness expensive, I should have
-nothing officially to say on the subject; but inasmuch as it renders
-cleanliness more difficult, and creates a despair of cultivating it with
-success, people resign themselves to dirt, domestic and personal, which
-they could remove but so temporarily: or windows are kept shut, in spite
-of immeasurable fustiness, because the ventilation requisite to health
-would bring with it showers of soot, occasioning inconvenience and
-expense. Such is the tendency of many complaints which have reached me,
-and of their foundation in truth and reason I have thorough conviction
-and knowledge.
-
-I would submit to your Hon. Court that these evils are not
-inconsiderable; and that beside the injury to property (with which I
-have nothing to do) the detriment to health, if only indirect, claims to
-be removed. Yet, while I am cautious to speak of this latter injury, as
-though it were only indirect--only by its obstruction of healthy habits,
-I ought likewise to tell you, that there are valid reasons for supposing
-that we do not with impunity inhale day by day so much air which leaves
-a palpable sediment; that many persons of irritable lungs find
-unquestionable inconvenience from these mechanical impurities of the
-atmosphere; and (gathering a hint from the pathology of vegetation) that
-few plants will flourish in the denser districts of London, unless the
-air which conduces to their nourishment be previously filtered from its
-dirt.
-
-If the smoke of London were inseparably identified with its commercial
-greatness, one might willingly resign oneself to the inconvenience. But
-to every other reason against its continuance must be added as a last
-one, on the evidence of innumerable competent and disinterested
-witnesses, that the nuisance, where habitual, is, for the greater part
-or entirely, voluntary and preventable; that it indicates mismanagement
-and waste; that the adoption of measures for the universal consumption
-of smoke, while relieving the metropolis and its population from injury,
-would conduce to the immediate interest of the individual consumer, as
-well as to indirect and general economy. For all the smoke that hangs
-over us is wasted fuel.
-
-The consumption of smoke in private houses is unfortunately a matter to
-which hitherto little attention has been given; and it would be vain to
-hope that the reform should begin with those, whose individual
-contributions to the public stock of nuisance are comparatively
-trifling. With the progress of knowledge on these subjects, a time will
-undoubtedly arrive, and at no distant period, when chimneys will cease
-to convey to the atmosphere their present immense freight of fuel that
-has not been burnt, and of heat that has not been utilised; when each
-entire house will be uniformly warmed with less expenditure of material
-than now suffices to its one kitchen fire; and our successors[53] will
-wonder at the ludicrous ingenuity with which we have so long managed to
-diffuse our caloric and waste our coal in the directions where they
-least conduce to the purposes of comfort and utility.
-
- [53] To the philosophical thinker there would seem to exist no
- important difficulty which should prevent the collective warming of
- many houses in a district by the distribution of heat from a central
- furnace--perhaps even so, that each house might receive its _ad
- libitum_ share of ventilation with warmed air. Ingenuity and
- enterprise, in this country, have accomplished far more arduous tasks;
- and I little doubt that our next successors will have heat-pipes laid
- on to their houses, with absence of smoke and immense economy of fuel,
- on some such general organisation as we now enjoy for gas-lighting and
- water-supply.--J. S., 1854.
-
-But, while the arrangements of private establishments may, perhaps
-wisely, be left to the operation of this spontaneous reform, I would
-venture to recommend in regard to furnaces, employed for steam-engines
-and otherwise for manufactures within the City, that you should
-endeavour to control the nuisance of smoke.
-
-The members of your Hon. Court are probably cognisant of the great mass
-of evidence on this subject, collected by two separate committees of the
-House of Commons, and of the almost unanimous conclusions to which that
-evidence led; ‘that opaque smoke issuing from steam-engine chimneys may
-be so abated as no longer to be a public nuisance; that a variety of
-means are found to exist for the accomplishment of this object, simple
-in construction, moderate in expense, and applicable to existing
-furnaces and flues of stationary steam-engines; that a sufficient body
-of evidence has been adduced, founded upon the experience of practical
-men, to induce the opinion that a law, making it imperative upon the
-owners of stationary steam-engines, to abate the issue of opaque smoke
-is desirable for the benefit of the community;’[54] ‘that the expense
-attendant on putting up whatever apparatus may be required to prevent
-smoke arising from furnaces is very trifling, and (as some of the
-witnesses observed) the outlay may be repaid within the year, by the
-diminished consumption of fuel; that the means of preventing smoke might
-also be applied to the furnaces of steam-boats, but such application
-would be attended with rather more expense than on land, from the
-occasional want of space, and the setting of boilers in a steam-vessel.
-No doubt, however, existed, in the opinions of those examined, that the
-prevention of smoke could be accomplished in steam-vessels.’[55]
-
- [54] Report of Committee, 1845.
-
- [55] Report of Committee, 1849.
-
-In two local improvement Acts (those of Leeds and Manchester) clauses
-have been introduced in accordance with the sense of these conclusions;
-and in order to render them as little oppressive as possible to those
-whose interests might be affected by their operation, the enactments
-(which apply to every variety of furnace) have been so framed as to
-enforce penalties for the issuing of smoke only when it should appear
-(as no doubt it commonly would appear) that the proprietor had refrained
-from “using the best practicable means for preventing or counteracting
-such annoyance.”
-
-Surely if such applicable means exist, it is a just and reasonable thing
-that the public should be defended against offence and injury, arising
-in the mere indifference or obstinacy of those who inflict them; and I
-venture to hope that your Hon. Court, in renewing your application to
-Parliament, may procure the enactment of a clause, giving you control
-over so much of the nuisance as is wanton and avoidable.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There are still under the present head, some points to which I am
-anxious to advert. During the two years that your Act has been in
-operation, various complaints have been made with respect to nuisances
-arising in particular trades; and with many of the causes of complaint
-you have been unable effectually to contend. Soap-makers,
-tallow-melters, gut-spinners, naphtha-distillers, preparers of patent
-manure, dealers in soot, exposers of stinking hides, wire-makers,
-dealers in kitchen-stuff, fish-curers, tripe-boilers, type-founders,
-gold-refiners, slaughterers, varnish-makers, roasters of coffee and
-chicory, whalebone-boilers, iron and brass-founders, keepers of
-cattle-sheds, makers of printing-ink, dealers in camphine, cookers of
-cats’-meat, and manufacturing chemists, have all, at different times and
-in various degrees, been complained of.
-
-In respect of those of the enumerated trades which deal in the
-manufacture or sale of organic materials in a putrid or putrescent
-state, I have already submitted to you my opinion that the City of
-London, the home of a large and crowded population, is no place for
-them. With regard to the many other occupations, it would obviously be
-absurd, in the present state of society, to think of banishing them from
-the City which their industry has contributed to enrich, and where
-immemorial custom has given sanction to their continuance, unless you
-could with certainty affirm of them, that they cause direct and
-inevitable detriment to their neighbourhood. Every useful purpose, as
-regards the health of the City, might be fulfilled by the enactment of
-some moderate restriction.
-
-Manifestly, it is opposed to the spirit of your Act of Parliament, that
-any trader or manufacturer should possess the right of diffusing in the
-vicinity of his house, to the detriment and disgust of his neighbours,
-any product (whether in the form of running fluid, or volatile dust, or
-vapour, or smoke, or odour) which is either disagreeable to the senses
-or may be hurtful to the health. Many of the instances which I have
-enumerated fall within this description, and yet remain unaffected by
-the restrictive sections of your Act.
-
-I would submit to the consideration of your Hon. Court, whether, in the
-renewal of your Act, some comprehensive clause might not be introduced,
-which should deal with these difficulties, as well as with the nuisance
-of smoke--and deal with them, too, on the same principle: a clause,
-which (without enumerating all trades which have been, or possibly may
-become, sources of nuisance in the City, and without specifying too
-narrowly the nature of the nuisances to be guarded against) should
-empower your Commission generally, in respect of every trade practised
-within the City, to require that its operations shall be conducted with
-the least possible amount of inconvenience to the neighbourhood; and
-which should enable you to enforce penalties in case of every nuisance
-arising in such operations, unless it should be distinctly shown on the
-part of the proprietor, that every practicable measure for abatement of
-the inconvenience had been constantly and thoroughly employed.[56]
-
- [56] Such a clause was introduced in the Act of 1851 (see page 193)
- and has been worked with considerable advantage.--J. S., 1854.
-
-I would beg to express my conviction that your possession of the
-authority with which such a clause would invest you, would very largely
-increase your powers of utility, in respect of many acknowledged
-grievances hitherto beyond your control; and the influence of your
-example, in the achievement of this great municipal purpose, would, I
-doubt not, speedily lead to the adoption of general measures throughout
-the metropolis, for the total suppression of smoke, and for the
-mitigation of other nuisances which now exist around your territory no
-less than within it.[57]
-
- [57] This expectation has recently been fulfilled in the Smoke
- Prevention Act, for which the metropolis has to thank Lord
- Palmerston.--J. S., 1854.
-
-
-_Burial-Grounds._
-
-In my last year’s Report I had occasion to represent to your Hon. Court
-the evils of intramural sepulture. I testified to that large
-accumulation of human remains, by which, in numerous parts of the City,
-the soil of burial-grounds has been raised many feet above its original
-level; and I advised you of the injury which must accrue to health from
-the constant organic decomposition thus suffered to proceed in the midst
-of our crowded population. I likewise invited your attention to the
-still greater evil of burial in vaults; I explained and endeavoured to
-remove the misconception which commonly prevails, as to the preservation
-of bodies under those circumstances; and I showed you how unfailingly,
-sooner or later after such burial, the products of putrefaction make
-their way from within the coffin (whatever may have been its
-construction) and diffuse themselves offensively and injuriously through
-the air. I concluded by expressing to you my strong conviction of the
-necessity that some comprehensive measure should be undertaken, for
-abolishing, at once and for ever, all burial within the City of London.
-
-During the session of Parliament that has intervened between that Report
-and my present one, an event has occurred, which promises to remove
-effectually the evils on which I then addressed you. Her Majesty’s
-government, acting at the instigation of the General Board of Health,
-carried through Parliament a Bill, enacting that the Queen, by Order in
-Council, may prohibit further burials within any district of the
-metropolis, so soon (after the close of this year) as the General Board
-of Health should have provided the means of extramural interment. The
-operation of this Act of Parliament is such as, I have every reason to
-believe, you will welcome within the City of London: and I look forward
-to the complete cessation of burial within your territory, as a matter
-for warm congratulation among all who are interested in the cause of
-sanitary improvement.[58]
-
- [58] The Act of Parliament here referred to never passed into
- operation, and was repealed in 1852 by a second Metropolitan Burials
- Act, under which the City Commissioners of Sewers are at present
- acting as a Burial Board for the City of London. See the last Reports
- of this Volume, from page 280 to the end.--J. S., 1854.
-
-From the terms of the Act in question I find that Her Majesty’s Order in
-Council is to be preceded by a Report from the General Board of Health,
-stating their opinion of the expediency, that (in any particular case
-reported on) burial should forthwith be discontinued. Accordingly, in
-the present state of the law, it will devolve on that Board to initiate
-whatever measures may be necessary for the prohibition of further
-interment in the City.
-
-Two clauses of your Act of Parliament, which have hitherto been
-inoperative, may perhaps come into requisition whenever Her Majesty’s
-Order in Council closes the burial-grounds of the City; viz., clause 89,
-which empowers your Commission, if you shall “think fit, to provide fit
-and proper places, in which the poor, under proper rules and
-regulations, may be permitted to deposit the bodies of their dead
-previous to interment;” and the following clause, which authorises your
-Officer of Health, in case of necessity, and for protection of the
-living, to cause any dead body to be removed at your expense, to
-whatever building may have been provided for the reception of the dead,
-previous to interment. It may hardly be necessary that I should trouble
-you with any remarks on the subject of these clauses, till such time as
-they are likely to come into operation.
-
-With respect to the burial-grounds within the City, which will fall into
-disuse so soon as the new Interment Act becomes operative, I trust that
-your Hon. Commission will procure the power of regulating and
-supervising their maintenance, so that they may no longer be hurtful to
-the health of their vicinity. The arrangement of them, which would be
-most advantageous to their locality, would be that of planting them with
-whatever trees or shrubs may be made to flourish in a London atmosphere.
-The putrefactive changes, which for some years longer must proceed in
-these saturated soils, will be rendered comparatively harmless and
-imperceptible, if at the same time there advance in the ground a
-sufficiency of vegetation, which for its growth would gradually
-appropriate, as fast as they are evolved, the products of animal decay.
-
-It seems almost superfluous for me to observe, that, from the time when
-burials are discontinued, no unnecessary disturbance of the soil should
-be allowed; nor any attempts at levelling or the like, except under the
-direct sanction of your Hon. Court.
-
-Another point in connexion with these burial-grounds, to which I may
-here advert (though I must recur to it hereafter) is, that while great
-advantage may be expected from the discontinuance of their former uses,
-if their several areas be left open and without building, so as to
-subserve the ventilation of their neighbourhood, all that advantage
-would be lost, and a heavier evil inflicted on the neighbourhood than
-that of which it purports to be relieved, if these spaces were at any
-time to be covered with houses; and I trust it may be found within the
-province of your Hon. Court to obtain authority for preventing any
-encroachment of this nature on the limited breathing-spaces of the City.
-
-
-_Habitations and Social Condition of the Poor._
-
-In my last Report (under its fifth and sixth heads) I particularly
-solicited the attention of your Hon. Court to certain circumstances
-connected with the dwellings and habits of the poor, which, though they
-then lay apparently out of your jurisdiction, as defined by the Act of
-Parliament, yet appeared to me of immeasurable weight in the sanitary
-fluctuations of the City, as tending in their operation constantly to
-thwart your endeavours for improvement, and to neutralise day by day
-whatever good you could achieve.
-
-I reported to you that there were sanitary defects, inherent in certain
-large proportions of your municipal cure, which the most absolute
-control of drainage and water-supply would do nothing to
-amend,--constructional defects of houses and of courts, whereby their
-crowded inhabitants were excluded from a sufficiency of light and air,
-and were constrained, without remission or change, to breathe an
-atmosphere fetid with their own stagnant exhalations. I reported to you
-that, however unexceptionable might be the arrangement of such
-localities in matters already within your control--however clean their
-pavements, however pure their water, however effective their drainage,
-yet fever and the allied disorders could never be absent from their
-population; while under opposite arrangements, with nuisances around
-them, with organic poisons rising from the soil or mingling in the
-water, their mortality would rise to the horrors of pestilence, and
-might easily renew the most awful precedents in history. I described to
-you the class of miserable dwellings alluded to--‘Courts and alleys with
-low, dark, filthy, tenements, hemmed in on all sides by higher
-buildings, having no possibility of any current of air, and (worst of
-all) sometimes so constructed, back to back, as to forbid the advantage
-of double windows or back doors, and thus to render the house as perfect
-a _cul-de-sac_ out of the court, as the court is a _cul-de-sac_ out of
-the next thoroughfare:’ I affirmed that ‘this could never be otherwise
-than a cause of sickness and mortality to those whose necessities allot
-them such residence;’ and assured you of the ‘incontrovertible fact,
-that subsistence in closed courts is an unhealthy and short-lived
-subsistence, in comparison with that of the dwellers in open streets.’
-
-In habitations of this kind the death-rate would of necessity be high,
-even if the population were distributed thinly in the district. A single
-pair of persons, with their children, having such a court for their sole
-occupancy, would hardly be otherwise than unhealthy; the infants would
-die teething, or would live pallid and scrofulous; or a parent would
-perish prematurely--the father, perhaps, with typhus, the mother with
-puerperal fever. Judge then, gentlemen, how the mortality of such courts
-must swell your aggregate death-rate for the City, when I tell you that
-their population is in many instances so excessive, as, in itself, and
-by its mere density, to breed disease.
-
-Statistics can give you no conception of this crowding. If you refer to
-the results of the last census, you find the average population _per_
-house, in the City of London Union to be 7·1; in the East and West
-London Unions, 8·8; for the construction of these averages, the most
-dissimilar materials are blended together; and the density of population
-is apparently reduced by the very large number of business-houses which
-have no resident inmates, beyond the porter or the housekeeper who has
-charge of them. If you turn from the deceptions of an average to the
-exact analysis of detail, you will find many single rooms in the City
-with a larger number of inmates than you might otherwise ascribe to
-entire houses. Instances are innumerable, in which a single room is
-occupied by a whole family--whatever may be its number, and whatever the
-ages and sexes of the children; where birth and death go on side by
-side; where the mother in travail, or the child with small-pox, or the
-corpse waiting interment, has no separation from the rest.
-
-This is evil enough; but worse remains behind. It is no uncommon thing,
-in a room of twelve feet square or less, to find three or four families
-_styed_ together (perhaps with infectious disease among them) filling
-the same space night and day--men, women, and children, in the
-promiscuous intimacy of cattle.[59] Of these inmates it is nearly
-superfluous to observe, that in all offices of nature they are
-gregarious and public; that every instinct of personal or sexual decency
-is stifled; that every nakedness of life is uncovered there. Such an
-apartment is commonly hired in the first instance by a single pair, who
-sub-let a participation in the shelter, probably to as many others as
-apply. Sometimes a noxious occupation is carried on within the space:
-thus, I have seen mud-larks (_chiffonniers_) sitting on the floor with
-baskets of filth before them, sorting out the occasional bit of coal or
-bone, from a heterogeneous collection made along the bed of the river,
-or in the mouths of the sewers; and this in a small room, inhabited
-night and day by such a population as I have described.
-
- [59] I purposely refrain from any attempt to illustrate all the
- horrors which are incidental to this method of life; but, as a single
- exemplification of the text (chosen, not because of its rarity, but
- because it happens to occur at the moment) I insert an extract from a
- note, with which I was favoured a fortnight ago, by Mr. Hutchinson,
- Surgeon to the North District of the West London Union: ‘I was sent
- for to attend a poor Irish woman in labour, at half-past six o’clock
- yesterday morning, at 17, Fox and Knot court. There were three
- families, each consisting of a man and wife and two or more children,
- in a small room, 15 feet by 8, all lying upon dirty rags on the floor.
- I found one of the children suffering under small-pox. The adjoining
- room was occupied by six grown-up persons and two children.’ In the
- circumstances to which my Report refers, scenes of this description
- must of necessity be _habitual_: and it is to their habit, not to
- their exceptional occurrence, that my remarks apply.
-
-Who can wonder at what becomes, physically or morally, of infants
-begotten and born in these bestial crowds?
-
-In my former Report, I drew your attention to this pestilential heaping
-of human beings, and suggested to you its results; and on many
-occasions, during the past year, complaints have been before your Hon.
-Court which have had their real origin in this uncontrolled evil. I
-revert to it because of its infinite importance. While it maintains
-physical filth that is indescribable, while it perpetuates fever and the
-allied disorders, while it creates mortality enough to mask the results
-of all your sanitary progress, its moral consequences are too dreadful
-to be detailed. I have to deal with the matter only as it relates to
-bodily health. Whatever is morally hideous and savage in the
-scene--whatever contrast it offers to the superficial magnificence of
-the metropolis--whatever profligacy it implies and continues--whatever
-recklessness and obscene brutality arise from it--whatever deep injury
-it inflicts on the community--whatever debasement or abolition of God’s
-image in men’s hearts is tokened by it--these matters belong not to my
-office, nor would it become me to dwell on them. Only because of the
-physical sufferings am I entitled to speak; only because pestilence is
-for ever within the circle; only because Death so largely comforts these
-poor orphans of civilisation. To my duty it alone belongs, in such
-respects, to tell you where disease ravages the people under your
-charge, and wherefore; but while I lift the curtain to show you this--a
-curtain which propriety might gladly leave unraised, you cannot but see
-that side by side with pestilence there stalks a deadlier presence;
-blighting the moral existence of a rising population; rendering their
-hearts hopeless, their acts ruffianly and incestuous; and scattering,
-while society averts her eyes, the retributive seeds of increase for
-crime, turbulence, and pauperism.
-
-While I refer to these painful topics, I may remind your Hon. Court of
-the Report of your Committee on Health, in respect of the same heads in
-my previous communication, and may strengthen myself with their
-testimony: ‘We feel it due to Mr. Simon to add, from the result of
-personal investigation, that the statements contained in his Report
-under this subject, distressing as they are, are not exaggerated:’ and,
-as regards whatever I may have recapitulated from that Report, I would
-beg leave to add, that my experience during the past year has confirmed
-the opinions which I then expressed; assuring me more and more, that the
-correction of these crying evils must advance simultaneously with the
-other labours of sanitary reform.
-
-Recently, while having the honour to attend your Committee of Health in
-their deliberations on your Act of Parliament, I have submitted to them,
-as my view of what is desirable for legislation on the subject of my
-present section, substantially the same suggestions as I formerly laid
-before your Hon. Court. As their recommendations must shortly come
-before you for consideration, and as I entertain the deepest conviction
-that the subject is of paramount importance to the cause in which you
-are interested, I have hoped you would excuse my recurrence to it, and
-my brief repetition of those suggestions which the incompleteness of
-your Act of Parliament has hitherto prevented your adopting.
-
-1. There are within the City some blocks of houses which are, I fear,
-irremediably bad and pestilential from such errors of construction as I
-have already described; and which, further, are so dilapidated, as to
-show at a glance their little pecuniary value. In many instances the
-destruction of such a block of houses would confer a sensible advantage
-on the population of a considerable district. Of this class I could
-hardly give you a better illustration than would be seen in the
-ground-plan of Seven-step alley. There are other instances (frequent in
-Cripplegate) where the removal of a single house at the extremity of a
-court or passage would make a material difference to the ventilation of
-several houses, and to the health of a numerous population.
-
-2. Again, in very many parts of the City, you find illustrations of a
-constructional error to which I have adverted as in the highest degree
-pernicious to health. You find a number of courts, probably with very
-narrow inlets, diverging from the open street in such close succession,
-that their backs adjoin with no intermediate space whatsoever.
-Consequently, each row of houses has but a single row of windows, facing
-into the confined court; and thus there is no possibility of
-ventilation, either through the court generally, or through the houses
-which compose it. In the Out-Wards of Cripplegate, Farringdon, and
-Bishopsgate, examples of this arrangement are both most numerous, and I
-believe, most removable: but they may likewise be found in considerable
-numbers in the In-Wards of the City; _e.g._, in the neighbourhood of
-Printing-house-square, of Great Bell-alley, of Leadenhall-street, of
-Aldgate, of Skinner-street, and of St. Martin’s-le-Grand.
-
-In many of these cases, if the management of the property were under a
-single control, it is possible that effectual relief might be given, by
-converting any two rows of houses which are back to back, each having
-windows only on one side, into a single row of houses, with doors and
-windows both before and behind: and if changes of this nature were
-accompanied by the removal of an occasional house, or other impediment
-to the circulation of air, I would guarantee to your Hon. Court that the
-next year’s register would show a very large diminution in the local
-amount of preventable sickness and mortality.
-
-3. In other cases, the immediate impediment to ventilation apparently
-consists in the operation of the window-tax. Your Hon. Court, at various
-times, has heard how unfortunate for the health of cities is this
-ill-chosen method of taxation, assessing the amount of rate for houses
-in proportion to their means of ventilation. You can easily conceive how
-much it would impede your endeavours to promote health and cleanliness
-within the City, if an additional direct tax were levied on houses by
-reason of their _drainage_; or if the assessor regulated his rate
-according to the _consumption of water_ for household purposes. The
-working of the window-tax is on this principle; and although it may be
-very true that health is the greatest of treasures, and that, on this
-ground, its means and appliances are eligible for taxation, I cannot but
-regret that a struggling population should be tempted by the hope of
-some small saving, to make a sensible diminution in their chances of
-life, by retrenching within the narrowest measures their inlets of
-ventilation and light.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In reference to the more important constructional errors which I have
-described to you, as affecting the courts and alleys of the City, it
-will be obvious, from the remedies which I have suggested, that no hope
-of alteration can be expected from landlords. To throw together the
-adjoining houses of two different courts, or to remove one house for the
-advantage of certain others, or to destroy a whole block of houses for
-the sake of its neighbourhood, could evidently be undertaken, as a
-matter of private enterprise, only where property of very considerable
-extent, and close juxtaposition, happened to be in the hands of a single
-individual; and, as regards the City of London, this is rarely or never
-the case. The only manner, then, it occurs to me, in which the requisite
-remedies could be applied, would be through the wealth and benevolence
-of the Corporation. If there were vested in your Hon. Court (or in any
-other authority of the Corporation) the power to make compulsory
-purchases of house-property, on the ground of its unfitness for human
-habitation, it would be easy to correct the extreme errors which exist;
-and, under a single large landlordship of this nature, it might not
-improbably be found that measures such as I have described would give to
-the localities in which they might be effected as much improvement in
-value as in health. After the necessary alterations, such houses would
-no longer need to continue under tenure of the Corporation, and the
-proceeds of their sale might again be applied to the reclamation of
-similar property in other parts of the City.
-
-In throwing out this suggestion to your Hon. Court, I, of course, do not
-pretend to offer you any details for its realisation. These can more
-fitly be supplied by others; nor should I have introduced even this
-general mention of a plan, but for the vividness with which its
-practicability and usefulness have struck me. During my period of
-office, I have seen distinctly that what seems incurable in the dark
-intricacies of our worst courts and alleys often depends for its
-difficulty on the _number_ of landlords, and on their mutual
-independence. The conviction had thus been forced on me, which I have
-endeavoured briefly to express to you; that the only available cure for
-such evils would consist in the Corporation assuming to itself (if only
-for a time, and in gradual succession) the proprietage of such wretched
-tenements, and fulfilling towards them those large and liberal duties
-of landlordship, which now remain unperformed through the multiplicity
-and neediness of petty owners. And, as a precedent for one species of
-such improvement, I may mention to your Hon. Court, that in such
-property as I have described to you, situated in other parts of the
-metropolis, private societies have already effected purchases which have
-enabled them to convert bad and unwholesome residences into the form of
-model lodgings for the working classes.
-
-Before leaving the consideration of evils, in which over-density of
-building and defective ventilation form such important parts, I would
-avail myself of the opportunity to observe, that it is of incalculable
-importance to preserve, for the health of the City, every open space
-which at present exists. The density of buildings within the City of
-London Union is very great, and in the East and West London Unions, is
-very considerably greater than in any other part of the metropolis; and
-not merely are the houses closely packed together, but (as I have
-already described them) very thickly inhabited. Within the City of
-London Union, each human being, on an average, has less than an eighth
-part of the space he would have if residing in the district of
-Islington; and, small as is this pittance, it is more than double what
-he would enjoy if he were living in the district of the East and West
-London Unions. With such density of population, it would, of course, be
-advantageous if any space now occupied by buildings should hereafter
-become vacant, so as to increase the breathing-room of the
-neighbourhood; and your Hon. Court will see the imperative necessity of
-discountenancing, so far as may be, the erection of additional houses on
-the few unoccupied spaces which remain. In order to do this effectually,
-it would be desirable to procure the enactment of a clause, giving you
-absolute prohibiting power in this respect, whenever, for sanitary
-reasons, you might think it right to interfere.
-
-With respect to those evils which I have set before you, as arising from
-the unrestricted accumulation of persons of both sexes, and of all ages,
-within a single sleeping-room--dreadful as they are, I do not consider
-them irremediable. In the first place, I would beg you to observe, that
-the very restricted definition of a ‘lodging-house’ given in your Act of
-Parliament, has hitherto rendered it impossible, in any degree, to
-regulate dwellings of the description referred to. An amendment of that
-definition might bring them within your control, and might enable you,
-not only in these instances, but in many others, to restrict the numbers
-of inmates, to compel the removal of persons with infectious disease,
-and to enforce provisions of decency, cleanliness, and ventilation.
-
-Not, however, alone to restrictive and compulsory measures do I look for
-the social improvement of numbers, now so destitute and miserable. That
-our entire industrial population within the City might, in such
-respects, gain great advantage from an enlightened supervision and
-guidance, I formerly endeavoured to show. I sought (from other
-experience) to illustrate the benefits they would derive, not only from
-your exercising habitual inspection, and possessing a more extensive
-control, in many matters relative to their dwellings and mode of life;
-but likewise, from the establishment, under the auspices of the
-Corporation, of institutions which, raising before them a higher
-standard of civilisation, would improve their social habits by an
-indirect educational influence, and would elevate the general tone and
-character of their class.
-
-On the subject of Model Dwellings for the labouring classes, and of
-Public Baths and Wash-houses, as illustrating this view, I dwelt at some
-length in my former Report; and, deeply convinced of the boon which
-their establishment would confer on the poor, I explained, to the best
-of my ability, the nature and the extent of their usefulness.
-
-I now recur to the subject, only that I may repeat my profound
-conviction of its importance; and that in doing so, I may congratulate
-your Hon. Court, and may utter my deep thankfulness for the labouring
-and suffering poor of this great community, that, in compliance with the
-Standing Orders of Parliament, formal notice has been given on the part
-of the Corporation of the City of London, of their intention, in the
-approaching session of the Legislature, to apply for authority which may
-enable them to achieve, for their dependent fellow-citizens, this almost
-incalculable good.[60]
-
- [60] The intention of the Corporation, here spoken of, has not
- hitherto been carried into effect.--J. S., 1854.
-
-I cannot too strongly express the importance I attach to this implied
-intention of the Corporation, to establish model dwellings for the
-industrial population of the City. But the first and immediate operation
-of such an Act will, from the nature of things, hardly reach to those
-very destitute and degraded classes of which I have spoken. Model
-lodgings of the ordinary character will become the residence of men, who
-now pay from two to five shillings a week for such space as they occupy,
-and who have the habit of sleeping in beds. To them the gain will be
-very great; and the example of improved domestic habits will be
-beneficial to their entire class. But among the lowest order which I
-have described to you, as it subsists in thronged and pestilent heaps
-within your worst quarters, there is little knowledge of beds. The first
-hirer of the room may possibly have a pile of rags on which he lies,
-with his wife and children, in one corner of the tenement; but the
-majority of his sub-tenants (paying for their family-lodging from
-sixpence to ten-pence a week) lie on straw, or on the bare boards. It
-will be obvious to you, that no _Model_ Lodging-house could be reduced
-to the level of their means. By those restrictions to which I have
-adverted, something may be done, no doubt, for improving the arrangement
-of houses so tenanted--something to prevent the more glaring outrages of
-decency which at present prevail--something to maintain comparative
-cleanliness, and to check the spread of disease. I fear that no further
-remedy than this would prove effectual, unless it were universal for the
-metropolis. Unquestionably, it would be possible, with persons even of
-the lowest sort above pauperism, to proceed on the same principle as in
-the establishment of model-lodgings for the working orders; to provide
-for them, namely, under respectable control and supervision, the best
-accommodation which their price could purchase, of the kind to which
-they have been habituated; to give them the means of lying down, free
-from damp or cold, partitioned from one another, and with isolation of
-sexes, in a building constructed or arranged for the purpose, where the
-ventilation and the facilities for cleanliness might be complete. There
-seems little room to doubt that this might be done, on a very large
-scale, at a rate considerably less than the poorest now pay for the
-right of lairage amid vermin, filth, obscenity, and fever; and with such
-dormitories, obviously, there might be connected other arrangements for
-giving comfort and cleanliness to the very poor and destitute, at the
-lowest possible price. Of gratuitous reception I do not speak, because
-that is already provided, under certain regulations, in all the
-work-houses of the metropolis. But while I conceive that such a measure,
-if generally adopted throughout London, would defray its own cost, and
-would remove evils and miseries horrid to contemplate, I cannot but feel
-that it would be inadmissible (in its cheapest form) as a local measure.
-For if the price of reception--for instance, here, were so low as to
-allure the wretched population in question from their places of present
-resort within the City, it cannot be doubted that its influence would
-extend beyond your jurisdiction, and would throng your dormitories with
-the destitute of other districts. As the evil is metropolitan, so ought
-the remedy to be; and if there were thus instituted within each Union of
-the metropolis, a _Ragged Dormitory_ of the nature described, I am
-persuaded, from my knowledge of the poorest classes, that its
-establishment would be of infinite advantage in improving the habits,
-and diminishing the mortality of those who would become its inmates.
-
-
-III. SUGGESTED ALTERATIONS IN THE ACT OF PARLIAMENT.
-
-Finally, gentlemen, considering that you are about to procure a renewal
-of your Act of Parliament, and that you contemplate strengthening it
-with such additional clauses as may render it effective for the
-eradication of all preventable disease within the City of London, I
-would ask permission, in this point of view, to submit to you in a
-connected series, such modifications as in my judgment would contribute
-to that purpose. Most of these I have already had the advantage of
-suggesting to your Committee on Health; and to many of them I have
-adverted by anticipation, in previous passages of my Report. I would beg
-to enumerate the _desiderata_ under the following heads, _viz._
-
-1. A clause, which would give you control over the supply and
-distribution of water, would enable you in your corporate capacity to
-contract with any person or any company for the total service of the
-City; and would authorise you to defray the expenses of such contract by
-certain specified rates.
-
-2. A clause empowering you to require, that every trade or manufacture
-practised within the City shall be carried on with such precautions, and
-with such available improvements, from time to time, as shall reduce to
-the lowest practicable amount whatever nuisance or inconvenience to the
-neighbourhood is apt to arise therefrom.
-
-3. Such change in the definition affixed to your 91st clause as would
-render this operative for the regulation and improvement of a larger
-number of houses; and such addition to the clause as would enable you,
-on the joint certificate of your Officer of Health and Surveyor, to
-enforce the making of additional windows, where requisite for the proper
-ventilation of houses.
-
-4. A clause permitting and empowering you, on sufficient medical
-testimony, to remove, or to call upon the Board of Guardians to remove,
-from any lodging-house, within the new definition of your Act, any
-person diseased with fever or other infectious malady, whose continuance
-there would endanger the lives of other inmates.
-
-5. A clause prohibiting the occupation of under-ground cellars for the
-purposes of dwelling.
-
-6. A clause prohibiting the keeping of cattle in or under
-dwelling-houses.
-
-7. A clause vesting in the Commission a right to purchase houses by jury
-valuation, in any case where they shall determine that such houses are
-permanently unwholesome and unfit for human habitation, or that their
-alteration or removal is necessary for the public health.
-
-8. A clause enabling the Commission to control all further encroachments
-on spaces which are now open within the City; so that on ground now
-unoccupied by buildings, no future erection shall be made, except with
-the sanction of the Commission.
-
-9. A clause to protect the purity and wholesomeness of human food, as
-sold within the City, by affixing penalties to its exposure for sale in
-any adulterated, decayed, or corrupted condition, which may impair its
-fitness for consumption.
-
-These are the heads under which it has appeared to me that the most
-useful additions might be made to your Act of Parliament, in matters
-within the scope of my official observation. There are some other minor
-modifications, which I have submitted to your Committee of Health, and
-which, as they relate merely to detail, it is unnecessary for me to
-bring before you. All the recommendations which I have made on this
-subject result from a careful scrutiny of the operation of your present
-Act, during the two years that I have had the honour of serving you.
-Each separate paragraph of my enumeration founds itself upon a distinct
-recollection of occasions, sometimes numerous, wherein, for want of such
-enactments, nuisances which you were anxious to suppress have eluded
-your authority, or advantages which you were desirous to realise have
-stood beyond your attainment.
-
-It was in the nature of things that this should be so; for the period
-has been one of experiment. When the City Sewers Act became law for a
-period of two years, every one interested in its success must have felt
-the advantage of that limited duration, and have rejoiced in the
-opportunity, thus afforded, of rendering it eventually the most perfect
-embodiment of sanitary law.
-
-Parts of the Act have abundantly fulfilled your intention. In the
-all-important particular of house-drainage--in the enforcement of
-water-supply, so far as circumstances rendered possible--in the
-effective preservation of exterior cleanliness--in the abatement of
-innumerable nuisances--in the provision and maintenance of sewerage and
-paving and lighting throughout the City--the public has seen your Hon.
-Court exercising very large powers with very unusual success. And this,
-let me add, during a time of no ordinary difficulty: a time when, day by
-day, the vast importance of sanitary improvement has been gaining ground
-among the educated classes of the country, as a deep and settled
-conviction; a time when the feelings of all classes have been powerfully
-excited, and when the metropolis especially has been convulsed with
-alarm, in the anticipation and in the aspect of a pestilence.
-
-In some other respects the Act has been less operative, and for an
-obvious reason. To legislate for health was new to you. It was only
-through the gradual investigation of officers, appointed under the Act,
-that you could become adequately informed of those sanitary requirements
-on which your ultimate legislation for the City must found itself. Only
-by their slow experience, only by failure as well as by success, was it
-possible that correct knowledge could be obtained of the powers really
-needful for fulfilling your sanitary intentions.
-
-In carefully watching the fluctuations of health amid your population;
-in investigating the causes which determine them; and in testing, on
-every occasion, how far these causes are amenable to the control of your
-Act of Parliament, I have arrived at the conclusions submitted to you in
-the present and in my previous Report.
-
- * * * * *
-
-To excuse the length at which I have addressed you, I have but another
-word to say. My apology consists in the assurance, which again I lay
-before you, that in spite of all your exertions, untimely and
-preventable death still prevails most largely in the population under
-your charge. If the deliberate promises of Science be not an empty
-delusion, it is practicable to reduce human mortality within your
-jurisdiction to nearly the half of its present prevalence.
-
-It is the sad prerogative of my Profession to have such knowledge of
-death as cannot lie within your experience. Knowing all that is implied
-in each one separate instance of its visitation--how much pain and
-sorrow, often how much bereavement and destitution, we, perhaps better
-than others, learn to appreciate that vast amount of social misery which
-has its symbol in the high death-rate of a population. It is from this
-practical point of view that I have ever estimated the importance of
-your functions, and have fixed the obligations of my own humbler office.
-Notwithstanding all that Medicine can achieve, to succour the body as it
-struggles against actual disease--notwithstanding those resources of
-drugs and handicraft, by which the physician or surgeon opposes death or
-mitigates pain in the detailed exercise of his art, all past experience,
-and every transaction of our daily practice, confirm the popular adage
-that _prevention is better than cure_. If this be true in any particular
-case, much more is it true in the largest application. While _Curative
-Medicine_--ministering step by step to the individual units of a
-population, can produce only minute and molecular changes in the health
-of society; Sanitary Law, embodying the principles of _Preventive
-Medicine_, may ensure to the aggregate masses of the community
-prolongation of life and diminution of suffering: in the working of some
-single enactment, it may affect the lives of generations of men, and may
-moderate in respect of millions the sources of orphanage and poverty.
-
-Surely, it is no common epoch in the history of the metropolis when you
-are appealing to the Legislature, on behalf of the Corporation, for the
-grant of additional powers towards the accomplishment of so great a
-beneficence. To me it has always been an act of the deepest and most
-anxious responsibility to address you; and it would ill have become me
-now, in the attempt to discharge so grave a duty, if I had spared any
-pains or withholden any conviction.
-
-While endeavouring in this, and in my previous Report, faithfully and in
-detail to depict for you the actual condition of human life within the
-City, and while seeking to deduce for you, from reason and experience,
-those sanitary principles which are applicable for its improvement, I
-have had no trivial or easy task; and you will pardon me, I hope, both
-if I have incompletely surmounted the difficulties of so large a
-subject, and if, by the length of my Report, I have made too great
-claims on your indulgence.
-
- I have the honour to remain,
-
- &c., &c.
-
-Note to Column I.
-
- Speaking generally, this column may be taken to express the number of
- houses in each Ward. Exception must be made, however, in respect of
- the four wards marked with asterisks; for in them the real number of
- houses somewhat exceeds the number of assessments. This discrepancy
- depends on the fact that, in the specified wards, a court containing
- several houses is often assessed by composition as a single property.
- Mr. Daw informs me that in order to correct on this score the numbers
- which stand opposite the Wards in question, addition should be made as
- follows:--to Bishopsgate Without, 80--raising its number to 1100; to
- Cripplegate Without, 150--raising its number to 1112; to Farringdon
- Without, 100--raising its number to 3633; to Portsoken, 150--raising
- its number to 1408. This would raise the total number to 16,384, which
- is about the estimated number of houses in the City. From the results
- of the last census it appeared that the population of the City was
- distributed as follows:--within the district of the City of London
- Union on an average of 7·1 persons to each house; within the district
- of the East and West London Unions on an average of 8·8 persons to
- each house.
-
-_Comparative prevalence, in the several Wards of the City, of such
-Deaths as particularly depend on local circumstances._
-
- +-------+--------------------+--------+---------+---------+---------+
- | I. | II. | III. | IV. | V. | VI. |
- | | | | | | |
- |Number | WARDS |Total |Separate |Cholera, |Fever, |
- |of | |for the |Totals of|Dysen- |_&c._ |
- |Assess-| |biennial|the two |tery, |Year |
- |ments. | |period, |years |Epidemic |ending |
- | | |from |ending |Diarrhœa.|Sept. |
- |_vide_ | |Oct. 1, |respec- |Year | |
- |Note. | |1848, to|tively |ending | |
- | | |Sept. |Sept. 29.|Sept. | |
- | | |28, | | | |
- | | |1850. | | | |
- | | | | | | |
- | | | | | | |
- | | | |1849|1850|1849|1850|1849|1850|
- +-------+--------------------+--------+----+----+----+----+----+----+
- | 184|Aldersgate Within | 30 | 15| 15| 1| ...| 1| 1|
- | 572|Aldersgate Without | 179 | 122| 57| 32| 4| 15| 5|
- | 809|Aldgate | 102 | 66| 36| 3| 1| 7| 7|
- | 133|Bassishaw | 7 | 5| 2| 3| ...| ...| 1|
- | 314|Billingsgate | 33 | 28| 5| 15| ...| 2| ...|
- | 334|Bishopsgate Within | 60 | 43| 17| 20| ...| 1| 3|
- | *1020|Bishopsgate Without | 329 | 231| 98| 88| 7| 18| 13|
- | 251|Bread Street | 22 | 16| 6| 2| ...| 3| ...|
- | 205|Bridge | 18 | 12| 6| 4| ...| ...| ...|
- | 536|Broad Street | 42 | 29| 13| 7| ...| 4| 1|
- | 194|Candlewick | 13 | 12| 1| 7| ...| ...| ...|
- | 499|Castlebaynard | 103 | 75| 28| 28| ...| 5| 5|
- | 341|Cheap | 32 | 22| 10| 4| 1| 3| ...|
- | 626|Coleman Street | 66 | 42| 24| 1| 3| 8| 3|
- | 294|Cordwainer | 5 | 5| ...| 2| ...| ...| ...|
- | 158|Cornhill | 4 | 2| 2| ...| ...| ...| ...|
- | 471|Cripplegate Within | 80 | 50| 30| 8| ...| 4| 1|
- | *962|Cripplegate Without | 299 | 207| 92| 86| 11| 15| 6|
- | 232|Dowgate | 25 | 20| 5| 12| ...| ...| ...|
- | 961|Farringdon Within | 153 | 117| 36| 67| ...| 9| 4|
- | *3533|Farringdon Without | 845 | 613| 232| 370| 19| 48| 40|
- | 409|Langbourn | 29 | 12| 17| 3| 1| 1| 2|
- | 166|Lime Street | 8 | 4| 4| 1| ...| ...| ...|
- | *1258|Portsoken | 143 | 82| 61| 29| 5| 7| 14|
- | 343|Queenhithe | 59 | 36| 23| 14| 1| 2| 4|
- | 611|Tower | 46 | 22| 24| 9| ...| 4| 3|
- | 253|Vintry | 14 | 11| 3| 5| ...| 2| 1|
- | 235|Walbrook | 24 | 15| 9| 3| 1| ...| 2|
- | |City of London Union| 25 | 18| 7| 1| ...| 7| 2|
- +-------+--------------------+--------+----+----+----+----+----+----+
- | 15904|The Deaths from all}| | | | | | | |
- | 480|causes within same }| 2795 |1932| 863| 825| 54| 166| 118|
- |-------|period were 6551 }| | | | | | | |
- | 16384| | | 2795 | 879 | 284 |
- +-------+--------------------+--------+---------+---------+---------+
-
- +-------+--------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+
- | I. | II. | VII. | VIII. | IX. | X. |
- | | | | | | |
- |Number | WARDS |Small |Erysipe- |Scarlet |Diarrhœa,|
- |of | |Pox, |las, |Fever, |Pneumo- |
- |Assess-| |_&c._ |Puerp. |Cynanche |nia, & |
- |ments. | |Year |Fever, |Maligna, |Bronchi- |
- | | |ending |Pyæmia, |_&c._ |tis of |
- |_vide_ | |Sept. |_&c._ |Year |Infants. |
- |Note. | | |Year |ending |Year |
- | | | |ending |Sept. |ending |
- | | | |Sept. | |Sept. |
- | | | | | | |
- | | | | | | |
- | | | | | | |
- | | |1849|1850|1849|1850|1849|1850|1849|1850|
- +-------+--------------------+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
- | 184|Aldersgate Within | ...| ...| ...| 1| 4| 2| 3| 7|
- | 572|Aldersgate Without | 1| 5| 4| 3| 14| ...| 27| 12|
- | 809|Aldgate | 2| ...| 2| 2| 5| 2| 18| 9|
- | 133|Bassishaw | ...| ...| 1| ...| ...| ...| ...| ...|
- | 314|Billingsgate | ...| ...| 2| ...| 3| ...| 2| 1|
- | 334|Bishopsgate Within | ...| ...| 1| 1| 2| ...| 3| 5|
- | *1020|Bishopsgate Without | 4| 5| 3| 5| 10| 3| 41| 19|
- | 251|Bread Street | ...| ...| 1| 1| ...| ...| 6| 3|
- | 205|Bridge | ...| ...| ...| 1| 2| 1| 3| 1|
- | 536|Broad Street | ...| ...| 1| ...| 3| 3| 4| 6|
- | 194|Candlewick | ...| ...| ...| ...| ...| ...| ...| ...|
- | 499|Castlebaynard | 1| ...| 1| ...| 4| ...| 6| 11|
- | 341|Cheap | ...| ...| 2| 1| 2| ...| 5| 3|
- | 626|Coleman Street | ...| ...| 2| ...| 3| ...| 10| 9|
- | 294|Cordwainer | ...| ...| ...| ...| ...| ...| ...| ...|
- | 158|Cornhill | ...| ...| ...| ...| ...| ...| 2| ...|
- | 471|Cripplegate Within | ...| ...| 2| 2| 3| ...| 12| 8|
- | *962|Cripplegate Without | 3| 7| 3| 3| 17| ...| 33| 29|
- | 232|Dowgate | ...| 2| ...| ...| 1| 1| 2| ...|
- | 961|Farringdon Within | 1| 1| 1| 1| 4| 1| 15| 17|
- | *3533|Farringdon Without | 2| 10| 13| 12| 34| 10| 56| 72|
- | 409|Langbourn | 1| ...| ...| 2| 1| 1| 1| 2|
- | 166|Lime Street | ...| ...| ...| ...| ...| ...| 1| 1|
- | *1258|Portsoken | ...| 2| 2| 1| 9| 1| 14| 10|
- | 343|Queenhithe | 2| 1| 1| 1| 7| 2| 5| 4|
- | 611|Tower | ...| ...| 1| 3| 1| 2| 3| 8|
- | 253|Vintry | ...| ...| ...| ...| 1| ...| 1| ...|
- | 235|Walbrook | ...| ...| ...| ...| 2| 2| 4| 3|
- | |City of London Union| ...| ...| 1| ...| 2| 1| 3| 3|
- +-------+--------------------+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+
- | 15904|The Deaths from all}| | | | | | | | |
- | 480|causes within same }| 17| 33| 44| 40| 135| 32| 285| 243|
- |-------|period were 6551 }| | | | | | | | |
- | 16384| | 50 | 84 | 167 | 528 |
- +-------+--------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+
-
- +-------+--------------------+---------+---------+
- | I. | II. | XI. | XII. |
- | | | | |
- |Number | WARDS |Infantile|Hydro- |
- |of | |Zymotic |cephalus,|
- |Assess-| |Dis. |Convul- |
- |ments. | |Hooping- |sions, |
- | | |cough, |_&c._ |
- |_vide_ | |Croup, |Year |
- |Note. | |Measles, |ending |
- | | |_&c._ |Sept. |
- | | |Year | |
- | | |ending | |
- | | |Sept. | |
- | | | | |
- | | |1849|1850|1849|1850|
- +-------+--------------------+----+----+----+----+
- | 184|Aldersgate Within | 2| 2| 4| 2|
- | 572|Aldersgate Without | 13| 9| 16| 19|
- | 809|Aldgate | 9| 5| 20| 10|
- | 133|Bassishaw | ...| ...| 1| 1|
- | 314|Billingsgate | 4| ...| ...| 4|
- | 334|Bishopsgate Within | 6| 5| 5| 3|
- | *1020|Bishopsgate Without | 32| 15| 35| 31|
- | 251|Bread Street | ...| ...| 4| 2|
- | 205|Bridge | 2| 1| 1| 2|
- | 536|Broad Street | 7| 1| 3| 2|
- | 194|Candlewick | 2| ...| 3| 1|
- | 499|Castlebaynard | 10| 5| 20| 7|
- | 341|Cheap | ...| 2| 5| 3|
- | 626|Coleman Street | 6| 2| 12| 7|
- | 294|Cordwainer | ...| ...| 3| ...|
- | 158|Cornhill | ...| 1| ...| 1|
- | 471|Cripplegate Within | 7| 7| 14| 12|
- | *962|Cripplegate Without | 31| 15| 19| 21|
- | 232|Dowgate | 1| 1| 4| 1|
- | 961|Farringdon Within | 9| 2| 11| 10|
- | *3533|Farringdon Without | 33| 31| 57| 38|
- | 409|Langbourn | 3| 2| 2| 7|
- | 166|Lime Street | ...| 2| 2| 1|
- | *1258|Portsoken | 12| 10| 9| 18|
- | 343|Queenhithe | 4| 4| 1| 6|
- | 611|Tower | ...| 1| 4| 7|
- | 253|Vintry | 1| ...| 5| 2|
- | 235|Walbrook | 1| 1| 5| ...|
- | |City of London Union| 1| ...| 3| 1|
- +-------+--------------------+----+----+----+----+
- | 15904|The Deaths from all}| | | | |
- | 480|causes within same }| 196| 124| 264| 219|
- |-------|period were 6551 }| | | | |
- | 16384| | 320 | 483 |
- +-------+--------------------+---------+---------+
-
- Letter by Mr. THOMAS TAYLOR, Lecturer on Chemistry at the Medical
- School of the Middlesex Hospital, on the Chemical Qualities of certain
- Waters.
-
- 4, Vere-street, Oxford-street,
- November, 1850.
-
- DEAR SIR,
-
- Having, by your desire, submitted the following samples of water to
- chemical analysis, I now beg leave to lay before you the result; and
- also, at the same time, to reply to certain questions which you
- likewise proposed.
-
- The samples of water taken for examination were derived from the
- following sources:--
-
- A. Water supplied by the New River Company.
-
- B. Water supplied by the East London Company.
-
- C. Water from a spring in the neighbourhood of Haslemere, Surrey.
-
- D. Water from a well in Bishopsgate-street.
-
- A. This water was taken from an upright pipe in a court-yard of the
- Guildhall. It was slightly opalescent, inodorous, and tasteless;
- numerous small particles floated in it, which took a considerable time
- to subside. The matter deposited was of a rust colour, and consisted
- of peroxide of iron, with a little sulphate and carbonate of lime, and
- organic matter. It is to be observed that, as the water from this pipe
- is seldom used, these impurities collect in the pipe, and are
- therefore in some measure accidental, although, prior to collecting
- the water, a considerable quantity had been allowed to run away. The
- water was allowed to free itself from these impurities by subsidence,
- before being submitted to analysis.
-
- By evaporation to dryness, an imperial gallon left a solid residue,
- weighing 17·33 grs., which consisted of--
-
- Carbonate of lime, with a little oxide of iron 11·12
- Carbonate of magnesia 0·60
- Sulphate of lime 1·56
- Chloride of sodium 2·40
- Silicic acid 0·37
- Organic matter 1·19
- -----
- 17·24
-
- When heated, this water became turbid; and, by continued boiling for
- two hours in an apparatus so arranged that the whole of the steam was
- condensed and returned to the water, 10·95 grs. of the earthy
- carbonates, coloured by oxide of iron, were deposited.
-
- The relative hardness of this water, as determined by the soap test,
- distilled water being taken as unity, was 13·3.
-
- * * * * *
-
- B. The second sample of water was taken from a small tap in the house
- of Mr. Hall, Bishopsgate-street. The tap was attached to the main.
-
- This water was without smell or taste, and free from floating matter.
- After standing some time, it deposited a very small quantity of oxide
- of iron. Although clear and transparent, it was not bright.
-
- It contained 19·10 grs. of solid matter in the imperial gallon. The
- solid matter consisted of--
-
- Carbonate of lime, with a little oxide of iron 14·58
- Carbonate of magnesia 0·44
- Sulphate of lime 1·54
- Chloride of sodium 1·71
- Silicic acid 0·32
- Organic matter 0·72
- -----
- 19·31
-
- Like the preceding water it became turbid when heated to the boiling
- point, and by continued ebullition for two hours, 12·90 grs. of
- carbonate of lime, coloured by oxide of iron, were precipitated.
-
- Hardness in reference to distilled water as unity = 19.
-
- * * * * *
-
- C. This water was taken by ourselves from a spring-head near
- Haslemere, Surrey. The spring issued from the foot of a low sand-hill
- covered with bushes, and was received into a natural basin about four
- or five feet in diameter, the bottom of which was lined with pebbles
- and small gravel. From this basin the water flowed into a large
- shallow pond.
-
- The temperature of the spring at its source was 49° Fahr., that of the
- air being 56° Fahr.
-
- This water was perfectly clear and brilliant, but not sparkling. It
- had no appreciable taste, but was peculiarly soft and agreeable. It
- did not contain carbonic acid in a free state, for when mixed with a
- solution of chloride of calcium and of ammonia not the slightest
- turbidity was produced. When boiled it did not lose its transparency,
- nor produce any deposit, until concentrated to about one-sixth of its
- volume, when glittering scales of hydrated silicic acid separated.
-
- An imperial gallon, when evaporated to dryness, left a solid residue,
- which weighed 5·24 grs.
-
- This residue was perfectly white when dried at 300° Fahr.; when heated
- to low redness, it charred slightly at the edges. The quantity of
- organic matter was therefore exceedingly small.
-
- Hardness in reference to distilled water as unity = 2·4.
-
- On analysis, an imperial gallon was found to contain--
-
- Carbonate of lime 2·00
- Chloride of sodium 1·46
- Sulphate of soda 0·407
- Silicic acid 1·143
- Organic matter 0·23
- -----
- 5·24
-
- Traces of an alkaline nitrate were also detected.
-
- During the short visit I made with you to Farnham, we examined several
- other springs near to their sources. In their general characters these
- waters closely resembled the preceding sample, all of them being
- remarkably soft, clear, transparent, inodorous, and free from any
- excess of organic matter, or of oxide of iron.
-
- By your desire two samples were subsequently sent to me; one marked
- ‘Barford,’ the other ‘Boorley.’
-
- The water marked Barford contained 6·30 grs. of solid matter in the
- imperial gallon; when evaporated, scales of silicic acid separated
- from it in the same manner as from the water taken at Haslemere.
- Neither of these waters contained any trace of carbonic acid. Their
- relative hardness (distilled being unity) was--Barford 2·4, Boorley
- 1·5.
-
- * * * * *
-
- D. The fourth sample of water was drawn from the pump near the church
- in Bishopsgate-street.
-
- This water was selected as exemplifying the general composition of the
- shallow well-water of the City of London, when the well is situated
- near to a burial-ground, as is frequently the case with the parochial
- wells.
-
- The water from this well is perfectly bright, clear, and even
- brilliant; it has an agreeable soft taste, and is much esteemed by
- the inhabitants of the parish, although, as will be seen by the
- subjoined analysis, it is an exceedingly hard water, and the large
- quantity of earthy salts it contains renders it unfit for all culinary
- and for most domestic purposes.
-
- When heated to the boiling point, this water becomes turbid, and by
- continued boiling of an imperial gallon of the water for two hours,
- 23·03 grs. of solid matter were deposited, consisting of 22·15 grs.
- carbonate of lime, and 0·88 carbonate of magnesia, with a trace of
- phosphate of lime.
-
- An imperial gallon of this water, when evaporated to dryness and the
- residue dried at a temperature of about 300° Fahr., left a residue
- which amounted to 88·07 grs. From another sample of the same water
- taken a month afterwards, 84·53 grs. of solid residue were obtained.
-
- By an analysis, an imperial gallon of the water gave--
-
- Carbonate of lime 28·97
- Carbonate of magnesia 2·61
- Sulphate of lime 17·85
- Chloride of sodium 16·95
- Nitrate of potass 12·40
- Nitrate of soda 1·50
- Nitrate of magnesia 4·92
- Nitrate of ammonia 4·01
- Silica 0·80
- Phosphate of lime traces
- Organic matter
- ------
- 90·01
-
- The residue left by evaporation was of a light brown colour; when
- calcined at a low red heat it became slightly charred; but I could
- not, with any degree of certainty, determine the precise quantity of
- organic matter it contained: it was certainly very small.
-
- The excess of solid matter, as shown by the analysis, over the
- quantity obtained by evaporating the water to dryness, is owing to the
- decomposition of the nitrate of ammonia.
-
- The quantity of alkaline and earthy nitrates in this water is very
- remarkable. These salts are doubtless derived from the decomposition
- of animal matter in the adjacent churchyard. Their presence, conjoined
- with the inconsiderable quantity of organic matter which the water
- contains, illustrates in a very forcible manner the power the earth
- possesses of depriving the water that percolates it of any animal
- matter it may hold in solution; and moreover shows in how complete and
- rapid a manner this process is effected.
-
- In this case the distance of the well from the churchyard is little
- more than the breadth of the footpath, and yet this short extent of
- intervening ground has, by virtue of the oxidizing power of the earth,
- been sufficient wholly to decompose and render inoffensive the liquid
- animal matter that has oozed from the putrefying corpses in the
- churchyard.
-
- * * * * *
-
- The result of these analyses confirms the general statement that the
- water derived from the sandy districts of Farnham and Bagshot is of
- eminent purity, and therefore peculiarly fitted for all those purposes
- of domestic and manufacturing economy which require the use of a very
- soft water.
-
- When regarded in conjunction with the analyses made by other chemists,
- of the water taken from the streams, pools, and other collections of
- water in the same locality, it also points out that, if it be
- desirable to secure the water in its utmost state of purity, it should
- be collected at its very source, before it has had time to become
- impregnated with the various mineral and saline ingredients of the
- different soils through which it would have to pass. The total absence
- of free carbonic acid in these waters is a very remarkable fact, and
- one which I believe has not been hitherto noticed.
-
- It will also be perceived that the principal solid constituent of the
- water supplied by the New River and the East London companies is
- carbonate of lime, held in solution by an excess of carbonic acid, an
- opinion already expressed by several chemists. These waters also
- contain an appreciable quantity of oxide of iron.
-
- When the water from these sources is boiled, or simply brought to the
- boiling temperature, the excess of carbonic acid is driven off, and
- the carbonate of lime being thus deprived of its solvent, the greater
- portion of it, together with the oxide of iron, is thrown down in the
- form of an insoluble crystalline powder, while the water is rendered
- comparatively soft and pure.
-
- Were it therefore possible that means could be devised by which the
- quantity of water necessary for the daily supply of London could be
- deprived of its excess of earthy carbonates in a manner sufficiently
- economic, comprehensive, and effectual, the citizens of the metropolis
- would enjoy the advantage of a tolerably pure soft water, free from
- those inconveniences which attend the use of the present hard-water
- supply.
-
- Confining myself wholly to a chemical view of the subject, the
- principal disadvantages attending the use of hard river waters are--
-
- First, The precipitation of earthy matter on the inside of vessels in
- which the water is heated. This furring of the vessel, as it is
- called, leads to its more rapid destruction, and has also the
- inconvenience of rendering it more difficult to cleanse, so that the
- flavour and odour of the various substances cooked in it are not
- readily removed. From the non-conducting power of the earthy crust, an
- increased consumption of fuel is also required for the due heating of
- the vessel.
-
- Secondly, The admixture of the earthy salts with the various articles
- of food submitted to the action of hot water.
-
- Thirdly, Diminished solvent power, as required for the purposes of the
- chemist, the brewer, and for many domestic purposes, as in the making
- of tea, soups, &c.
-
- Fourthly, Diminished cleansing power, both as regards the direct
- solvent action of the water, and also as causing the decomposition of
- soap, and consequent increased consumption of that article. I must,
- however, remark that the annual loss reported to arise from this cause
- appears to me considerably overrated, since water is rarely used for
- the washing of linen until previously boiled, and the common practice
- of adding carbonate of soda to the water completely destroys the ill
- effects resulting from the hardness of the water. The additional
- expense of the carbonate of soda, thus added, is too trifling to merit
- notice; but when this salt is used in excess, as is generally the
- case, it produces the more serious evil of materially impairing the
- strength of the fabric submitted to its action.
-
- The only real advantage which hard water possesses over soft (and in
- the present state of things one of considerable importance), is, that
- it does not act upon or erode the lead of the pipes and cisterns in
- which it is contained.
-
- There are also some particular cases of minor importance in which hard
- water is preferred; thus dyers prefer hard water for rinsing of their
- goods, soft water extracting too much of the colour; but these cases
- are comparatively rare, and might be easily accomplished by an
- artificial hardening of the water.
-
- The following Table indicates the relative hardness of the different
- waters as determined by the Soap test; distilled water being taken as
- unity, as proposed by Professor Brande. It also shows the effect of
- boiling in reducing the hardness of the water. The numbers express
- the direct quantity of an alcoholic solution of soap, which an equal
- bulk of each water requires in order to form a lather remaining
- permanent for from five to ten minutes.
-
- Distilled water 1·0
- Water from Haslemere 2·4
- Boorley 1·5
- Barford 2·4
- Water of the New River Company 13·3
- Ditto after being boiled 4·7
- Water of the East London Company 19·0
- Ditto after being boiled 5·6
- Water from the well in Bishopsgate-street 47·4
- Ditto after being boiled 26·0
-
- The experiments which I have recently made on the action of pure water
- upon lead, clearly point out the necessity of keeping the pipes always
- full, especially in those instances in which the water has a tendency,
- however slight, to erode the lead. As the importance of this part of
- the question does not appear to have been sufficiently appreciated by
- the advocates of a constant instead of an intermittent supply, I will
- briefly recount the facts of the case, although I do not offer them as
- presenting anything particularly novel. If a piece of bright lead be
- placed in a stoppered bottle, completely filled with recently
- distilled water, so that the access of air be wholly excluded, the
- lead is but very slightly acted upon, and it is only after the lapse
- of three or four days that its surface becomes spangled with a few
- minute crystals of carbonate of lead.
-
- If the stopper of the bottle be now removed, the lead still remaining
- beneath the surface of the water, the erosive action of the water on
- the lead proceeds more rapidly, but still slowly. But if now a portion
- of the water be poured off, so as to leave the lead only partially
- immersed, rapid action on the lead immediately commences. In the
- course of thirty-six or forty-eight hours, its surface becomes coated
- with crystalline scales of carbonate of lead, which, falling off, are
- succeeded by others, so that after the lapse of a few days an abundant
- deposit of carbonate and hydrated oxide of lead is found at the bottom
- of the vessel. If the experiment be made with distilled water that has
- been previously agitated with air, so as to completely aërate it, the
- lead is more rapidly acted upon, even in a closed vessel, thus clearly
- showing how much the action of the water upon the lead depends upon
- the presence or absence of atmospheric air.
-
- Now, in a minor degree, this is precisely what takes place in a leaden
- pipe conveying water capable of eroding lead. While the pipe is full,
- comparatively but little action occurs; but when the pipe is filled
- alternately with air and with water, it is placed under the most
- favourable circumstances to ensure a rapid erosion of its substance,
- and consequent contamination of the water.
-
- The rush of water necessarily produced by an intermittent flow must
- also detach portions of carbonate of lead from the sides of the pipe,
- even in those cases where the water has no very decided action on
- lead, and it is therefore far from improbable that in this manner the
- poison of lead is occasionally conveyed into our kitchens, and becomes
- mixed with our food.
-
- According to your desire, I have examined the action of the waters
- from the above-mentioned sources on clean lead, and have arrived at
- the following conclusions:--the water from Haslemere has a slow though
- decided action upon the metal, no effect taking place until the lead
- had been partially immersed for four or five days. After that time, a
- small deposit of carbonate of lead was perceptible at the bottom of
- the vessel, although none could be detected in solution. The absence
- of carbonic acid in the water from Haslemere, Boorley, and Barford,
- would in all probability prevent their acting upon lead, were
- atmospheric air at the same time excluded. A piece of lead that had
- been kept for a week in a closed bottle filled with water from
- Haslemere did not exhibit the least trace of carbonate of lead, nor
- could the presence of lead be detected in the water.
-
- It is scarcely necessary to add, that the water as drawn from the
- pipes of the New River and East London Companies does not exhibit the
- least solvent action upon lead; when, however, purified by boiling,
- and placed in contact with lead, crystals of carbonate of lead were
- observable after the lapse of three days in the water of the New River
- Company, while, owing to its greater hardness, the water of the East
- London Company did not exhibit any traces of carbonate of lead until
- the expiration of more than a week, and even then only in a slight
- degree. The same waters purified by the patented process of Clark did
- not exhibit so decided an action upon lead as when purified by
- boiling; but after evaporating to dryness the water in which lead had
- been immersed for three weeks, and dissolving the residue in dilute
- nitric acid, the presence of a minute quantity of lead was rendered
- evident.
-
- It therefore appears that if leaden pipes, and especially if leaden
- cisterns, are to be employed in the distribution and storage of water,
- on the system of interrupted supply, it will be a necessary safeguard,
- that the water thus conveyed and stored should not be of less hardness
- than from six to seven degrees, compared with distilled water as
- unity; and conversely, it also follows, that if the inhabitants of the
- metropolis are to gain the advantage of using a still purer and softer
- water, it will be requisite to do away with the existing leaden pipes
- and cisterns, and to substitute for them some material which shall not
- communicate any poisonous or noxious ingredient to the water. As
- matters now stand, we escape daily poisoning by the use of water
- loaded with earthy salts, and are thus compelled to drink an impure
- water on account of the impurity of our vessels. Would it not be
- better, and is it impossible, to drink the pure element from a pure
- cup?
-
- I remain, dear sir, with much respect,
- Yours obediently,
-
- THOMAS TAYLOR.
-
- To JOHN SIMON, Esq., F.R.S.,
- Officer of Health to the City of London.
-
-
-
-
-THIRD ANNUAL REPORT.
-
-
- _November 25th, 1851._
-
- GENTLEMEN,
-
-I have the honour of laying before you, in the various subjoined tables,
-such information as will enable you to measure the present sanitary
-condition of the City of London.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1. The first table (Appendix, No. I.) contains a statement of the
-present population of the City, as derived from the Registrar-General’s
-recent census; and it compares the existing numbers in each division of
-the City with those given at the last enumeration in 1841.
-
-In examining this table you will observe that, during these ten years,
-the general population of the City has increased about 3⅖ _per cent._;
-that this increase has not been uniform through the nine sub-districts
-of your jurisdiction; that in some it has been unimportant; that in
-others there has been an actual decrease, extending even to 4⅔ _per
-cent._ on the previous population; while in the whole East London Union
-the numbers have risen considerably above the aggregate rate of
-increase, and in the St. Botolph sub-district exceed those of the former
-census by more than 16 _per cent._
-
-Passing over the minor differences which have taken place in the
-distribution of the population, I cannot regard that larger increase
-without apprehension and regret. Probably for the most part it
-represents the continued influx of a poor population into localities
-undesirable for residence, and implies that habitations--previously
-unwholesome by their over-crowdedness--are now still more densely
-thronged by a squalid and sickly population.
-
-I congratulate your Hon. Court on the recent acquisition of powers (to
-the nature of which I shall presently advert) for the reduction and
-prevention of this serious evil.
-
- * * * * *
-
-2. The second table[61] presents a summary of the City mortality for the
-year which terminated at Michaelmas last; showing the deaths, as they
-have occurred, male and female, during each quarter of the year, in the
-several districts and sub-districts of the City; and including at the
-foot of each column, a statement of the year’s death-rate _per_ thousand
-of the living in each such district and sub-district.
-
- [61] _Appendix_, No. V. The calculated death-rates are omitted from
- this, as from the other annual tables:--the quinquennial rates (App.
- No. II.) giving more useful results.--J. S., 1854.
-
-You will observe that, during the 52 weeks, dated from September 29th,
-1850, to September 27th, 1851, there have died of the population under
-your charge 2978 persons; giving, for the City aggregately, a rate of
-nearly 23 deaths for every thousand living persons.
-
-The rate of last year was little over 21 _per_ thousand.
-
-In my last Annual Report I suggested that the death-rate then prevailing
-was probably (from temporary circumstances) more favourable than the
-true average of the City; that it corresponded to the period of recovery
-from severe epidemic influences; that it seemed exceptional; and that
-you might be prepared for this year’s mortality showing again a tendency
-to increase.
-
-Such has been the case; and it illustrates the necessity of appealing to
-cyclical averages for correct intelligence as to the healthiness of a
-population. To my mind the increased mortality of this year does not
-indicate any deterioration of the City in respect of sanitary matters
-under your control; it shows merely that the death-rate, which must be
-considered our present average for the City, is in truth higher than
-that which favourable circumstances, foreign to your jurisdiction, last
-year permitted us to attain.
-
-Looking to the total mortality of the last three years (the period for
-which I have had the honour of serving your Commission), I find that
-9493 deaths have taken place; which, the mean population of the time
-being 129,922, gives an average rate of 24·35 deaths _per_ thousand _per
-annum_. This accords very nearly with a death-rate (24·36) deduced from
-the septennial period 1838-44, during which (according to the
-Registrar-General) 22,127 deaths occurred in a population estimated at
-129,739.[62]
-
- [62] Since 1841, when the Census gave these figures, the limits of the
- West London Union have been slightly altered. The Inner Temple and
- Barnard’s Inn have been added to it, while part of St. Sepulchre’s
- parish has been taken away.
-
-Assuming our City mortality to be accurately represented by these
-averages, I need not inform your Hon. Court that such a death-rate is
-unduly high. I have already, in previous Reports, laid before you the
-materials for measuring its excess,--materials which seem to show that
-our existing death-rate is nearly the double of that which better
-circumstances have elsewhere rendered attainable.[63]
-
- [63] The death-rate to which I particularly refer in the text, and
- which I cited in my last year’s report, is that of a large district in
- Northumberland, numbering 27,628 inhabitants, where, during the seven
- years 1838-44, the mortality was at the rate of only 14 _per_ thousand
- _per annum_; and even in this comparatively low proportion a very
- distinct share might still be called preventable deaths.
-
-It is not to the City alone of metropolitan districts that this high
-mortality belongs. Unhappily it affects the entire Metropolis; and we
-may find other towns in England, and still more on the Continent, where
-the death-rate is higher than under your jurisdiction. Yet your Hon.
-Court will not doubt that the standard to be adopted for your estimate
-of healthiness ought to be the lowest known death-rate; that every
-avoidable death represents an evil to society; and that, if a mortality
-of 12, or 13, or 14 _per_ thousand _per annum_ can be reached for one
-mixed population, there is ample room for discontent among any other
-population, which finds itself doomed to perish at double the rate of
-the first.
-
- * * * * *
-
-3. In the third table[64] all the deaths of the last three years are
-enumerated in a form which may enable you to compare one year with
-another, and one sub-district with another, in respect of their several
-contributions to the total mortality.
-
- [64] This information is now included in the Quinquennial Synopsis,
- _Appendix_, No. II.
-
- * * * * *
-
-4. In the fourth table[65] are classified, according to the ages at
-which they occurred, 9476[66] deaths of the last three years. This table
-is arranged in a manner to display its results--(1) for each year
-separately, and (2) for each Union separately, in order that you may
-observe what local or annual differences have obtained as to the ages of
-chief mortality. You will notice that in 3469 instances, nearly
-three-eighths of the whole, death has befallen children under five years
-old. Children at this age constitute about a tenth part of the
-population of the City. They accordingly die at about four times the
-rate which would fall to them as equal participators in the average
-mortality of the district. The next table will throw some light on this
-disproportionate excess of infant deaths.
-
- [65] Now embodied in Table VIII.
-
- [66] In the remaining number (17) the particulars of age and residence
- could not be correctly ascertained.
-
- * * * * *
-
-5. In it[67] an enumeration is made of such deaths, during the last
-three years, as have arisen in consequence of acute disease partially or
-entirely preventable. They amount to 3923--more than two-fifths of the
-entire mortality of the period.
-
- [67] _Appendix_, No. IX. includes this Table.
-
-I would especially beg the attention of your Hon. Court to the
-particulars set forth in the successive columns of this table.
-
-The first column shows 391 deaths by fever; and of these, without
-hesitation, I would speak as entirely preventable. Under favourable
-sanitary conditions fever is unknown. The deaths arising from it befall
-for the most part persons in the prime of life, whose premature removal,
-in the midst of their vigour and usefulness, is not only a direct
-weakening of society, but is also, in respect of orphanage and
-widowhood, a frequent source to the public of indirect detriment and
-expense.
-
-In the second column, swelled by the epidemic visitation of 1849, you
-will find 902 deaths referred to Asiatic Cholera, and to other kindred
-diseases. Comparatively few cases of the kind have occurred since
-Michaelmas, 1849; an overwhelming majority belonged to the summer
-quarter then terminating, when the Metropolis generally was suffering
-from the presence of Cholera. I have already had occasion to show you
-that this frightful pestilence belongs only to localities which, by
-their general epidemic mortality, have previously been stigmatised as
-unhealthy; that, over districts otherwise healthy, it migrates without
-striking a blow; that it may, therefore, with confidence be spoken of as
-a disease proportionate to removable causes--in other words, as a
-preventable disease.
-
-I cannot pass over these two columns, without begging you to observe
-what perhaps may be novel to you. If, instead of reckoning the
-cholera-deaths as belonging solely to the one year in which they
-happened, you reckon them as belonging to the whole term of years which
-elapsed between the two visitations of the epidemic, and distribute them
-equally over that period, so as to form an average--say for fifteen
-years, you cannot fail to notice how largely, in the long run, the
-destruction by fever (which is always here) surpasses the fatality of
-that Eastern disease; so much so, that the average annual mortality by
-the latter probably does not amount to half the fatality of the former.
-
-Nor must it be lost sight of, that if the _deaths_ by typhus double in
-number those produced by cholera, the list of _persons attacked_ by the
-former disease, and thereby for a long while incapacitated and
-suffering, is immeasurably beyond this proportion. Two or three times
-the number of deaths by cholera would give you the number of seizures,
-and enable you to estimate all the direct mischief caused by it; while,
-in regard of typhus, probably for one death there are twenty cases of
-protracted illness, tardy convalescence, and injured constitution. Not
-only are the deaths double in number, but each of them indicates an
-infinitely larger amount of sickness and suffering not immediately
-productive of death.
-
-The frightful suddenness of the rarer disease, and the condensation of
-its epidemic fatality into some single year, give it more apparent
-importance than belongs to the familiar name of typhus; but I can assure
-your Hon. Court, that if a large amount of preventable death, and a
-still larger amount of preventable misery, be strong arguments for
-sanitary improvement and activity, those arguments are more abundantly
-derivable from the constant pressure of fever and its kindred maladies,
-than from the sharper but infrequent visitations of the foreign
-pestilence.
-
-In the third column of this table come deaths by scarlatina. Of these,
-perhaps a certain proportion would occur even under favourable
-circumstances; for, whatever may have been the original derivation of
-the disease, it is impossible to doubt that the severity of its attack
-mainly depends on conditions peculiar to the person of the patient, and
-that no perfection of external circumstances will ensure mildness of
-infection. But on the other hand it is certain, that, under attacks of
-the disease at first equally malignant, adequate ventilation with pure
-air will enable one patient to wrestle successfully against the poison,
-while another, less favourably circumstanced, will rapidly sink beneath
-its influence; and hence I have no hesitation in assuring you, in
-respect of the 213 deaths registered under this head, that a majority
-would have been avoided under improved domestic arrangements.
-
-In the fourth column, you will read of 91 deaths by small pox. Your
-judgment will not be a harsh one, if you assume that 90 of these were
-the result of criminal negligence. Under the present administration of
-the Poor Laws, vaccination is not only accessible to all members of the
-community, but is literally pressed on the acceptance of the poor. Those
-stupid prejudices, which for some years retarded the universal adoption
-of Jenner’s great discovery, have now died away; the neglect of
-vaccination must be regarded as the omission of a recognised and
-imperative duty. Deaths of children, arising in this parental neglect,
-ought to be considered in the same light as if they arose in the neglect
-to feed or to clothe; and I am disposed to believe, that the readiest
-way of bringing this view of the case before those uneducated classes,
-where the omission usually arises, would be to procure Coroner’s
-inquests every year in respect of some half dozen or more instances
-where the evidence of neglect might happen to be glaring.
-
-In the fifth column of the table stand recorded a hundred deaths by the
-poison of erysipelas, in one form or another; arising sometimes
-spontaneously, sometimes in connection with the child-bearing state,
-sometimes in sequel of accidental lesions and surgical operations.
-
-My daily experience as a Surgeon--especially as a Hospital-Surgeon,
-enables me confidently to speak of these diseases as an artificial
-product of unhealthy exterior conditions. The contrasting results of
-surgical operations in town and in country--of operations undertaken
-amid pur-ventilation, in spacious cleanly rooms and dry localities,
-with those undertaken under opposite circumstances (in the dwellings of
-the poor for instance, or wherever else amid damp, dirt, and
-over-crowding), and the similar experience which exists as to the
-origination of puerperal fever, would be quite conclusive as to the
-fact, that of the 101 deaths under this head, a large majority might
-have been prevented.
-
-Next, in the sixth, seventh and eighth columns, stand deaths arising in
-the chief acute diseases of infancy, those to which the disproportionate
-mortality of infants is mainly due. Many careful statistical
-observations, as well as personal experience, convince me that the
-immense fatality recorded under this head, is, to a very great extent,
-due to obviable causes.
-
-To bring this matter distinctly before you, I must take, as a standard
-of comparison, some district where the general death-rate is
-sufficiently low to distinguish it as eminently healthy; and in such an
-one you will notice a marked diminution, not only (of course) in the
-_number_ of infant deaths, but likewise in their _proportion_ to the
-total mortality.
-
-Such a district is that of the combined parishes of Glendale, Bellingham
-and Haltwhistle, in the county of Northumberland. In it the general
-death-rate is 14; in the East and West London Unions of the City of
-London, the general death-rate is 26·73. In the former district,
-children under five constituting more than an eighth of the population
-(1/7·6), their deaths form about a quarter of the whole mortality; while
-in the latter district, where the children are in smaller
-proportion--namely about 1/9 of the population, their deaths are not
-much less than half (1/2·21) of the whole mortality. Thus, in the
-healthier district they die at less than double the average rate for all
-ages; in the unhealthier, at more than four times that average.
-
-A still better method of district-comparison, is to arrange in a series
-the death-rates prevailing in several localities for persons _over five
-years of age_, and side by side with this column, another for the
-death-rates of children _under five years of age_. The first column will
-of course indicate very well the relative sanitary conditions of the
-districts; but the differences between them will be expressed far more
-clearly, and, as it were, in a magnified form, in the column of
-infantine death-rates. Thus, for instance--to repeat the comparison just
-instituted between the Northumberland and the London district; the
-death-rate for all ages over five is about 12 in the former district,
-and nearly 15 in the latter; a difference quite sufficient to establish
-the inequality of their sanitary conditions. But, how much more strongly
-is this disparity expressed in the comparison of the infantine
-death-rates--26·5 for the healthier district, 107·57 for the unhealthier
-one!
-
-Nothing can be more conclusive than the evidence afforded by statistics,
-as to the dependence of high infantine mortality on the general causes
-of endemic unhealthiness. My own observation within the City gives
-complete confirmation to this view, showing me that the diseases
-specified in my table (diarrhœa, bronchitis and pneumonia,
-hooping-cough, croup and measles, hydrocephalus and convulsions) however
-various in nature they may seem, and however apt you may be to
-dissociate their occurrence from the thought of local causation, yet
-unquestionably multiply their victims, in proportion to the otherwise
-demonstrable unhealthiness of a place, owe most of their fatality to
-local causes, and may, therefore, to a great extent he disarmed of their
-malignity.
-
-The last column gives the total of those which have preceded it, and
-shows, out of 9493 deaths, 3923, all from acute disease, in intimate
-dependence on local and obviable causes. It will be a moderate
-computation with respect to these deaths, if we estimate that two-thirds
-of them might have been hindered.
-
-And yet it is not only by _acute_ disorders, that preventable death
-succeeds in ravaging the population. If we turn to the examination of
-_chronic_ ailments producing death, we may quickly recognise many
-indications of their preventability, and may satisfy ourselves that here
-also the general mortality might be very largely reduced.
-
-Look, for instance, at the whole immense class of scrofulous diseases,
-including pulmonary consumption, a class probably causing, directly or
-indirectly, at least a quarter of our entire mortality; and consider the
-vast influence which circumstances exert over its development.
-
-Of such circumstances some lie within your control, and affect masses of
-the people; but the more special causes of chronic disease lie rather
-out of your jurisdiction, and the option of avoiding them is a matter of
-individual will. Vicious habits and indiscretion; a life too indolent,
-or too laborious; poverty and privation; vicissitudes of weather and
-temperature; intemperance in diet; unwholesome and adulterated food;
-and, not least, inappropriate marriages tending to perpetuate particular
-kinds of disease; these words may suggest to you, briefly, that there
-are many influences, within the sphere of private life, by which the
-aggregate death-rate of a population is largely enhanced, but the
-control of which, if attainable, lies almost entirely at the discretion
-of the classes subject to their operation.
-
-Considering all these causes, and the needless waste of life occasioned
-by them, I can have little doubt that as much might be done by
-individuals, under the influence of improved education, to lessen the
-mortality from chronic disease, as by sanitary legislation to stay the
-sources of epidemic death. And regarding both classes of disease
-together--those, on the one hand, which are of endemic origin (arising
-in imperfect drainage, in defective water-supply, in ill-devised
-arrangement of buildings, in offensive and injurious trades, in the
-putrefaction of burial-grounds, and the like) and those classes, on the
-other, which arise in the circumstances of individual life, I can have
-no hesitation in estimating their joint operation at a moiety of our
-total death-rate, or in renewing an assertion of my last years’ Report,
-‘if the deliberate promises of Science be not an empty delusion, it is
-practicable to reduce human mortality within your jurisdiction to the
-half of its present average prevalence.’
-
-To revert, however, to your more special branch of the subject,--I have
-thought the present a convenient time for indicating to you the pressure
-of preventable death, arising in acute disease, because of the great
-addition which you have recently gained to your powers for enforcing
-prevention.
-
-That an average death-rate of nearly 25 _per_ thousand _per annum_
-prevails in the City; that three-eighths of your mortality consists in a
-premature extinction of infant life; that fatal disease, in more than
-two-fifths of its visitations, is of a kind which operates endemically
-and preventably;--these are the facts to which I have appealed, as my
-evidence of the need for sanitary activity and perseverance.
-
-On other occasions I have endeavoured to set before you what are those
-agencies hostile to life, which affect the masses of an urban
-population; and during the last three years your Hon. Court has shown
-its recognition of these causes, and has devoted attention to the means
-of counteracting them by appropriate sanitary measures.
-
-In too many instances, the powers first given you by the Legislature
-were inadequate to this great purpose. But now, armed with the further
-authority of your new Act of Parliament, you enjoy such means for
-sanitary improvement as have never yet been possessed by any Corporation
-in the country; such means as, judiciously wielded, cannot but produce
-the greatest advantage to persons living under your jurisdiction.
-
-As you are only now entering on the exercise of these powers, it may be
-convenient that I should submit to you a brief account of them, and I
-gladly turn from contemplating the spectacle of preventable death, to
-analyse the means of prevention now vested in you by the Legislature.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1. In regard of _public drainage or sewerage_, the first and most
-elementary condition of endemic health, I need hardly tell you that
-within the City, your powers are absolute. You have entire and sole
-responsibility for the construction and maintenance of sewers, for their
-cleaning or flushing, and for the prevention of noxious effluvia from
-their innumerable gully-holes.
-
- * * * * *
-
-2. In the all-important particular of _house-drainage_, your authority
-is sufficient for every purpose. You can order the complete abolition of
-cesspools; the construction of drainage in any premises within fifty
-feet of a sewer; its repair, cleansing, or renewal, whenever it may be
-disordered: and not only can you order these works to be done,
-but--failing the owner’s compliance with your notice, you can devolve
-the performance of his duty on your own workmen, and can recover your
-expenses from the recusant.
-
- * * * * *
-
-3. In regard of _water-supply to houses_ your powers are equally cogent,
-though the unsatisfactory condition of the water-trade continues a
-serious obstacle to their effective employment. You have authority here,
-as with house-drainage, to order the construction of all necessary
-apparatus, and to enforce the fulfilment of your order.
-
-Under both these heads, you possess a power hitherto but imperfectly
-used, the complete and constant exercise of which I would strongly
-recommend to your Hon. Court. In all those clauses of your Acts of
-Parliament, which relate to private works of house-drainage and
-water-supply, there occurs a very important phrase:--such works shall be
-constructed ‘to the satisfaction of the Commissioners.’ Now, of private
-works effected under the authority of your Act, during the last three
-years, a certain, not inconsiderable, share proves inoperative and bad.
-The mere overflowing of a water-butt (and in numberless instances this
-is the arrangement evasively adopted under your orders) can never
-suffice for the effectual cleansing of house-drains. I need scarcely
-inform you that an obstructed drain and choked privy, wherever they
-occur, are equivalent to a cesspool; shedding abroad the same effluvia,
-and producing the same deadly results. No gain is gotten to the
-wholesomeness of a house, by substituting for its former cesspool an
-equally offensive and inoperative drain. To my knowledge, much of the
-drainage done during the last three years is liable to this risk; and it
-appears to me indispensable that you should exert direct supervision
-against so serious an evil.
-
-I would recommend to your Hon. Court that, in issuing orders for the
-construction of drainage and water-supply, you should require a full
-specification to be delivered you of the works about to be undertaken,
-and should distinctly decide as to their sufficiency; or by a still
-simpler process, that you should fix and determine a certain standard of
-combined works; a model plan, in short, for house-drainage, privies, and
-water-supply, and should direct your Inspectors to certify to you the
-sufficiency of only such works as may accurately correspond to this
-design.
-
-I cannot but regard it as a grave calamity, that the general supply of
-water to the City remains beyond your control, in the hands of
-irresponsible traders; for its imperfect adaptation to the requirements
-of the public constitutes the largest sanitary evil of the day.
-
- * * * * *
-
-4. You have entire control over the _pavement of every public way_
-within the City, for its construction, maintenance, and cleansing; and
-in this respect you exercise a power of great sanitary value. The
-preservation of cleanliness along the whole extended surface of the
-City, including its many hundred courts and alleys, is indeed a branch
-of your functions which can hardly be over-estimated for its importance;
-and the fines which you have the power of levying from your
-contractors, whenever the scavenging is neglected, are useful securities
-for the general performance of their duties.
-
-It lies within your power to order, wherever you may think fit, the
-employment of the hose and jet for the purpose of surface-cleansing in
-courts and alleys: and, I may add, that the advantages of this most
-effective sanitary process have been highly appreciated where you have
-directed its application.
-
-In some of the poorer localities, complaints have arisen in a matter
-relating to the pavements, where you are not able to afford the
-complainants effectual relief: viz., with respect to certain inhabitants
-throwing refuse and offensive matters from the houses into the public
-way, so that nuisance is created. I have already suggested to your Hon.
-Court, and I beg leave here to repeat, that in the 41st clause of the
-City Police Act, provision is made for the prevention of this particular
-offence, and that your four Inspectors are manifestly unable to relieve
-the Police Force of their legal responsibility in the matter.
-
- * * * * *
-
-5. Your powers for enforcing the wholesome _cleanliness of private
-premises_ are equally considerable. You can order the removal of
-offensive matter, the purification and whitewashing of premises, and the
-abatement of any nuisance arising in conditions of filth. In case of
-need, as shown by a medical certificate, you can summon the offender
-before your Court; and (under your new Act) you can punish with a heavy
-fine any repetition of the nuisance against which your order has once
-been issued.
-
- * * * * *
-
-6. So long as _slaughter-houses_ are tolerated within the City (and it
-is to be hoped this may not be long) you have power to regulate their
-use, according to your discretion, with a view to their cleanliness and
-better management; and in case of disobedience to your orders, you have
-power to enforce the temporary suspension of slaughtering. Your new Act
-renders illegal any slaughtering in cellars, or any keeping of cattle
-there: and it prohibits that offensive exposure of putrescent hides,
-which has so often been complained of in the vicinity of Leadenhall
-Market.
-
- * * * * *
-
-7. In close connection with the regulation of slaughter-houses, your new
-Act gives you authority in a matter hitherto quite foreign to your
-jurisdiction, but where your vigilance may no doubt be exercised with
-great advantage to the public health. You are authorised to _appoint
-Inspectors of slaughter-houses and of meat_; and these officers are
-required to inspect shops, markets, and slaughter-houses, and to seize
-and destroy any meat which may appear to them unsound or unwholesome. A
-further clause of very extensive application enables you to deal
-generally with all cases, where _unwholesome provisions_ are exposed for
-sale; and this clause is so constructed as to include and render penal
-all those _fraudulent adulterations of food_ which render it detrimental
-to health.
-
- * * * * *
-
-8. You are invested with important authority against _such trades and
-occupations as are offensive or injurious_ to their neighbourhood. Under
-your former Act, you can subject to penalties any person who shall
-‘roast or burn, boil, distil, or otherwise decompose any root, drug, or
-other article or thing, in any house or building, and thereby cause
-offensive or injurious smells or vapours to be emitted therefrom, so as
-to become a common nuisance;’ and the same Act also gave you a very
-inoperative clause against such nuisance-causing manufactories as might
-begin to work in the City after the commencement of that Act.
-
-Your new law enacts that everything practicable shall be done for the
-suppression of all nuisances arising in manufactures and the
-like:--that, after the first of January next, every furnace used in the
-City shall be such as to consume its own smoke; and that whatever trade
-or business may occasion noxious or offensive effluvia, or otherwise
-annoy the inhabitants of its neighbourhood, shall be required to employ,
-to your satisfaction, the best known means for preventing or
-counteracting such annoyance.
-
- * * * * *
-
-9. You have certain powers, to which I adverted in my former Report, as
-likely to come into activity whenever the injurious practice of
-intramural burial might cease; powers, namely, relating to the _disposal
-of dead bodies_ in certain specified cases: and under your new Act, you
-have acquired some further authority (likewise only to be exercised
-after that cessation, and with the consent of the Bishop of London) to
-_appropriate the disused burial-grounds_ for purposes of improvement. At
-the time of my last Report I looked ‘forward to the complete
-discontinuance of burial within your territory as a matter for warm
-congratulation among all who are interested in the cause of sanitary
-improvement;’ and it is with proportionate disappointment and regret,
-that I have now to report to you that the Order in Council, which was to
-have closed all metropolitan burial grounds, has never yet been issued;
-and that negociations, conducted by the General Board of Health for the
-purchase of a sufficient extramural cemetery, were suddenly arrested at
-the close of the last session of Parliament. Your powers in relation to
-these matters remain of course meanwhile inoperative.[68]
-
- [68] In the Parliamentary Session of 1852, the Interments Act of 1850,
- which had remained inoperative, was repealed under a new ‘Act to amend
- the Laws concerning the Burial of the Dead in the Metropolis,’ which
- became law July 1st, 1852. Under this Act, the powers, alluded to in a
- later part of this volume, were given to the Commissioners of Sewers
- of the City of London as a Burial Board for the City.--J. S., 1854.
-
- * * * * *
-
-10. The most important additions made to your power relate to the
-_dwellings of the poor_, and are embodied chiefly in the tenth section
-of your new Act. The definition of ‘lodging-house’ given in this clause
-is so extensive, and the power of regulation conceded to you is so
-unconditional (where once the necessity for your interference is shown)
-that your Hon. Court can now exert your authority for every legitimate
-object, in respect of all the poorer houses in the City.[69] The
-definition is, that ‘the expression _common lodging-house_ shall, for
-the purposes of this Act, mean any house, not being a licensed
-victualling house, let, or any part of which is let, at a daily or
-weekly rent not exceeding the rate of three shillings and sixpence per
-week; or in which persons are harboured or lodged for hire for a single
-night, or for less than a week at one time; or in which any room let for
-hire is occupied by more than one family at one time.’ And your powers
-are to the following effect:--Wherever over-crowding has taken place
-unwholesomely or indecently--wherever undue illness has
-prevailed--wherever from any one of several causes the house is unfit
-for occupation, you can require its _immediate registration_; you can
-then _make such rules_ as you think fit for the _maintenance of decency
-and health_; and you can enforce conformity to those regulations with
-appropriate penalties.
-
- [69] Circumstances, which need not here be detailed, have led to
- disappointment in the working of this clause, and have shown, to my
- great regret, that I over-estimated the benefits it was capable of
- conferring.--J. S., 1854.
-
-The terms of the clause throw on your Medical Officer the responsibility
-of initiating these proceedings; and his task in the matter will be one
-of anxiety and arduousness. In most other clauses of your Acts of
-Parliament, an alternative is allowed as to your taking the opinion ‘of
-the Officer of Health, or of any two duly qualified Medical
-Practitioners:’ but in this clause you are expressly restricted to the
-certificate of your Officer of Health.
-
-In my two former Reports, I have addressed you at length on those
-conditions relative to the dwellings and social habits of the poor which
-made the enactments of this clause indispensable; and I look forward to
-its operation with a sanguine belief that it may be rendered one of the
-most important boons ever conferred on the labouring classes of the
-community.
-
-I subjoin to my Report the schedule which I would suggest for the
-registration of lodging-houses, and which (as you will observe) requires
-detailed information as to every sanitary particular of the
-dwelling.[70] I would recommend that in every case, where registration
-is made, the owner’s specification of these particulars should be
-accompanied by a written certificate from your Inspector; testifying
-(in some such form as that annexed to the schedule in my Appendix)
-first, to the accuracy of the statement, and, secondly, to the general
-condition of the house.
-
- [70] Vide page 210.
-
-With respect to the rules, which, under authority of this clause, you
-may find it requisite to lay down for better regulating the residences
-of the poor,--the conditions for which you have to legislate are so
-various and complicated, that no formula will apply universally; and you
-will often be called on to adapt special rules to particular cases as
-they come before you. I can therefore only venture at present to offer
-you general suggestions on the subject.
-
-You will find that the houses in which your interference is required
-fall into three cases, characterised as follows:--(1) Where the house is
-let in several independent holdings (often as many holdings as rooms)
-each occupied by a single family and no more, and paid for at a rent not
-exceeding 3s. 6d. _per_ week;--(2) Where the house is thus let in
-several independent holdings, and where the renter of each or any
-portion, admits other persons to share his holding with him, on their
-payment to him of a sub-rent _per_ week or _per_ night, so that a room
-comes to be occupied by more than one family at a time;--(3) Where the
-entire house, or all such part as is let in lodgings is under the direct
-management of a single resident proprietor or keeper, where the lodgings
-are let at . . . . _per_ night, and where many persons not belonging to
-one single family are lodged together in some single room, or in various
-single rooms of the house.
-
-Of the first arrangement, where a single room is the residence of a
-single family, you have innumerable illustrations in the City; as, for
-instance in the large houses of Windsor-street (to which I have recently
-drawn your attention) where in one house there are sixteen such
-holdings:--of the second arrangement--the most abominable and
-brutalising which can be conceived, you have sufficient illustrations in
-Plumtree-court:--of the third--comparatively little known in the City,
-there are instances in Field-lane.
-
-In respect of the first class of houses, I should be disposed to look
-upon each holding as the house of its occupier, and not to interfere
-within his threshold, except on the ground of some commanding necessity.
-I would require only that the general arrangements of the house should
-be adapted to the number of its holdings; that, for instance, numerous
-families should not be left competing for the use of a single privy, but
-that such accommodation should be provided in strict proportion to the
-requirements of the inmates; that every room should be efficiently
-ventilated; that water should be supplied to the highest occupied part
-of the house, and a water-tap and sink furnished on every floor; that
-the dust and refuse of the house should be removed at least once daily.
-
-In dealing with the worst specimens of this class, it may be requisite
-to go further than I have here intimated; and it appears to me that for
-this purpose your Hon. Court must address your regulations not to the
-tenant, but to the landlord. He, I apprehend, must be held responsible
-for the decent and wholesome condition of his property, and for such
-conduct of his tenants as will maintain that condition.
-
-Seeing the punctuality with which weekly visitation is made for the
-collection of rents in these wretched dwellings, it would not be
-unreasonable, I think, to insist on some such regulation as the
-following:--The owner of the house, or his agent, or collector, shall
-visit each room on an appointed day, at least once weekly, between the
-hours of eleven and three; he shall see that the floor and other
-woodwork of the room have been properly washed on that day, that the
-room be free from all dirt, rubbish, or offensive smell, that no
-objectionable trade be pursued in it, and that it be generally in good
-and proper repair; he shall see that the premises generally[71] be in a
-clean and wholesome condition, that water be sufficiently supplied, and
-that the dustman’s work be regularly performed; and failing either of
-the two latter conditions, he shall forthwith lay complaint thereof
-before your Commission; in case of any inmate suffering from cholera,
-small-pox, erysipelas, or any kind of fever, the owner, or his agent or
-collector, shall immediately give notice of such illness to the
-Inspector of his district; and at the meeting of the Commission next
-after such notice, he shall, if required, attend your Court, to receive
-any order which you may issue for reducing the number of his lodgers, or
-for improving the condition of his house, or for employing any
-disinfectant process; and he shall fulfil any such order within the time
-therein specified.
-
- [71] Namely--passages, staircases, area, cellar, yard, privy, &c., and
- if common privies and urinals exist, he shall provide for the
- cleansing of these, where requisite, at least once daily.
-
-In a proceeding so experimental as the present, I cannot assure you of
-infallible means for meeting every evil contingency; but it seems to me
-that a regulation having the general tendency here indicated, enforced
-by moderate penalties, would work an important revolution in the economy
-of dwellings affected by its operation, would render it indispensable
-to the landlord of such holdings to promote cleanly and decent habits
-among his tenants--even to obtain security for their good behaviour, and
-it would make it difficult or impossible for persons of opposite habits
-to obtain holdings under a landlord who would be virtually punishable
-for their misconduct.
-
-Such a regulation would apply, as I have said, to the lowest and
-filthiest specimens of the first class of lodging-houses; for, to the
-large majority of that class less stringent rules would suffice; and it
-would apply most usefully to the second class of lodging-houses--those
-in which the single rooms of a house are severally occupied by more than
-one family. So great are the physical and moral evils attending this
-indiscriminate admixture of adult persons of both sexes (as I have
-submitted to you in my former reports), that I entertain no doubts of
-the necessity for prohibiting it in the most absolute manner. A
-regulation to the following effect would, probably, fulfil the purpose
-contemplated by the law, and would disperse these loathsome heaps of
-disease, destitution, and profligacy: viz.--There shall not be lodged in
-a sleeping-room, at any one time, more than two persons over fourteen
-years of age, if of different sexes; nor more than[72] ---- such
-persons, if they be all of one sex.
-
- [72] This number would be proportioned to the cubical contents of the
- room, and its facilities for ventilation, of which mention would be
- made in the registration-schedule of the house.
-
-This order--in addition to its wholesome influence on the second class
-of lodging-houses, would apply beneficially to the third class; and, in
-further relation to the latter, there would probably be required various
-minor regulations with respect to facilities for washing, lighting,
-ventilation and the like, which admit of being fixed in detail, only as
-each particular case comes under your notice, with its deficiencies
-recorded in the schedule of its registration.
-
- * * * * *
-
-11. In addition to this power of regulating lodging-houses, a further
-authority has been conceded you by the Legislature, for the _amendment
-or removal of houses presenting aggravated structural faults_. Wherever
-your Officer of Health may certify to you that any house or building is
-permanently unwholesome and unfit for human habitation, you are
-empowered to require of the owner (or, in his neglect, yourselves to
-undertake) the execution of whatever works may be requisite for
-rendering the house habitable with security to life.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Finally,--under your former Act you were authorised, and indeed
-_required, to appoint Inspectors of Nuisances_, whose duties were to
-consist in the following particulars:--They were to superintend and
-enforce the due execution of all duties to be performed by the
-scavengers; to report to your Commission all breaches of your rules and
-regulations; to point out the existence of nuisances; to record whatever
-complaints might arise in relation to the supply of water, or in
-relation to any infraction, either of the Act, or of any of the
-regulations made by you under its authority for the preservation of
-order and cleanliness and for the suppression of nuisances.
-
-Hitherto your Hon. Court has deemed it sufficient compliance with the
-terms of the Act, to engraft the functions above described on the office
-of your previously appointed Inspectors of Pavements; and these
-Officers have endeavoured very diligently to fulfil the multifarious
-obligations thus imposed on them. During the past year it has become
-obvious to me that this arrangement of their duties is inconvenient, and
-that the occupation of their time as Inspectors of Pavements prevents
-them devoting the requisite number of hours to the other important
-duties.
-
-I need hardly add, for the information of your Hon. Court, that the
-immense increase of sanitary business implied in your new Act (an
-increase probably equivalent to doubling or trebling the former amount)
-renders a continuance of the former arrangement still less possible than
-heretofore; the important functions assigned to your Inspectors of
-Nuisances will now require to be discharged, under the superintendence
-of your Officer of Health, with uninterrupted assiduity and vigilance;
-and I would therefore take the liberty of begging your Hon. Court to
-refer this subject to the consideration of your Committee, together with
-some other points relative to the administration of your new powers.[73]
-
- [73] Two additional Inspectors came into work, under appointment of
- the Commission, at Christmas, 1853. See last Annual Report.--J. S.,
- 1854.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Here, gentlemen, terminates my statement of the powers now vested in you
-for the maintenance of the public health. Authority so complete for this
-noble purpose has never before been delegated to any municipal body in
-the country. In exercising the means of such wide beneficence, your
-Hon. Court will be discharging duties of immeasurable importance to the
-public welfare; and those who have the honour and responsibility of
-giving you professional advice will have a task of more than ordinary
-difficulty.
-
-It is easy to foresee the numerous obstacles which interested persons
-will set before you to delay the accomplishment of your great task.
-Sometimes technical objections will be raised to your proceedings:
-sometimes vexatious delays and evasions will occur in the fulfilment of
-your injunctions.
-
-When your orders are addressed to some owner of objectionable
-property--of some property which is a constant source of nuisance, or
-disease, or death; when you would force one person to refrain from
-tainting the general atmosphere with results of an offensive occupation;
-when you would oblige another to see that his tenantry are better housed
-than cattle, and that, while he takes rent for lodging, he shall not
-give fever as the equivalent;--amid these proceedings, you will be
-reminded of the ‘rights of property,’ and of ‘an Englishman’s inviolable
-claim to do as he will with his own.’
-
-Permit me, gentlemen, to remind you that your law makes full recognition
-of these principles, and that the cases in which sophistical appeal will
-oftenest be made to them, are exactly those which are most completely
-condemned by a full and fair application of the principles adverted to.
-With private affairs you interfere, only when they become of public
-import; with private liberty, only when it becomes a public
-encroachment. The factory chimney that eclipses the light of heaven with
-unbroken clouds of smoke, the melting-house that nauseates an entire
-parish, the slaughter-house that forms round itself a circle of
-dangerous disease--these surely are not private, but public affairs. And
-how much more justly may the neighbour appeal to you against each such
-nuisance, as an interference with his privacy; against the smoke, the
-stink, the fever, that bursts through each inlet of his dwelling,
-intrudes on him at every hour, disturbs the enjoyment and shortens the
-duration of his life. And for the rights of property--they are not only
-pecuniary. Life, too, is a great property; and your Act asserts its
-rights. The landlord of some overthronged lodging-house complains, that
-to reduce the numbers of his tenantry, to lay on water, to erect
-privies, or to execute some other indispensable sanitary work, would
-diminish his rental: in the spirit of your Act, it is held a sufficient
-reply, that human life is at stake, and that a landlord, in his dealings
-with the ignorant and indefensive poor, cannot be suffered to estimate
-them at the value of cattle, to associate them in worse than bestial
-habits, or let to them for hire, at however moderate a rent, the certain
-occasions of suffering and death.
-
-And indeed, gentlemen, the mere pecuniary import of life thus squandered
-is not inconsiderable. The costs of medical attendance on these
-superfluities of disease are heavy items of parochial expenditure: and
-although much of the undue mortality is of children, and consists in the
-premature extinction of life that hitherto has no market value--costing
-only the tears that are shed for it; yet there likewise occur among your
-preventable deaths, very many cases in which adult life is sacrificed,
-with all its strength and utility; and where, besides the wasted capital
-which that loss implies, there often remains for the district which has
-poisoned the man an entailment of orphanage and widowhood.
-
-Nor, again, can it be questioned, that year by year, as general
-education advances, the sanitary condition of a district will be an
-important element in determining the value of its property. In engaging
-houses, men will not only look to rent, and to rates on rent; they will
-look also to rates on life, and will doubt the cheapness of a town
-residence, however small in rental, where their lease of life must be
-shortened from its intended duration, and form part of an average
-mortality two-thirds higher than in the suburbs. It is an instinct in
-this direction, or perhaps the guidance of knowledge, that within late
-years has given so much extension to suburban residence, and has carried
-numbers of the wealthier inhabitants of the City to dwell so far from
-their places of daily business: and the same instinct or knowledge
-yearly acts more towards the less affluent classes, urging them to fly
-as far as possible beyond the smoke and crowding and unwholesome vapours
-of the metropolis. I entertain great hope and little doubt, that, within
-a few years, the working classes will have organised for themselves
-extensive means of suburban residence; that vast barracks of
-model-houses, rising on healthier soil and amid purer atmosphere, will
-receive hundreds of thousands of inmates from those classes of society
-which now throng the courts and alleys of the metropolis; and that by
-this spontaneous emigration, in so far as it may affect the City, great
-assistance will be given to those endeavours which will be made, under
-authority of your Act, to thin the court population of the City, and to
-diminish the too dense array of houses inhabited by the poor.
-
-As I look to the poor-rates of the City of London, as well as to the
-other circumstances just adverted to, I feel the deepest conviction that
-_property_, no less than _life_, is interested in the progress of
-sanitary reform: and once again, most earnestly, I beg leave to
-congratulate your Hon. Court on the acquisition of powers, conferring on
-you the inestimable privilege of doing so much good for those whom you
-represent, and for the often unrepresented poor; of relieving so much
-suffering; of prolonging so much life.
-
-That much improvement remains to be accomplished within your province,
-is a certainty which I have endeavoured here, as on former occasions,
-plainly to set before you.
-
-But I cannot close my Report without adverting to the fact, that both
-within and around the City, there are sanitary evils for which you are
-not responsible--evils beyond your control--powerful causes of diseases
-in hourly operation; and that these are so extensive in their agency, as
-to neutralise much of the good which it lies in your competence to
-effect.
-
-The mere fact, that for the metropolis generally there is hitherto no
-sanitary law, such as you possess for your territory, is an evil to you.
-When, at the commencement of next year, you will be proceeding to
-suppress the several nuisances against which you are armed; when the
-various trades of the City will have ceased to send forth smoke or
-stink, you can raise no barrier against invasions from around;
-southward, you cannot exclude the unwholesome airs wafted from the river
-and from across it; nor on either side, east or west, the soot that
-showers down from innumerable shafts encircling you; nor northward, the
-odours that rise from the shambles of Clerkenwell.
-
-And likewise within the City there will be remaining--out of your
-control, unremedied evils, the existence of which has long been
-denounced, and the removal long expected.
-
-In 1849, with the cholera amidst us, great exertions were made, and
-greater promises. In that dreadful week, when two thousand victims of
-our metropolitan population fell beneath its poison; when every
-household, from hour to hour, trembled at the visible nearness of death;
-the public were scared out of indifference. If the visitation could have
-been bought away, at the expense of doubling all local rates in
-perpetuity, no doubt the sacrifice would have been made. Public opinion
-was kindled to overwhelm all opposition.
-
-The metropolis was to be drained afresh; the outfall of sewerage was no
-longer to be beneath our windows; the river was to be embanked; its
-rising tide was no longer to make our sewers disgorge their poisonous
-contents into our streets and houses; dead bodies in their decay, were
-no more to desecrate the breathing-space of the living; water was no
-longer to be supplied--clumsily, insufficiently, and unwholesomely, at
-the discretion of private capitalists: all was to be amended.
-
-For participation in these advantages, the City had to look beyond its
-own representatives, and to await the more comprehensive measures of Her
-Majesty’s Government.
-
-Two years have elapsed, and none of the measures referred to has made
-visible progress. The water question remains unsettled; arrangements for
-extramural interment of the dead have been disconcerted at what seemed
-the moment of their completion; the river still receives the entire
-sewage of this immense metropolis, and still at each retreating tide,
-spreads amid the town, as heretofore, its many miles of fetid, malarious
-mud.
-
-In justice it should indeed be remembered, that any one of the required
-amendments could only be the result of long preparatory labour, and that
-its organisation would often of necessity be the travail of some single
-mind, not insusceptible of fatigue. Particularly as respects the scheme
-(now understood to approach its maturity) for the complete drainage of
-the metropolis, it cannot be overlooked that very extensive surveys,
-superficial and subterranean, with innumerable drawings and
-specifications, were necessary to the construction of so comprehensive a
-plan.
-
-But neither can it be disguised or disregarded, that meanwhile, in the
-absence of these sanitary works, there are dying needlessly and
-prematurely thousands of the population; that preventable death,
-hitherto unprevented, is proceeding at its accustomed pace; that
-children continue to perish at three or four times their due rate; that
-time, which carries us from one visitation of the great epidemic and
-obliterates the remembrance of our alarm, also, too probably, carries us
-towards the day of another outbreak: that typhus--our home-bred and
-daily visitant, rehearses the same warnings as heretofore, moving
-uniformly onward like the shadow on a dial, toward the hour when that
-Eastern pestilence may again be here.
-
-Therefore, gentlemen, I have felt it my duty to represent to you that,
-in the promotion of those metropolitan works, the population of the City
-of London have an incalculable interest;--that the emancipation of human
-life from such fetters of disease as weigh on it, can never even
-approximate to completion within your City, while the saturated
-burial-grounds still continue to receive their annual multitudes of the
-dead, while the administration of the water-supply interposes an
-effectual hindrance to your most important functions, and while the
-river, contaminated and unembanked, diffuses injurious miasms through
-the whole extent of your jurisdiction. And I would further venture to
-urge on the consideration of your Hon. Court, that your legitimate
-influence with Her Majesty’s Government and with Parliament--your
-influence as trustees of the Public Health for so large a constituency,
-exerted in furtherance of those metropolitan reforms to which I have
-adverted--would be tending, not only to the general good, but directly
-and eminently to the sanitary advantage of the City of London.
-
- I have the honour,
-
- &c., &c.
-
-_Proposed Schedule of specification for the Register of Lodging-houses._
-
- House situate at No. __________
-
- Name and Address of Owner _________
-
- Number of Floors (including Cellars and Lofts) ____
-
- „ Rooms „ „ ____
-
- +-------+------+-------------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
- | | No. | | | | | |
- | | on | Situation. |Height. |Length. |Breadth.|Windows.|
- | |door. | | | | | |
- | | +-------------+--------+--------+--------+ |
- |Account| |Floor, Aspect|ft. in.|ft. in.|ft. in.| |
- | +------+-------------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
- | of | 1 | | | | | |
- | +------+-------------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
- | Rooms | 2 | | | | | |
- | +------+-------------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
- |separ- | 3 | | | | | |
- | +------+-------------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
- |ately. | 4 | | | | | |
- | +------+-------------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
- | | 5 | | | | | |
- | +------+-------------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
- | |6, &c.| | | | | |
- +-------+------+-------------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
-
- +-------+------+---------+-------+-------+--------+-------------+
- | | No. | | | | |Number |
- | | on |Flooring.| Fire- |Venti- | Rent. |of |
- | |door. | |place. |lators.| |Inmates. |
- | | | | | +--------+-------------+
- | | | | | |Weekly, |Under | Over |
- | | | | | | or | 9 | 9 |
- | | | | | |nightly,|years |years |
- | | | | | | or per | of | of |
- |Account| | | | |person. | age. | age. |
- | +------+---------+-------+-------+--------+------+------+
- | of | 1 | | | | | | |
- | +------+---------+-------+-------+--------+------+------+
- | Rooms | 2 | | | | | | |
- | +------+---------+-------+-------+--------+------+------+
- |Separ- | 3 | | | | | | |
- | +------+---------+-------+-------+--------+------+------+
- |ately. | 4 | | | | | | |
- | +------+---------+-------+-------+--------+------+------+
- | | 5 | | | | | | |
- | +------+---------+-------+-------+--------+------+------+
- | |6, &c.| | | | | | |
- +-------+------+---------+-------+-------+--------+------+------+
-
- Staircase, if with windows or skylight __________
-
- Privies {Number ____
- {Situation ____
-
- { {Material ______
- {Receptacles-{Capacity ______
- Water-supply-{ {Situation ______
- {
- {Taps, where situated _____________
-
- Sinks ____
-
- Dustbin ____
-
- Yard--size of uncovered area ____
-
- Pavement ____
-
- Laundry ____
-
- Date ________ Signature of Owner ________________
-
- NOTE.--I, ____________________, Inspector for the Commissioners of
- Sewers of the City of London, do certify that the above schedule
- contains a true account of the matters to which it relates; also that
- I have examined the privies, drains, sinks, and water-supply in the
- above house, and do find the same to be in an efficient and
- satisfactory condition; also that the house generally is in good
- repair, perfectly clean, and free from disagreeable smell.
-
- Date____, signed ________________ Inspector.
-
-
-
-
-FOURTH ANNUAL REPORT.
-
-
- _September 28th, 1852._
-
- GENTLEMEN,
-
-I beg leave to lay before your Hon. Court the several tables[74] which I
-have prepared, to illustrate the mortality of the City of London during
-the past year. They refer to fifty-two weeks, dating from September
-28th, 1851, to September 25th, 1852.
-
- [74] These tables are not here reprinted in a separate form, except
- the enumeration of deaths for the year, which is No. VI. in the
- Appendix. The others are embodied in the different quinquennial
- tables of the Appendix.
-
- In the first table I have distributed the 3064 deaths of the period,
- according to their localities and seasons; showing them as they
- occurred, male and female, during each quarter of the year, in the
- several districts and sub-districts of the City. For the foot of each
- column, I have calculated the year’s death’s rate, per thousand of the
- living, in the district or sub-district referred to; and at the head
- of the columns, for facility of reference, I have introduced an
- analysis of the population, founded on the Registrar-General’s recent
- census.
-
- In the second table all the deaths of the last four years are stated,
- in a form which will enable you to compare one year with another, and
- one sub-district with another, in respect of their several
- contributions to the total mortality of the period.
-
- In the third table 12,540 deaths[75] of the last four years are
- classified according to the ages at which they befell. This table is
- arranged in a manner to display its results, first for each year
- separately, and next for each Union separately; in order that you may
- observe what local or annual differences have obtained as to the ages
- of chief mortality.
-
- [75] In the remaining number (17) the particulars of age and
- residence could not be correctly ascertained.
-
- The fourth table also relates to the last four years. It restricts
- itself to those various forms of acute disease--epidemic, endemic, and
- infectious, which occasion, most of all, the predominant mortality of
- particular districts or seasons; and which are susceptible, in the
- highest degree, of being mitigated or removed under an efficient
- sanitary system.
-
-In their general import these documents agree very nearly with last
-year’s record; though showing unfortunately a somewhat higher death-rate
-(23·62) and especially a larger proportion of fever.
-
-On former occasions I have examined, with great minuteness, all such
-facts as these tables set forth, and have offered you the best
-suggestions in my power for the mitigation of preventable disease.
-
-The sanitary condition of the City is now substantially the same as at
-the date of my last Report; and any comment which I might make on the
-present tables could be little else than a repetition of arguments
-already submitted to your notice.
-
-Therefore, as other topics[76] of importance to the health of the City
-press for more immediate consideration, I refrain from occupying your
-time by any further remark on the materials which I subjoin.
-
- [76] We were at this time closely occupied in considering the general
- questions of extramural interment for the City.--J. S., 1854.
-
- I have the honour,
-
- &c., &c.
-
-
-
-
-FIFTH ANNUAL REPORT.
-
-
- _November 29th, 1853._
-
- GENTLEMEN,
-
-According to the practice of previous years, I lay before you, in the
-annexed tables, a brief digest of your death-register for the fifty-two
-weeks which terminated at Michaelmas last.
-
-The deaths there enumerated amount to 3040--being 24 fewer than in the
-last preceding similar period.
-
-Beyond these statistics of the past year, there are other facts which I
-have thought it well to tabulate for your information. They relate to
-the entire term of five years, during which I have kept record of your
-mortality. Midway in this quinquennial period--namely, in the spring of
-1851, the general census happened to occur. The inhabitants of the City,
-then enumerated, may fairly be taken to represent the mean of your
-somewhat fluctuating population; and the five years’ mortality, compared
-with the numbers of this mean population, will express pretty accurately
-their habitual death-rate.
-
-The period mentioned is indeed short for the purpose of establishing an
-average; but ten years at least must elapse before even similar
-materials can again be given for calculation, and a still longer time
-before the statistical basis can be enlarged. I have therefore thought
-it desirable to make the best use in my power of such facts as were
-before me, for the construction of quinquennial tables; out of which,
-with sufficient accuracy for all practical purposes, you may draw your
-own inferences as to the health of that large population which is under
-your sanitary government.
-
-The facts are classified, as heretofore, in the manner which will most
-easily display their practical meaning. First, namely, the deaths of the
-period are recorded in their local distribution, so that you may compare
-one part of the City with another in respect of healthiness. Next, they
-are so tabulated according to ages, as to indicate the prevailing
-proportion of untimely death. Thirdly, those of them are separately
-enumerated which, in their several classes, chiefly occur as results of
-acute disease in connexion with removable causes.
-
-In after years, when sanitary improvements, now only in contemplation or
-commencement, shall have produced their legitimate results and rewards,
-these tables may serve an important use. Indicating the standard of
-public health within the City before such works were achieved, and
-constituting a permanent record of your starting-point, they will
-qualify your successors to estimate the amount of amelioration which
-your endeavours shall have produced.
-
-The details of your present sanitary condition, as varying in different
-sub-districts of the City, and as fluctuating in the several years and
-seasons of the quinquennial period, are expressed in the figures of
-these tables more compendiously and more clearly than I could hope to
-convey them in words. Here, therefore I restrict myself to telling you
-very briefly their general results.
-
-The population of the City--about 130,000 persons--has been dying
-during these five years at the rate of about 24 _per_ thousand _per
-annum_. The sub-district rates which give this aggregate vary from under
-18 to above 29; the former death-rate belonging to your healthiest
-locality--the north-west sub-district of the City of London Union; while
-the latter--more than 60 _per cent._ higher--mortality belongs to the
-north sub-district of the West London Union. The lowest death-rate
-hitherto attained in this country for a considerable population, during
-a term of seven years, has been 14 _per_ thousand _per annum_; which
-your worst sub-district mortality more than doubles.
-
-As different districts contribute unequally to your average death-rate,
-so also do different ages. Among all the population exceeding five years
-of age, the death-rate is under 17 _per_ thousand _per annum_; while,
-for children under five years of age, the rate is nearly 85. And these
-rates are unequally constituted by your three chief districts in the
-following proportion; viz.:--
-
- Annual Rate of Deaths to 1000 Over 5 Years Under 5 Years
- living persons. of age. of age.
-
- East London Union 16·68 91·99
- West London Union 20·58 94·84
- City of London Union 15·06 71·72
- ----- -----
- Average death-rate in the City 16·85 84·72
-
-How various are the diseases which have conspired to produce your annual
-average of 3120 deaths, it would be tedious to describe; and in the
-table which I have devoted to a partial analysis of this subject, I have
-restricted myself to a consideration of those ailments which are likely
-to become less fatal under a well-developed sanitary system. To the
-annual average typhus has contributed 140 deaths; choleraic affections
-(including the epidemic of 1849) 196; scarlet fever, 76; small pox, 40;
-erysipelas, 30; the acute nervous and mucous diseases of children, 572;
-their measles, hooping-cough, and croup, 182;--making, from this class
-of disorders, an annual average of about 1250 deaths--nearly two-fifths
-of the entire mortality.
-
-My tables will show you that the different seasons of the year have
-pressed somewhat differently on human life; and there is exhibited in
-them a point of some interest to which I would beg your attention. In
-your healthier sub-districts it is easy to perceive the influence, the
-almost inevitable influence, exerted by the inclemency of winter against
-the aged and feeble. In your unhealthier sub-districts, this effect is
-completely masked, and summer becomes the fatal season; its higher
-temperature acting in some sort as a test of defective sanitary
-conditions, and giving to the several local causes of endemic disease an
-augmentation of activity and virulence.
-
-On the facts which these tables set forth, I have nothing further to say
-than would consist in a repetition of arguments already submitted to
-your notice. In my third Annual Report, especially, I endeavoured to lay
-before you the conclusions which are fairly deducible from the
-proportions of early death, and from the partial allotment of particular
-diseases.
-
-These conditions, indeed, are in obvious mutual relation. To human life
-there has been affixed a normal range of duration; and when it
-prematurely fails--when children perish in the cradle, or adults amid
-the glow of manhood, the exception in every case is a thing to be
-investigated and explained. Of the 15,597 persons who have died within
-your jurisdiction, not an eighth part had reached the traditional
-‘threescore years and ten;’ while nearly three-eighths died in the first
-five years of life. In proportion as facts like these appear in the
-death-tables of a particular district, in the same proportion we can
-trace the local prevalence of particular diseases, to explain the
-abridgment of life; and passing from such a locality to other districts,
-where the natural term of existence is more nearly attained, invariably
-we find that these diseases have fallen into comparative inertness.
-Finally, in grouping the fatal results of such diseases in their
-proportionate geographical allotment, invariably we find that their
-prevalence or non-prevalence, here or there, has been associated with
-demonstrable physical differences; that life has not capriciously been
-long in one place and short in another, but that, where short, it has
-been shortened; that its untimely extinction has depended on the direct
-operation of local and preventable causes.
-
-In this recognition of cause and effect, which the experience of late
-years has rendered vivid and precise; and in that higher appreciation of
-human life, which belongs to civilized nations in peaceful times; and in
-that deeper sympathy for the suffering poor, which should be at the
-heart of every Christian government, sanitary legislation had its origin
-in this country; and it has been the good fortune of the City of London
-(in respect of your two Acts of Parliament) to precede the rest of the
-metropolis in acquiring and exercising authority for the mitigation of
-preventable disease.
-
-Nearly five years have now passed over your tenure of this very grave
-responsibility; and although in many respects the period must be
-regarded as one of apprenticeship to a new and difficult
-career--although you have hardly yet arrived at what may permanently
-represent your method of action--although important changes which you
-have determined to adopt are not yet in actual working--although the far
-greatest evils still remain for correction--yet I rejoice to inform you
-that sensible improvement has already shown itself in the sanitary state
-of your population. My comparison of the past five years with any
-considerable previous period cannot be as precise as I would wish, owing
-to the absence of circumstantial records for the time anterior to my
-appointment; but, judging from such information as I can consult on the
-subject, I am induced to believe that the deaths, for equal numbers of
-population, are about four _per cent._ fewer than before your Acts of
-Parliament came into operation, and that the disproportionate mortality
-of children is decidedly lessened.
-
-On this first improvement--the beginning, I would fain hope, of a long
-series of similar steps for regaining the allotted duration of human
-life, I beg to offer my respectful congratulations to your Hon. Court,
-under whose auspices it has been effected. Further impetus in the same
-direction will shortly be given by the removal of sanitary evils,
-already in fact or in principle condemned. The approaching institution
-of your extramural cemetery, and, I venture to hope, the translation of
-all slaughtering establishments to the site of your new Smithfield, will
-be important contributions to this effect. I therefore make bold to
-speak with some sanguineness of the slight change of death-rate already
-noticed; though, while so much remains to be accomplished, I doubt not
-you will welcome the amelioration rather as an encouragement to proceed,
-than as the final reward of a completed task.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Here, Gentlemen, terminates all that I have to submit for your
-consideration in respect of your past and present record of deaths. The
-greater extension which, during the last two years, I have given to my
-habitual Weekly Reports, and to sundry occasional statements which it
-has been my duty to lay before you, may seem, at least generally, to
-render it superfluous for my Annual Report to contain anything beyond
-such statistical particulars as I have now brought under your notice.
-But, however this may generally be, there exist exceptional
-circumstances at the present time which induce me to trouble you at
-somewhat greater length.
-
- * * * * *
-
-II. Two years ago--adverting to the non-completion of metropolitan
-sanitary works, on which the health of entire London is vitally
-dependent, I could not but comment[77] on the utter unpreparedness with
-which the metropolis was awaiting any sudden return of Asiatic cholera.
-It was indeed impossible to foresee how soon, or how late, that dreadful
-visitation might recur to desolate our homes--whether it might return at
-once, or never. But typhus--averaging in fifteen years double the
-fatality of that rarer epidemic--was adding day by day to its list of
-preventable deaths; and other endemic diseases were co-operating with
-it, demonstrably, uninterruptedly, to decimate, impoverish, and abase
-the people.
-
- [77] Third Annual Report, p. 206.
-
-Whatever doubts might have existed as to a return of the foreign
-pestilence were soon solved: whatever hasty conclusions had been formed,
-as to its again remaining absent during half a generation, were soon
-disappointed and reversed. Even while I was addressing you on the
-subject, the plague had again kindled its smouldering fire, and was
-widening its circle of destruction. Perhaps from the eastern centres of
-its habitual dominion--from the alluvial swamps and malarious jungles of
-Asia, where it was first engendered amid miles of vaporous poison, and
-still broods over wasted nations as the agent of innumerable deaths; or
-perhaps from the congenial flats of Eastern Europe, where it may have
-lingered latent and acclimatised; the subtle ferment was spreading its
-new infection to all kindred soils. Repelled again from the dry and airy
-acclivities of the earth, and their hardier population, it filtered
-along the blending-line of land and water--the shore, the river-bank,
-and the marsh. Conducted by the Oder and Vistula from the swamps of
-Poland to the ports of the Baltic, it raged east and west, from St.
-Petersburg to Copenhagen, with frightful severity, and, obedient to old
-precedents, let us witness its arrival at Hamburg.
-
-Twice in the European history of cholera, had this town seemed the
-immediate channel of epidemic communication to our island; the disease
-having on each occasion commenced in our north-eastern sea-ports within
-a very short time of its outburst there. A third time, not unexpectedly,
-has this dreadful guest, following the line of former visitation,
-touched upon the banks of the Tyne; where[78] a worse than beastly
-condition of the crowded poor, and sewage-water diluted through the
-people’s drink, had prepared it an appropriate welcome.
-
- [78] Having had recent occasion to examine judicially into the matters
- here adverted to, I think it proper to mention that the allusions in
- my text were long prior to this examination, and were founded chiefly
- on the Registrar-General’s Reports of the time, with other official
- statements.--J. S., 1854.
-
-Next, the disease was rumoured to be in London. Hope and belief are too
-near akin for this not to have been doubted and denied; but the last few
-weeks have shown, with sad incontrovertible certainty, that after only
-four years absence, Cholera has again obtained its footing on our soil.
-Six or seven hundred deaths, registered in the metropolis since the
-beginning of September, have already attested its presence.
-
-Anxiously adverting to the future, and asking what may be the onward
-progress of the disease, we can appeal only to a narrow experience.
-Before us lie the records of but two complete visitations of the
-disease, and the commencement of this, the third. It would be a shallow
-philosophy that should pretend, from two observations, to predict the
-possible orbit of this obscurely wandering plague.
-
-Yet I dare not disguise from you that such knowledge as we have, to
-justify scientific anticipation, is pregnant with threats and gloom.
-For--let me remind you of the past. At each former period of attack, the
-infection, after a certain course over Continental Europe, struck upon
-our eastern coast in the summer of an unforgotten year. In the northern
-parts of Great Britain, so soon as it had lit among the population, each
-time it burst forth into explosive activity, and worked its full
-measure of destruction without delay. More faintly it reached the South.
-On each occasion, indeed, at the close of summer, London was sensibly
-affected by the disease; but, we hoped, under a milder infliction. Here
-and there, within its Bills of Mortality (as at Tooting in 1848) there
-was thrown some astounding flash on a particular hot-bed of co-operating
-poison; but on the whole it seemed to the sanguine, on each occasion,
-that the fury of the epidemic was expending itself in our northern
-towns, and that the metropolis was to be comparatively spared.
-
-Each time, at the commencement of the new year, our London mortality
-from Cholera seemed stationary within the limit of a few hundred deaths.
-Each time winter and spring allowed a long respite to our invaded City,
-and confirmed the omens of the hopeful.
-
-But each time there was disappointment. Each time, as the warmth of
-summer requickened the exterior conditions of chemical activity, the
-dormant fire kindled afresh--slowly at first, but with speedy
-acceleration of rate. Each time, in the few weeks before
-Michaelmas--amid almost universal threatenings of the disease, and amid
-such panic of death as the metropolis had not known since the Great
-Plague, there suddenly fell many thousands of the population.
-
-Thus then our position stands. Scientific prediction of phenomena can
-arise only in the knowledge of laws. That the phenomena of this disease,
-however capricious they may seem, are obedient to some absolute
-uniformity as yet beyond our ken--are enchained by that same rigid
-sequence of cause and effect which is imposed on all remaining
-Nature--it would be impossible to doubt. But these conditions are
-hitherto unknown to science. Hitherto we can speak of the facts alone,
-with a short empirical knowledge of their succession. Yet in this light,
-such as it is, the conclusion is only too obvious. If the disease,
-already notorious for a tendency to return on its former vestiges,
-repeat on this third occasion the steps of its two previous courses; or,
-perhaps I should rather say, if it now proceed consistently to complete
-a repetition which it has already half-effected; Asiatic Cholera will be
-severely epidemic in London in the third quarter of next year--will
-proceed, with a stern unflattering test, to measure the degree in which
-those promises of sanitary improvement have been redeemed, which the
-terror of its recent visitation extorted even from the supinest and most
-ignorant of its witnesses.
-
-In the face of so great a danger, you will reasonably claim of your
-Officer of Health that he shall report to you, how far the City is
-already fortified against this dreadful invasion--how far the hygienic
-defences of life, if weak, may be strengthened--how far there remain
-breaches now insusceptible of repair.
-
- * * * * *
-
-1. It forms an all-important part of these considerations for resistance
-to the disease, to recognise quite accurately what is its fashion of
-attack. Since I last addressed you on the subject, in my Report for
-1849-50, the materials for correct generalisation have been very largely
-increased by Dr. Farr’s admirable Report to the Registrar-General on the
-Cholera in England, and by numerous other important publications. By
-collating with these works the more restricted, yet not uninstructive,
-experience which arose within your particular jurisdiction, I hope to
-have enlarged my knowledge of the subject, and to have become able with
-greater confidence to submit my conclusions for your acceptance.
-
-The first and most obvious characteristic of the disease is its
-preference for particular localities. It is eminently a
-district-disease. And the conditions which determine its local
-settlement are demonstrable physical peculiarities.
-
-After carefully reviewing the subject, I do not know that I need
-qualify, except to express more confidently, the account I formerly gave
-you of those peculiarities, as consisting in the conjunction of dampness
-with organic decomposition.
-
-It is in respect of these conditions--especially among dense urban
-populations, that the level of occupied ground, relatively to the
-nearest water-surface, becomes of primary importance. The low level, in
-itself, or rather in respect of the watery dampness which it implies, is
-not enough to localise the pestilence. To be afloat at sea might be the
-safest lodging.
-
-The sub-district of St. Peter’s, Hammersmith, averages only four feet
-above high-water level; that of St. Olave’s, Southwark, two feet higher;
-yet among the former and worse placed of these two populations, the
-Cholera-mortality was only 18 per 10,000; while among the latter and
-better placed it rose to 196--multiplying nearly eleven times the minor
-phenomena of a lower level. So also within your own jurisdiction. Side
-by side along the river lie four of your sub-districts; three at the
-elevation of twenty-one feet, one at the elevation of twenty-four feet.
-The Cholera-mortality, if simply proportioned to level, should have been
-nearly the same for these four sub-districts, but somewhat less in the
-last one than in the first three. Yet contrary was the fact; for in two
-of these sub-districts the Cholera-mortality, for equal numbers of
-population, was 4½ times as great as in the other two.
-
-It would, therefore, appear that in certain low-lying levels--to
-constitute them favorable soils for the disease, there must be joined to
-their first condition of lowness (with the mere watery dampness which it
-implies) some other and second condition; one, which is of extreme
-frequency in such districts, though not essentially present there.
-
-This second condition impends wherever there dwells at such levels a
-certain density of population; _it mainly varies with the degree in
-which that dense population lives in the atmosphere of its own
-excrements and refuse_. In this respect I cannot refrain from saying,
-that the giant error of London is its present system of drainage.
-Probably in considerable parts of the metropolitan area, house-drainage
-is extensively absent: probably in considerable parts, the sewers, from
-the nature of their construction, are very doubtful advantages to the
-districts they traverse: but the evil, before all others, to which I
-attach importance in relation to the present subject, is that habitual
-empoisonment of soil and air which is inseparable from our tidal
-drainage. From this influence, I doubt not, a large proportion of the
-metropolis has derived its liability to Cholera. A moment’s reflection
-is sufficient to show the immense distribution of putrefactive dampness
-which belongs to this vicious system. There is implied in it that the
-entire excrementation of the metropolis (with the exception of such as,
-not less poisonously, lies pent beneath houses) shall sooner or later be
-mingled in the stream of the river, there to be rolled backward and
-forward amid the population; that, at low water, for many hours, this
-material shall be trickling over broad belts of spongy bank which then
-dry their contaminated mud in the sunshine, exhaling fœtor and poison;
-that at high water, for many hours, it shall be retained[79] or driven
-back within all low-level sewers and house-drains, soaking far and wide
-into the soil, or leaving putrescent deposit along miles of underground
-brickwork, as on a deeper pavement. Sewers which, under better
-circumstances, should be benefactions and appliances for health in their
-several districts, are thus rendered inevitable sources of evil. During
-a large proportion of their time they are occupied in retaining or
-re-distributing that which it is their office to remove. They furnish
-chambers for an immense fæcal evaporation; at every breeze which strikes
-against their open mouths, at every tide which encroaches on their
-inward space, their gases are breathed into the upper air--wherever
-outlet exists, into houses, foot-paths, and carriage-way.
-
- [79] I am informed that in large districts on the south side of the
- river, this retention of sewage is prolonged for two-thirds of every
- tide--sixteen hours out of every twenty-four.
-
-To you, Gentlemen, as Commissioners of Sewers for the City of London,
-these remarks may seem superfluous; the rather so, as the worst evils of
-tidal drainage are not largely exemplified within your jurisdiction. But
-it seems to me of extreme moment at the present time, when very costly
-improvements of the metropolitan drainage are about to undergo
-parliamentary discussion, that the public should be well aware how
-indispensable such improvements are for the general health of London,
-and how important, in fact, they are to thousands who at first sight
-might think themselves little interested in their completion.
-
-To some individual householder, dwelling at a high level, all concern
-in the subject may seem to terminate with the defluxion of his own
-sewage. So that his own pipes remain clear, little cares he for the
-ultimate outfall of his nuisance! Perhaps, if he knew better, he would
-care more. His gift returns to him with increase. Down in the valley,
-whither his refuse runs, converge innumerable kindred contributions.
-From city and suburb--from an area of a hundred square miles covered by
-a quarter of a million of houses, with their unprecedented throng of
-metropolitan life, there pours into that single channel every
-conceivable excrement, outscouring, garbage and refuse, from man and
-beast, street and slum, shamble and factory, market and hospital. From
-the polluted bosom of the river steam up, incessantly though unseen, the
-vapours of a retributive poison; densest and most destructive, no doubt,
-along the sodden banks and stinking sewers of lowest level; but
-spreading over miles of land--sometimes rolled high by wind, sometimes
-blended low with mist, and baneful, even to their margin that curls over
-distant fields. For, not alone in Rotherhithe and Newington--not alone
-along the Effra or the Fleet, are traced the evils of this great miasm.
-The deepest shadows of the cloud lie here; but its outskirts darken the
-distance, A fever hardly to be accounted for, an infantile sickness of
-undue malignity, a doctor’s injunction for change of air, may at times
-suggest to the dweller in our healthiest suburbs, that while draining
-his refuse to the Thames, he receives for requital some partial workings
-of the gigantic poison-bed which he has contributed to maintain.
-
-The subject of these remoter effects I refrain from pursuing, as foreign
-to my present purpose. That on which I wish to insist is the character
-of the river, in its relation to the marginal sub-districts which it
-habitually dampens and occasionally floods with putrescent soakage, and
-in its relation to the sewers of low gradient which it converts (often
-with their adjoining soil) into the similitude and hurtfulness of
-cesspools. I wish emphatically to point out, that the several parts of
-London have suffered, and are likely again to suffer, from Cholera, in
-proportion as either this malarious influence is exerted on them, or
-other kindred miasms are furnished by their soil. And it is my belief,
-from such evidence as is before me, that the general liability of London
-to suffer the epidemic visitation will cease, whenever an efficient and
-inodorous system of drainage, conveying all refuse of the metropolis
-beyond range of its atmosphere, shall be substituted for our present
-elaborate disguise of an unremoved nuisance. I deem it right to state
-this explicitly: not only because it is my duty to give you, in simple
-truth, the conclusions to which I am led by careful reflection on the
-facts; but likewise because--for the credit of sanitary medicine and for
-your justification in the awful presence of a recurrent pestilence
-within your jurisdiction--it ought to be thoroughly known how much of
-the cause is common to the entire metropolis, and has not admitted of
-removal by measures of partial improvement. And the circumstances will
-perhaps excuse me if I repeat to your Hon. Court--represented as you are
-both in the Metropolitan Commission of Sewers and in Parliament, where
-this question must shortly be discussed--that the universal reform of
-our metropolitan drainage, at whatever imaginable pecuniary cost, is an
-urgent claim and necessity, unless this great city is again, as two
-centuries ago, to live under the constant alarm of increasing epidemic
-destruction.
-
-Reverting, however, to the more especial relations of the disease within
-your territory, you will remember that, among your four bank-side
-sub-districts, two suffered in marked excess; their Cholera-mortality
-having been 4½ times as great as that of the other two. The fact is
-instructive; because those two suffering sub-districts (though not of
-lower mean level than the others) were marginal to the valley of the
-Fleet, and were therefore exposed, more than any other part of your
-province, to the class of evils I have described. For a considerable
-part of this locality may be regarded as but recently[80] a creek of the
-Thames; its shelving banks, singularly foul from ancient misuse, though
-now built over and paved, undergo in their lower levels very
-considerable soakage; while those vast sewers which lie in the
-mid-channel of the former river, are more liable than any within your
-jurisdiction, to suffer injurious interference from the action of the
-tide. At every such interference, and at every current of air setting up
-the sewers, all gases generated in these large chambers would diffuse
-themselves, not only in the low level, but likewise widely east and
-west, up those important slopes which depend on this valley for their
-drainage. I can easily understand that the radical cure of this district
-may be possible, only as part of those metropolitan improvements to
-which I have adverted; but I do think it of supreme importance, in
-reference to any such visitation as we dread, that, during the next
-twelve months, there should be taken every precaution which technical
-knowledge can suggest, for restricting, even by palliative and temporary
-expedients, those mischievous effects which I have endeavoured to
-illustrate.
-
- [80] New Bridge Street was built over the Fleet in 1765. The present
- site of Farringdon Street had been arched in thirty years earlier, for
- the purposes of the Fleet Market.
-
-In describing to you the local affinities of cholera, I have intimated
-that, in its preference for our low metropolitan levels, it selects
-these soils specifically in respect of their being damp with organic
-putrefaction. A moment’s consideration will suffice to show that, if
-this be true, the higher levels of the metropolis will be exempt from
-the disease, only in proportion as they exempt themselves from the local
-conditions which invite it--only in proportion as they avail themselves
-of those natural advantages which their situation enables them to
-command. Let a district be defective in house-drainage, so that its soil
-is excavated by cesspools and sodden by their soakage; let its sewers be
-ill-constructed and foul, so that offensive gases are ventilated into
-the immediate breathing-air of the inhabitants; let its pavement be
-absent or imperfect, scattered with refuse and puddled with water;--you
-will easily conceive that, under these circumstances, all distinctions
-of level are merged in the strong identity of filth, and whatever
-diseases belong to putrefactive dampness of soil will strike here as
-readily as on the low-lying mud-banks of the river.
-
-So, likewise, in still narrower limits--the predisposition of a house to
-Cholera may be stated in the same terms as define the liability of a
-district--viz., that the humid gases of organic decomposition, in
-proportion as they are breathed into one house in a district more than
-into other houses there, will engender the greater liability of that
-house, as compared with its collaterals, to suffer an invasion of
-Cholera. And thus it often happens, during epidemic prevalence of the
-disease, that sporadic cases are determined in localities which might
-generally claim to be free from infection: for, what avails it to be on
-the highest ground and the best soil, with every neighbouring facility
-of sewers and scavenage, if, owing to individual carelessness and filth,
-the conditions of dampness and putridity are by choice retained within a
-house, and its basement flooded with rotting liquids, or piled with
-accumulated refuse?
-
-I might give you many instances in illustration of these points--showing
-you how, under the operation of specific sanitary faults, the
-Cholera-mortality of districts acquires an artificial exaltation; but
-few comparisons will suffice. At the period of the epidemic of 1849,
-your best conditioned sub-district was the north-west of the City of
-London Union; and (among those of the same level) your worst was the
-sub-district of Cripplegate, which at that time was in a very
-unsatisfactory state, abounding in open cesspools and their
-consequences. In the former of these sub-districts the Cholera-mortality
-_per_ 10,000 was 19; in the latter 47; and it is easy to show that
-additional sanitary errors soon develop a larger fatality. Not far from
-your boundary, at the same level with these two sub-districts, in the
-Hackney-Road division of Bethnal-Green, it rose to 110; this large
-mortality being principally confined to a very small portion of the
-district, wherein (the local Registrar reports) sewers were almost
-entirely absent, houses were contaminated with the filth of years,
-streets were remaining for days uncleansed from accumulating dirt, and
-all waste water (including animal secretions) was uniformly thrown into
-the public way.
-
-Such are the conditions under which, at any imaginable height in the
-metropolis, Cholera may decimate a population: such, in their worst
-form, were the conditions which at Merthyr-Tydvil--several hundred feet
-above the water-level, carried the Cholera-mortality to more than double
-the high metropolitan rate just mentioned. Taught by this case the power
-of human mismanagement to futilise the favours of Nature; taught that
-perverse ingenuity can construct poison-beds for the development of
-Cholera, high above the usual track of its devastation; one gladly turns
-from the horrible instructiveness of such a lesson, to gather the
-kindred evidence of contrast: and happily there is abundant evidence to
-show how much may be effected, even in the most tainted districts, to
-purchase a circumscribed exemption from the disease by the judicious
-application of sanitary care.
-
-In the remarks which I have made on the local distribution of Cholera,
-you will have observed that I dwell particularly on one class of
-sanitary evils as concerned in its production; on that class, namely,
-which consists in the retention and soakage of organic refuse--on that
-class, which has its appointed antidote in a system of inodorous
-drainage, of uninterrupted pavement, of complete and punctual scavenage.
-
-On this I particularly insist, because I believe that here is the very
-atmosphere without which Cholera would cease.
-
-Sanitary evils abound; and, if I were speaking of other diseases, I
-might have more to say of other causes. I am unwilling, even for a
-moment, to seem indifferent to those remaining fertile sources of
-suffering that surround the poor of our metropolitan population--to
-their over-crowded condition, to their scantiness of ventilation, to
-their insufficient or disgusting water-supply, to their frequent
-personal dirt, to their habitually defective diet. These several
-influences have their own characteristic sequels and retribution, on
-which I have often addressed you, and which I am little likely to
-underrate; believing, as I do, that, in the lapse of years, the
-aggregate of their effects is far more fatal than any periodical
-epidemic visitation. Likewise, I cannot doubt that, under certain
-circumstances, and in respect of particular cases, they may assist the
-operation of the choleraic poison. Nor will I pretend so exactly to
-limit the affinities of that which evolves this poison, as to deny that
-rooms, fœtid with animal exhalations, may (like cesspool-sodden cellars)
-be ready to answer the stimulus of its infection. And at any rate, I
-think it highly important to recognise that all sanitary defects which
-embarrass the excretive purification of the human body--whether by
-breathing or otherwise, do naturally tend in the same direction as the
-causes of Cholera, and are liable--if only by indirect means, to become
-accessory in its destructive work.
-
-But, deeply impressed as I am with the importance of these
-considerations, I esteem it of still higher consequence, if measures are
-ever to be taken for an effective prevention of the disease, that the
-principle of its _specific causation_ should be steadfastly kept in
-view. What may be the exact chemistry of this process, I do not pretend
-to say: urging only, that, in all human probability, the poison arises
-in specific changes impressed by some migratory agent upon certain
-refuse-elements of life. Perhaps nowhere, and certainly not before your
-Hon. Court, can it be desirable, in the present immaturity of
-pathological knowledge, to argue as to the first origin or absolute
-nature of that wandering influence which determines in particular
-localities the generation of epidemic malaria. Simply, since it leads to
-all-important practical conclusions, let this distinction be recognised:
-that which seems to have come to us from the East is not itself a
-poison, so much as it is a test and touchstone of poison. Whatever in
-its nature it may be, this at least we know of its operation. Past
-millions of scattered population it moves innocuous. Through the
-unpolluted atmosphere of cleanly districts, it migrates silently,
-without a blow: that which it can kindle into poison, lies not there. To
-the foul, damp breath of low-lying cities, it comes like a spark to
-powder. Here is contained that which it can swiftly make
-destructive,--soaked into soil, stagnant in water, griming the pavement,
-tainting the air--the slow rottenness of unremoved excrement, to which
-the first contact of this foreign ferment brings the occasion of
-changing into new and more deadly combinations.
-
-These are matters which it is hateful to hear, and, believe me, to speak
-about. But the thing is worse than the statement; and I would suggest to
-you this easy test of its reality. Take at random any consecutive
-hundred entries of Cholera-Deaths in the Registrar-General’s
-metropolitan returns, where local conditions are described; and let any
-man decide for himself, whether what I have sketched in general terms
-convey more than the essential features of these several records. In
-1849, such an atmosphere as these influences engender existed
-continuously and intensely on the low-lying south side of the river, and
-to some distance inland, from Greenwich to Wandsworth; it existed also
-continuously, but in far less intensity, and with comparatively little
-extension inland, along the northern side of the river from Poplar to
-Chelsea, and it existed very intensely in several independent centres,
-scattered about those healthier levels of the metropolis, which, by
-their better position, ought to have been exempted from such a reproach.
-The Cholera struck in the same proportion as this atmosphere prevailed;
-and herein, I repeat, lies that definite local condition, except for
-which--to the best of my knowledge and belief, the migratory ferment
-(whatever it may be) would pass harmlessly through the midst of us.
-
-For, towards the chemical constitution of local atmospheres, it seems
-that the several principles of epidemic diseases stand in the same sort
-of fixed respective relations, as do the several principles of infective
-fevers towards certain elements in the blood of individual persons. Just
-as the infective ferment acts on man, so appears the epidemic ferment to
-act on locality. We know that, in a given group of human beings,
-small-pox chooses one victim, scarlatina another, measles a third, by
-reason of some material quality in each person respectively, which his
-blood possesses, and which his neighbour’s blood does not possess. By
-virtue of this quality--not the less chemical because chemists have no
-name for it, that specific exterior agency, which we call infection, has
-the power of affecting each such person--has the power of producing in
-him a succession of characteristic chemical changes which tend to an
-eventual close by exhausting this material which feeds them.[81]
-
- [81] For the scientific reader, I may perhaps be permitted to add,
- that the very difficult Subject, at which here I can only venture to
- glance, is discussed at some length in one of my Pathological
- Lectures, delivered at St. Thomas’s Hospital in 1850, published at
- that time in the _Lancet_, and subsequently reprinted.--J. S., 1854.
-
-Strictly analogous to this, in its principle of choice and in its method
-of operation, appears the epidemic action--not on persons indeed, but on
-places. The specific migrating power--whatever its nature, has the
-faculty of infecting districts in a manner detrimental to life, only
-when their atmosphere is fraught with certain products susceptible,
-under its influence, of undergoing poisonous transformation.
-
-These products, it is true, are but imperfectly known to us. Under the
-vague name of putrefaction we include all those thousand-fold
-possibilities of new combination, to which organic matters are exposed
-in their gradual declension from life. The birth of one such combination
-rather than another is the postulate for an epidemic poison.
-
-Whether the ferment, which induces this particular change in certain
-elements of our atmosphere, may ever be some accident of local origin,
-or must always be the creeping infection from similar atmospheres
-elsewhere similarly affected; whether the first impulse, here or there,
-be given by this agency or by that--by heat, by magnetism, by planets or
-meteors--such questions are widely irrelevant to the purpose for which I
-have the honour of addressing you. The one great pathological fact,
-which I have sought to bring into prominence for your knowledge and
-application, is this:--that the epidemic prevalence of Cholera does not
-arise in some new cloud of venom, floating above reach and control, high
-over successive lands, and raining down upon them without difference its
-prepared distillation of death; but that--so far as scientific analysis
-can decide, it depends on one occasional phase of an influence which is
-always about us--on one change of materials which in their other changes
-give rise to other ills; that these materials, so perilously prone to
-explode into one or other breath of epidemic pestilence, are the dense
-exhalations of animal uncleanness which infect, in varying proportion,
-the entire area of our metropolis; and that, from the nature of the
-case, it must remain optional with those who witness the dreadful
-infliction, whether they will indolently acquiesce in their continued
-and increasing liabilities to a degrading calamity, or will employ the
-requisite skill, science, and energy, to remove from before their
-thresholds these filthy sources of misfortune.
-
- * * * * *
-
-2. If, gentlemen, I have detained you long in stating conclusions as to
-the habits of the disease, and as to the significance of its local
-partialities, it has been in order to render quite obvious to you the
-intention of those precautionary measures which it is now my duty to
-recommend.
-
-First, I would allude to influences of an exterior and public kind; and
-here, all that I have to advocate might be included in a single
-stipulation, that cleanliness--in the widest sense of the word--should
-be enforced to the full extent of your authority.
-
-Over the pollutions of the river, and over the tidal exposure of its
-malarious banks, you have no power.
-
-Whether for the relief of your low-lying districts--subject to imminent
-risk from causes I have described--there can be found any temporary
-protection to save their atmosphere from contamination, is a question
-which you will resolve upon other judgment than mine.
-
-Along the river-bank there is one especial source of nuisance which has
-repeatedly been under your notice, and which is likely to become of
-serious local import under the presence of epidemic disease. I refer to
-the docks, and chiefly to that of Whitefriars. I mention it
-particularly, not only because the accumulations of putrid matter there
-have often been alarmingly great, but likewise because, at the head of
-this dock, during the former invasion of Cholera, there was remarkable
-prevalence of the disease; and I can well remember how often the
-offensive condition of the dock was accused, not unjustly, of
-contributing to the mortality of the neighbourhood. The fœtid materials,
-floated into these several recesses of the river, and left stranded
-there by the receding tide, are often so copious as to produce very
-objectionable effects on the atmosphere which surrounds them; and I
-would beg leave strongly to urge that such sources of nuisance should be
-thoroughly and permanently removed.
-
-Further--from what I have said as to the conditions of our vulnerability
-by Cholera, you will be prepared to think it of great importance that,
-during the next six months, you should be certified on the state of your
-sewers, in every part of the City, as to their greatest possible
-cleanliness and least possible offensiveness of ventilation. Fifty miles
-of sewer, reticulated through the City, sufficiently attest your active
-desire to provide for the complete and continuous carrying away of all
-excremental matters: and you will excuse me, I hope, in consideration of
-the anxieties of my office, if I seem superfluously cautious in
-reminding you that the test of successful sewers lies in an inodorous
-fulfilment of their duty, and that every complaint of offensive
-emanations indicates, in proportion to its extent, a failure of that
-sanitary object for which the construction was designed.
-
-There is one precaution--always of great value to the health of towns,
-and especially useful against any malarious infection, which happily I
-find it needless to recommend. The paving of all public ways within the
-City--including every court and alley--is already so complete as to
-constitute a very favorable point in your sanitary defences. In order
-that this excellent arrangement may give its full fruit, it will be
-requisite--though this again I need hardly press on your consideration,
-that the duties of scavengers and dustmen be thoroughly and punctually
-performed.
-
-Again, I would particularly advise that great vigilance be exercised in
-all markets, slaughtering-places, and other establishments under your
-jurisdiction, to prevent the retention of refuse-matter, animal or
-vegetable. I would urge the strictest enforcement of all regulations
-which you have made for the cleanliness of such places, and for the
-removal of their putrefiable refuse.
-
-Likewise, I have to suggest that after the month of May, at latest, no
-disturbance of earth to any considerable depth should be allowed to take
-place, either in your works or in those of gas and water companies,
-except under circumstances of urgent necessity. In the lower levels of
-the City, particularly, I conceive this prohibition to be a matter of
-paramount importance; because the soil, never of unexceptionable
-cleanliness in towns, is here especially apt to be of offensive quality.
-
-On the subject of water in its general relations to the City, I have
-only again to express my deep regret that it lies out of your present
-power to compel a continuous supply, and that your means are restricted
-to choosing what may best compensate for the absence of this sanitary
-boon. It must be your aim to mitigate, so far as may be, the evils that
-belong to an ill-regulated intermittent system in its adaptation to the
-houses of the poor--evils which imply, as I have often told you, not
-only much domestic dirt, but likewise a frequent suspension of all
-efficiency in the drainage of innumerable houses. With a view to the
-best alternative for a continuous supply, I would recommend that at
-least a daily filling of all cisternage take place, and expressly that
-Sunday form no exception to the advantages of this rule. If a choice of
-evils must be made, I trust it is no heathen’s part to urge that the
-Christian Sabbath suffers more desecration in the filth and preventable
-unwholesomeness of many thousand households, than in the honest industry
-of a dozen turncocks. I likewise submit, that it would be highly
-advantageous to the labouring poor, most of whose domestic cleansing is
-reserved for the last day of the week, that, on that day, a second
-delivery of water should take place at some hour in the afternoon.
-
-I wish it were in my power to tell your Hon. Court that the supply of
-water to the City of London had become, in quality, all that I think it
-might be rendered. Such as it is, however, there depend other very
-important issues on its being delivered in ample abundance for all the
-purposes of cleanliness; and I am glad to have learned from the eminent
-engineer of the New River Company, that he has it in expectation very
-shortly to be able to furnish to the City a largely increased and
-practically inexhaustible supply.
-
-The subject of water in its district relations ought hardly to be passed
-without a word of caution as to the use of pumps within the City. I need
-hardly inform you that every spring of water represents the drainage of
-a certain surface or thickness of soil, and that--such as are the
-qualities of this gathering ground, such must be the qualities of the
-water. You will, perhaps, remember that in my account of one celebrated
-City pump, which sucks from beneath a churchyard, I showed you ninety
-grains of solid matter in every gallon of its water. In virtue of that
-wonderful action which earth exerts on organic matter, the former
-contents of a coffin, here re-appearing in a spring, had undergone so
-complete a change as to be insusceptible of further putrefaction: the
-grateful coolness, so much admired in the produce of that popular pump,
-chiefly depending on a proportion of nitre, which arises in the chemical
-transformation of human remains, and which being dissolved in the water,
-gives it, I believe, some refrigerant taste and slight diuretic action.
-Undoubtedly this water is an objectionable beverage in respect of its
-several saline ingredients; but my present object in adverting to them
-is rather to illustrate an anterior danger which they imply. Their
-presence indicates a comparative completion of the putrefactive process,
-effected by the uniform filtration of organic solutions through a
-porous soil.[82] Let that soil have frequent fissures in its substance;
-or let its thickness be scanty in proportion to the organic matters to
-be acted on: and the water, imperfectly filtered, would run off foul and
-putrescent. Now this risk, more or less, belongs to all pumps within the
-City of London. They draw from a ground excavated in all directions by
-sewers, drains, cesspools, gas-pipes, burial-pits. The immense amount of
-organic matter which infiltrates the soil does undoubtedly, for the
-greater part, suffer oxidation, and pass into chemical repose: but in
-any particular case it is the merest chance, whether the glass of water
-raised to the mouth shall be fraught only with saline results of
-decomposition--in itself an objectionable issue--or shall contain
-organic refuse in the active and infectious stage of its earlier
-transformations. Some recent cutting of a trench, or breakage of a drain
-in the neighbourhood, may have converted a draught, which before was
-chronicly unwholesome, into one immediately perilous to life. Such facts
-ought to be known to all persons having custody of pumps within urban
-districts; and it ought likewise to be known that this infiltrative
-spoiling of springs may occur to the distance of many hundred yards.[83]
-
- [82] This very important influence, exerted by the earth on various
- organic infiltrations, is referred to in the text only under one point
- of view; only as it occasions the deterioration of land-springs in
- urban districts, and renders their water unfit for consumption. But
- the subject has another equally important side. Such springs, having
- their waters laden with nitrates, represent the continuous removal of
- organic impurities which otherwise would contaminate the air. The evil
- of spoiled springs, therefore--while it necessitates for every urban
- population that their water-supply shall be artificially furnished
- from a distance, has great countervailing advantages. A given organic
- soakage will cease to vitiate the atmosphere by evaporation, in
- proportion as it gravitates to lower levels, and undergoes those
- chemical changes which accompany filtration through the soil. Hence it
- is evident that, for the healthiness of inhabited districts (where
- extensive soakage of organic matters is almost invariable) it becomes
- most important to maintain, or by artificial measures to accelerate,
- this down-draught through the soil; and the reader will scarcely need
- to be reminded, that, in those improvements of metropolitan sewerage,
- which it is a chief object of this Report to advocate, complete
- provision for the continuous drainage of soil is implied as an
- essential part.
-
- [83] For a fact strikingly illustrative of this, I am indebted to my
- colleague, Dr. R. D. THOMSON, Lecturer on Chemistry at St. Thomas’s
- Hospital. At Liverpool--in three wells which he examined, distant
- severally 760, 800, and 1050 yards from the Mersey, he found the water
- brackish from marine soakage, containing four or five hundred grains
- of solid matter _per_ gallon, and totally unfit for consumption.
-
-In final reference to the quality of water, whether supplied by our
-trading companies or derived from springs within the City, I think it
-expedient to mention that, against its lesser impurities, great
-protection is given by filtration through animal charcoal, as in various
-‘filters and purifiers’ which are before the public. These protective
-means do not lie within reach of the poorer classes; nor, whatever their
-accessibility to individuals, can any such personal arrangements render
-it less important to provide that water--the first necessary of life--be
-supplied for universal use in its utmost procurable purity.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Beyond the above points, which are of general application within the
-City, all your remaining precautions will relate to the condition of
-private houses: and of these--occupied by the poorer classes, there
-exist in the City some thousands over which it will be requisite, by
-repeated inspection, to maintain an efficient sanitary watch. From
-circumstances to which I have already referred, it appears that your
-defences against Cholera will very mainly consist in removing the causes
-of disease from within individual houses; and it is only by an organised
-system of inspection, for detecting and removing every unclean
-condition, that this object can be attained. For your encouragement in
-this task, I may venture to express my belief that, throughout a
-considerable portion of the City, the local affinities for Cholera are
-not too strong to be greatly modified and obviated by such a system.
-
-With respect to this important work of sanitary inspection, what I now
-propose is no new proceeding within the City. More or less since the
-date of my appointment, but I hope with gradual increase of completeness
-and efficiency, weekly visitations on a considerable scale have been
-made, under my direction, by your four Inspectors of Nuisances. Acting
-under your authority, and guided by what information I could obtain on
-the existence of endemic disease[84] in your several districts, I have
-furnished the Inspectors every week with a variable list of houses,
-ranging probably from fifty to one hundred and fifty at a time, for
-their visitation and inquiry. The information which I have directed them
-to seek has referred of course to the various details of sanitary
-condition: to questions of lodgment, ventilation, cleanliness, drainage,
-water-supply, dust-removal, paving of yards and cellars, existence of
-nuisances, and the like: and I have constructed tabular forms for their
-use, which admit of this information being recorded and reviewed in the
-readiest manner. Week by week, before each meeting of your Court, I have
-had the habit of going through every particular of these somewhat
-considerable details. I have sorted out of them those very numerous
-cases in which your lawful powers could be usefully exerted. When I have
-deemed it necessary, I have myself made visits of verification or
-inquiry; and have finally laid before you, in the form which is familiar
-to your weekly meetings, such recommendations as the week’s survey has
-shown necessary, for enforcing works of local improvement under the
-powers of your Acts of Parliament. I find that within the last twelve
-months there have been made 3147 visitations of this nature, the results
-of which are recorded in your office; and, founded on the result of
-these inspections, there have been issued 983 orders for abatement of
-causes of disease.
-
- [84] This information has been mainly derived from two
- sources:--first, from the weekly Death-Returns of the nine City
- Registrars, which the Registrar-General most kindly allows me to have
- transcribed so soon as they arrive at his office;--secondly, from
- weekly returns which the Medical Officers of the three City Unions
- have had the great kindness and liberality to supply for my
- assistance, as to the existence of fever and kindred disorders in the
- several localities under their charge.
-
-I am very far from considering that these arrangements have been
-perfect. Circumstances beyond my control have prevented me from
-constructing as complete an organisation as I could wish; and the fact
-that your Inspectors are very largely employed in other duties, has
-perhaps occasionally given some hurry and imperfection to their share of
-the work. Still, such as it is, this system has been the means of
-considerable advantage; and I am glad to be able to claim for your Hon.
-Court the distinction of being first in the metropolis to have
-established an arrangement for the systematic sanitary visitation of the
-dwellings of the poor. In relation to this subject, I beg to inform your
-Hon. Court that your Inspectors have discharged, with much zeal,
-intelligence, and industry, the duties which you authorised me to impose
-on them.
-
-During the last few weeks it has become obvious to your Hon. Court that
-the duties of this department of your service have grown to such
-dimensions as to necessitate some increase of your staff; and acting on
-this opinion, mainly with a view to render more complete your sanitary
-supervision of the City, you have just appointed two additional
-Inspectors of Nuisances. In making this appointment, you have determined
-not to restrict any two or three Inspectors exclusively to the business
-of house-inspection, but to allot the joint duties, sanitary and
-surveying, equally among their number: parting the area of the City into
-six, instead of four, Inspectors’ districts; so that each Inspector
-shall give a certain proportion of time to the duties which he has to
-fulfil under your Surveyor’s direction, and another certain proportion
-to those in which he will be engaged under the direction of your Officer
-of Health. It is only some experience of this arrangement that can
-decide whether it will be the most effectual for your purpose; but in
-the mean time I have studied so to dispose the industry of your
-increased staff, under the arrangement you have ordered, as to obtain
-the most systematic and efficient discharge of those duties which you
-have desired me to superintend.
-
-Reckoning that each Inspector, if he fulfilled no other duty, could
-report on the condition of about fifty houses _per diem_, I presume
-that henceforth, in each of your five more important districts, from one
-hundred to one hundred and twenty houses can be visited weekly by the
-Inspector, without encroaching on the time required for his other
-duties.
-
-The general plan, on which I would propose that this force should be
-disposed, is the following:--first, as heretofore, the weekly list would
-contain all places needing investigation on the ground of such deaths
-and illness as are usually associated with preventable causes, in order
-that any sanitary defects may at once be remedied in them; secondly, in
-each week there would fall due a certain number of sanitary works
-(relating to house-drainage, water-supply, and the like) for which you
-would have previously issued orders requiring them to be completed
-within a stated time, and on the satisfactory execution of these it will
-be the Inspectors duty to examine and certify; thirdly, in each district
-I would have a certain rota of visitation, according to the badness of
-the spot and its known liability to fall into filthy and unwholesome
-condition, requiring one set of houses to be seen weekly, another set
-fortnightly, another monthly, another quarterly, and so on--a rota,
-varying from time to time with the changing circumstances of each
-locality; and, out of this rota, each week would supply a stated number
-of cases for inquiry, to which I should occasionally add certain of
-those establishments in which offensive occupations are pursued. Thus,
-in the large number of weekly visits which I suppose the Inspector to
-make, there would be a certain proportion of that more elaborate kind
-which involves an examination of the entire house; another proportion,
-made for the sole purpose of seeing that previous orders have been
-executed; another proportion, repeated at fixed intervals, simply to
-ascertain that houses, once cleansed and repaired, are not relapsing
-into filth, nor their works becoming inefficient.
-
-By utilising, on some such plan as this, the increased staff which you
-have appointed for the purpose, and by giving to its execution my
-continual superintendence, I trust to be able, from time to time, to
-certify you that the City becomes better and better capable of resisting
-epidemic invasion.[85] From such statements as I have set before you, on
-the local affinities of disease--not of Cholera alone, but of typhus and
-its kindred, you will be prepared to expect increased sanitary
-advantage, from this more systematic suppression of the causes of death:
-and I believe you will not be disappointed. Whether the anticipated
-pestilence rage in our metropolis or not, you will be combating, day by
-day, the influence of other malignant diseases. Whenever it may be in my
-power to tell you generally of the City, that the dwellings of the poor
-are no longer crowded and stifling; nor their walls mouldy; nor their
-yards and cellars unpaved and sodden; nor their water-supply defective;
-nor their drainage stinking; nor their atmosphere hurt by neighbouring
-nuisances; then, gentlemen, whether Cholera test your success or not,
-surely you will have contributed much to conquer more habitual enemies.
-For whatever there may be specific and exceptional in the production of
-Cholera, at least it touches no healthy spot: the local conditions
-which welcome its occasional presence are, in its absence, hour by hour,
-the workers of other death; and in rendering a locality secure against
-the one, you will also have made it less vulnerable by the others.
-
- [85] I may take this opportunity of mentioning that, during the last
- few months, the increased sanitary staff has been worked with very
- great advantage.--J. S., May, 1854.
-
-As a last suggestion in this part of my subject, there are two steps
-which I would recommend to your Hon. Court, as likely to assist the
-labours of your officers, and to bring a large quantity of important
-information before you:--first (according to a plan adopted here in the
-last epidemic) that printed notices should be posted in every
-back-street, court and alley of the City, and should be renewed once a
-month, advising the careful maintenance of cleanliness in all houses,
-and inviting all persons who are aggrieved by any nuisance, or by any
-neglect of scavengers and dustmen, or by any defect of water-supply,
-forthwith to make complaint at your Office, or to the Inspector of the
-district, whose name and address might be subjoined; secondly, that a
-circular letter should be written to all persons in parochial authority,
-also to other clergy, to heads of visiting societies and the like,
-begging them to communicate with your officers on every occasion when
-any local uncleanliness or nuisance may come within their knowledge.
-
- * * * * *
-
-3. Finally, gentlemen--in the probable anticipation that next year
-Cholera will prevail in London with at least its former severity, it may
-be claimed of my office, that I should say something with respect to
-personal precautions for avoidance of the disease. While most willing to
-place at your disposal any useful results of my practical experience in
-the matter, I cannot but feel the great difficulty of making general
-suggestions in a form really capable of particular application.
-
-From the eminently local prevalence of the poison, it may be inferred
-that, for all whose circumstances allow an option in the matter, the
-first and most important precaution would consist in avoiding those
-localities where the epidemic is active. Our knowledge of the subject
-enables us confidently to say that, if in one spot the chance of being
-attacked by Cholera is as 1 to 100, in another it becomes 1 to 50, in a
-third 1 to 5, in a fourth almost an equal chance whether to be attacked
-or not. Nothing is gained towards security by the mere act of leaving
-our metropolitan area, if one resorts to some other place where the
-system of drainage is equally vicious, or where--as at our nearest
-bathing-place, the beach is made almost as offensive by sewage as here
-the river-banks.[86] From earlier statements in my Report, it will be
-obvious to you that the eligible sites of residence are those which
-stand high and dry, with clean effectual drainage of their soils and
-houses, conveying all organic refuse beyond range of the local
-atmosphere.
-
- [86] Unless the sanitary improvement of Brighton be soon set about in
- earnest, the reputation for healthiness, which established its
- prosperity, will undergo a very sensible reverse. The natural
- advantages of the place are now almost neutralised by the evil
- adverted to in the text, and by other filthinesses of the kind.--J.
- S., 1854.
-
-I will not pass this part of the subject without admitting that the
-course here suggested might involve a considerable desertion of
-particular localities, and a transient injury to their commerce. This
-unavoidable result of proclaiming the laws of the disease, I must regret
-in regard of its personal bearings. But the facts of the case are
-all-important for the public; and sanitary improvement will perhaps
-move more quickly in the country, when it is known that the pecuniary
-prosperity of places may suffer from their reputation for endemic
-disease.
-
-In case of Cholera prevailing with severity in spots containing a dense
-poor population, great assistance would be given to medical and sanitary
-measures, if a number of empty unlet houses, healthily situated, were at
-the disposal of the authorities; into which, under proper regulations,
-they might induce certain of the poorest families to migrate for a time,
-as to places of refuge, till the disease should have subsided about
-their original dwellings.
-
-For persons, whose circumstances or duties retain them unavoidably in
-the midst of those suffering districts where the poison is most active,
-the best counsel I can offer--even if at first hearing it seem
-vague--is, that they should be vigilant as to preserving the greatest
-possible soundness and vigour of general health; keeping the body, so
-far as may be, undisturbed by extremes of heat and cold, undepressed by
-long confinement, unfluttered by violent passions, unexhausted by
-physical or mental fatigue, untried by any excess or any privation;
-taking for diet a sufficiency of fit and nutritive food, rather in
-generous measure than otherwise, but far from the confines of
-intemperance; and giving meanwhile a prompt attention and cure to
-whatever accidental ailments may arise.
-
-Such, in general language, are our best fortifications against the
-poison. It may be well, however, to add that in our metropolitan
-climate--perhaps everywhere else--the human frame tends to require some
-periodical aid from medicine. It may be the excitement and labour of
-London; it may be its atmosphere; it may be native peculiarity: but
-thus the fact stands--that there are few persons who do not at intervals
-require the re-establishing effects of what is called _tonic_ treatment.
-Probably three-fourths of the prescriptions we write are aimed at this
-mere tendency to depression in the human body, as manifested in one form
-or another. Now, as a man, going on some distant voyage of exploration,
-submits his chronometer to a last intelligent scrutiny, before he
-exposes it to the ordeal of other climates, so, in this matter of
-frequenting infected districts, men will do prudently, before they pass
-into perils which may test their powers of resistance, to see that they
-carry about with them no enfeeblement or disrepair which a short
-submission to medical discipline could effectually remove. For with
-epidemic poisons generally, and in a marked degree with Asiatic Cholera,
-it seems that all states of languor, depression, and debility enhance
-the risk of infection.[87]
-
- [87] For my medical readers, I may suggest that perhaps the daily use
- of _sulphate of quinine_, in small doses, during the height of the
- epidemic, would seem to deserve trial as a prophylactic; subject, of
- course, to what each practitioner is best able to estimate--of
- personal peculiarity in the patient, forbidding the use of this
- drug.--J. S., 1854.
-
-Beyond these general cautions, there is yet one which requires very
-particular mention.
-
-In respect of the commencement and predispositions of the disease, it is
-now well known--first, that in this country it habitually begins with
-diarrhœa of a painless and apparently trivial character; secondly, that
-diarrhœa, however produced, is, of all known personal conditions, the
-one most likely to invite an attack of Cholera at times when that
-disease is epidemic; thirdly, that during the prevalence of Cholera,
-side by side with it in a district, there is always a vast amount of
-epidemic diarrhœa, apparently constituting slighter degrees or earlier
-stages of the same disease; that this condition is just as amenable to
-treatment as the confirmed collapse of Cholera is utterly the opposite;
-and--since we can never say how incurable a few hours may render this
-insidious symptom, that its immediate arrest is a consideration of vital
-importance.
-
-Precautions against causing diarrhœa to oneself by errors of diet will
-vary somewhat with different individuals. Every person of ordinary
-discretion knows the habits of his own body, and can be tolerably
-confident, within certain limits of food, that he gives himself no
-occasion of sickness. He remembers articles of diet, which his neighbour
-perhaps may innocently indulge in, but which to himself are the occasion
-of inward disorder--of purging or vomiting, ‘bilious attack’ or nettle
-rash, headache, nightmare, or some other inconvenience. This knowledge
-fixes the limits which it primarily behoves him to regard; taking such
-food only into his body as experience has shown best to agree with it;
-and adhering to this course, without panic as to particular accustomed
-articles, and without abrupt discontinuance of old harmless habits.
-Apart from personal peculiarities, the chief dangers of diet appear to
-lie as follows: first, in those excesses of meat and drink, which
-(especially under circumstances of fatigue) occasion sickness to the
-stomach, or an increased labour of digestion; secondly, in taking food,
-solid or fluid, which is midway in some process of chemical
-transition--half-fermented beer and wine, water containing organic
-matters, meat and game and venison no longer fresh and not completely
-cooked, fish and shell-fish, in any state but the most perfect
-freshness, fruit or vegetables long-gathered or badly kept, and the
-like; thirdly, in a profusion of cold sour drink; fourthly, in partaking
-largely of those articles of diet which habitually, or by reason of
-imperfect cooking, pass unchanged through the intestinal canal; and
-fifthly, in the indiscreet use of purgative medicines, or in taking any
-article of diet which is likely to produce the same effect.
-
-In short, if care be taken under all these heads to avoid occasions of
-intestinal disturbance; if the diet, while generous, be simple and
-strictly temperate; if regular hours be given to sleep, to meals, to
-industry, to recreation; if a fair proportion of out-door exercise be
-taken; if damp and extremes of temperature be guarded against; and all
-practical pains be given to avoid the sources of bodily and mental
-depression; the danger will certainly be reduced to its _minimum_; and
-whatever effects the epidemic may happen to produce can be readily
-recognised and boldly encountered.
-
-Should these effects arise in their customary form of diarrhœa, it is of
-absolute urgent necessity that immediate medical treatment be resorted
-to: and so important for the safety of life is the recognition of this
-symptom in the earliest stage of its occurrence, that no unwonted action
-of the bowels should pass unobserved.
-
-The public constantly asks to be informed of some drug, or combination
-of drugs, to which under these circumstances they may have immediate
-recourse. But after very careful consideration of this subject, after
-hearing arguments on both sides, and reading those prescriptions which
-have been recommended for adoption, I venture to express my opinion
-that the safest course for the public, in regard of this threatened
-disease, will be to follow the same principle as guides them in their
-ordinary seizures of illness, and to obtain as quickly as possible the
-aid of their customary medical advisers. There is an invincible aptitude
-in the public to misapply all precautionary medicines within their
-reach; often superstitiously to treat them as charms, under the
-protection of which they may neglect temperance of diet and all other
-solicitude for health; often ignorantly to employ them in cases for
-which their use is forbidden; often, at the instigation of panic, to
-abuse them by preposterous and hurtful excess. Nervous and uneducated
-persons, instead of employing their astringent dose simply to stop any
-undue action from the bowels, would be apt, as the danger neared them,
-to make it an habitual dram in order to anticipate any such action; and
-the frequent after-necessity for purgative medicine, thus created, would
-constitute the very danger they desire to avoid. Recognising, therefore,
-at its full value, the importance of immediately treating, in every
-case, the first phenomena of epidemic diarrhœa, I must yet doubt whether
-the conditions of medical science and general education are such as to
-justify the promulgation of general formulæ so liable to extensive
-abuse.
-
-I speak of course with particular reference to the metropolis. In remote
-rural districts it may often be desirable that discreet and intelligent
-persons--the Clergy, for instance, should obtain from their medical
-neighbours some astringent preparation to which--in the very rare event
-of real emergency, temporary recourse might be had: but--for so
-hazardous a condition of disease, I must repeat as a general rule, that
-no nostrum, even in the best-intentioned hands of ignorance, can supply
-the place of medical discrimination.
-
-During the acute prevalence of the epidemic in any particular locality,
-it becomes of great importance to bring the uneducated classes of
-society, as far as possible, under systematic medical care; in the
-absence of which they are likely to neglect all premonitions of the
-disease, and thus to incur much unnecessary danger. To fulfil this
-object as regards the poor, express provision has been made by the Law:
-and it might be well for other classes, under similar exposure to
-attack, to consider how far they could arrange for their households a
-similar plan of protection.
-
-Under any Order in Council which brings into action the extraordinary
-powers of the Nuisances Removal Act, the General Board of Health has
-authority to enjoin on all Boards of Guardians throughout the country,
-that they provide, for ‘persons afflicted by or threatened with’ the
-disease, such medical aid as may be required: and the actual working of
-this has been that, on all occasions of epidemic Cholera prevailing in
-particular localities, the General Board of Health has called on the
-local Boards of Guardians to establish systematic house-to-house
-visitation, for discovering and treating among the poor all premonitory
-symptoms of the disease.
-
-In the too probable event of its becoming necessary next year to
-establish this system of medical organisation in parts of the
-metropolis, I have no reason to doubt that a requisition to the above
-effect will be addressed to the Guardians of the City poor; and, in this
-anticipation, I think it desirable to bring, in conclusion, one more
-point under notice of your Hon. Court. During the former invasion, the
-Guardians within the City of London resisted the requisitions of the
-General Board of Health; and the first fourteen weeks of the epidemic
-consequently passed without the establishment of any visitational system
-for arresting its progress. In the fifteenth week, however, the
-Corporation of the City undertook the unperformed duty, not legally
-devolving on them, and requested me to make arrangements for the purpose
-of its execution. With the assistance of the several Medical Officers of
-the City Unions, I immediately organised the requisite staff, and from
-that moment to the close of the epidemic there continued under my
-superintendence a systematic visitation of the poor, with beneficial,
-though tardy and imperfect, results.
-
-Recalling these incidents to the recollection of your Hon. Court, I
-would beg to observe that no similar endeavour can fully succeed, except
-as a system--well considered beforehand, and adjusted to the various
-circumstances which may require its application. Uncertainties of
-responsibility and conflicts of jurisdiction would inevitably occasion a
-sacrifice of life; and therefore, before the time when Cholera is likely
-to become epidemic, it should be definitively settled who is to
-undertake this organisation. Your Commission can have no jurisdiction in
-the matter; and the interference of the Corporation would be only at its
-own option. The legal responsibility rests solely with the Boards of
-Guardians: and it seems to me indispensable that, before the time for
-action arrives, the Corporation should determine its intentions; in
-order that the Boards of Guardians, if again called upon to organise
-arrangements of the kind in question, may know distinctly--either that
-the Corporation has relieved them of their task, or that there rests on
-them the undivided obligation of providing for the crisis.
-
- * * * * *
-
-III. Gentlemen, in concluding this report, I will not attempt to
-disguise from you that it has been written under feelings of
-considerable apprehension; and I am fully conscious that, in thus
-expressing myself, I am liable to the imputation of raising unnecessary
-alarm.
-
-If the possible mischief to be wrought by epidemic Cholera lay in some
-fixed inflexible fate, whatever opinion or knowledge I might hold on the
-subject of its return, silence would be better than speech; and I could
-gladly refrain from vexing the public ear by gloomy forebodings of an
-inevitable future.
-
-But from this supposition the case differs diametrically: and the people
-of England are not like timid cattle, capable, only when blindfold, of
-confronting danger. It belongs to their race--it belongs to their
-dignity of manhood, to take deliberate cognisance of their foes, and not
-lightly to cede the victory. A people that has fought the greatest
-battles--not of arms alone, but of genius and skilful toil, is little
-likely to be scared at the necessity of meeting large danger by
-appropriate devices of science. A people that has inaugurated
-railways--that has spanned the Menai Strait and reared the Crystal
-Palace, can hardly fear the enterprise of draining poison from its
-infected towns. A people that has freed its foreign slaves at twenty
-millions’ ransom, will never let its home population perish, for
-cheapness sake, in the ignominious ferment of their filth.
-
-Therefore, gentlemen, advisedly I state the danger as it seems to me.
-England has again become subject to a plague, the recurrence of
-which--or the duration--or the malignity, no human being can predict.
-
-But, if I state the danger, so likewise, to the best of my belief, I
-state the remedy and defence. Colossal statistics concur with the
-results of detailed inspection, to refer this disease, in common with
-many others that scourge our population, distinctly and infallibly, to
-the working of local causes--of causes susceptible of removal--of causes
-which it devolves on our Legislature to remove.
-
-The exemption we seek is worth a heavy purchase. My thoughts turn
-involuntarily to the epidemics of former centuries, to their frequent
-returns and immense fatality. I reflect on the Plague, and how it
-influenced the average death-rate of London; how in 1593 it doubled it,
-in 1603 trebled it, in 1625 quadrupled it: and how (after a less
-considerable visitation in 1636) it actually multiplied the mortality
-sevenfold in the tremendous epidemic of ‘65. The ravages of that
-pestilence are best appreciated in the fact, that we esteem the Great
-Fire of London a cheap equivalent for their arrest; looking to that
-eventful conflagration of the metropolis with gratitude, rather than
-horror, because of the mightier evils that were extinguished with its
-flames.
-
-To so frightful a development as this, Cholera, by many degrees, has not
-attained; but, ignorant as we are of its laws and resources, we dare not
-surmise, at any renewed invasion, what increment of severity it may have
-won. In the simple fact, that our country has again become subject to
-pestilential epidemics, there lies an amount of threat only to be
-measured by those who are conversant, by history or experience, with
-the possible developments of such disease.
-
-Therefore, gentlemen, having the deepest assurance that these unexplored
-possibilities of evil may be foreclosed by appropriate means, I should
-ill deserve your confidence if I shrank from setting before you--however
-ungracious the task--my deliberate estimate of the peril.
-
-It pertains to my local office to tell you of local cures; and this I
-have sought to do. I have suggested that, by active superintendence of
-all houses within your jurisdiction, there may be suppressed in detail
-those several causes of the disease which arise in individual neglect;
-that, by elaborate care as to the cleanliness of pavements, markets,
-docks, and sewers, something may be done towards the mitigation of more
-general causes; that, by a well-organised system of medical visitation,
-very much may be effected towards encountering attacks of the disease,
-while still amenable to treatment:--that these, with similar
-precautions, are therefore to be recommended.
-
-And not for a moment would I seem to depreciate such measures,
-palliative only, and partial though they be. By their judicious
-application, from Aldgate to the Temple, life may possibly be saved to
-some hundreds; to children that are fondly loved, to parents that are
-the stay of numbers.
-
-But against the full significance of any epidemic, I am bound to tell
-you that these are but poor substitutes for protection. To render them
-effectual, even in their narrow sphere of operation, there must be great
-vigilance and great expenditure; a weary vigilance and a
-disproportionate expenditure, because chiefly given to defeat in detail
-what should have been prevented in principle. And be done what may, in
-this palliative spirit, the sources of the disease are substantially
-unstayed: for the faults, to which its metropolitan prevalence is due,
-consist not simply in a number of individual mismanagements, but include
-a common and radical mal-construction as their chief.
-
-No city, so far as Science may be trusted, can deserve immunity from
-epidemic disease, except by making absolute cleanliness the first law of
-its existence; such cleanliness, I mean, as consists in the perfect
-adaptation of drainage, water-supply, scavenage, and ventilation, to the
-purposes they should respectively fulfil; such cleanliness, as consists
-in carrying away by these means, inoffensively, all refuse materials of
-life--gaseous, solid, or fluid, from the person, the house, the factory,
-or the thoroughfare, so soon as possible after their formation, and with
-as near an approach, as their several natures allow, to one continuous
-current of removal.
-
-To realise for London this conception of how a city should cleanse
-itself may involve, no doubt, the perfection of numberless details. Yet,
-most of all, it would pre-suppose a comprehensive organisation of plan
-and method: not alone for that intramural unity of system which is
-needful for all the works, as most for those of drainage and
-water-supply; but, equally, to harmonise these works with other
-extramural arrangements for utilising to the country the boundless
-wealth of metropolitan refuse--for distributing to the uses of
-agriculture what is then rescued from the character of filth--for
-requiting to the fields in gifts for vegetation, what they have rendered
-to the town in food for man.
-
-How far the construction of London has proceeded on the recognition of
-such objects, or how far the advantages of such a plan have been
-realised, it could only be a mockery to ask. Our metropolis, by
-successive accretions, has covered mile after mile of land. Each new
-addition has been made with scarcely more reference to the legitimate
-necessities of life, than if it had clustered there by crystallisation.
-With no scientific forecast to plan the whole, with little but chance
-and cheapness to shape the parts, our desultory architecture has
-eclipsed the conditions of health. Draining up-hill or down-hill, as the
-case might be, and running their aqueducts at random from chalk-quarries
-or river-mud; or ponding sewage in their cellars, and digging beside it
-for water; blocking-up the inlets of freshness and, equally, the outlets
-of nuisance; constructing sewers to struggle with the Thames--now to
-pollute its ebb, now to be obstructed by its flow; the builders of many
-generations have accumulated sanitary errors in so intricate a system,
-that their apprehension and their cure seem equally remote.
-
-Therefore--by reason of causes, ramified through the whole metropolis
-and deep-rooted in its soil, which bind all parts together in one common
-endurance of their effects--therefore cannot epidemic disease be
-conquered by any exertions or by any amelioration, short of the complete
-and comprehensive cure. Against the danger we dread, no shelter is to be
-found in petty reforms and patchwork legislation. Not to inspectorships
-of nuisances, but to the large mind of State-Policy, one must look for a
-real emancipation from this threatening plague.
-
-A child’s intellect can appreciate the wild absurdity of seeking at Peru
-what here runs to waste beneath our pavements,--of ripening only
-epidemic disease with what might augment the food of the people--of
-waiting, like our ancestors, to expiate the neglected divinity of water
-in some bitter purgation by fire.
-
-But it needs the grasp of political mastership, not uninformed by
-Science, to convert to practical application these obvious elements of
-knowledge; to recognise a national object irrelevant to the interests of
-party; to lift an universal requirement from the sphere of professional
-jealousies, and to found in immutable principles the sanitary
-legislation of a people.
-
- I have the honour to remain,
-
- &c. &c.
-
-
- APPENDIX OF TABLES
- ILLUSTRATING THE
- SANITARY CONDITION OF THE CITY OF LONDON.
-
- I. Area and Population of the several Districts and Sub-districts of
- the City.
-
- II. Quinquennial Synopsis of City Mortality, from Michaelmas 1848 to
- Michaelmas 1853; with Death-Rates calculated for this period, on the
- Population enumerated in 1851, for each District and Sub-District of
- the City.
-
- III. First annual enumeration of Deaths, relating to the fifty-two
- weeks dating from October 1st, 1848, to September 29th, 1849.
-
- IV. Second annual enumeration of Deaths, relating to the fifty-two
- weeks, dating from September 30th, 1840, to September 28th, 1850.
-
- V. Third annual enumeration of Deaths, relating to the fifty-two
- weeks, dating from September 29th, 1850, to September 27th, 1851.
-
- VI. Fourth annual enumeration of Deaths, relating to the fifty-two
- weeks, dating from September 28th, 1851, to September 25th, 1852.
-
- VII. Fifth annual enumeration of Deaths, relating to the fifty-two
- weeks, dating from September 26th, 1852, to September 24th, 1853.
-
- VIII. Quinquennial Mortality, classified by Age; first, for the entire
- City; next, for the Three Unions severally.
-
- IX. Number of Deaths occasioned, during the last five years, by
- certain Acute Diseases, chiefly epidemic, infectious, and endemic.
-
- X. Comparative Mortality in different seasons of the year: namely, in
- the Autumn-Quarters (October, November, December), in the
- Winter-Quarters (January, February, March), in the Spring-Quarters
- (April, May, June), and in the Summer-Quarters (July, August,
- September), of the five years from Michaelmas 1848 to Michaelmas 1853.
-
- XI. Autumn Mortality.
-
- XII. Winter Mortality.
-
- XIII. Spring Mortality.
-
- XIV. Summer Mortality.
-
-
-No. I. _Area and Population of the several Districts and Sub-districts
-of the City of London._
-
- +-----------------------------+-------+-------+-------------+-------+
- | | Census| Census| Decennial |Area of|
- | Sub-district. | of | of | increase (+)|Land in|
- | | 1841. | 1851. | or |Acres. |
- | | | |decrease. (-)| |
- +-----------------------------+-------+-------+-------------+-------+
- | {St. Botolph | 20,197| 23,435| + 3238| 85|
- |EAST LONDON. {Cripplegate | 19,161| 20,582| + 1421| 68|
- | {Workhouses[88]| 454| 576| + 122| |
- | { +-------+-------+-------------+-------+
- | {Total | 39,812| 44,593| + 4781| 153|
- +-----------------------------+-------+-------+-------------+-------+
- | {North | 12,138| 12,350| + 212| 47|
- |WEST LONDON. {South | 16,460| 15,844| - 616| 77|
- | {Workhouse[89] | 387| 409| + 22| |
- | { +-------+-------+-------------+-------+
- | {Total | 28,985| 28,603| - 382| 124|
- +-----------------------------+-------+-------+-------------+-------+
- | {South-West | 8839| 9204| + 365| 49|
- | {North-West | 12,427| 11,847| - 580| 72|
- |CITY OF {South | 11,954| 11,461| - 493| 82|
- |LONDON. {South-East | 10,597| 10,594| - 3| 84|
- | {North-East | 12,103| 12,826| + 723| 92|
- | {Workhouse[90] | 920| 794| - 126| |
- | { +-------+-------+-------------+-------+
- | {Total | 56,840| 56,726| - 114| 379|
- +-----------------------------+-------+-------+-------------+-------+
- | Entire Population of} 125,637|129,922| + 4285| 656|
- | the City of London} | | | |
- +-------------------------------------+-------+-------------+-------+
-
- [88] One of these workhouses is situated in the North sub-district of
- the West London Union. In 1841 it contained 157 inmates; in 1851, 187
- inmates. The other workhouse is situated in the St. Botolph
- sub-district: in 1841 it contained 297, in 1851, 389 persons.
-
- [89] This workhouse is situated in the North sub-district of the
- Union.
-
- [90] In 1841, the 920 paupers of this Union were received, partly at
- Marlborough House, Peckham; partly in Deacon’s Farm-house, Stepney
- Green. The present workhouse, erected since 1841, is at Bow.
-
-
-No. II.--_Quinquennial Synopsis of City Mortality, with Death-rates
-calculated per Thousand on the Population of 1851._
-
- +-----------------------+-------------------------+
- | | EAST |
- |Population,} | LONDON |
- |according }Entire City| UNION, |
- |to the }of London, | 44,593. |
- |Census }129,922. +--------+--------+-------+
- |of 1851. } | Saint |Cripple-| Work- |
- | |Botolph,| gate, |houses,|
- | | 23,435.| 20,582.| 576. |
- +-----------------------+--------+--------+-------+
- |Mortality of five years| | | |
- |from Michaelmas 1848 to| | | |
- |Michaelmas 1853. | | | |
- | {1848-9 =3763= | 519| 574| 179|
- | {1849-50 =2752= | 296| 444| 125|
- | {1850-1 =2978= | 493| 471| 167|
- | {1851-2 =3064= | 534| 460| 176|
- | {1852-3 =3040= | 516| 534| 155|
- | { +--------+--------+-------+
- | { =⁂= | 2458| 2483| 802|
- | { | |
- | {Total =15,597= | =5743= |
- +-----------------------+-------------------------+
- |Yearly Death-rate _per_| =25.75= |
- |thousand of the living | |
- |Population. | | | |
- | =24.00= | =24.30=| =27.41=| =*= |
- +-----------------------+--------+--------+-------+
-
- +-----------------------+----------------------+
- | | WEST |
- |Population,} | LONDON |
- |according }Entire City| UNION, |
- |to the }of London, | 28,603. |
- |Census }129,922. +-------+-------+------+
- |of 1851. } | North,| South,| Work-|
- | | | |house,|
- | |12,350.|15,844.| 409. |
- +-----------------------+-------+-------+------+
- |Mortality of five years| | | |
- |from Michaelmas 1848 to| | | |
- |Michaelmas 1853. | | | |
- | {1848-9 =3763= | 372| 598| 126|
- | {1849-50 =2752= | 324| 290| 108|
- | {1850-1 =2978= | 317| 313| 68|
- | {1851-2 =3064= | 266| 379| 129|
- | {1852-3 =3040= | 289| 309| 164|
- | { +-------+-------+------+
- | { =⁂= | 1568| 1889| 595|
- | { | |
- | {Total =15,597= | =4052= |
- +-----------------------+----------------------+
- |Yearly Death-rate _per_| =28.33= |
- |thousand of the living | |
- |Population. | | | |
- | =24.00= |=29.19=|=27.66=| =*= |
- +-----------------------+-------+-------+------+
-
- +---------------------+----------------------------------------------+
- | | CITY OF LONDON UNION, |
- |Population,}Entire | |
- |according }City of | |
- |to the }London, | 56,726. |
- |Census }129,922. +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+------+
- |of 1851. } | S. W. | N. W. | South,| S. E. | N. E. | Work-|
- | | | | | | |house,|
- | | 9,204.|11,847.|11,461.|10,594.|12,826.| 794. |
- +---------------------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+------+
- |Mortality of five | | | | | | |
- |years from Michaelmas| | | | | | |
- |1848 toMichaelmas | | | | | | |
- |1853. | | | | | | |
- | {1848-9 =3763= | 293| 245| 263| 214| 262| 103|
- | {1849-50 =2752= | 176| 168| 218| 183| 219| 101|
- | {1850-1 =2978= | 191| 169| 258| 217| 213| 101|
- | {1851-2 =3064= | 196| 198| 203| 171| 235| 117|
- | {1852-3 =3040= | 170| 188| 223| 164| 224| 104|
- | { +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+------+
- | { =⁂= | 1026| 968| 1165| 949| 1153| 526|
- | { | |
- | {Total =15,597= | =5787= |
- +---------------------+----------------------------------------------+
- |Yearly Death-rate | =20.40= |
- |_per_ thousand of the| |
- |living Population. | | | | | | |
- | =24.00= |=23.83=|=17.96=|=21.90=|=19.52=|=19.58=| =*= |
- +-----------------------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+----+
- |N.B. The first year’s total (3763) includes 15 deaths, which, by |
- |reason of their imperfect registration, it has been impossible |
- |to refer correctly to the Unions where they occurred. |
- +--------------------------------------------------------------------+
-
-NOTE TO TABLE No. II.
-
-In calculating the Death-Rates given in the last lines of this Table, I
-have proceeded as follows:--
-
-First, I have counted all _Workhouse-Population_ and _Workhouse-Deaths_
-as forming part of the aggregate population and aggregate mortality of
-that Union to which the particular workhouse legally belongs.
-
-Next, I have distributed among the several sub-districts the population
-and the mortality of their Union Workhouses, in the ratio of the general
-sub-district population; so as to prevent the high Workhouse-Mortality
-from telling unjustly against that sub-district in which the Workhouse
-happens to have been erected.
-
-Thus, for instance, the East London Union has its male Workhouse placed
-in the territory of the West London Union; but I have reckoned it as
-belonging to the East London Union, in respect both of its population
-and its deaths. Similarly, the City of London Union has its Workhouse
-situate at Bow; but, not the less, I have considered its 794 inmates and
-526 deaths as belonging to the population and the mortality of our
-central Union.
-
-Thus again for the sub-district death-rates--for instance, in
-the two sub-districts of the East London Union: reckoning the
-Workhouse-Population not as exclusively due either to Cripplegate or to
-St. Botolph, but as furnished by these sub-districts jointly, in the
-ratio of their populations, I have distributed 576 between them in the
-proportion, 23,435 : 20,582. The Workhouse-Deaths of the period (802)
-have been similarly distributed; and the rates, given in the last line
-of the table, are finally deduced from a comparison of these sums,
-viz:--
-
-23,435 + 306.66 : 2458 + 426.991 :: 1000 : 121.515, which divided by 5
-(to show an annual, instead of a quinquennial, result) gives 24.30 as
-the annual death-rate for St. Botolph; and, in like manner, 20,582 +
-269.33 : 2483 + 375.008 gives 137.065 as the quinquennial, and 27.41 as
-the annual death-rate _per_ thousand for the sub-district of
-Cripplegate.
-
-_Hospital Deaths_ have been distributed, as far as possible, according
-to the previous residence of the patients. Thus the north sub-district
-of the West London Union, in which St. Bartholomew’s Hospital is
-situated, is made to retain only its just proportion of deaths. On the
-same principle I have reckoned to the death-lists of other sub-districts
-those cases in which I could ascertain that the residents of such
-sub-districts had gone to die either in St. Bartholomew’s, or in other
-Metropolitan Hospitals.
-
-
-No. III.--_First Annual Enumeration of Deaths, relating to the Fifty-two
-Weeks dating from October 1st, 1848, to September 29th, 1849._
-
- +------------------+-------------------------+-----------------------+
- |DEATHS in the four| EAST LONDON UNION. | WEST LONDON UNION. |
- |quarterly periods,+--------+--------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |terminating as |Saint |Cripple-| Work- |North. |South. |Work- |
- |follows:-- |Botolph.|gate. |houses.| | |house. |
- | +--------+--------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |In the quarter | M. F.| M. F.| M. F.| M. F.| M. F.| M. F.|
- |ending: | | | | | | |
- | I. Dec. } =766={| 63 64| 69 59| 10 21| 44 30| 55 48| 14 15|
- | 30th } {| 127 | 128 | 31 | 74 | 103 | 29 |
- | | | | | | | |
- | II. March} =822={| 70 66| 60 57| 17 19| 39 34| 50 40| 20 10|
- | 31st } {| 136 | 117 | 36 | 73 | 90 | 30 |
- | | | | | | | |
- |III. June } =765={| 40 45| 62 68| 16 23| 46 31| 61 49| 13 21|
- | 30th } {| 85 | 130 | 39 | 77 | 110 | 34 |
- | | | | | | | |
- | IV. Sept.}=1395={| 88 83|104 95| 17 56| 75 73|116 179| 15 18|
- | 29th } {| 171 | 199 | 73 | 148 | 295 | 53 |
- +------------------+--------+--------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |Sum of the four {|261 258|295 279| 60 119|204 168|282 316| 62 64|
- |quarters =3748={| 519 | 574 | 179 | 372 | 598 | 126 |
- |Unclassified =15= | =1272= | =1096= |
- |TOTAL FOR THE YEAR =3763=
- +---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- +------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
- |DEATHS in the four| CITY OF LONDON UNION. |
- |quarterly periods,+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |terminating as | S. W. | N. W. |South. | S. E. | N. E. | Work- |
- |follows:-- | | | | | |house. |
- | +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |In the quarter | M. F. | M. F. | M. F. | M. F. | M. F. | M. F.|
- |ending: | | | | | | |
- | I. Dec. } =766={| 25 15 | 27 23 | 36 23 | 25 15 | 31 31 | 1 22|
- | 30th } {| 40 | 50 | 59 | 40 | 62 | 23 |
- | | | | | | | |
- | II. March} =822={| 20 32 | 32 31 | 28 32 | 29 23 | 40 37 | 14 22|
- | 31st } {| 52 | 63 | 60 | 52 | 77 | 36 |
- | | | | | | | |
- |III. June } =765={| 35 21 | 31 24 | 37 21 | 24 21 | 22 28 | 12 14|
- | 30th } {| 56 | 55 | 58 | 45 | 50 | 26 |
- | | | | | | | |
- | IV. Sept.}=1395={| 62 83 | 37 40 | 48 38 | 45 32 | 40 33 | 5 13|
- | 29th } {| 145 | 77 | 86 | 77 | 73 | 18 |
- +------------------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |Sum of the four {|142 151|127 118|149 114|123 91|133 129| 32 71|
- |quarters =3748={| 293 | 245 | 263 | 214 | 262 | 103 |
- |Unclassified =15= | =1380= |
- |TOTAL FOR THE YEAR |
- +------------------------------------------------------------------+
-
-
-No. IV.--_Second Annual Enumeration of Deaths, relating to the Fifty-two
-Weeks dating from September 30th, 1849, to September 28th, 1850._
-
- +------------------+-------------------------+-----------------------+
- |DEATHS in the four| EAST LONDON UNION. | WEST LONDON UNION. |
- |quarterly periods,+--------+--------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |terminating as |Saint |Cripple-| Work- |North. |South. |Work- |
- |follows:-- |Botolph.|gate. |houses.| | |house. |
- | +--------+--------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |In the quarter | M. F.| M. F.| M. F.| M. F.| M. F.| M. F.|
- |ending: | | | | | | |
- | I. Dec. } =765={| 62 56| 72 65|22 22| 42 43| 30 40| 10 13|
- | 29th } {| 118 | 137 | 44 | 85 | 70 | 23 |
- | | | | | | | |
- | II. March} =803={| 49 47| 68 56| 21 15| 50 41| 42 42| 21 19|
- | 30th } {| 96 | 124 | 36 | 91 | 84 | 40 |
- | | | | | | | |
- |III. June } =589={| 39 41| 42 48| 6 13| 39 35| 45 26| 5 22|
- | 29th } {| 80 | 90 | 19 | 74 | 71 | 27 |
- | | | | | | | |
- | IV. Sept.} =595={| 57 45| 57 36| 12 14| 35 39| 26 39| 5 13|
- | 28th } {| 102 | 93 | 26 | 74 | 65 | 18 |
- +------------------+--------+--------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |Sum of the four {|207 189|239 205| 61 64|166 158|143 147|41 67|
- |quarters =2752={| 396 | 444 | 125 | 324 | 290 | 108 |
- | | =965= | =722= |
- |TOTAL FOR THE YEAR =2752=
- +---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- +------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
- |DEATHS in the four| CITY OF LONDON UNION. |
- |quarterly periods,+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |terminating as | S. W. | N. W. |South. | S. E. | N. E. | Work- |
- |follows:-- | | | | | |house. |
- | +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |In the quarter | M. F. | M. F. | M. F. | M. F. | M. F. | M. F. |
- |ending: | | | | | | |
- | I. Dec. } =765={| 35 22| 26 19| 27 28| 30 21| 22 30| 9 19|
- | 29th } {| 57 | 45 | 55 | 51 | 52 | 28 |
- | | | | | | | |
- | II. March} =803={| 23 23| 16 29| 48 32| 22 36| 45 29| 15 14|
- | 30th } {| 46 | 45 | 80 | 58 | 74 | 29 |
- | | | | | | | |
- |III. June } =589={| 13 21| 14 25| 25 15| 23 20| 21 29| 9 13|
- | 29th } {| 34 | 39 \ 40 | 43 | 50 | 22 |
- | | | | | | | |
- | IV. Sept.} =595={| 20 19| 18 21| 22 21| 16 15| 15 28| 12 10|
- | 28th } {| 39 | 39 | 43 | 31 | 43 | 22 |
- +------------------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |Sum of the four {| 91 85| 74 94|122 96| 91 92|103 116| 45 56|
- |quarters =2752={| 176 | 168 | 218 | 183 | 219 | 101 |
- | | =1065= |
- |TOTAL FOR THE YEAR |
- +------------------------------------------------------------------+
-
-
-No. V.--_Third Annual Enumeration of Deaths, relating to the Fifty-two
-Weeks dating from September 29th, 1850, to September 27th, 1851._
-
- +------------------+-------------------------+-----------------------+
- |DEATHS in the four| EAST LONDON UNION. | WEST LONDON UNION. |
- |quarterly periods,+--------+--------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |terminating as |Saint |Cripple-| Work- |North. |South. |Work- |
- |follows:-- |Botolph.|gate. |houses.| | |house. |
- | +--------+--------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |In the quarter | M. F.| M. F.| M. F.| M. F.| M. F.| M. F.|
- |ending: | | | | | | |
- | I. Dec. } =672={| 47 54| 68 57| 7 25| 29 33| 35 37| 8 6|
- | 28th } {| 101 | 125 | 32 | 62 | 72 | 14 |
- | | | | | | | |
- | II. March} =876={| 87 67| 77 63| 19 30| 51 36| 46 43| 11 11|
- | 29th } {| 154 | 140 | 49 | 87 | 89 | 22 |
- | | | | | | | |
- |III. June } =767={| 72 43| 58 43| 26 22| 45 47| 38 41| 11 10|
- | 28th } {| 115 | 101 | 48 | 92 | 79 | 21 |
- | | | | | | | |
- | IV. Sept.} =663={| 63 60| 62 43| 13 25| 53 23| 38 35| 9 2|
- | 27th } {| 123 | 105 | 38 | 76 | 73 | 11 |
- +------------------+--------+--------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |Sum of the four {|269 224|265 206| 65 102|178 139|157 156| 39 29|
- |quarters =2978={| 493 | 471 | 167 | 317 | 313 | 68 |
- | | =1131= | =698= |
- |TOTAL FOR THE YEAR =2978=
- +---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- +------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
- |DEATHS in the four| CITY OF LONDON UNION. |
- |quarterly periods,+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |terminating as | S. W. | N. W. |South. | S. E. | N. E. | Work- |
- |follows:-- | | | | | |house. |
- | +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |In the quarter | M. F. | M. F. | M. F. | M. F. | M. F. | M. F. |
- |ending: | | | | | | |
- | I. Dec. } =672={| 27 21| 24 20| 25 24| 24 31| 19 29| 16 6|
- | 28th } {| 48 | 44 | 49 | 55 | 48 | 22 |
- | | | | | | | |
- | II. March} =876={| 28 31| 22 26| 39 42| 27 29| 35 32| 12 12|
- | 29th } {| 59 | 48 | 81 | 56 | 67 | 24 |
- | | | | | | | |
- |III. June } =767={| 26 18| 22 16| 40 35| 35 35| 31 25| 15 13|
- | 28th } {| 44 | 38 | 75 | 70 | 56 | 28 |
- | | | | | | | |
- | IV. Sept.} =663={| 24 16| 21 18| 29 24| 23 13| 17 25| 14 13|
- | 27th } {| 40 | 39 | 53 | 36 | 42 | 27 |
- +------------------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |Sum of the four {|105 86| 89 80|133 125|109 108|102 111| 57 44|
- |quarters =2978={| 191 | 169 | 258 | 217 | 213 | 101 |
- | | =1149= |
- |TOTAL FOR THE YEAR |
- +------------------------------------------------------------------+
-
-
-No. VI.--_Fourth Annual Enumeration of Deaths, relating to the Fifty-two
-Weeks dating from September 28th, 1851, to September 25th, 1852._
-
- +------------------+-------------------------+-----------------------+
- |DEATHS in the four| EAST LONDON UNION. | WEST LONDON UNION. |
- |quarterly periods,+--------+--------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |terminating as |Saint |Cripple-| Work- |North. |South. |Work- |
- |follows:-- |Botolph.|gate. |houses.| | |house. |
- | +--------+--------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |In the quarter | M. F.| M. F.| M. F.| M. F.| M. F.| M. F.|
- |ending: | | | | | | |
- | I. Dec. } =800={| 73 67| 59 58| 32 32| 40 28| 37 43| 18 12|
- | 27th } {| 140 | 117 | 64 | 68 | 80 | 30 |
- | | | | | | | |
- | II. March} =773={| 62 62| 50 46| 18 30| 30 24| 58 43| 25 12|
- | 27th } {| 124 | 96 | 48 | 54 | 101 | 37 |
- | | | | | | | |
- |III. June } =774={| 54 56| 78 53| 21 17| 39 31| 65 56| 23 8|
- | 26th } {| 110 | 131 | 38 | 70 | 121 | 31 |
- | | | | | | | |
- | IV. Sept.} =717={| 77 83| 54 62| 6 20| 35 39| 41 36| 17 14|
- | 27th } {| 160 | 116 | 26 | 74 | 77 | 31 |
- +------------------+--------+--------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |Sum of the four {|266 268|241 219| 77 99|144 122|201 178| 83 46|
- |quarters =3064={| 534 | 460 | 176 | 266 | 379 | 129 |
- | | =1170= | =774= |
- |TOTAL FOR THE YEAR =3064=
- +---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- +------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
- |DEATHS in the four| CITY OF LONDON UNION. |
- |quarterly periods,+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |terminating as | S. W. | N. W. |South. | S. E. | N. E. | Work- |
- |follows:-- | | | | | |house. |
- | +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |In the quarter | M. F. | M. F. | M. F. | M. F. | M. F. | M. F. |
- |ending: | | | | | | |
- | I. Dec. } =800={| 33 30| 29 25| 26 26| 23 25| 32 23| 9 20|
- | 27th } {| 63 | 54 | 52 | 48 | 55 | 29 |
- | | | | | | | |
- | II. March} =773={| 20 22| 33 28| 33 28| 31 19| 27 40| 17 15|
- | 27th } {| 42 | 61 | 61 | 50 | 67 | 32 |
- | | | | | | | |
- |III. June } =774={| 24 33| 29 22| 22 19| 30 17| 33 26| 17 11|
- | 26th } {| 47 | 51 | 41 | 47 | 59 | 28 |
- | | | | | | | |
- | IV. Sept.} =717={| 26 18| 15 17| 29 20| 15 11| 31 23| 12 16|
- | 27th } {| 44 | 32 | 49 | 26 | 54 | 28 |
- +------------------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |Sum of the four {|103 93|106 92|110 93| 99 72|123 112| 55 62|
- |quarters =3064={| 196 | 198 | 203 | 171 | 235 | 117 |
- | | =1120= |
- |TOTAL FOR THE YEAR |
- +------------------------------------------------------------------+
-
-
-No. VII.--_Fifth Annual Enumeration of Deaths, relating to the Fifty-two
-Weeks dating from September 26th, 1852, to September 24th, 1853._
-
- +------------------+-------------------------+-----------------------+
- |DEATHS in the four| EAST LONDON UNION. | WEST LONDON UNION. |
- |quarterly periods,+--------+--------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |terminating as |Saint |Cripple-| Work- |North. |South. |Work- |
- |follows:-- |Botolph.|gate. |houses.| | |house. |
- | +--------+--------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |In the quarter | M. F.| M. F.| M. F.| M. F.| M. F.| M. F.|
- |ending: | | | | | | |
- | I. Dec. } =675={| 72 58| 46 60| 10 20| 35 33| 35 32| 14 19|
- | 25th } {| 130 | 106 | 30 | 68 | 67 | 33 |
- | | | | | | | |
- | II. March} =878={| 67 64| 80 66| 32 22| 35 31| 45 55| 34 20|
- | 26th } {| 131 | 146 | 54 | 66 | 100 | 54 |
- | | | | | | | |
- |III. June } =817={| 69 60| 69 62| 24 27| 53 36| 46 44| 25 21|
- | 25th } {| 129 | 131 | 51 | 89 | 90 | 46 |
- | | | | | | | |
- | IV. Sept.} =670={| 70 56| 84 67| 8 12| 32 34| 25 27| 18 13|
- | 24th } {| 126 | 151 | 20 | 66 | 52 | 31 |
- +------------------+--------+--------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |Sum of the four {|278 238|279 255| 74 81|155 134|151 158| 91 73|
- |quarters =3040={| 516 | 534 | 155 | 289 | 309 | 164 |
- | | =1205= | =762= |
- |TOTAL FOR THE YEAR =3040=
- +---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- +------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
- |DEATHS in the four| CITY OF LONDON UNION. |
- |quarterly periods,+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |terminating as | S. W. | N. W. |South. | S. E. | N. E. | Work- |
- |follows:-- | | | | | |house. |
- | +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |In the quarter | M. F. | M. F. | M. F. | M. F. | M. F. | M. F. |
- |ending: | | | | | | |
- | I. Dec. } =675={| 23 14| 21 22| 31 26| 18 15| 25 29| 10 7|
- | 25th } {| 37 | 43 | 57 | 33 | 54 | 17 |
- | | | | | | | |
- | II. March} =878={| 19 30| 38 19| 32 33| 29 20| 40 35| 15 17|
- | 26th } {| 49 | 57 | 65 | 49 | 75 | 32 |
- | | | | | | | |
- |III. June } =817={| 20 25| 27 20| 30 29| 24 26| 27 20| 19 14|
- | 25th } {| 45 | 47 | 59 | 50 | 47 | 33 |
- | | | | | | | |
- | IV. Sept.} =670={| 16 23| 18 23| 25 17| 18 14| 28 20| 10 12|
- | 24th } {| 39 | 41 | 42 | 32 | 48 | 22 |
- +------------------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
- |Sum of the four {| 78 92|104 84|118 105| 89 75|120 104| 54 50|
- |quarters =3040={| 170 | 188 | 223 | 164 | 224 | 104 |
- | | =1073= |
- |TOTAL FOR THE YEAR |
- +------------------------------------------------------------------+
-
-
-No. VIII.--_Quinquennial Mortality, classified by Age, first for the
-entire City, next for the three Unions severally._
-
- +--------------------+------+-----+-----+-----+------+------+------+
- | | Under| From| From| From| From | From | From |
- |Deaths in the Popu- | 5 | 5 | 10 | 15 | 20 | 30 | 40 |
- |lation of the City | Years| to | to | to | to | to | to |
- |of London. | of | 10.| 15.| 20.| 30. | 40. | 50. |
- | | Age. | | | | | | |
- +--------------------+------+-----+-----+-----+------+------+------+
- |Year by year{1848-49| 1243 | 202 | 92 | 90 | 292 | 345 | 396 |
- |dating from {1849-50| 1032 | 83 | 44 | 70 | 166 | 200 | 251 |
- |Michaelmas {1850-51| 1194 | 124 | 48 | 60 | 169 | 227 | 248 |
- |to {1851-52| 1197 | 113 | 57 | 84 | 196 | 253 | 267 |
- |Michaelmas. {1852-53| 1135 | 94 | 37 | 59 | 179 | 258 | 268 |
- +--------------------+------+-----+-----+-----+------+------+------+
- |Sum of five year’s |=5801=|=616=|=278=|=363=|=1002=|=1283=|=1430=|
- |deaths | | | | | | | |
- +--------------------+------+-----+-----+-----+------+------+------+
- |Deaths East London | 2471 | 215 | 80 | 105 | 338 | 432 | 488 |
- |of five Union | | | | | | | |
- |years West London | 1416 | 141 | 75 | 122 | 305 | 376 | 405 |
- |in Union | | | | | | | |
- |their City of Lon-| 1914 | 260 | 123 | 136 | 359 | 475 | 537 |
- |Local don Union | | | | | | | |
- |Distri- Uncertain | * | * | * | * | * | * | * |
- |bution. Address | | | | | | | |
- +--------------------+------+-----+-----+-----+------+------+------+
-
- +--------------------+------+------+------+----+-------+
- | | From | From | From | Age| Total.|
- |Deaths in the Popu- | 50 | 60 | 70 | not| |
- |lation of the City | to | to | up- | re-| |
- |of London. | 60. | 70. |wards.|por-| |
- | | | | |ted.| |
- +--------------------+------+------+------+----+-------+
- |Year by year{1848-49| 355 | 366 | 367 | 15 | 3763 |
- |dating from {1849-50| 254 | 318 | 334 | 0 | 2752 |
- |Michaelmas {1850-51| 261 | 303 | 342 | 2 | 2978 |
- |to {1851-52| 260 | 287 | 350 | 0 | 3064 |
- |Michaelmas. {1852-53| 297 | 320 | 393 | 0 | 3040 |
- +--------------------+------+------+------+----+-------+
- |Sum of five year’s |=1427=|=1594=|=1786=|=17=|=15597=|
- |deaths | | | | | |
- +--------------------+------+------+------+----+-------+
- |Deaths East London | 444 | 551 | 619 | 0 | 5743 |
- |of five Union | | | | | |
- |years West London | 393 | 420 | 398 | 1 | 4052 |
- |in Union | | | | | |
- |their City of Lon-| 590 | 623 | 769 | 1 | 5787 |
- |Local don Union | | | | | |
- |Distri- Uncertain | * | * | * | 15 | 15 |
- |bution. Address | | | | | |
- +--------------------+------+------+------+----+-------+
-
-
-No. IX.--_Number of Deaths occasioned, during the last Five Years, by
-certain Acute Diseases, chiefly Epidemic, Infectious, and Endemic._
-
- +-------------------+------+----------+--------+------+-----------+
- | | | Acute |Scarlet-| | |
- | | | Diarrhœa | Fever | |Erysipelas,|
- |In the successive | | (not of | and |Small-| Pyæmia, |
- |years terminating |Fever.| infants),|Cynanche| Pox. | and |
- |severally as | |Dysentery,|maligna.| | Puerperal |
- |follows:-- | | and | | | Fever. |
- | | | Cholera. | | | |
- | | | | | | |
- +-------------------+------+----------+--------+------+-----------+
- |At Michaelmas, 1849| 166 | 825 | 135 | 17 | 44 |
- |„ „ 1850| 118 | 54 | 32 | 33 | 40 |
- |„ „ 1851| 107 | 23 | 46 | 41 | 17 |
- |„ „ 1852| 165 | 37 | 86 | 96 | 24 |
- |„ „ 1853| 145 | 43 | 85 | 15 | 26 |
- +-------------------+------+----------+--------+------+-----------+
- |Total number of | | | | | |
- |such Deaths in the | =701=| =982= | =384= | =202=| =151= |
- |Five Years 1848-53.| | | | | |
- +-------------------+------+----------+--------+------+-----------+
-
- +-------------------+----------+--------+--------+---------+
- | |Diarrhœa, | | | |
- | |Bronchitis|Measles,| Hydro- | Total |
- |In the successive | and |Hooping-|cephalus| of |
- |years terminating |Pneumonia | cough | and |preceding|
- |severally as |of Infants| and | Convul-| columns.|
- |follows:-- | under | Croup. |sions of| |
- | | 3 years | |Infancy.| |
- | | of age. | | | |
- +-------------------+----------+--------+--------+---------+
- |At Michaelmas, 1849| 285 | 196 | 264 | =1932= |
- |„ „ 1850| 243 | 124 | 219 | =863= |
- |„ „ 1851| 340 | 272 | 282 | =1128= |
- |„ „ 1852| 330 | 132 | 308 | =1178= |
- |„ „ 1853| 304 | 190 | 289 | =1097= |
- +-------------------+----------+--------+--------+---------+
- |Total number of | | | | |
- |such Deaths in the | =1502= | =914= | =1362= | =6198= |
- |Five Years 1848-53.| | | | |
- +-------------------+----------+--------+--------+---------+
-
-
-No. X.--_Comparative Mortality in different seasons of the Year; namely,
-in the Autumn Quarters (Oct., Nov., Dec.) in the Winter Quarters (Jan.,
-Feb., March,) in the Spring Quarters (April, May, June) and in the
-Summer Quarters (July, Aug., Sept.) of the Five Years from Michaelmas,
-1848, to Michaelmas, 1853._
-
-SYNOPSIS.
-
- +------------------+-------------------------+--------------------+
- |DEATHS in the dif-| EAST LONDON UNION. | WEST LONDON UNION. |
- |ferent seasons of +--------+--------+-------+------+------+------+
- |five years, as | Saint |Cripple-| Work- | | |Work- |
- |follows:-- |Botolph.| gate. |houses.|North.|South.|house.|
- +------------------+--------+--------+-------+------+------+------+
- |In five Autumn | 616 | 613 | 201 | 357 | 392 | 129 |
- |Quarters | =1430= | =878= |
- +------------------+--------+--------+-------+------+------+------+
- |In five Winter | 641 | 623 | 223 | 371 | 464 | 183 |
- |Quarters | =1487= | =1018= |
- +------------------+--------+--------+-------+------+------+------+
- |In five Spring | 519 | 583 | 195 | 402 | 471 | 159 |
- |Quarters | =1297= | =1032= |
- +------------------+--------+--------+-------+------+------+------+
- |In five Summer | 682 | 664 | 183 | 438 | 562 | 124 |
- |Quarters | =1529= | =1124= |
- +------------------+--------+--------+-------+------+------+------+
-
- +------------------+-------------------------------------+------+
- |DEATHS in the dif-| CITY OF LONDON UNION. | Total|
- |ferent seasons of +-----+-----+------+-----+-----+------+ for |
- |five years, as |S. W.|N. W.|South.|S. E.|N. E.|Work- |entire|
- |follows:-- | | | | | |house.|City. |
- +------------------+-----+-----+------+-----+-----+------+------+
- |In five Autumn | 245 | 236 | 272 | 227 | 271 | 119 |=3678=|
- |Quarters | =1370= |
- +------------------+-----+-----+------+-----+-----+------+------+
- |In five Winter | 248 | 274 | 347 | 265 | 360 | 153 |=4152=|
- |Quarters | =1647= |
- +------------------+-----+-----+------+-----+-----+------+------+
- |In five Spring | 226 | 230 | 273 | 255 | 262 | 137 |=3712=|
- |Quarters | =1383= |
- +------------------+-----+-----+------+-----+-----+------+------+
- |In five Summer | 307 | 228 | 273 | 202 | 260 | 117 |=4040=|
- |Quarters | =1387= |
- +------------------+-----+-----+------+-----+-----+------+------+
-
-
-No. XI.--_Comparative Mortality in Different Seasons of the Year._
-
-AUTUMN QUARTERS.
-
- +-----------------+--------------------------+--------------------+
- | | EAST LONDON UNION. | WEST LONDON UNION. |
- |DEATHS in five +--------+--------+--------+------+------+------+
- |Autumn Quarters | Saint |Cripple-| Work- |North.|South.|Work- |
- |as follows:-- |Botolph.| gate. |houses. | | |house.|
- | +--------+--------+--------+------+------+------+
- |Oct., Nov., Dec.,| | | | | | |
- | 1848| 127 | 128 | 31 | 74 | 103 | 29 |
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | |
- | 1849| 118 | 137 | 44 | 85 | 70 | 23 |
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | |
- | 1850| 101 | 125 | 32 | 62 | 72 | 14 |
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | |
- | 1851| 140 | 117 | 64 | 68 | 80 | 30 |
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | |
- | 1852| 130 | 106 | 30 | 68 | 67 | 33 |
- +-----------------+--------+--------+--------+------+------+------+
- |Total of five | =616= | =613= | =201= | =357=|=392= |=129= |
- |Seasons | | | | | | |
- +-----------------+--------+--------+--------+------+------+------+
-
- +-----------------+-----------------------------------------+------+
- | | CITY OF LONDON UNION. |Totals|
- |DEATHS in five +------+------+------+------+------+------+ for |
- |Autumn Quarters | S.W. | N.W. |South.| S.E. | N.E. |Work- |entire|
- |as follows:-- | | | | | |house.|City. |
- | +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
- |Oct., Nov., Dec.,| | | | | | | |
- | 1848| 40 | 50 | 59 | 40 | 62 | 23 | =766=|
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | | |
- | 1849| 57 | 45 | 55 | 51 | 52 | 28 | =765=|
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | | |
- | 1850| 48 | 44 | 49 | 55 | 48 | 22 | =672=|
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | | |
- | 1851| 63 | 54 | 52 | 48 | 55 | 29 | =800=|
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | | |
- | 1852| 37 | 43 | 57 | 33 | 54 | 17 | =675=|
- +-----------------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
- |Total of five |=245= |=236= |=272= |=227= |=271= |=119= |=3678=|
- |Seasons | | | | | | | |
- +-----------------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
-
-
-No. XII.--_Comparative Mortality in Different Seasons of the Year._
-
-WINTER QUARTERS.
-
- +-----------------+--------------------------+--------------------+
- | | EAST LONDON UNION. | WEST LONDON UNION. |
- |DEATHS in five +--------+--------+--------+------+------+------+
- |Autumn Quarters | Saint |Cripple-| Work- |North.|South.|Work- |
- |as follows:-- |Botolph.| gate. |houses. | | |house.|
- | +--------+--------+--------+------+------+------+
- |Jan., Feb., Mar.,| | | | | | |
- | 1849| 136 | 117 | 36 | 73 | 90 | 30 |
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | |
- | 1850| 96 | 124 | 36 | 91 | 84 | 40 |
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | |
- | 1851| 154 | 140 | 49 | 87 | 89 | 22 |
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | |
- | 1852| 124 | 96 | 48 | 54 | 101 | 37 |
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | |
- | 1853| 131 | 146 | 54 | 66 | 100 | 54 |
- +-----------------+--------+--------+--------+------+------+------+
- |Total of five | =641= | =623= | =223= | =371=| =464=| =183=|
- |Seasons | | | | | | |
- +-----------------+--------+--------+--------+------+------+------+
-
- +-----------------+-----------------------------------------+------+
- | | CITY OF LONDON UNION. |Totals|
- |DEATHS in five +------+------+------+------+------+------+ for |
- |Autumn Quarters | S.W. | N.W. |South.| S.E. | N.E. |Work- |entire|
- |as follows:-- | | | | | |house.|City. |
- | +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
- |Jan., Feb., Mar.,| | | | | | | |
- | 1849| 52 | 63 | 60 | 52 | 77 | 36 | =822=|
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | | |
- | 1850| 46 | 45 | 80 | 58 | 74 | 29 | =803=|
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | | |
- | 1851| 59 | 48 | 81 | 56 | 67 | 24 | =876=|
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | | |
- | 1852| 42 | 61 | 61 | 50 | 67 | 32 | =773=|
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | | |
- | 1853| 49 | 57 | 65 | 49 | 75 | 32 | =878=|
- +-----------------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
- |Total of five | =248=| =274=| =347=| =265=| =360=| =153=|=4152=|
- |Seasons | | | | | | | |
- +-----------------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
-
-
-No. XIII.--_Comparative Mortality in Different Seasons of the Year._
-
-SPRING QUARTERS.
-
- +-----------------+--------------------------+--------------------+
- | | EAST LONDON UNION. | WEST LONDON UNION. |
- |DEATHS in five +--------+--------+--------+------+------+------+
- |Autumn Quarters | Saint |Cripple-| Work- |North.|South.|Work- |
- |as follows:-- |Botolph.| gate. |houses. | | |house.|
- | +--------+--------+--------+------+------+------+
- |April, May, June,| | | | | | |
- | 1849| 85 | 130 | 39 | 77 | 110 | 34 |
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | |
- | 1850| 80 | 90 | 19 | 74 | 71 | 27 |
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | |
- | 1851| 115 | 101 | 48 | 92 | 79 | 21 |
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | |
- | 1852| 110 | 131 | 38 | 70 | 121 | 31 |
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | |
- | 1853| 129 | 131 | 51 | 89 | 90 | 46 |
- +-----------------+--------+--------+--------+------+------+------+
- |Total of five | =519= | =583= | =195= | =402=| =471=| =159=|
- |Seasons | | | | | | |
- +-----------------+--------+--------+--------+------+------+------+
-
- +-----------------+-----------------------------------------+------+
- | | CITY OF LONDON UNION. |Totals|
- |DEATHS in five +------+------+------+------+------+------+ for |
- |Autumn Quarters | S.W. | N.W. |South.| S.E. | N.E. |Work- |entire|
- |as follows:-- | | | | | |house.|City. |
- | +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
- |April, May, June,| | | | | | | |
- | 1849| 56 | 55 | 58 | 45 | 50 | 26 | =765=|
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | | |
- | 1850| 34 | 39 | 40 | 43 | 50 | 22 | =589=|
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | | |
- | 1851| 44 | 38 | 75 | 70 | 56 | 28 | =767=|
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | | |
- | 1852| 47 | 51 | 41 | 47 | 59 | 28 | =774=|
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | | |
- | 1853| 45 | 47 | 59 | 50 | 47 | 33 | =817=|
- +-----------------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
- |Total of five | =226=| =230=| =273=| =255=| =262=| =137=|=3712=|
- |Seasons | | | | | | | |
- +-----------------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
-
-
-No. XIV.--_Comparative Mortality in Different Seasons of the Year._
-
-SUMMER QUARTERS.
-
- +-----------------+--------------------------+--------------------+
- | | EAST LONDON UNION. | WEST LONDON UNION. |
- |DEATHS in five +--------+--------+--------+------+------+------+
- |Autumn Quarters | Saint |Cripple-| Work- |North.|South.|Work- |
- |as follows:-- |Botolph.| gate. |houses. | | |house.|
- | +--------+--------+--------+------+------+------+
- |July, Aug., Sep.,| | | | | | |
- | 1849| 171 | 199 | 73 | 148 | 295 | 33 |
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | |
- | 1850| 102 | 93 | 26 | 74 | 65 | 18 |
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | |
- | 1851| 123 | 105 | 38 | 76 | 73 | 11 |
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | |
- | 1852| 160 | 116 | 26 | 74 | 77 | 31 |
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | |
- | 1853| 126 | 151 | 20 | 66 | 52 | 31 |
- +-----------------+--------+--------+--------+------+------+------+
- |Total of five | =682= | =664= | =183= | =438=| =562=| =124=|
- |Seasons | | | | | | |
- +-----------------+--------+--------+--------+------+------+------+
-
- +-----------------+-----------------------------------------+------+
- | | CITY OF LONDON UNION. |Totals|
- |DEATHS in five +------+------+------+------+------+------+ for |
- |Autumn Quarters | S.W. | N.W. |South.| S.E. | N.E. |Work- |entire|
- |as follows:-- | | | | | |house.|City. |
- | +------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
- |July, Aug., Sep.,| | | | | | | |
- | 1849| 145 | 77 | 86 | 77 | 73 | 18 |=1395=|
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | | |
- | 1850| 39 | 39 | 43 | 31 | 43 | 22 | =595=|
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | | |
- | 1851| 40 | 39 | 53 | 36 | 42 | 27 | =663=|
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | | |
- | 1852| 44 | 32 | 49 | 26 | 54 | 28 | =717=|
- | „ „ „ | | | | | | | |
- | 1853| 39 | 41 | 42 | 32 | 48 | 22 | =670=|
- +-----------------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
- |Total of five | =307=| =228=| =273=| =202=| =260=| =117=|=4040=|
- |Seasons | | | | | | | |
- +-----------------+------+------+------+------+------+------+------+
-
-
-
-
- ON THE PRESENT
- BURIAL-PLACES OF THE CITY.
-
-
- TO THE IMPROVEMENT COMMITTEE OF THE HON. THE COMMISSIONERS OF SEWERS
- OF THE CITY OF LONDON.
-
- _December 10th, 1852._
-
- GENTLEMEN,
-
-In order to an application of the Metropolitan Burials Act by the
-constituted authorities of the City, you have requested me to report how
-far, in my judgment, the existing burial-places within this jurisdiction
-are fit for further reception of the dead.
-
-I have little to add to the information which I have laid before the
-Commission in my successive annual reports--especially in that of 1849,
-and which long since induced me to express my conviction ‘that the City
-of London could no longer with safety or propriety be allowed to furnish
-intramural burial to its dead.’
-
-It would, indeed, be ridiculous if I should pretend to you that this
-part of the subject requires any further inquiry. Putrefactive
-decomposition of one kind and another is the principal cause of
-town-unhealthiness. Against its occurrence round about our houses all
-your legislation is directed. The human body, once destitute of life,
-furnishes no exception to the laws of organic decay: under the common
-laws of chemical change, it soon dissolves itself into products neither
-less offensive, nor less poisonous, than those of any brute’s
-decomposition. And you cannot take a juster view of the subject--you
-cannot arrive at stronger arguments for the immediate abolition of
-intramural interment, than by forcing yourselves to discard for a moment
-all memory of the fading human outline which masks this dreadful
-nuisance, and to conceive it as _a mere bulk of animal matter_, planted
-every year to undergo decomposition within the City, beneath our
-Churches, and before our thresholds.[91]
-
- [91] The right of interment in the City may at present be claimed in
- respect probably of more than three thousand corpses _per_ annum. The
- number actually interred of late years has, I believe, not exceeded an
- average of two thousand _per_ annum.
-
-Dead bodies thus buried contribute importantly in their neighbourhood to
-the vitiation of air and water. Those that lie shelved in vaults,
-eventually, if not at first, spread through the atmosphere every product
-of their decomposition. Those that are dug into the soil have their
-decay modified by its influence, mingle with its drainage the products
-of their transformation, and thus (as I have shown in my remarks on the
-Bishopsgate pump water) find their issue in the nearest land-spring of
-the spot, polluting the drink of the population. Further, in all the
-more frequented burial-grounds, the soil seems to be saturated with
-animal matters only partially transformed; and at every new disturbance
-by the spade, a fresh quantity of this unctuous clay comes upmost,
-tainting the air with materials of fœtid decomposition, often to the
-great distress of persons who dwell in the vicinity.
-
-On such grounds as these, I cannot hesitate in renewing my report that
-the City of London is absolutely unfit to serve as a further
-burial-place for the dead; and this, whether by inhumation or in vaults,
-whether in parochial burying-grounds, or in those of other communities.
-
-Regard being had to the object of your reference, you would probably not
-desire me at present to enter on the ulterior questions of extramural
-interment.
-
-On such representations as I have made, the Court of Common Council
-(acting under the Metropolitan Act already referred to) has authority to
-determine in respect of the City of London, whether the existing places
-of burial, either from their insufficiency, or from their dangerousness
-to health, are so unfit for their purpose as to render it necessary that
-other burial-space be provided.
-
-Should they affirm this view, they can then ‘authorise and direct the
-Commissioners of Sewers of the City of London to exercise for the said
-City and Liberties all the powers and authorities vested in
-Burial-Boards under the Act.’
-
-This course being taken, the Commission (subject to approval from the
-Secretary of State) will have authority to make all arrangements
-requisite for the final closure of burial-places within the City.
-
-In approaching the subject of extramural sepulture, with its innumerable
-details of inquiry, for site, for conveyance, and for burial--details
-which form the knowledge and experience of a special class of persons,
-the Commission may perhaps first consider whether works so foreign to
-their usual functions shall be undertaken by themselves directly, or
-shall be made matter of contract with existing Cemetery Companies, or
-other associations or individuals. Till this decision is made, it seems
-impossible to conjecture what topics you may wish to entertain, or
-within what limits the industry of your officers may most usefully be
-exercised.
-
-There are many very important parts of the subject with which it may
-hereafter become my duty to deal; but till the preliminary questions are
-settled, it would be idle to detain you with sanitary considerations
-belonging to a later stage of your inquiry.
-
-As my Report for 1849 had long been out of print, I subjoin an extract
-from it of so much as relates to the matter in hand.[92]
-
- [92] The passages here referred to form a separate section of the
- First Annual Report; and therefore need not be reprinted in this part
- of the present volume.--J. S., 1854.
-
-
-NOTE.
-
- _On considering the above Report, the Improvement Committee of the
- Commissioners (to whom the subject had been specially referred) at
- once resolved to report to the General Court that, in their ‘judgment,
- steps should be taken for closing the several burial-places within the
- City;’ and at the same time they desired that the Officer of Health
- would prepare for them his opinion on those ulterior arrangements
- which such closure might render necessary._
-
- _The following Report was written accordingly._
-
-
-
-
- INTRODUCTORY REPORT
- SUGGESTING THE
- OUTLINE OF A SCHEME
- FOR
- EXTRAMURAL INTERMENT.
-
- TO THE IMPROVEMENT COMMITTEE
- OF THE
- HON. THE COMMISSIONERS OF SEWERS OF THE CITY OF
- LONDON.
-
-
- GENTLEMEN,
-
-Under the several clauses of the Metropolitan Burials Act, and under
-certain clauses of the City Sewers Act 1848, the Commissioners of
-Sewers, acting as a Burial-Board for the City of London, will be subject
-to the following responsibilities--viz.:
-
- _First_,--That a sufficient extramural burial-place be provided for
- those classes of persons who have heretofore had right of interment
- within the City;
-
- _Secondly_,--That the facilities of transit and conveyance to such
- burial-place be commensurate with the purposes for which it is
- established;
-
- _Thirdly_,--That evil no longer accrue to the health of the City from
- unnecessary delays of interment, or from the keeping of dead bodies in
- the dwelling-rooms of the poor.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I. To measure the sufficiency of a burial-place, one must know for what
-numbers of population it is intended to suffice.
-
-Burial-Boards under the new Act are obliged to provide accommodation for
-all _parishioners_ or _inhabitants_ of the several parishes within their
-jurisdiction.
-
-Under the term ‘parishioners’ as relating to the City, there may be
-included, I am told, an indefinite number of non-resident rate-payers:
-and although, at first, interment might not be claimed under the latter
-head to any considerable extent, yet, with the completion and success of
-your Cemetery, the applications might year by year become more numerous.
-From the nature of the case, such claimants would in most instances be
-of the wealthier classes, and might consequently be expected to apply
-for special allotments of ground. It seems therefore desirable that you
-should have some knowledge of the number for whom you may thus be
-required to provide.
-
-I would accordingly suggest as expedient, that a legal opinion should be
-obtained on your exact liabilities under the law referred to; and
-especially as to whether the right of burial possessed by non-resident
-rate-payers does likewise extend to the non-resident households of such
-rate-payers.
-
-In the meantime I will leave this set of claimants out of my argument;
-assuming that, whenever you have reckoned their number, you will be
-able, on their account, to add to your general estimate, according to a
-fixed proportion, the assessment of whatever additional accommodation
-they may legally require.
-
-The number of deaths belonging to the ‘inhabitants’ of the City of
-London may be more precisely given. It would probably lie, as an
-average, within 3200 per annum.
-
-In attempting to fix the extent of ground required for your purpose in
-respect of this mortality, I must bring before you some preliminary
-considerations.
-
-First,--as regards the _minimum accommodation_ to be given in your
-Cemetery; I assume that every person buried there, however humble his
-previous station in life, may in death claim a grave to himself. It has
-been the opprobrium of our previous system that, in the poorer classes
-of interments, many bodies have been huddled together into a single pit.
-Probably you will think, as regards your future burial-place, that no
-consideration of cheapness can justify this indecency: probably you will
-be unwilling that, in a presence which confounds all social comparisons,
-there should be drawn, with your sanction, between rich and poor any so
-disrespectful distinction. But at all events, on sanitary grounds, I
-feel bound to assure you that these multiple burials are quite
-inadmissible. With such concentration of organic remains in very narrow
-compass, the soil grows utterly fœtid; and it becomes impossible to
-guard against nuisance arising to the public, or against danger to those
-who are occupied in digging and tending the ground. These evils, indeed,
-are so glaring, and the indecorum of crowded interment has long been so
-notorious, that nothing could have given them continuance except the
-necessities of our narrow accommodation under the system of intramural
-burial: and it would of course be without excuse to perpetuate them
-under the changed circumstances of extramural Cemeteries, where space
-can so readily be obtained for all legitimate requirements of the
-public. So far as the experience of other countries may help to
-determine your judgment in this matter, I may inform you that, in every
-foreign interment system which can deserve to be considered an
-establishment of public authority, the right of single burial is
-universally recognised.
-
-Next--as regards the _succession of interments_; according to the
-burial-usages of modern times, no public Cemetery with fixed limits can
-be permanently useful, except on a full recognition of the fact that it
-is a decaying place for the dead, not a place for their embalmment or
-mummification. For hence it follows, that ground once used for burial
-becomes equally fitted for a second use, whenever by gradual
-decomposition the bodies first interred there have thoroughly vanished
-from the soil.
-
-This principle has given the common rule of burial; and for obvious
-reasons. Under any other plan, the entire area allotted for interment
-would presently be in holding. No portion, however remote the date of
-its first occupation, could be resumed for a second series of
-interments; and the provision of a new Cemetery would be indispensable.
-Pushed to its extreme consequences, such a system must eventually
-convert the entire country into its burial-ground.
-
-Under the practice of intramural interments--that practice which the new
-law supersedes, the principle of temporary tenure has been made to cover
-all manner of brutal abuses. Graves have been disturbed--within
-metropolitan churchyards and other burying-grounds, in which the
-transformations of decay had not half accomplished themselves; and
-public decency has been outraged--here, in the centre of civilisation,
-by the spectacle of human remains being tossed about like offal. It is
-one chief advantage of extramural sepulture, that, while the inevitable
-decay of the dead will be removed from the vicinity of the living, and
-the latter will no longer have their atmosphere tainted by this hideous
-contamination; so likewise for the dead--however humble, that in this
-new resting-place, room will be allotted them with no indecent stint;
-that the dwellings and market-places of the living will no longer hem
-them in, grudging their narrow requirements; that their return to dust
-will be respected, as beseems the last phase of mortal existence; and
-that, against any desecration of their repose, there will be given every
-security which piety and affection can demand.
-
-There may be difference of opinion as to the precise time when a grave
-can with truth and decency be thought to have become distenanted. The
-rapidity of decay varies in so extraordinary a degree according to soil,
-that some inhumations are almost equivalent to embalming; while, in
-other cases, the process is comparatively rapid. Only experience of a
-particular soil will enable you to know with precision, what length of
-tenure is needed there for the purposes of interment to accomplish
-themselves; but on general principles one can approximate pretty nearly
-to the truth. Assuming the site of your Cemetery to have been selected
-with due regard to those qualities of soil which determine the
-differences adverted to, I think it unlikely that any adult grave can
-properly be re-opened within twenty years[93] of the time when interment
-shall last have occurred in it. Very long within this time, however, all
-soft textures of the body would have completed their decay. Remains of
-the coffin and of the skeleton--materials insusceptible of putrefaction,
-would alone occupy the grave, and with gradual crumbling blend
-themselves in the soil. Not till this final disintegration of the
-skeleton is complete--not till the identity of its different elements is
-destroyed, can the first occupant of a grave be fairly deemed to have
-abdicated his tenure. From this time only, can his interest in it be
-held as having reverted to the public, for whoever next may claim a
-similar usufruct of the ground.
-
- [93] Twenty years would probably represent at least four times the
- average period during which the bodies of the poor have been left at
- rest in many grave-yards of the metropolis. Yet I would willingly
- advocate a longer term of years as the personal tenure of a grave, if
- public opinion would sanction the heavier expense which must thus be
- entailed on the living.
-
-Taken for granted that, as regards the general public, your Cemetery
-will be established on the principle of a temporary tenure of graves, it
-remains for you to determine to what extent you will permit wealthier
-applicants to purchase exemption from this rule, and obtain a freehold
-interest in particular portions of your ground. I have little to say on
-this point, because it is of no sanitary importance, provided that
-privileges so purchased do not in any degree interfere with the general
-economy of your plan. Barring any risk of this kind, it comes before you
-simply as a question of finance.
-
-A precaution, however, which I would suggest, is, that, first of all,
-you should provide a cemeterial space sufficient for the interment
-purposes of your population, on the principle of temporary tenure; that
-no portion of this space should, under any circumstances, be alienated
-from its public destination; that the whole of it should remain in
-perpetuity the common burying-ground of the City of London. This prime
-necessity of your plan being secured, it will be competent for you to
-include in your purchase a certain redundant number of acres; and out of
-these you can allot, at your discretion, such quantities of ground as
-may be desired in freehold, either for the purposes of family interment,
-generation after generation, or for the fiction of perpetual tenure by
-some single occupant.[94]
-
- [94] In regard of these exceptional burials, it will be requisite to
- fix certain regulations; especially for the construction of family
- graves, wherein it will be desired that many who during life have been
- united, shall after death have their ashes mingled together in the
- soil. A frequent custom in private Cemeteries for fulfilling this
- purpose has been, for graves to be dug to a considerable
- depth--sometimes such that twelve coffins could be piled there, one on
- the other; and these deep pits have commonly been provided with brick
- walls. Now, for the same reason as determined my opinion against the
- multiple burial of the poor, I would argue against this arrangement,
- as one which might occasion excessive accumulation in single spots of
- your Cemetery, and as being in principle bad. In preference, I would
- venture to recommend the endeavour to introduce an interment-custom,
- which is prevalent abroad, of _family plots of ground instead of
- family pits_. Under ordinary circumstances, all the accommodation
- heretofore sought in the one arrangement would be found superiorly in
- the other; and in a well-projected suburban Cemetery the larger
- superficial extent could probably be afforded at much less cost than
- is usually paid for the pit. Persons familiar with the details of
- Cemetery-burial would easily devise an arrangement of such plots,
- whereby they should be separate and secluded, admitting of appropriate
- decoration, and altogether likely to prove more acceptable to public
- opinion than many existing arrangements. In regard of such plots, too,
- there might be conceded a privilege which I believe has not been
- allowed in private Cemeteries; namely, an hereditary right to refill
- the ground for any successive number of times, subject only to such
- restrictions as will determine the succession of interments in other
- parts of the Cemetery.
-
-In thus selling portions of your land for private and privileged
-employment, you would be satisfying what has become a habit, and may be
-considered a legitimate claim of the wealthier classes. Beyond this, it
-is also evident, that you would virtually be competing with the ordinary
-Cemetery-companies of the metropolis, in the most lucrative department
-of their trade. It would probably be easy for you, by varying your fees
-according to circumstances, either on the one hand to diminish, and
-almost prohibit, the frequency of applications for exceptional
-interments; or, on the other hand, to attract such applications. Even,
-if you thought it desirable, you might admit purchasers from other
-classes than those having right of burial in your municipal
-Cemetery;--in short, you might manage it commercially, with a view to
-profit, looking to its proceeds for covering many expenses of the
-general establishment.
-
-With respect to the ordinary arrangement of your ground for public
-purposes, and the distribution of burials therein, you may estimate
-that, taking one grave with another, and allowing for the marginal
-spaces of each, the average size of a grave will be twenty-eight square
-feet. For illustration’s sake, I will suppose the ground to be laid out
-in plots--say the third of an acre in extent. Each such plot would
-contain four hundred single graves, mixed adult and young, with what
-foot-paths might be requisite for approaching them. The City mortality
-of twenty years (assuming this period to be the ordinary leasehold of a
-grave) might be reckoned at sixty-four thousand deaths; for the
-accommodation of which number there would be wanted one hundred and
-sixty plots of the above-mentioned size--say fifty-four acres of ground.
-I would propose that throughout each line of every such space, adult and
-infant graves should, as far as possible, lie alternately; and that,
-instead of filling all the graves together at stated periods (say every
-twenty years) half of them, taken alternately, should be filled at each
-semi-period--say every ten years. By this arrangement, half the
-complement of burials would take place in each plot, at a time when the
-decomposition of the preceding half-complement had finished itself, so
-far as putrefaction is concerned; and whatever contamination of air
-might be liable to occur under the best-considered sanitary arrangement,
-would certainly be reduced to the lowest conceivable amount. Or, as an
-alternative equal to this arrangement for the purposes of health, you
-might adopt the plan of filling in immediate succession all the
-burial-spaces of a plot; provided the surface could then at once be
-devoted to the growth of appropriate vegetation.
-
-Fifty-four acres being then the quantity of ground which would suffice,
-on sound principles, for the ordinary interment of your entire annual
-mortality during a period of twenty years; at the expiration of which
-time (assuming your soil to be appropriate) one may reasonably expect
-that the ground will admit of a second similar occupation; and so forth
-in perpetuity: it will be requisite to add a considerable allowance of
-space for other accessory purposes.
-
-Thus, room would be required for the various buildings that belong to
-the institution of a Cemetery: partly for the dwelling of such officers
-as you may require to be there resident, partly for the temporary
-accommodation of persons resorting thither for the burial of their
-friends, partly for the religious services of different
-congregations.[95]
-
- [95] The distinction of the ground into a consecrated and an
- unconsecrated portion, as required by the Act of Parliament, will
- require no addition to its total area; and therefore the proportion
- which these parts should bear to one another need not now be
- discussed.
-
-Something likewise must be added for such mainways as will be wanted
-along various lines of the burial-ground, for the carriage traffic which
-belongs to funeral ceremonies among the richer classes of society, and
-for other like purposes.
-
-Further, I dare say you would think it inexpedient that your Cemetery
-should be entirely without decoration and elegance. Fifty-four acres of
-head-and-foot stones, or the same extent of bare mounds, might vulgarise
-even the aspect of death. By the judicious introduction of trees and
-turf and shrubs, of bends and undulations, you would probably seek to
-interrupt the long perspective of so many tombs, and, by these
-artificial resources of planning and planting, to enhance the native
-solemnity of the spot. Amid such ornamental portions of your ground
-might be scattered irregularly the various sites of exceptional
-interment,--family graves, personal graves in perpetuity, long leasehold
-graves, and the like; and the interposition of these large portions of
-comparatively un-occupied soil, with as much appropriate vegetation as
-could conveniently be introduced, might not only allow much tasteful
-decoration of the ground, but would likewise conduce to the healthful
-accomplishment of those purposes for which the Cemetery is established.
-
-In respect of these and many other details of your plan, you will
-doubtless be guided by the direct and responsible advice of men
-specially skilled in the subject. I have, therefore, confined myself to
-the mention of those points which may determine your judgment merely as
-to the quantity of land required for your purpose.
-
-Without offering any opinion as to the possible claims of non-resident
-parishioners, on which liability I would again suggest your obtaining a
-legal opinion; and without pretending to advise what allowance should be
-made for purely decorative purposes; I may yet conclude from such
-information as I have collected, that, with a hundred acres of suitable
-soil at your disposal, you would be amply able to meet all legitimate
-burial-requirements of your population in perpetuity, and would likewise
-(for many years at least) have a considerable excess which might be
-applied to the uses of ornamental arrangement.
-
-From what I have said on the influence of soil, in determining the
-period after which burying-grounds may be resumed for a second series of
-interments, it will be obvious to you that this condition is an
-important element in deciding the sufficiency of any area for given
-burial purposes. And the site of your Cemetery might be such as somewhat
-to lessen, or greatly to increase, the suggested extent of your
-estimate. It would be fruitless, however, now to detain you with any
-endeavour to trace the several influences which different soils exert
-over animal decay. Such remarks, at the present time, could only be
-addressed to hypothetical cases, or stated in the most general form.
-Therefore, instead of attempting this anticipative argument on the
-subject, I hold myself ready to report to you, specifically, on the
-suitableness of whatever soil may be proposed to you for the purposes of
-your Cemetery.[96]
-
- [96] For similar reasons, I defer any discussion of the depth at which
- bodies may most properly be deposited in the ground. The thickness of
- superjacent soil, which will deodorise, before their escape, the
- gaseous products of any given decomposing mass, or which will retain
- these gases more or less permanently in combination, varies most
- importantly with certain chemical and mechanical qualities of the
- soil: and on these it would be useless to dwell by anticipation. For
- accurate results, it may be necessary, after the selection of a site
- and during its preparation, to institute experiments on the subject.
-
-There is yet one other consideration which may affect the extent of your
-purchase. The law restricts you from approaching within 200 yards of any
-dwelling-house, without the previous written consent of its owner,
-lessee, and occupier. But there is no law restricting the nearness
-within which any builder may approach your wall with his design for new
-habitations; and it might easily occur to you, within a short time of
-establishing your Cemetery, to find a new town growing in close
-proximity around it. If there be any meaning and value in the clause,
-which forbids your undue approach to inhabited houses--if it truly
-represent that this approach would be a sanitary evil, then obviously
-the law is deficient in the respect adverted to. It would be in your
-power to guarantee the continuance of a belt of unoccupied ground, as an
-immediate circuit to your Cemetery, in either of two ways:--either,
-namely, you might purchase a considerable extent of ground beyond the
-actual requirements of your Cemetery, might devote its central hundred
-acres to interment, and might let its remaining circumference for
-agricultural purposes; or, if you were fortunate enough to be treating
-for the central portion of some considerable estate, you might
-stipulate, as a condition of purchase, that no building should be reared
-within such distance of the wall of your Cemetery, as you, on due
-consideration, may deem fit.
-
- * * * * *
-
-II. In the provision of a Cemetery, it is required by the Act of
-Parliament, that ‘the Burial-Board shall have reference to the
-convenience of access thereto from the Parish or Parishes for which the
-same is provided;’ and it is legalised, that ‘any Burial-Board may make
-such arrangements as they may from time to time think fit, for
-facilitating the conveyance of the Bodies of the Dead from the Parish,
-or the place of Death, to the Burial-ground which shall be provided.’
-
-It cannot but be obvious to you, that the choice of a site for your
-Cemetery might be such as to interpose very serious obstacles in the way
-of interment, even for the richest classes; and under the most favorable
-circumstances, the removal of the dead to a distance of some miles from
-their previous residence, cannot but threaten serious difficulty to the
-poor. Assuming--what various conditions of the Act of Parliament render
-almost inevitable, that your Cemetery must be distant at least six miles
-from the centre of the City, the present funeral charges can hardly be
-maintained without increase, if the traffic is to be conducted on the
-same principles as heretofore. The price for which an artisan could
-procure a decent funeral for his wife or child, within a stone’s throw
-of his door, will unavoidably be augmented by every mile you add to the
-distance, if the conveyance is still to depend on the old means and
-arrangements.
-
-When I consider the classes of persons likely, as inhabitants of the
-City, to claim interment in your Cemetery--classes, among which the
-predominance of narrow, if not necessitous, circumstances will be
-frequent; when, for instance, in a year’s official returns, I see that
-artisans and paupers make more than two-thirds of your entire classified
-mortality; I cannot but think this aspect of the matter a very important
-one. From some years’ experience of your death-register, I should say
-that, of City funerals, there would not be one in ten where the friends
-could afford to disregard an additional expenditure of half a guinea;
-and, in the majority of instances, I am persuaded that a smaller
-addition would be enough to cause inconvenience and distress. It
-therefore seems to me certain, that your plan for extramural sepulture,
-however perfect at all other points, might either entirely fail of its
-purpose, or become cruelly oppressive to the poor, by the simple
-expensiveness of approaching the burial-place. And I suppose it was in
-anticipation of the difficulties here adverted to, that the framers of
-the Metropolitan Burials Act introduced the permissive clause, which I
-just quoted, empowering Burial-Boards ‘to facilitate the conveyance’ of
-the dead, and thus virtually rendering them responsible, so far as the
-poorer classes are concerned, for the cheapness and efficiency of such
-conveyance.
-
-I would therefore submit, that in your decision as to the site of your
-Cemetery, so soon as the indispensable conditions of appropriate soil
-are given, the first point to examine is accessibility; that the spot to
-be chosen should have, in addition to its carriage roads, the utmost
-facility of railway approach; and that, for those with whom small
-differences of price are an important consideration, you should be able
-to guarantee a rate of transport for coffin and mourners, not in excess
-of existing charges.
-
-From observation of arrangements which have lately been made with
-Railway-Companies by the Directors of Cemeteries, and from inquiry of
-persons engaged in such undertakings, I entertain little doubt that you
-might make a contract to the following effect with the authorities of
-any line convenient for your purpose--viz., that every day, at a fixed
-hour, there should be a train, or some portion of a train, exclusively
-adapted to the funeral purposes of the poorer classes; that for this
-train there should be issued funeral tickets, franking the conveyance of
-a coffin with some stated number of mourners, who should also be
-entitled to return; that the introduction of funeral traffic should be
-by a special entrance, and its exit at a special terminus.
-
-Such contract supposed,--in connexion with this funeral train, you might
-further arrange to maintain public hearses; which, at the option of
-persons concerned, and on due requisition being made, should convey any
-coffin from its former home to the railway terminus; and which again, if
-necessary, at the distal station, should complete its conveyance to the
-grave. This facility might even be extended, if the distances were
-considerable, to the similar conveyance of a certain number of
-mourners, with the undertaker in charge of their procession.
-
-Also, if desirable, it could no doubt be arranged, with a view to
-economy, that the undertaker’s responsibility for a funeral should
-terminate at the railway terminus, up to which he would have conducted
-it; and that its reception at the distal station should be entrusted to
-servants of your Cemetery, who would then fulfil all remaining duties in
-respect of it.
-
-Arrangements to the above effect would be much simplified in working,
-and their general adoption much promoted, if all disbursements for
-funeral tickets, and for such other facilitations of conveyance as I
-have adverted to, were made by your Burial-Board,--their cost to be
-included in an uniform Cemetery fee; so that the friends of the
-deceased, after paying for his grave, should, without further payment,
-be entitled, if they desired it, to claim conveyance for his coffin from
-home to the Cemetery, and for themselves (in stated number) by a funeral
-ticket, at least for the railway portion of their transit. Thus to have
-one single and inclusive price for all that belongs to the new
-system--for the extramural grave, namely, and for conveyance thereto,
-would enable your Burial-Board to maintain its total cost at a level
-within reach of the poorer classes, and probably below that of existing
-prices.
-
-In addition to what I have here suggested, there are many other steps
-which might be taken, if unforeseen circumstances should render them
-necessary, to diminish the pressure of new burial-charges on the poor.
-Time will develop, better than one can foretell, the exact operation of
-our reformed system; and for such inconveniences as it may bring, you
-will have no difficulty, I think, in finding appropriate cures. Nor
-could it be otherwise than easy, if you thought it desirable, to extend
-to the comparatively few funerals of wealthier classes which occur from
-within the City of London, those same arrangements for facilitating
-conveyance, which I have here deemed it requisite to consider only in
-their relation to the poor.
-
-For the latter, it has seemed indispensable that your scheme should
-provide assistance, equivalent at least to the difficulty which its
-adoption must occasion them. Beyond this, I believe you would wish to
-disturb as little as possible the ordinary routine of interment; and I
-have aimed, therefore, at suggesting assistance only in such kind, and
-in such degree, as may least interfere with any interests of trade,
-least derange any established habits, least offend any prejudices of the
-people.
-
- * * * * *
-
-III. There is no part of the subject which I have considered with more
-anxiety than that which relates to delays of interment, and to the
-prolonged keeping of dead bodies in the rooms of their living kindred.
-
-Evils arising in this source are unknown to the rich. Soldered in its
-leaden coffin, on tressels in some separate and spacious room, a corpse
-may await the convenience of survivors with little detriment to their
-atmosphere.
-
-Not so in the poor man’s dwelling. The sides of a wooden coffin, often
-imperfectly joined, are at best all that divide the decomposition of the
-dead from the respiration of the living. A room, tenanted night and day
-by the family of mourners, likewise contains the remains of the dead.
-For some days the coffin is unclosed. The bare corpse lies there amid
-the living; beside them in their sleep; before them at their meals.
-
-The death perhaps has occurred on a Wednesday or Thursday; the next
-Sunday is thought too early for the funeral; the body remains unburied
-till the Sunday week. Summer or winter makes little difference to this
-detention: nor is there sufficient knowledge on the subject, among the
-poorer population, for alarm to be excited even by the concurrence of
-infectious disease in a room so hurtfully occupied.
-
-I have no means of telling you, with statistical precision, in how many
-of your annual deaths the corpse is detained in dangerous proximity to
-the living. But I have already quoted an official classification of
-deaths, by which it would appear that more than two-thirds of your
-deaths are of the artisan class or below it. Among them at least, it
-would be exceptional for the corpse to have a room to itself. On an
-average, then, there would probably be lying within the City at any
-moment, from thirty to forty dead bodies in rooms tenanted by living
-persons.
-
-This very serious evil is well known to all persons who have taken an
-interest in the sanitary advancement of the poor; and ineffectual
-endeavours have been made for its diminution. The law does indeed
-empower your Officer of Health, under certain circumstances, to order
-the removal of a corpse from any inhabited room. And, under the
-Nuisances Removal Act, the General Board of Health may be authorised,
-during times of epidemic disease, to issue directions and regulations
-for the speedy interment of the dead. Both laws have remained
-inoperative, and are likely to remain so.
-
-If one were starting anew--legislating for a people with unformed
-habits, nothing might be easier than to devise regulations of a perfect
-kind with regard to the sanitary management of the dead. But our case is
-widely different. The evils against which we have to contend are among
-the deepliest-rooted habits of the country. In defence of what exists
-there are many stupid and ignorant prejudices: but, interwoven with
-these are feelings of tenderness and affection, to which all
-consideration and reverence are due;--feelings which would be shocked
-and outraged by any abrupt endeavour to reduce the care of the dead to a
-system of fixed regulations.
-
-For myself, having the deepest sense of the evil in question, and having
-officially the power to order the removal of the dead, I may repeat that
-I have never yet exercised my authority. Practically speaking, I can
-hardly conceive an instance in which I should attempt to do so. It would
-require the strongest case that could be shown of actual mischief in
-progress--of disease and death multiplied day by day through the
-presence of some particular dead body, to justify interference even in
-that single instance. Nothing like the operation of a general law would
-be tolerated;--nothing like including the dead in a compulsory plan of
-hygienic police.
-
-After very careful consideration of the subject, I may confess myself
-even more impressed with its difficulties than when I first began to
-give it my attention; and in the few suggestions which follow I cannot
-pretend to do more than intimate where, in my opinion, a beginning may
-usefully be made towards an improvement which it will take many years
-to accomplish.
-
-Legislative remedies, proposed for the evils which I am bringing under
-your notice, have been of two kinds--viz., _first_, to restrict the time
-during which it should be lawful to keep a body unburied; _secondly_, to
-promote the use of reception-houses (as they have been called) whither
-bodies might be removed from within all dwelling-places, and be kept
-under certain regulations during the days preceding their interment.
-
-As regards the first point;--there are many foreign countries (and even
-some parts of the United Kingdom) where either law or custom has made it
-imperative to bury within two, three, or four days of death. Our habit,
-unfortunately, is to keep the corpse unburied for twice as long. A week
-may probably be considered our medium interval between death and
-interment; and with this delay, I need hardly tell you, the body becomes
-putrid--sometimes intensely so, before the time for its removal arrives.
-
-Among the wealthier classes, as I have said, this delay is practically
-unimportant; except in so far as every repetition maintains the
-pernicious custom. Scarcely on account of any risk arising to themselves
-in emanations from the dead, but mainly for the sake of influence and
-example, would one wish the educated classes of the community to adopt
-the usage of earlier burial. Our present practice is upheld by no law of
-necessity; nor for the most part does it represent any extravagance of
-grief, or fond reluctance of separation. Chiefly it subsists by our
-indolent acquiescence in a habit, which former prejudices and former
-exigencies established. Fears of premature interment, which had much to
-do with it, are now seldom spoken of but with a smile. The longer
-interval, once rightly insisted on as necessary for the gathering of
-distant friends, has now, in the progress of events, become absurdly
-excessive: in a vast majority of cases, all whose presence is needed,
-live within a narrow circle; and the more distant mourner, who, fifty
-years ago, would have spent several days in coming from Paris or
-Edinburgh, can now finish his journey in twelve hours. It is much to be
-wished that, under these changed circumstances, an altered practice
-might ensue in the upper classes of society, fixing their time of burial
-within three or four days of death. Such example of wealthier
-neighbours, aided by greater enlightenment and education among
-themselves, would greatly tend to detach the poor from many observances
-and delays, in relation to the dead, which, in their narrow dwellings
-cannot continue with impunity.
-
-But, as regards these poorer classes, cannot anything be done in
-connexion with your new arrangements, to abridge the period of delay? As
-for any positive regulation, limiting the time during which it should be
-allowed to retain dead bodies in certain dwelling-houses,--such could
-only be enforced by an extensive organisation of sanitary police, which
-you would have to call into existence for the purpose, and which, in the
-present state of public opinion, would encounter insurmountable
-difficulties on every occasion of its authoritative interference.
-
-It is by indirect means and inducements alone, that I can hope at
-present to effect the desired alteration; and by them, I think,
-something can be ensured toward shortening the delays of interment.
-
-First, I believe that everything which cheapens the cost of burial, will
-conduce to such a result; for, among the poor, one considerable cause of
-procrastination must often be the immediate absence of money. The plan
-of conveyance and payment which I have suggested, would at least ensure
-you against any increase of this difficulty, and might readily be
-applied to diminish it. For, under such a system of single payment for
-grave and conveyance, it would be practicable, and, I think, most
-advantageous, to fix two prices, with a difference of at least five
-shillings between them; to charge the lower fee whenever the funeral
-should occur within eighty hours of death, the higher whenever this
-period should be exceeded. If, by the general adoption of the former
-alternative, the Cemetery receipts should be diminished in respect of
-artisan funerals, even to the utmost extent--say five or six hundred
-pounds per annum--this money, or much more, would have been
-advantageously expended in purchasing so great a reform. If, on the
-contrary, the immediate option of the working classes should be in
-favour of continuing a system so injurious to themselves and to their
-neighbours, there would be no injustice in leaving them the incumbrance
-of a cost, from which it would require only their own will to escape.
-The difference of price would soon be recognised as a municipal tax on
-delays of interment;--a tax, rendered legitimate by the public evil
-which it is designed to correct, and guarded against remonstrance,
-because any man may avoid it who will. And since the delays in question
-often arise in a passive habit of the people, founded on no deliberate
-intention or reason, I cannot but believe that a well-marked difference
-of fee would, as it were, startle the poor into considering the
-question, which would come to be of daily argument in their houses:--‘Is
-it worth while that our funeral cost should be increased by the amount
-of one or two days wages, in order that we may retain within our
-dwelling-rooms four days longer, that which every one tells us is
-hurtful to ourselves and to others?’
-
-It has been suggested to me, that many delays occur owing to Sunday
-being considered specially as a funeral day among the labouring classes;
-that an equal distribution of burials over the week would be preferable
-to this waiting for a particular day; and that the closure of your
-Cemetery on Sundays might accordingly be beneficial for the purposes
-under consideration. Many arguments will doubtless occur to you, both
-for and against the desirability of Sunday interments; but this probably
-may be regarded as a point of detail, more fitly to be considered when
-your scheme is complete, or even when it has actually given you some
-experience of its operation.
-
-As regards the second point adverted to--the establishment of special
-reception-houses for the dead, I do not hesitate to say that, if they
-could be brought into general use, their institution would confer great
-advantages on the poor. But against this event, at least as an immediate
-one, I grieve to see strong probabilities.
-
-A first proposal made to some mourning household, that they should trust
-to strangers’ hands the custody of their unburied dead, would in most
-instances greatly and suddenly clash with their customs, and prejudices,
-and affections. Whatever success you might have in conquering this
-difficulty would of necessity be slow: and my practical familiarity with
-the poorer classes makes me so little hopeful of their immediate
-acquiescence in the plan, that I should hardly feel justified in urging
-you to incur any very large expense, or to embarrass yourselves at
-starting with any elaborate machinery, for the sake of so scanty an
-expectation.
-
-The reception-houses of Germany, as you probably know, are founded with
-a double intention; partly for the purpose which I am here chiefly
-considering--that the dead may be removed from an injurious contiguity
-to the living; partly also, that the bodies may be vigilantly observed,
-in case of suspended animation. With the latter view, many of them are
-specially furnished and specially officered. In that at Frankfort, for
-instance, each body is placed in a separate, warmed and ventilated cell;
-cords are attached to the fingers in such manner that the slightest
-movement occasions the ringing of an alarum; night and day watch is kept
-in a central apartment which looks into each cell, and has the several
-alarum-bells hung round it; adjacent is a room designed for acts of
-resuscitation, with bath, galvanic apparatus and the like, always in
-readiness for instant use; and, so long as any corpse lies within the
-reception-house, the medical superintendent of the establishment never
-goes beyond its walls. Dr. Sutherland, whose report to the General Board
-of Health is full of interesting information on the burial-institutions
-of the Continent, praises the completeness and ingenuity of these
-contrivances; adding, however, that ‘after careful inquiry at all the
-cities where he found them to exist, he could not learn that any case of
-resuscitation had as yet occurred.’ I may add, too, as regards my own
-personal experience in this country, that, with extensive opportunities,
-it has never happened to me, either to see any case of suspended
-animation where doubts of death and question of interment could arise,
-nor to hear in professional circles of any such occurrence, I therefore
-think it quite unnecessary to recommend any arrangement of
-reception-houses, with reference to the resuscitation of persons
-apparently dead.
-
-The object for which I would desire their institution, is exclusively
-that of receiving dead bodies out of the houses of the poor, in order to
-mitigate those evils which arise in prolonged retention of the corpse.
-That this object is in itself very desirable, and that under the
-prevalence of epidemic disease its accomplishment might be of urgent
-necessity, you will not doubt: and the responsibility for fulfilling
-it--or at least for giving all facilities to its fulfilment, is so
-distinctly imposed on you by the letter and spirit of the law, that you
-will probably wish to take measures accordingly.
-
-The extent, then, to which my information on the subject would lead me
-to recommend provision to be made, is this: I would advise that
-accommodation of an appropriate character (savouring in style rather of
-an ecclesiastical construction, than of the workhouse or
-dissecting-room) be arranged for the reception of fifty coffins. Tor
-this purpose I would suggest--not the building of several separate
-reception-houses within the City of London, in order to their being
-respectively adjacent to the portions of population which might use
-them,--but rather the establishment of one only, and that on the site of
-your Cemetery. Thus the conveyance of bodies which would take place
-under your auspices, might be made with greater economy, since it could
-work into the plan I have already suggested. The advantage of having
-only a single edifice (especially since its use is likely to be limited)
-and of including its superintendence in the general organisation of
-your Cemetery, cannot be questioned. And it seems to me, likewise, that
-a building designed for the reception of many dead bodies, cannot
-conveniently be established in the heart of the City.
-
-I would of course recommend that the use of this building should be
-entirely optional with the poor, and that its advantages should be
-allowed gratuitously to persons burying in your ground: so that any one
-who, in respect of his cemetery-fee, would be entitled to have a corpse
-conveyed thither for funeral purposes, might claim this conveyance as
-soon as he chose after the occurrence of death, and might have the
-coffin kept with all proper formalities in the reception-house, till the
-moment fixed for its interment.
-
-On further particulars connected with this part of your arrangements, I
-do not think it requisite at present to dwell; especially because, while
-I regard the establishment of a reception-house to be quite
-indispensable to the complete fulfilment of your new responsibilities, I
-still look upon it as an institution to be gradually developed in the
-course of years, and according to circumstances yet undetermined, rather
-than as something which ought at once to assume its permanent character
-and proportions.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Here, too, in concluding this introductory report, I may observe that I
-have endeavoured as far as possible to avoid encumbering it with detail.
-For myself, in its construction, I have thought it indispensable to
-pursue the subject into minuter ramifications, to consider a vast number
-of circumstances here scarcely mentioned, to make myself acquainted with
-the burial customs of other countries, to review a great variety of
-opinions and arguments which have been advanced on the several matters
-alluded to, and to consult with persons practically versed in them. But
-to have brought all this material before you, would have prolonged my
-report to an inconvenient extent with no proportionate utility.
-
-Further, as regards these details of the subject, there are many parts
-on which I cannot address you with the confidence that belongs to
-personal knowledge. The general principles which I have set before you,
-do indeed lie within range of my official and professional observation.
-But the next stage of your inquiry relates to matters of special pursuit
-with which I am only indirectly conversant: and whatever information I
-may have compiled for myself from other sources, you will probably best
-obtain at first hand. Practical experience in the construction and
-working of Cemeteries has now for many years been the growing knowledge
-of persons connected with their administration by ties of business, or
-by official appointment. In many instances it has been dearly purchased,
-and notorious failures have arisen from its absence. Regard being had to
-the magnitude of your undertaking--hitherto unprecedented in the
-country, and to the immense interests involved in your success, I cannot
-but earnestly hope that such experience may be made available for your
-information.
-
-At an early period you will have to determine what appointments will be
-requisite, with a view to the architectural and other designs of your
-cemetery, to its economical planning and decorations, to the
-superintendence of its daily working, to its financial management, to
-the conveyance of bodies, and to all intramural organisation connected
-therewith. Minute details will be best considered when these
-appointments are made, and when you will naturally have the benefit of
-such practical experience as may best assist your deliberations.
-
-For the task on which you are engaged extends, I need hardly say, far
-beyond the purchase of certain acres for your burial-ground. It implies
-for its completion, that you shall possess an adequate plan on which the
-interment of your population may be managed during many succeeding
-generations; a plan constructed, first of all, with entire regard to the
-general good of the public, and next, with as little violence as may be
-to those habits, prejudices, and interests, which are involved in the
-present system of interment.
-
-The construction of such a plan constitutes a very large question of
-municipal policy;--one which, because of its solemn subject, and because
-of the degree in which human feelings and affections are involved in it,
-requires to be handled with peculiar discretion and delicacy; but which
-not the less requires to be contemplated in a large and comprehensive
-manner.
-
-I have therefore thought I should best fulfil the object of your
-reference, by bringing before you those general principles which lie at
-the root of all minute considerations: in order that, having first
-determined on them, and having taken one collective view of the subject,
-you may better know at what time, and in what order, and to what extent,
-you would wish the minor details to be developed for your information.
-
- I have the honour,
-
- &c. &c.
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
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-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Reports Relating to the Sanitary Condition
-of the City of London, by John Simon
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Reports Relating to the Sanitary Condition of the City of London
-
-Author: John Simon
-
-Release Date: April 28, 2017 [EBook #54622]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK REPORTS--SANITARY CONDITION--LONDON ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chris Curnow, Harry Lam and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class="tnbox">
-<p class="center">Please see the <a href="#TN">Transcriber&#8217;s Notes</a>
-at the end of this text.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h1><span class="fsize200">REPORTS</span><br />
-RELATING TO<br />
-<span class="fsize150">THE SANITARY CONDITION</span><br />
-OF THE<br />
-<span class="fsize150">CITY OF LONDON.</span></h1>
-
-<p class="center fsize80">BY</p>
-
-<p class="author"><span class="fsize150"><span class="gesp2">JOHN SIMON</span>, F.R.S.</span><br />
-<span class="fsize80">SURGEON TO ST. THOMAS&#8217;S HOSPITAL, AND<br />
-OFFICER OF HEALTH TO THE CITY.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center blankbefore2">LONDON:<br />
-JOHN W. PARKER AND SON, WEST STRAND.<br />
-MDCCCLIV.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="printer">LONDON:<br />
-SAVILL AND EDWARDS, PRINTERS, CHANDOS STREET,<br />
-COVENT GARDEN.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Pageiii">[iii]</span></p>
-
-<p class="dedication"><span class="fsize80">TO</span><br />
-<span class="fsize125">LOUIS MICHAEL SIMON,</span></p>
-
-<p class="center fsize80">OF THE STOCK EXCHANGE, LONDON, AND OF<br />
-THE PARAGON, BLACKHEATH,</p>
-
-<p class="dedication">I DEDICATE THIS REPRINT OF MY REPORTS:<br />
-<span class="fsize80">LOOKING<br />
-LESS TO WHAT LITTLE INTRINSIC MERIT THEY MAY HAVE,<br />
-THAN TO THE YEARS OF ANXIOUS LABOUR THEY REPRESENT:<br />
-DEEMING IT FIT TO ASSOCIATE<br />
-MY FATHER&#8217;S NAME<br />
-WITH A RECORD OF ENDEAVOURS TO DO MY DUTY:<br />
-BECAUSE IN THIS HE HAS BEEN MY BEST EXAMPLE;</span></p>
-
-<p class="center fsize80">AND</p>
-
-<p class="dedication"><span class="fsize80">BECAUSE I COUNT IT THE HAPPIEST INFLUENCE IN MY LOT,<br />
-THAT, BOUND TO HIM BY EVERY TIE OF GRATEFUL AFFECTION,<br />
-I HAVE LIKEWISE BEEN ABLE, FROM MY EARLIEST CHILDHOOD<br />
-TILL NOW&mdash;THE EVENING OF HIS LIFE,<br />
-TO REGARD HIM WITH UNQUALIFIED AND INCREASING RESPECT.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Pagev">[v]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-<table class="toc" summary="toc">
-
-<tr>
-<th colspan="2" class="right padr1 fsize80">Page</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="title"><span class="smcap">Dedication</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Pageiii">iii</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="title"><span class="smcap">Preface</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Pagevii">vii</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="title"><span class="smcap">First Annual Report</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page1">1</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="title"><span class="smcap">Further Remarks on Water-supply</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page72">72</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="title"><span class="smcap">Second Annual Report</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page77">77</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="title"><span class="smcap">Third Annual Report</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page177">177</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="title"><span class="smcap">Fourth Annual Report</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page211">211</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="title"><span class="smcap">Fifth Annual Report</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page213">213</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="title"><span class="smcap">Appendix of Tables Illustrating the Sanitary Condition of the City of London.</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page264">264</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="title"><span class="smcap">Report on City Burial-Grounds</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page280">280</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="title"><span class="smcap">Report on Extramural Interments</span></td>
-<td class="pageno"><a href="#Page285">285</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table><!--toc-->
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Pagevii">[vii]</span></p>
-
-<h2>PREFACE.</h2>
-
-<p class="preface">The following Reports, officially addressed to the
-Commissioners of Sewers of the City of London,
-were originally printed only for the use of the
-Corporation; and although, to my very great
-pleasure, they have been extensively circulated
-through the medium of the daily press, there has
-continued so frequent an application for separate
-copies that the surplus-stock at Guildhall has long
-been exhausted. Under these circumstances&mdash;believing
-the Reports may have some future interest,
-as belonging to an important educational period
-in the matters to which they refer, I have requested
-the Commission to allow their collective reprint
-and publication; and this indulgence having been
-kindly accorded me, I have gathered into the
-present volume all my Annual Reports, together
-with a special Report suggesting arrangements for
-extramural burial.</p>
-
-<p class="preface">From the nature of the work, I have not considered
-myself at liberty to make those extensive
-alterations of text which usually belong to a second
-edition. I have restricted myself to a few verbal<span class="pagenum" id="Pageviii">[viii]</span>
-corrections, and to rectifying or omitting some unimportant
-paragraph, here or there, in case its
-matter has been more fully or more correctly
-stated in parts of a subsequent Report. Frequently,
-where I have wished to explain or qualify passages
-in the text, I have added foot-notes; but these are
-distinguished as interpolations by the mark&mdash;J. S.,
-1854.</p>
-
-<p class="preface">My Reports lay no claim to the merit of scientific
-discovery. Rather, they deal with things
-already notorious to Science; and, in writing them,
-my hopes have tended chiefly towards winning for
-such doctrines more general and more practical
-reception. It has seemed to me no unworthy
-object, that, confining myself often to almost
-indisputable topics&mdash;to truths bordering on truism,
-I should labour to make trite knowledge bear fruit
-in common application.</p>
-
-<p class="preface">Nor in any degree do they profess to be cyclop&aelig;dic
-in the subject of Preventive Medicine; for it
-is but a small part of this science that hitherto
-is recognised by the law; and that&mdash;so far as the
-metropolis is concerned, scarcely beyond the confines
-of the City. It would have been an idle sort
-of industry, to say much of places or of matters
-foreign to the jurisdiction of those whom I officially
-addressed.</p>
-
-<p class="preface">In re-publishing documents which proclaim extreme<span class="pagenum" id="Pageix">[ix]</span>
-sanitary evils, as affecting the City, I think
-it right to draw attention to the dates of the
-several Reports, and to state that for the last five
-years many of these evils have been undergoing
-progressive diminution, of late at a rapid and
-increasing rate; while, at their worst, they represented
-only what I fear must be considered the
-present average condition of our urban population.</p>
-
-<p class="preface">This national prevalence of sanitary neglect is a
-very grievous fact; and though I pretend to no
-official concern in anything beyond the City boundaries,
-I cannot forego the present opportunity of
-saying a few words to bespeak for it the reader&#8217;s
-attention. I would beg any educated person to
-consider what are the conditions in which alone
-animal life can thrive; to learn, by personal inspection,
-how far these conditions are realised for
-the masses of our population; and to form for himself
-a conscientious judgment as to the need for
-great, if even almost revolutionary, reforms. Let
-any such person devote an hour to visiting some
-very poor neighbourhood in the metropolis, or in
-almost any of our large towns. Let him breathe
-its air, taste its water, eat its bread. Let him
-think of human life struggling there for years.
-Let him fancy what it would be to himself to live
-there, in that beastly degradation of stink, fed with
-such bread, drinking such water. Let him enter<span class="pagenum" id="Pagex">[x]</span>
-some house there at hazard, and&mdash;heeding where
-he treads, follow the guidance of his outraged
-nose, to the yard (if there be one) or the cellar.
-Let him talk to the inmates: let him hear what is
-thought of the bone-boiler next door, or the
-slaughter-house behind; what of the sewer-grating
-before the door; what of the Irish basket-makers
-upstairs&mdash;twelve in a room, who came in after the
-hopping, and got fever; what of the artisan&#8217;s dead
-body, stretched on his widow&#8217;s one bed, beside her
-living children.</p>
-
-<p class="preface">Let him, if he have a heart for the duties of
-manhood and patriotism, gravely reflect whether
-such sickening evils, as an hour&#8217;s inquiry will have
-shown him, ought to be the habit of our labouring
-population: whether the Legislature, which his
-voice helps to constitute, is doing all that might
-be done to palliate these wrongs; whether it be
-not a jarring discord in the civilisation we boast&mdash;a
-worse than pagan savageness in the Christianity
-we profess, that such things continue, in the midst
-of us, scandalously neglected; and that the interests
-of human life, except against wilful violence, are
-almost uncared for by the law.</p>
-
-<p class="preface">And let not the inquirer too easily admit what
-will be urged by less earnest persons as their pretext
-for inaction&mdash;that such evils are inalienable
-from poverty. Let him, in visiting those homes<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexi">[xi]</span>
-of our labouring population, inquire into the
-actual rent paid for them&mdash;dog-holes as they are;
-and studying the financial experience of Model
-Dormitories and Model Lodgings, let him reckon
-what that rent can purchase. He will soon have
-misgivings as to dirt being cheap in the market,
-and cleanliness unattainably expensive.</p>
-
-<p class="preface">Yet what if it be so? Shift the title of the
-grievance&mdash;is the fact less insufferable? If there
-be citizens so destitute, that they can afford to live
-only where they must straightway die&mdash;renting
-the twentieth straw-heap in some lightless fever-bin,
-or squatting amid rotten soakage, or breathing
-from the cesspool and the sewer; so destitute that
-they can buy no water&mdash;that milk and bread must
-be impoverished to meet their means of purchase&mdash;that
-the drugs sold them for sickness must be
-rubbish or poison; surely no civilised community
-dare avert itself from the care of this abject
-orphanage. And&mdash;<i>ruat c&#339;lum</i>, let the principle
-be followed whithersoever it may lead, that Christian
-society leaves none of its children helpless. If
-such and such conditions of food or dwelling are
-absolutely inconsistent with healthy life, what
-more final test of pauperism can there be, or
-what clearer right to public succour, than that
-the subject&#8217;s pecuniary means fall short of providing
-him other conditions than those? It may<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexii">[xii]</span>
-be that competition has screwed down the rate of
-wages below what will purchase indispensable food
-and wholesome lodgment. Of this, as fact, I am no
-judge; but to its meaning, if fact, I can speak.
-All labour below that mark is masked pauperism.
-Whatever the employer saves is gained at the
-public expense. When, under such circumstances,
-the labourer or his wife or child spends an occasional
-month or two in the hospital, that some
-fever-infection may work itself out, or that the
-impending loss of an eye or a limb may be averted
-by animal<a id="FNanchor1"></a><a href="#Footnote1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> food; or when he gets various aid from
-his Board of Guardians, in all sorts of preventable
-illness, and eventually for the expenses of interment,
-it is the public that, too late for the man&#8217;s
-health or independence, pays the arrears of wage
-which should have hindered this suffering and
-sorrow.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote1"><a href="#FNanchor1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a>
-Twenty years&#8217; daily experience of hospital surgery enables me
-to say, from personal knowledge, that our wards and out-patient
-rooms are never free from painful illustrations of the effects of insufficient
-nutrition&mdash;cases, in fact, of chronic starvation-disease
-among the poor; such disease as Magendie imitated, in his celebrated
-experiments, by feeding animals on an exclusively non-azotised
-diet.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p class="preface">Probably on no point of political economy is
-there more general concurrence of opinion, than
-against any legislative interference with the price
-of labour. But I would venture to submit, for the<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexiii">[xiii]</span>
-consideration of abler judges than myself, that
-before wages can safely be left to find their own
-level in the struggles of an unrestricted competition,
-the law should be rendered absolute and
-available in safeguards for the ignorant poor&mdash;first,
-against those deteriorations of staple food
-which enable the retailer to disguise starvation to
-his customers by apparent cheapenings of bulk;
-secondly, against those conditions of lodgment
-which are inconsistent with decency and health.</p>
-
-<p class="preface">But if I have addressed myself to this objection,
-partly because&mdash;to the very limited extent in
-which it starts from a true premiss, it deserves
-reply; and partly because I wish emphatically to
-declare my conviction, that such evils as I denounce
-are not the more to be tolerated for their rising in
-unwilling Pauperism, rather than in willing Filth;
-yet I doubt whether poverty be so important an
-element in the case as some people imagine. And
-although I have referred especially to a poor
-neighbourhood&mdash;because here it is that knowledge
-and personal refinement will have least power to
-compensate for the insufficiencies of public law; yet
-I have no hesitation in saying that sanitary mismanagement
-spreads very appreciable evils high in
-the middle ranks of society; and from some of the
-consequences, so far as I am aware, no station
-can call itself exempt.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Pagexiv">[xiv]</span></p>
-
-<p class="preface">The fact is, as I have said, that, except against
-wilful violence, life is practically very little cared
-for by the law. Fragments of legislation there
-are, indeed, in all directions: enough to establish
-precedents&mdash;enough to testify some half-conscious
-possession of a principle; but, for usefulness,
-little beyond this. The statutes tell that now and
-then, there has reached to high places the wail of
-physical suffering. They tell that our law-makers,
-to the tether of a very scanty knowledge, have, not
-unwillingly, moved to the redress of some clamorous
-wrong. But&mdash;tested by any scientific standard
-of what should be the completeness of sanitary
-legislation; or tested by any personal endeavour
-to procure the legal correction of gross and
-glaring evils; their insufficiencies, I do not hesitate
-to say, constitute a national scandal, and, perhaps
-in respect of their consequences, something not far
-removed from a national sin.</p>
-
-<p class="preface">In respect of <i>houses</i>&mdash;here and there, under local
-Acts of Parliament, exist sanitary powers, generally
-of a most defective kind; pretending often
-to enforce amendments of drainage and water-supply;
-sometimes to provide for the cleansing of
-filthy and unwholesome tenements; in a few cases
-to prevent over-crowding; very rarely to ensure
-stringent measures against houses certified to be
-unfit for human habitation. Occasionally&mdash;but<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexv">[xv]</span>
-a few lines would exhaust the list, an application
-of the Public Health Act, or some really
-efficient local Act, has put it within reach of
-the authorities to do all that is needful under
-certain of these heads. But I know of no such
-town that would bear strict examination as to its
-possession of legal powers to fulfil, what I presume
-must be the principle contemplated by the law&mdash;that
-no house should be let for hire unless presenting
-the conditions indispensable for health, or
-be hired for more occupants than it can decently
-and wholesomely accommodate.<a id="FNanchor2"></a><a href="#Footnote2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a>
-However this<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexvi">[xvi]</span>
-may be expressed, and in whatever laws embodied,
-local or general, I will venture to say that no
-Government should suffer a town, either to be without
-the means of enforcing this principle, or, having
-such means, to shirk their exercise. Our Constitution
-may properly concede that local representative
-authorities shall have their option whether,
-for sanitary purposes, to fall under a general law,
-or to have Local Improvement Acts of their own;
-but, in the present state of knowledge, it certainly
-seems incontestable that one or other of these alternatives
-should be compulsory, and that all Local<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexvii">[xvii]</span>
-Improvement Acts should be required, in their
-sanitary clauses, to come up to the standard of
-the Public Health Act of the time, whatever it
-may be.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote2"><a href="#FNanchor2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a>
-In addition to the ordinary powers&mdash;given, for instance, in the
-Public Health or City Sewers Act, for abating accumulated nuisances
-and for enforcing wholesome constructional arrangements;
-a principal requirement of all bodies having jurisdiction for the
-public health is, that there should be vested in them some authority,
-<i>enabling them to regulate</i>, in the spirit of the Common Lodging
-House Act, <i>all houses which are liable to be thronged by a dangerous
-excess of low population</i>. Almost invariably such houses
-are of the class technically known as &#8216;tenement-houses,&#8217; i. e.,
-houses divided into several tenements or holdings; whereof each&mdash;though
-very often consisting but of a single small room, receives its
-inmates without any available restriction as to their sex or number,
-and without regard to the accommodation requisite for cleanliness,
-decency, and health. The inhabitants of such houses, especially
-where of the lower order of Irish, constantly lapse into the most
-brutal filthiness of habits, and live in almost incredible conditions of
-dirt, over-crowding, and disease. See sections of the following Reports,
-beginning severally at <a href="#Page44">pages 44</a>, <a href="#Page146">146</a>, and <a href="#Page195">195</a>. Powers for
-dealing with these evils might be given to Local Boards of Health,
-most usefully, I think, in some such form as the following: 1) that&mdash;in
-respect of any house occupied by more than one family, if it be
-situate in any court, alley, or other place having no carriage-way,
-and be not assessed to the poor-rate at a higher rental than &pound;......
-<i>per annum</i>; or if in it any occupied holding consist of only one
-room, provided the rent of such room do not exceed the sum of
-......shillings per week, or if in it there reside, or within three
-months previous have resided, any person receiving parochial relief,
-medically or otherwise; on the certificate of a duly authorized
-medical officer, that any such house, or part thereof, is habitually in
-a filthy condition, or that from over-crowding or defective ventilation
-the health of its inmates is endangered, or that there has prevailed
-in it undue sickness or mortality of an epidemic or infectious
-kind; the Local Board may call upon its owner to register it in a book
-kept for this purpose; and in respect of all houses thus registered,
-the Local Board may make rules for periodical washing, cleansing,
-and limewhiting, and for the regular removal of all dust or refuse-matter,
-may fix the number of tenements into which it shall be
-lawful to divide any such house, or the total number of inmates who
-may at one time be received therein, may require its better ventilation
-by the construction of additional windows or louvres, and may
-from time to time make such other regulations and orders as they
-shall judge necessary for the maintenance of health and decency;
-and may recover from the owner or lessee of any such house penalties
-for neglect of any legal requisitions, rules, and orders, as aforesaid:
-2) that&mdash;on the certificate of a duly authorised medical officer,
-that the condition of any house or room is such as to render
-probable the rise or the spread of infectious and dangerous disease
-among its inmates, the Local Board may cause the owner or lessee
-of such house to be summoned before a magistrate; who, after
-due hearing, or in default of the owner&#8217;s or lessee&#8217;s appearance, may
-order the house, or any part of it, to be evacuated of all tenants
-within such time as he shall judge fit, and not again to be tenanted
-till after licence from the Local Board given on the certificate of
-their medical officer that its causes of unhealthiness are abated;
-and the magistrate may enforce penalties for non-compliance with
-his order, as aforesaid: 3) that&mdash;after an Order in Council bringing
-into action the extraordinary clauses of the Nuisances Removal Act,
-the Local Board, on receiving the certificate of their medical officer
-that any house, or part of house, is in such condition as to be imminently
-dangerous to the lives of its inmates in respect of the
-prevailing epidemic, or any similar disease, may issue a peremptory
-order for its evacuation, and may recover, from the owner or lessee
-to whom such order is addressed, penalties for every day during
-which, or part of which, after such order, the house, or any part
-thereof, continues to be tenanted; nor, under like penalties, shall it
-be lawful, except after written licence from the Local Board, given
-as aforesaid, to allow such house to be re-occupied.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p class="preface">Under circumstances like those just adverted to,
-may be found traces of enactment against <i>offensive
-and injurious trades</i>. Unregulated slaughtering
-throughout all London, except the City, tallow-melting
-in St. Paul&#8217;s church-yard, bone-boiling
-beside Lambeth Palace, may serve to illustrate the<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexviii">[xviii]</span>
-completeness and efficiency of these laws&mdash;even in
-our metropolitan area. Here we greatly lack some
-competent authority, on the part of the Government,
-to investigate all circumstances connected
-with such establishments, generally; to suggest
-laws for their prospective restriction, as to places
-wherein they may lawfully settle; and to frame
-regulations&mdash;enforceable by any Local Board of
-Health, for ensuring that all available measures be
-employed to mitigate their nuisance. Considering
-the circumstances under which many of these
-establishments have existed, no one can entertain
-a thought, that&mdash;even for the public health,
-they should be liable to the tyranny of an unconditional
-displacement. But if there existed&mdash;as
-undoubtedly there should exist, some skilled tribunal,
-competent to speak on the subject; then, I
-will venture to say, it might be quite in accordance
-with our English sense of liberty, that&mdash;after a
-certain condemnatory verdict by this tribunal, it
-should be open to the Local Board of Health to
-procure their expulsion, on payment of whatever
-compensation an ordinary jury might award.</p>
-
-<p class="preface">Again, with <i>factories</i>; thanks to Lord Shaftesbury&#8217;s
-indefatigable benevolence, the law has appointed
-an inspection of certain establishments,
-a restriction of their hours of labour, and some
-care against the dangers of unboxed machinery.<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexix">[xix]</span>
-And with mining also the law has interfered,
-chiefly as to the ventilation of mines; but hitherto
-so ineffectively that, while I write, the coal-miners
-are remonstrating with the Legislature on the
-thousand lives <i>per annum</i> still sacrificed through
-the insufficient protection accorded them. If there
-be meaning in this legislation&mdash;if it imply any
-principle, the meaning and the principle require to
-be developed into a general law, that every establishment
-employing labour be liable to inspection
-and regulation in regard of whatever acts and conditions
-are detrimental or hazardous to life. If
-factory-children are cared for, lest they be over-worked;
-and miners, lest they be stifled; so, for
-those who labour with copper, mercury, arsenic,
-and lead, let us care, lest they be poisoned! for
-grinders, lest their lungs be fretted into consumption!
-for match-makers, lest their jaws be rotted
-from them by phosphorus! And here let it again
-be noticed, as in the class of cases last spoken of,
-how greatly wanted is some skilled tribunal, to
-form part of any lawful machinery which might
-ensure that, in these and similar instances, no precautions
-necessary to life are withheld through
-ignorance or parsimony.</p>
-
-<p class="preface">Against <i>adulterations of food</i>, here and there,
-obsolete powers exist, for our ancestors had an eye
-to these things; but, practically, they are of no<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexx">[xx]</span>
-avail. If we, who are educated, habitually submit
-to have copper in our preserves, red-lead in our
-cayenne, alum in our bread, pigments in our tea,
-and ineffable nastinesses in our fish-sauce, what
-can we expect of the poor? Can they use<a id="FNanchor3"></a><a href="#Footnote3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> galactometers?
-Can they test their pickles with ammonia?
-Can they discover the tricks by which bread is
-made dropsical<a id="FNanchor4"></a><a href="#Footnote4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a>, or otherwise deteriorated in value,
-even faster than they can cheapen it in price?
-Without entering on details of what might be the
-best organisation against such things, I may certainly
-assume it as greatly a <i>desideratum</i>, that local
-authorities should uniformly have power to deal
-with these frauds (as, of course, with every sale of
-decayed and corrupted food) and that they should
-be enabled to employ skilled officers, for detecting
-at least every adulteration of bread and every
-poisonous admixture in condiments and the like.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote3"><a href="#FNanchor3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> The proverbial dilutions of milk are not its only deteriorations.
-Cows are so ill kept in London, and in consequence so often sickly,
-that milk suffers&mdash;sometimes by mere impoverishment, sometimes
-by much graver derangements. If there were instituted a proper
-Inspection of Provisions, one function of its officers should be to
-visit cow-houses, and to prevent the distribution of milk thus
-damaged or infected. I suspect that a sanitary reform of these
-establishments would make a sensible difference to the nursery-population
-of the metropolis.</p>
-
-<p id="Footnote4"><a href="#FNanchor4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> A chief artifice in the cheapening of bread is to increase its
-weight by various means which render it retentive of water. The
-other usual frauds consist in the employment of inferior flours&mdash;either
-not cereal, or damaged and partially deglutinised.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxi">[xxi]</span></p>
-
-<p class="preface">In some respects this sort of protection is even
-more necessary, as well as more deficient, in regard
-to <i>the falsification of drugs</i>. The College of Physicians
-and the Apothecaries&#8217; Company are supposed
-to exercise supervision in the matter; so that at least
-its necessity is recognised by the law. The security
-thus afforded is, in practice, null. It is notorious
-in my profession that there are not many
-simple drugs, and still fewer compound preparations,
-on the standard strength of which we can
-reckon. It is notorious that some important medicines
-are so often falsified in the market, and others
-so often mis-made in the laboratory, that we are
-robbed of all certainty in their employment. Iodide
-of potassium&mdash;an invaluable specific, may be
-shammed to half its weight with the carbonate of
-potash. Scammony, one of our best purgatives, is
-rare without chalk or starch, weakening it, perhaps,
-to half the intention of the giver. Cod-liver oil
-may have come from seals or from olives. The
-two or three drops of prussic acid that we would
-give for a dose may be nearly twice as strong at
-one chemist&#8217;s as at another&#8217;s. The quantity of
-laudanum equivalent to a grain of opium being,
-theoretically, 19 minims; we may practically find
-this grain, it is said, in 4.5 minims, or in 34.5.
-And my colleague, Dr. R. D. Thomson, who has
-much experience in these matters, tells me that of<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxii">[xxii]</span>
-calamine&mdash;not indeed an important agent, but still
-an article of our pharmacop&#339;ia&mdash;purporting daily
-to be sold at every druggist&#8217;s shop, there has not
-for years, he believes, existed a specimen in the
-market.<a id="FNanchor5"></a><a href="#Footnote5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote5"><a href="#FNanchor5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> Dr. Thomson tells me that he has known white precipitate of
-mercury sold in hundred-weights as calomel, and in one case (he
-believes by accident or ignorance) as trisnitrate of bismuth. In
-my text I have endeavoured to adduce such illustrations as I suppose
-to be most notorious; but I may refer the reader to various
-interesting papers published, through the last two or three years,
-in the <span class="smcap">Lancet</span> (<i>Analytical Sanitary Commission</i>) from one of which
-I quote the astounding instance, given above, of variations in the
-strength of laudanum. Mr. Thomas Taylor, of Vere Street, informs
-me that, whereas an ounce of laudanum should contain about
-four grains of morphia, he finds the actual quantity varying in
-different specimens from two grains to six; and that in two specimens
-of solid opium, outwardly alike and supposed to be of equal
-quality, he has found the per centage of morphia to vary from
-3<sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>2</sub> to 10. It requires little instruction in medicine to appreciate
-these facts.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p class="preface">Again, with the <i>promiscuous sale of poisons</i>,
-what incredible laxity of government! One
-poison, indeed, has its one law. Arsenic may not
-be sold otherwise than coloured, nor except with
-full registration of the sale, and in the presence of
-a witness known to both buyer and vender. Admirable,
-so far as it goes! but why should arsenic
-alone receive this dab of legislation? Is the
-principle right, that means of murder and suicide
-should be rendered difficult of access for criminal
-purposes? Does any one question it? Then, why<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxiii">[xxiii]</span>
-not legislate equally against all poisons?&mdash;against
-oxalic acid and opium, ergot and savin, prussic
-acid, corrosive sublimate, strychnine?</p>
-
-<p class="preface">Nor can our past legislators be more boastful of
-their labours for the <i>medical profession</i>&mdash;either for
-its scientific interests, or for the public protection
-against ignorance and quackery.<a id="FNanchor6"></a><a href="#Footnote6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> Nearly two
-dozen corporate bodies within the United Kingdom
-are said to grant licences for medical practice; and
-I hardly know whether it lessens or aggravates
-this confusion, that such licences are in many
-cases partial; that one licentiate may practise
-north of the Tweed, but nowise to the south; that
-one may practise in London, another only seven
-miles beyond it. Not that the licence seems much
-to matter! for innumerable poachers in all directions
-trespass on what the law purports to sell as a
-secured preserve for qualified practitioners: their
-encroachments are made with almost certain impunity;<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxiv">[xxiv]</span>
-and&mdash;as for the titles of the Profession, any
-impostor may style himself <i>doctor</i> or <i>surgeon</i> at his
-will. Even where licences are held, conveying
-identical titles, they imply neither equal privileges
-(as I have said) nor even uniform education. The
-law has troubled itself little as to the terms on
-which they shall be granted; and the qualifications
-exacted from candidates&mdash;the conditions preliminary
-to their becoming eligible for licence, vary
-in so remarkable a degree among the many corporate
-bodies which are fountains of this honour, that
-the credentials conferred have really little meaning,
-apart from a context which the public is unable to
-supply. It is charged against particular institutions,
-that their degrees and licences are attained
-with a very inglorious facility; and when it is
-recollected that the issuing of such testimonials is
-a source&mdash;sometimes a chief source&mdash;of income to
-the corporations which grant them, it will be felt
-that at least there must exist great danger of this
-reproach being sometimes deserved. If a national
-title to practise medicine is to be granted by several
-Boards, and if yet the tenure of that title is to
-determine public confidence in favour of its holder,
-it would seem indispensable that some guarantee
-should be given for these several licences representing
-equal qualifications&mdash;some guarantee that
-the holder in each case possesses professional<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxv">[xxv]</span>
-knowledge, and has enjoyed professional opportunities,
-at least above some uniform standard recognised
-as a <i>minimum</i> qualification by all the diplomatising
-bodies. Indispensable, however, as this
-may seem, years of endeavour have failed to attain
-it. What is called <i>medical reform</i> has been agitated
-longer than I can remember; and more than one
-minister has been willing to legislate for its promotion.
-Unfortunately the very magnitude of the
-evils has delayed their cure. With the constitution
-I have described&mdash;a system of conflicting jurisdictions,
-of licences without titles, and titles without
-licences, how could we escape internal dissension?
-how escape the antagonism, perhaps the jealousies,
-of rival corporations and of different professional
-classes? Home-Secretaries have had little leisure
-to fathom these things to the bottom. Unexamined
-and unadjudicated by any competent authority,
-such influences have bewildered public
-judgment, made statesmen regard us with despair,
-postponed legislative correction, and maintained us
-in a state of anarchy and confusion, best to be
-appreciated when we compare with our own the
-organisation and government of the legal profession.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote6"><a href="#FNanchor6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> Legislative passiveness towards scientific medicine is not the
-only evil we have to complain of. Surely, in selling Letters Patent
-for the protection of quack-medicines&mdash;in seeming to sanction and
-authenticate whatever lies their proprietor may post upon the wall,
-the State demeans itself into complicity with fraud, and soils its
-fingers with something fouler than the Vespasian tax. It illustrates
-the curious <i>forgetfulness</i> shewn towards medicine by the
-Legislature, that this immoral practice of giving patents for pretended
-cures of disease should have been allowed to continue&mdash;as
-of course it must have continued, solely by oversight, till past the
-middle of the nineteenth century.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p class="preface">And be it noted, how this reacts upon the State.
-So completely is our government dissevered from
-Science in general, and, most of all, from the sciences<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxvi">[xxvi]</span>
-relating to Life, that, on such subjects, there
-exists not for state-purposes anything like a tribunal
-of appeal. The Legislature recognises no
-<i>Medical Authority</i>. Occasionally this fact stands
-out in painful conspicuousness, and brings most
-injurious results. In contested cases requiring
-scientific testimony&mdash;before Parliamentary Committees,
-for instance, and in a variety of legal proceedings,&mdash;instead
-of the Court having satisfactory
-power of referring particular questions to skilled
-impartial adjudicators, the uniform practice is, that
-scientific men are retained on opposite sides, to
-support partisan interests. The advantages, such
-as they are, which belong to this system, might, I
-believe, easily be obtained under altered arrangements:
-the disadvantages are glaring. It might
-be invidious to refer to illustrations of their reality:
-but it is of course impossible to doubt of the working
-of this system, that, in so far as it makes each
-witness feel himself engaged to maintain the views
-of his employer, it tends towards a moral prostitution
-and subornation of science. In the interests
-of truth, it would surely seem desirable that scientific
-evidence should be tendered, so far as may be,
-in a judicial spirit towards the suit; either that
-the technical point should be referred to a technical
-jury, or that the technical witness should be
-summoned at the Court&#8217;s discretion, should be examined<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxvii">[xxvii]</span>
-in-chief by the Court, and should be subject
-only to such cross-examination as may procure
-the most complete statement of his knowledge on
-the matter in hand.</p>
-
-<p class="preface">Having said so much on the defects and the
-wrongs of our existing sanitary condition, perhaps I
-may venture to speak of the almost obvious remedy.
-&#8216;Almost obvious&#8217; I say; for surely no one will
-doubt that this great subject should be dealt with
-by comprehensive and scientific legislation; and I
-hardly see how otherwise, than that it should be
-submitted in its entirety to some single department
-of the executive, as a sole charge; that there
-should be some tangible head, responsible&mdash;not
-only for the <i>enforcement</i> of existing laws, such as
-they are or may become, but likewise for their
-<i>progress</i> from time to time to the level of contemporary
-science, for their <i>completion</i> where fragmentary,
-for their <i>harmonisation</i> where discordant.</p>
-
-<p class="preface">If&mdash;as is rumoured, the approaching re-constitution
-of the General Board of Health is (after the
-pattern of the Poor-law Board) to give it a Parliamentary
-President, that member of the Government
-ought to be open to challenge in respect of
-every matter relating to health. What, for this
-purpose, might be the best subordinate arrangements
-of such a Board, it would take a volume to
-discuss. But at least as regards its constituted<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxviii">[xxviii]</span>
-head, sitting in Parliament, his department should
-be, in the widest sense, to <i>care for the physical
-necessities of human life</i>. Whether skilled coadjutors
-be appointed for him or not; engineers&mdash;lawyers&mdash;chemists&mdash;pathologists;
-whether he be,
-as it were, the foreman of this special jury, or,
-according to the more usual precedent of our public
-affairs, collect advice on his own responsibility,
-and speak without quotation of other authority
-than himself, his voice, unless the thing is to be
-a sham, must represent all these knowledges.</p>
-
-<p class="preface">The people, through its representatives, must be
-able to arraign him wherever human life is insufficiently
-cared for.</p>
-
-<p class="preface">He must be able to justify or to exterminate
-adulterations of food; to shew that alum ought
-to be in our loaves, or to banish it for ever; to
-shew that copper is wholesome for dessert, or to
-give us our olives and greengages without it; to
-shew that red-lead is an estimable condiment, or
-to divert it from our pepper-pots and curries.</p>
-
-<p class="preface">Similarly with drugs and poisons&mdash;the alternatives
-of life and death&mdash;a minister of Public Health
-would, I presume, be responsible for whatever evils
-arise in their unlicensed and unregulated sale. He
-would hardly dare to acquiesce in our present defencelessness
-against fraud and ignorance; in doses
-being sold&mdash;critical doses, for the strength of<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxix">[xxix]</span>
-which we, who prescribe them, cannot answer
-within a margin of <i>cent. per cent.</i>; or in pennyworths
-of poison being handed across the counter
-as nonchalantly as cakes of soap.<a id="FNanchor7"></a><a href="#Footnote7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> Surely, before
-he had been six months in office, he would have
-procured some enactment to remedy this long
-neglect of the legislature, by providing that the
-druggist&#8217;s trade be exercised only after some test
-of fitness, and in subjection to certain regulations.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote7"><a href="#FNanchor7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a>
-Without referring to what may be considered rare&mdash;the sale of
-poison for the purposes of intended homicide, I may remind the
-reader of the very dreadful facts collected by the Commissioners on
-Trades and Manufactures, as to the immense sales of opium in our
-principal manufacturing towns, for the purpose of quieting&mdash;and
-with the effect of killing, children, while their poor mothers are
-absent from home in their several occupations.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p class="preface">Within his province, likewise, it would fall to be
-cognisant of all that relates to the constitution of
-the Medical Profession. The difficulties which have
-baffled successive Home-Secretaries might soon
-find their solution in the less divided attention
-which he could bring to their study. Amid conflicting
-opinions and an apparent scramble for
-power, he would soon distinguish where might be
-the strife of jealousy and covetousness, where a
-truthful zeal for the honour and efficiency of medicine.
-I think he could not be long in curing our
-more scandalous anomalies. Probably&mdash;unless
-human bowels require other doctoring in London<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxx">[xxx]</span>
-than in Manchester, he would manage that a
-doctor there should be a doctor also here; that no
-licence for the partial practice of medicine should
-be recognised&mdash;no licence admitting a man to do
-in Edinburgh what it would be a misdemeanour
-for him to do in Greenwich. And obviously, in
-order to this&mdash;since a professional diploma is the
-only criterion by which the public can measure the
-competence of those who seek their patronage, he
-would see that, as far as may be, the various
-licensing bodies exact from their candidates equal
-and sufficient qualifications; that the diploma entitling
-a man to call himself Surgeon or Physician,
-Accoucheur or Apothecary, mean the same thing&mdash;imply
-the same education, whether it be got in
-Scotland, Ireland, or England; and that any falsification
-of such diploma, or any unauthorised assumption
-of the title which implies its possession,
-be promptly punishable at law.<a id="FNanchor8"></a><a href="#Footnote8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote8"><a href="#FNanchor8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> This check at least seems indispensable, for the reason above
-given, that a professional diploma is the only criterion by which the
-public can measure professional competence; and for the validity
-of such a criterion, it therefore, I think, becomes the duty of a
-government, on behalf of the public, to provide. For anything
-beyond this (except in one particular case) the matter might take
-its natural course. No law can supersede a necessity for common
-sense in the subject; and medicine, I think, requires no <i>protection</i>.
-Let my neighbour, by all means, if he desire it, send for a green-grocer
-to reduce his dislocation or assuage his gout! and let him
-take the consequences of his folly, in a spoilt limb or in a hair&#8217;s
-breadth escape with his life. Only&mdash;let the green-grocer be punishable,
-if he seek this office under false pretences, calling himself by
-any title which implies a professional qualification. And, for what
-harm he may do&mdash;let him of course (as would, if necessary, the presidents
-of our colleges) be prepared to abide before judge and jury
-his trial for malpractice. But, in strict adhesion to the principle I
-have professed, that protection is wanted, not for the profession,
-but for the public, I would suggest one exception to what otherwise
-might be universal free-trade in medicine. I refer to the
-case of druggists; who, whenever the Legislature may awake to
-the necessity of regulating their trade, ought, I think, to be expressly
-prohibited from the treatment of disease. To an immense
-majority of our population&mdash;to all the under-educated classes, the
-druggist&#8217;s shop appears an emporium for medical skill, as well as
-for medical appliances. They probably have some vague overestimate
-of our art of healing, and think perhaps that the several
-bottles on the shelf correspond to the several ailments they can specifically
-cure. They ask for something &#8220;good for a dropsy,&#8221; or
-&#8220;good for a wasting,&#8221; or &#8220;good for a palpitation;&#8221; not knowing
-how much skill may be requisite to interpret the symptom; not
-knowing that, to our highest skill, there is no medicine thus indiscriminately,
-or even generally, &#8220;good.&#8221; At present almost universally,
-druggists, with no medical qualification, are tampering
-more or less with serious medical responsibilities; and the mischief
-thus occasioned&mdash;especially among the poorer classes, is a matter
-of notoriety, on which persons engaged in hospital practice would
-be competent and tolerably impartial witnesses. It is because this
-evil arises in the <i>almost inevitable ignorance</i> of those who chiefly
-suffer from it, that, in accordance with the principle above suggested,
-I think it deserves consideration from the Legislature.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxxi">[xxxi]</span></p>
-
-<p class="preface">Into the hands of this new minister&mdash;advised,
-perhaps, for such purposes by some permanent
-commission<a id="FNanchor9"></a><a href="#Footnote9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a>
-of skilled person, would devolve the<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxxii">[xxxii]</span>
-guardianship of public health against combined
-commercial interests, or incompetent administration.
-He would provide securities for excluding
-sulphur from our gas, and animalcules from our
-water. He would come into relation with all Local
-Improvement Boards, in respect of the sanitary
-purposes of their existence. To him we should
-look, to settle at least for all practical purposes
-the polemics of drainage and water-supply; to form
-opinions which might guide Parliament, whether
-street sewers really require to be avenues for men,
-whether hard water really be good enough for all
-ordinary purposes, whether cisternage really be indispensable
-to an urban water-supply.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote9"><a href="#FNanchor9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> There are many instances in my mind, some already adverted
-to, where the existence of a standing jury for scientific&mdash;especially
-for sanitary, purposes might be of great utility. It is an organisation
-which prevails extensively in France, under the name of
-<i>Conseils de Salubrit&eacute;</i>; forming, in most of the large towns there,
-a constant board of reference for the municipality, in respect of
-sanitary regulations. <i>Mutatis mutandis</i>, it might become invaluable
-as an English institution, in respect of many matters touched upon
-in this sketch; and perhaps with some division of duties, into such
-as would best belong to a General Board of the kind, and such as
-might properly be vested in Local Boards. To determine the indispensable
-conditions of healthy lodgment; to examine the influence
-of trades and occupations, and to devise the regulations they may require,
-for the neighbourhood&#8217;s sake, or for their operatives&#8217;; to
-supervise the sale of food and drugs; to be cognisant of medical
-matters; would seem, either locally or generally, to require the
-co-operations of several skilled persons. But, though I have spoken
-of such, as indispensable jurors for these subjects, I do not forget
-that other interests than those of life may need to be consulted.
-For the fair representation of these, the lay faculty of <i>educated
-common-sense</i> will fulfil an inestimable usefulness, if it may be there
-to mediate between science, which is sometimes crotchety, and trade,
-which is sometimes selfish.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxxiii">[xxxiii]</span></p>
-
-<p class="preface">Organisations against epidemic diseases&mdash;questions
-of quarantine&mdash;laws for vaccination, and the
-like, would obviously lie within his province; and
-thither, perhaps, also his colleagues might be glad
-to transfer many of those medical questions which
-now belong to other departments of the executive&mdash;the
-sanitary regulation of emigrant ships, the ventilation
-of mines, the medical inspection of factories
-and prisons, the insecurities of railway traffic, <i>et
-hoc genus omne</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="preface">There is another subject respecting which I
-should reluctantly forego the present opportunity
-of saying something. To the philosopher, perhaps,
-any partial sanitary legislation&mdash;even for a metropolis,
-may seem of low importance, as compared
-with our commanding need that the general legislation
-of the country be imbued with deeper sympathies
-for life. Yet London is almost a nation in
-itself; and the good which might be effected by its
-sanitary regeneration would, even as example, be
-of universal influence. Now, at this moment, there
-seems a chance&mdash;such a chance as may not soon
-recur&mdash;for gaining a first step towards this consummation.
-The re-construction of the Metropolitan
-Commission of Sewers, on the principle of
-local representation, affords extraordinary facilities
-for providing London, at length, with an efficient
-sanitary government. For, while any administration<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxxiv">[xxxiv]</span>
-for this purpose would require to be entrusted
-with very extensive and very stringent powers, it
-seems probable that such authority might by the
-public be willingly conceded to a body constituted,
-in great part, of persons representing local interests.
-The jurisdiction required would be substantially
-such as is already vested in the City
-Commissioners of Sewers, for the sanitary control
-of the city; the concession of which&mdash;because to
-a representative body&mdash;was never any matter of
-municipal dispute. In so vast a government as
-that of the metropolis, Local Boards of Health for
-its various sections would seem indispensable; it is
-presumed that these boards<a id="FNanchor10"></a><a href="#Footnote10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> would be represented
-in the general Commission; which, in conjunction
-with them, and including certain skilled assessors,
-might constitute a complete sanitary organisation,
-consultative and executive.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote10"><a href="#FNanchor10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> It would seem premature to discuss what might be the best
-constitution of such Local Boards for the metropolis; but it will
-appear to the reader, on a moment&#8217;s reflection, that there would be
-no difficulty in finding materials for their organisation. If, according
-to suggestions lately ventilated, municipal institutions should be
-given to the parts of London hitherto without them; these new corporations
-would probably have sanitary functions allotted them, and
-might readily become Local Boards of Health under such a constitution
-as I have sketched. If, on the other hand, our present non-municipal
-system were to be continued, probably our several Boards
-of Guardians might seem specially proper to act as Local Boards of
-Health; first, as being elected representative bodies, already invested
-with certain authority of the kind&mdash;as, for instance, under
-the Nuisances Removal Act; secondly, because various of their
-officers would be almost indispensable parts of any sanitary
-machinery. Indeed, my experience of such matters suggests it to
-me as not unimportant, that, under any arrangement which may be
-made, the jurisdiction of Local Boards of Health should, at least
-in area, be conterminous with Poor Law Unions; so that those
-who administer sanitary affairs&mdash;affairs which are always chiefly
-relative to the poor&mdash;may, as far as possible, in their several districts,
-come into relation with single sets of Poor Law officers.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p class="preface">I have one word more to say about the Reports.
-They have been received by the public with such<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxxv">[xxxv]</span>
-remarkable indulgence and favour, that I feel some
-anxiety lest I may seem to have plumed myself
-with other feathers than my own. Let me, therefore,
-at least in part, confess my debts.</p>
-
-<p class="preface">Before my first enlistment in the service of public
-health, others had fought this great cause with
-rare courage and devotion; establishing its main
-principles in a manner to require no corroboration,
-and to admit little immediate increase. The true
-patriarchs of the cause in this country are the present
-working members of the General Board of
-Health. The constitution of my city appointment
-is quite independent of this Board; but I should be
-acting an unworthy part if I refrained from acknowledging,
-that, in innumerable instances, I have
-gathered most valuable knowledge from the Board&#8217;s
-official publications, and that, in personal intercourse
-with its members and officers, I have had
-abundant reason to be grateful for information invariably
-given with that frank kindness which belongs<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxxvi">[xxxvi]</span>
-to brotherhood in science, and to sympathy
-for common objects.</p>
-
-<p class="preface">I must likewise acknowledge constant obligations
-to the courtesy of the Registrar-General, and express
-with how much pleasure and instruction I
-have studied the works of his inestimable office.
-Especially I would offer my tribute of respect to
-Dr. Farr&#8217;s learning and industry, as well as to that
-capacity for generalisation which the world has long
-recognised in his eloquent and thoughtful writings.</p>
-
-<p class="preface">And, though this be not the place to boast of
-private friendships, I may venture to say that there
-are few topics relating to sanitary medicine that
-I have not enjoyed the advantage of discussing
-with men who have given genius, inquiry, and reflection
-to their development.</p>
-
-<p class="preface">Thank God! the number of persons capable
-of apprehending the cause, and ready to take interest
-in its promotion, is now daily on the increase.
-If some minister of Public Health could take his
-seat in the House of Commons&mdash;some minister
-knowing his subject and feeling it, I believe he
-would find no lack of sympathy and co-operation.
-The world abounds with admirable wishes and intentions,
-that vaguely miscarry for want of guidance.
-How many men can get no farther in their
-psalm of life than the question, <i>in quo corriget</i>. To
-such&mdash;not masters of the subject, but willing and
-eager to be its servants, an official leader might be<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxxvii">[xxxvii]</span>
-everything: for in great causes like this, where the
-scandal of continued wrong burns in each man&#8217;s
-conscience, the instincts of justice thirst for satisfaction.
-What can we do or give&mdash;how shall we
-speak or vote, to lessen these dreadful miseries of
-sanitary neglect&mdash;is, at this moment, I believe, the
-fervent inquiry of innumerable minds, waiting, as
-it were for the word of command, to act.</p>
-
-<p class="preface">How much of this generous earnestness towards
-the cause exists in society&mdash;how much desire to
-grasp any reasonable opportunity of good has lately
-happened to fall under my notice. Last winter, when
-the signs of the times were making us fear that Cholera
-would presently again be epidemic in London,
-it was remembered that, in the greater part of the
-metropolis, nothing whatever had been done since
-the last invasion to give immunity against the returning
-disease. It was remembered&mdash;too late,
-how indescribably dreadful a thing is the epidemic
-prevalence of sudden death. And the poor were
-thought of&mdash;in their unprotectedness, their filth,
-their ignorance. Among the persons thus aroused,
-was a gentleman whom I reluctantly leave unnamed;
-saying of him only, that, from a distinguished
-position in official life, he had retired
-to literary enjoyments, amid which he bears the
-imputation of many unacknowledged writings
-which charm and instruct the public. When the
-rumours of the pestilence began, he too heard<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxxviii">[xxxviii]</span>
-and read and became aghast. The notion that &#8216;in
-a skilful, helpful, Christian country nothing should
-be done&#8217; against these impending dangers&mdash;that
-the poor should be left &#8216;defenceless, huddled together
-in some dismal district, not more helpful
-than women&#8217;&mdash;was felt by him, he wrote, &#8216;deeply
-as a disgrace;&#8217; and he pleaded that, &#8216;on a great
-and pressing occasion, it remains for the thoughtful,
-the rich, and the benevolent, to try and do these
-needful things for the people.&#8217;<a id="FNanchor11"></a><a href="#Footnote11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> Let us, he urged,
-endeavour to meet this shameful reproach; let us
-combine voluntary charitable assistance for extemporaneous
-sanitary measures, rapid, though partial;
-let us get a hundred thousand pounds and do what
-we can in aid of local authorities in the poorest
-districts&mdash;in Bethnal Green, in Shoreditch. Eventually
-this plan was abandoned, at least for the time.
-There was argued against it, that prompt legislation
-might do more good, with less exoneration of local
-responsibility. Whether rightly or wrongly, the
-latter view was acted on; and in accordance with
-it, the gentleman first adverted to (waving his
-own hopes and wishes in the matter) took active
-part in framing suggestions,<a id="FNanchor12"></a><a href="#Footnote12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a>
-which Lord Palmerston<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxxix">[xxxix]</span>
-had expressed himself willing to accept, for
-modifying the laws of Nuisance and Disease-Prevention
-to a form more suitable for the apprehended
-emergency. But, in the meantime, what had happened?
-The author of the plan, as it were at a
-moment&#8217;s notice, had seemed to draw round himself
-half the intellectual and moral strength of the
-metropolis. Himself setting aside the literary
-ambition of his life, he found others ready to meet
-him with their several self-sacrifices. Over-worked
-men of science and of business, who afford no time
-to relaxation; favourites of society, who might
-have been suspected of mere shuddering at distasteful
-subjects; men of high laborious rank in
-Church and State; poets; heads of professions;
-minds that guide the tastes and morals of the
-country, or feed its imagination; not least, the invalid
-from his distant wintering-place; men, in
-short, immersed in all kinds and grades of occupation,
-were either bodily present at the deliberations
-referred to, or were writing about the plan in
-terms of warm interest, anxious to promote whatever
-usefulness could be shown them. About the
-means there was discussion&mdash;about the object,
-none; nor lukewarmness. All were competing,
-by gifts of time and labour, to snatch some opportunity
-of serving this neglected cause.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote11"><a href="#FNanchor11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a>
-I quote from a pamphlet printed by him for private circulation.
-It was entitled &#8216;<i>Health-Fund for London; some Thoughts
-for next Summer: by Friends in Council</i>.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p id="Footnote12"><a href="#FNanchor12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> These have since been laid before the House of Lords, on
-the motion, I think, of Lord Harrowby, who took much interest in
-the subject.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p class="preface">Such&mdash;to return to my text&mdash;such, I am deeply
-assured, would be the spirit which a minister of<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexl">[xl]</span>
-Public Health would find abundantly on his side
-in Parliamentary discussion, and in the Press.
-There is no attachment to the incongruities I
-have sketched as belonging to our abortion of a
-sanitary system. Still less is there any want of
-feeling for the poor&mdash;any reluctance to raise their
-state and better their circumstances&mdash;any unconsciousness
-that these things are great solemn duties.
-On the contrary, everywhere there is the conviction
-that <i>something</i> must be done; everywhere a waiting
-for authority to say <i>what</i>. But, the trumpet giving
-an uncertain sound, who can prepare himself to
-battle? Knowledge, and method, and comprehensiveness,
-are wanted&mdash;the precise, definite, categorical
-impulses of a Parliamentary leader, who can
-recognise principles and stick to them.</p>
-
-<p class="preface">And for such a minister, what a career! It would
-be idleness to speak of the blessings he could diffuse,
-the anguish he could relieve, the gratitude and
-glory he could earn. A heathen can tell him this.
-<i>Homines enim ad Deos null&acirc; re propius accedunt
-quam salutem hominibus dando. Nihil habet nec
-fortuna tua majus quam ut possis, nec natura tua
-melius quam ut velis, conservare quam plurimos.</i></p>
-
-<div class="signature">
-
-<p>Upper Grosvenor Street,<br />
-May 15th, 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--signature-->
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page1">[1]</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlerepeat"><span class="fsize150 gesp2">REPORTS</span><br />
-<span class="fsize80">RELATING TO</span><br />
-<span class="fsize150">THE SANITARY CONDITION</span><br />
-<span class="fsize80">OF THE</span><br />
-<span class="fsize150">CITY OF LONDON.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2>FIRST ANNUAL REPORT.</h2>
-
-<p class="reportaddress">TO THE HON. THE COMMISSIONERS OF SEWERS OF THE
-CITY OF LONDON.</p>
-
-<p class="reportdate"><i>November 6th, 1849.</i></p>
-
-<p class="reportsalutation"><span class="smcap">Gentlemen</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="chapstart"><span class="startword">During</span> the 52 weeks dating from October 1st, 1848,
-to September 29th, 1849, there died of the population
-of the City of London 3763 persons.</p>
-
-<p>The rate of mortality, estimated from these <i>data</i> for a
-population of 125,500, would be about the proportion of 30
-deaths to every thousand living persons.<a id="FNanchor13"></a><a href="#Footnote13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote13"><a href="#FNanchor13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> The Census of 1851, compared with that of 1841, would lead me
-to believe that in 1848-9 the population of the City must have been
-about 129,000. With this correction, the death-rate would have been
-about 29&middot;16 <i>per</i> thousand.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The lowest suburban mortality recorded in the fifth
-volume of the Registrar-General&#8217;s Reports, for the year
-then under estimation, gave a rate of 11 in the thousand;
-and we might perhaps be justified in adopting that rate as
-a <i>minimum</i> for the purpose of sanitary comparison.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page2">[2]</span></p>
-
-<p>According to this standard (undoubtedly a very superior
-one) it would appear that, during the last year, death has
-prevailed in the City of London with nearly three times its
-recognised <i>minimum</i> of severity.</p>
-
-<p>But, to avoid all sources of fallacy, I will allow a
-very ample margin to this estimate; I will take 15 per
-thousand as a fair standard of mortality, and will assume
-that last year&#8217;s deaths in the City have amounted to only
-double their normal proportion.</p>
-
-<p>Probably no one contends that the lower rate of mortality,
-as illustrated at Dulwich or Sydenham, indicates an over-healthy
-condition of the locality to which it refers. Probably
-no one argues that human life, in those healthier
-districts, is prolonged beyond enviable limits. Surely, on
-the contrary, every one who can measure the large amount
-of misery and destitution which results from a high rate of
-mortality, will think it most desirable that, by every means
-within the scope of sanitary science, exertion should be
-made to reduce the higher rate to the level of the lower.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, Gentlemen, I venture to assure myself, that I
-shall but have anticipated the wishes of this Hon. Court, in
-preparing for your consideration a statement of those circumstances,
-which apparently conspire to determine the
-larger mortality of the City of London.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">In order to prevent any misapprehension of my remarks,
-I think it well to observe that, in commenting on this
-mortality, I purposely avoid instituting any comparison
-between it and the mortality of those urban districts which
-immediately adjoin us: for the object of my comparison is
-not to illustrate how, by similar or worse circumstances, an
-equally great mortality may have been procured elsewhere;<span class="pagenum" id="Page3">[3]</span>
-but rather to suggest how, by other and better sanitary
-arrangements here, our present high mortality may be
-diminished.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, while I speak of the causes of that high mortality
-which distinguishes the City of London from the healthier
-sub-districts I have cited, it will be obvious that many of
-my observations do not apply to the City of London
-exclusively, but admit of equal application to various other
-central districts of the metropolis;&mdash;relating, in fact, generally
-to the characteristic evils of all urban residences.</p>
-
-<p>With those other districts I have nothing to do; but I
-wish it to be understood, that in describing the City as
-healthy or unhealthy, I am not comparing it with Holborn,
-or Whitechapel, or Bermondsey, or other urban localities,
-where&mdash;whatever the relative badness of the places, the
-scale of comparison would be essentially vicious, and the
-results of comparison worthless. It is my object to test the
-salubrity of the City by comparison with a superior standard,
-in order that some definite aim may appear, towards which
-to direct the endeavours of sanitary improvement.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">Starting, then, from our Registrars&#8217; Returns, I invite you
-to inquire with me, how it has come to pass that within the
-City of London there have died in the last year twice as
-many persons as it seems necessary that there should die;
-and whence has arisen the apparent anomaly, that here&mdash;in
-the very focus of civilization, where the resources of curative
-medicine are greatest, and all the appliances of charitable
-relief most effectual, still, notwithstanding these advantages,
-there has passed away irrevocably during the year so undue
-a proportion of human life.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page4">[4]</span></p>
-
-<p>Let it not be imagined that the word <i>cholera</i> is a sufficient
-answer to these questions, or that its mention can
-supersede the necessity for sanitary investigation. Let it,
-on the contrary, be observed that the epidemic which has
-visited us, extends its ravages only to localities previously
-and otherwise hostile to life; so that, while all regions of
-the globe in succession are shadowed by its dark transit,
-the healthiest districts of each region remain utterly unharmed
-in presence of the pestilence. Compare, for instance,
-the cholera mortality in a healthy suburban sub-district
-with that of an unhealthy urban one. Dulwich and
-the parish of St. Ann&#8217;s, Blackfriars, in the City of London,
-are probably nearly equal in population: in the former,
-there was not a single death from cholera; in the latter, the
-deaths from this cause alone were at the rate of twenty-five
-to every thousand of the population. Dulwich is one of
-the healthiest sub-districts within the bills of mortality;
-St. Ann&#8217;s belongs to one of the unhealthiest sub-districts
-of the City of London; and the cholera visited each in proportion
-to its ordinary healthiness.</p>
-
-<p>Such is the general rule; and accordingly I would suggest
-to you that the presence of epidemic cholera, instead of
-serving to explain away the local inequalities of mortality,
-does, in fact, only constitute a most important additional
-testimony to the salubrity or insalubrity of a district, and
-renders more evident any disparity of condition which may
-previously have been overlooked. The frightful phenomenon
-of a periodic pestilence belongs only to defective sanitary
-arrangements; and, in comparing one local death-rate with
-another, it is requisite to remember that, in addition to
-the ordinary redundance of deaths which marks an unhealthy
-district, there is a tendency from time to time to<span class="pagenum" id="Page5">[5]</span>
-the recurrence of epidemic pestilence, which visits all unhealthy
-districts disproportionately, and renders their annual
-excess of mortality still more egregious and glaring.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">As materials which may aid you to estimate the sanitary
-defects of the City, I subjoin two tables<a id="FNanchor14"></a><a href="#Footnote14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> illustrating the
-relative mortality of the several sub-districts. The first
-of these tables indicates numerically the local distribution
-of the year&#8217;s deaths, and gives their proportion to the
-population of each district and sub-district. The second
-relates particularly to the last quarter, and illustrates the
-pressure of the epidemic. The two together furnish a
-synoptical view of the several rates of mortality, as calculated
-for the entire City, for the Unions separately, for
-the sub-districts separately; and for the last quarter of the
-year separately. In the tedious process of constructing
-these tables, I have been careful to avoid every source of
-inaccuracy, and believe that they present you with a true
-measure of the health of the City during the past year.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote14"><a href="#FNanchor14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a>
-I have not reprinted these tables quite as here described. The
-local distribution of the 3763 deaths of the year is given in the
-<a href="#App03">Appendix, No. III.</a>; and the sub-district death-rates of the year, as
-nearly as I can get them, in a <a href="#Footnote15">note</a> overleaf, <a href="#Page6">page 6</a>. The high mortality
-of this summer quarter (in which 1395 persons died) will be
-best appreciated by the reader in referring to <a href="#App14">Appendix, No. XIV.</a>;
-where it can be compared with the mortality of similar periods
-of time in the four other years there accounted for.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>From these comparative tables it will be observed, that
-the high mortality of the population does not affect the
-entire City equally; that, in some of its portions, the
-rate of death approaches the <i>minimum</i> standard much more
-nearly than in others; that in those districts where the<span class="pagenum" id="Page6">[6]</span>
-general rate is best, the temporary aggravation from epidemic
-causes has likewise been least; and that our aggregate City
-rate, either for ordinary times or for a period of epidemic
-disease, is compounded from the joint result of several very
-different proportions. Reference to the Registrar-General&#8217;s
-tables will enable any one to see that the ordinary rate of
-mortality for the West London Union is a fourth higher
-than the rate for the City of London Union, while the rate
-for the East London Union bears a still higher proportion;
-and these very different rates are, as it were, merged in the
-one aggregate rate, struck for the whole City, as comprising
-the three unions referred to. It will be obvious, therefore,
-that many parts of the City are much healthier than
-this aggregate rate would signify, while others are much
-unhealthier. In regard of last year, for instance, the aggregate
-rate of mortality was (as I have stated) 30 per thousand
-of the general population of the City: but if this rate be
-analysed by examination of the sub-district mortality, it
-will be seen that in one sub-district the rate of death stood
-nearly as low as 20; that in another sub-district of the same
-union it rose to 36, and in a third sub-district (of another
-union) to within a small fraction of 40.<a id="FNanchor15"></a><a href="#Footnote15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote15"><a href="#FNanchor15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> On account of changes of population shown by the subsequent
-Census, these figures would require correction. The death-rates <i>per</i>
-thousand in the several sub-districts were probably about as follows,
-<span class="nowrap">viz.:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<table class="fn15" summary="mortality">
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<th colspan="2" class="brd"><span class="smcap">EAST LONDON UNION.</span></th>
-<th colspan="2" class="brd"><span class="smcap">W. L. UNION.</span></th>
-<th colspan="5"><span class="smcap">CITY OF LONDON UNION.</span></th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<th class="br">St. Botolph.</th>
-<th class="brd">Cripplegate.</th>
-<th class="br">North.</th>
-<th class="brd">South.</th>
-<th class="br">S. W.</th>
-<th class="br">N. W.</th>
-<th class="br">South.</th>
-<th class="br">S. E.</th>
-<th>N. E.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td class="br">26<sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>2</sub></td>
-<td class="brd">32</td>
-<td class="br">34</td>
-<td class="brd">41</td>
-<td class="br">38</td>
-<td class="br">22</td>
-<td class="br">24</td>
-<td class="br">21<sup>2</sup>&#8260;<sub>3</sub></td>
-<td>22</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p class="right padr4">J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>If it were possible to furnish you with statistics derived<span class="pagenum" id="Page7">[7]</span>
-from a still smaller sub-division of each district, these
-points would be infinitely more manifest. In some limited
-localities of the City you would probably find an approximation
-to the average mortality of suburban districts; while
-in other spots, if they were isolated for your contemplation,
-you would see houses, courts, and streets where the habitual
-proportion of deaths is far beyond the heaviest pestilence-rate
-known for any metropolitan district aggregately&mdash;localities,
-indeed, where the habitual rate of death is more
-appalling than any which such averages can enable you to
-conceive.</p>
-
-<p>These facts are quite unquestionable, and I have felt it
-my duty to bring them under your notice as pointedly and
-impressively as I can; feeling assured, as I do, that so soon
-as you are cognisant of them, every motive of humanity, no
-less than of economical prudence, must engage you to investigate
-with me, whether or not there may lie within your
-reach any adoptable measures for lessening this large
-expenditure of human life, and for relieving its attendant
-misery. It is, therefore, with the deepest feeling of responsibility
-that I proceed to fulfil the main object of my First
-Annual Report, by tracing these effects to their causes, and
-by explaining to you, from a year&#8217;s observation and experience,
-what seem to me the chief influences prevailing
-against life within the City of London.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">My remarks for this purpose will fall under the following
-heads, <span class="nowrap">viz.:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<ul class="subjects">
-
-<li><a href="#Ref01">I.</a> Defective house-drainage;</li>
-
-<li><a href="#Ref02">II.</a> Incomplete and insufficient water-supply;</li>
-
-<li><a href="#Ref03">III.</a> Offensive or injurious trades and occupations;<span class="pagenum" id="Page8">[8]</span></li>
-
-<li><a href="#Ref04">IV.</a> Intramural burials;</li>
-
-<li><a href="#Ref05">V.</a> Houses insusceptible of ventilation, and absolutely
-unfit for habitation;</li>
-
-<li><a href="#Ref06">VI.</a> The personal habits of the lowest classes, and the
-influence of destitution in increasing their mortality.</li>
-
-</ul><!--subjects-->
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">In treating of these topics, I shall not pretend to bring
-before you all the details on which my opinions are
-founded, or to enumerate under each head those infinite
-individual instances which require sanitary correction. It
-is my wish at this time to submit to you only such general
-considerations as may show you the largeness of the
-subject, its various ramifications, and its pressing importance;
-and it is my hope that these considerations may
-suffice to convince you of the necessity which exists in
-the City of London for some effective and permanent sanitary
-organisation.</p>
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page9">[9]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="Ref01">HOUSE-DRAINAGE.</h3>
-
-<p>I. It is not in my power to lay before you any numerical
-statement of the proportion of drained to undrained houses.
-From such information as I possess, I may venture to speak
-of imperfect house-drainage as having been a general evil in
-all the poorer districts of the City; and the latest intelligence
-on the subject leads me to consider this great evil as
-but very partially removed. So far as I can calculate from
-very imperfect materials, I should conjecture that some
-thousands of houses within the City still have cesspools
-connected with them. It requires little medical knowledge
-to understand that animals will scarcely thrive in an atmosphere
-of their own decomposing excrements; yet such,
-strictly and literally speaking, is the air which a very large
-proportion of the inhabitants of the City are condemned to
-breathe. Sometimes, happily for the inmates, the cesspool
-in which their ordure accumulates, lies at some small
-distance from the basement-area of the house, occupying the
-subsoil of an adjoining yard, or if the privy be a public one,
-of some open space exterior to the private premises. But
-in a very large number of cases, it lies actually within the
-four walls of the inhabited house; the latter reared over it,
-as a bell-glass over the beak of a retort, receiving and<span class="pagenum" id="Page10">[10]</span>
-sucking up incessantly the unspeakable abomination of its
-volatile contents. In some such instances, where the basement
-story of the house is tenanted, the cesspool lies&mdash;perhaps
-merely boarded over&mdash;close beneath the feet of a
-family of human beings, whom it surrounds uninterruptedly,
-whether they wake or sleep, with its fetid pollution and
-poison.</p>
-
-<p>Now, here is a removable cause of death. These gases,
-which so many thousands of persons are daily inhaling, do
-not, it is true, in their diluted condition, suddenly extinguish
-life; but, though different in concentration, they are
-identically the same in nature with that confined sewer-gas
-which, on a recent occasion, at Pimlico, killed those who
-were exposed to it with the rapidity of a lightning stroke.
-In their diluted state, as they rise from so many cesspools,
-and taint the atmosphere of so many houses, they form a
-climate the most congenial for the multiplication of epidemic
-disorders, and operate beyond all known influences of
-their class in impairing the chances of life.</p>
-
-<p>It may be taken as an axiom for the purposes of sanitary
-improvement, that every individual cesspool is hurtful to its
-vicinage; and it may hence be inferred how great an injury
-is done to the public health by their existence in such
-numbers, that parts of the City might be described as having
-a cesspool-city excavated beneath it.</p>
-
-<p>I beg most earnestly to press on the consideration of
-your Hon. Court, the extreme importance of proceeding
-with all convenient speed to alter this very faulty construction,
-and to substitute for it an arrangement compatible
-with the health of the population.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page11">[11]</span></p>
-
-<p>While addressing you on this subject, and while congratulating
-your Hon. Court on the fact, that public attention is
-so much directed to a matter in which your exertions are
-certain to effect large and salutary reform, I cannot refrain
-from expressing a wish, that more accurate knowledge prevailed
-among the public as to the history and jurisdiction
-of the nuisance in question. It seems constantly to be forgotten,
-that your responsibility in the matter dates but from
-last January. The cesspool-nuisance has been the slow
-growth of other less enlightened ages, not in the City
-merely, but in the whole metropolis, and in all other towns
-in England. The extreme injury which it inflicts on the
-health of the population, and the vital necessity of abating
-that injury, are points which only began to claim attention
-in this country about ten years ago; and which have since
-but very slowly been forcing their way (chiefly through the
-indomitable zeal and perseverance of Mr. Chadwick) into
-that share of notice which they deserve. House-drainage
-with effective water-supply, are the remedies which can alone
-avail; and it is only during the present year that authority
-to enforce these measures has been vested by the Legislature
-in any public bodies whatsoever.</p>
-
-<p>Before the month of January last, when your increased
-jurisdiction was established, it appears to me that, for the
-existence of cesspools in the City, you had no more responsibility
-than for the original site of the metropolis, or
-for the architecture of Westminster Abbey.</p>
-
-<p>During the last ten months, however, the care of effective
-house-drainage has rested solely and entirely with your
-Hon. Court; for two of those ten months, I thought<span class="pagenum" id="Page12">[12]</span>
-it desirable, on account of the epidemic, that no considerable
-disturbance of the soil should take place in the construction
-of new works; in the remaining eight months, two
-miles of new sewer were formed, and 900 houses were
-drained for the first time.</p>
-
-<p>If the house-drainage of the City had depended for its
-completion, even since that time, solely on the labours of
-this Commission, no doubt it would have proceeded at a far
-quicker pace. How effectively your Hon. Court had
-prepared for the best application of your increased powers,
-is sufficiently evinced in the 45 miles of sewerage, ramifying
-through all the districts of your jurisdiction, ready at every
-point to receive the streams of private drainage, and leaving
-to the owners of house-property (with few exceptions) no
-excuse for their non-performance of these necessary works.
-I believe the extent of public sewerage within the City to
-be quite unparalleled, and to furnish facilities of the rarest
-kind for the abolition of cesspools, and for the establishment
-of an improved system of house drainage. But,
-Gentlemen, while you have exerted yourselves to the utmost
-in the application of your increased authority, and have
-directed your staff of officers, from first to last, to proceed
-with all possible despatch in enforcing sanitary improvement
-in the matter now under consideration, the intentions
-of your Court and the industry of its officers have been in
-a great measure frustrated by the passive resistance of landlords.
-Delays and subterfuges have been had recourse to
-by the owners of house-property, in order to avoid compliance
-with the injunctions of the Commission; and the
-temporary interruption of works, which occurred in August<span class="pagenum" id="Page13">[13]</span>
-and September, prevented these evasions from being dealt
-with as otherwise they would have been.</p>
-
-<p>Now, however, the course is again open. For some
-weeks your Hon. Court has directed that all works of
-drainage and sewerage shall proceed; many are already in
-progress; and I can see no reason why, within a year
-from the present time, the number of cesspools and of
-undrained houses within the City of London should not be
-reduced to a very small proportion.</p>
-
-<p>Everything, however, in this respect will depend on the
-spirit of <i>thoroughness</i> with which the Act of Parliament is
-enforced; and I would strongly recommend, in all cases of
-non-drainage or other non-compliance with the terms of
-notice, that no indulgence whatever should be conceded to
-landlords beyond the time specified in the notification of
-the Court; that no difference should be recognised between
-a &#8216;notice&#8217; and &#8216;a peremptory notice;&#8217; that all notices should
-be &#8216;peremptory;&#8217; and that, a certain period for performance
-having been allowed to the landlord, on the very day of that
-period&#8217;s expiration, the work, if undone, should be given
-over for completion by the workmen of the Commissioners
-of Sewers, in accordance with the 61st clause of the Act of
-Parliament. In favour of the adoption of this principle, I
-can adduce no stronger argument than my conviction, that
-its non-adoption would insure a sacrifice of human life, in
-exact proportion to the procrastination allowed; and that,
-too, in a matter where henceforth your responsibility is undivided
-and your power absolute.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">In order to give efficiency to whatever improvements of<span class="pagenum" id="Page14">[14]</span>
-house-drainage may be instituted, the present system of
-water-supply will require to undergo very extensive modifications;
-for at present in the poorer tenements, even where
-some show of house-drainage is made, the arrangements are
-constantly rendered inoperative from insufficiency or
-absence of water. To this matter, however, I shall presently
-revert.</p>
-
-<p>Another most important <i>desideratum</i> in connexion with
-the sewerage of the City is that, if possible, some more
-perfect system of trapping should be devised, or that, in
-some way or other, the sewers should be ventilated effectively
-and inoffensively.<a id="FNanchor16"></a><a href="#Footnote16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> At present there are frequent complaints
-of offensive exhalation from gratings in the open ways of
-the City; and it will be obvious to your Hon. Court, that
-all which I have urged on the subject of cesspool-exhalations
-must apply equally to those which are emitted from
-sewers. The impediments to effective trapping are almost
-insuperable; but I believe that when the water-supply of
-the City is very largely increased, washing the drains amply
-and incessantly, the evil complained of will undergo a
-sensible diminution.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote16"><a href="#FNanchor16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a>
-This subject is adverted to, with more detail, in the next year&#8217;s
-Report.&mdash;See <a href="#Page104">page 104</a>.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">In further connexion with my present subject, I would
-also solicit attention to the fact that the sanitary purposes
-of drainage are but imperfectly achieved, where the outfall
-of sewerage is into a tidal river passing through the heart
-of a densely peopled metropolis. I should be stepping<span class="pagenum" id="Page15">[15]</span>
-beyond my province, if I were to say much respecting the
-schemes now before the public for dealing with the difficulty
-to which I here refer, inasmuch as those schemes involve
-questions of engineering and machinery, on which I am incompetent
-to form an opinion. But I can have no hesitation
-in stating it as a matter greatly to be desired in the City of
-London, that the noble river which ebbs and flows beneath
-its dwellings should cease to be the drainpool of our vast
-metropolis; and that the immeasurable filth which now
-pollutes the stream should be intercepted in its course, and
-be conveyed to some distant destination, where instead of
-breeding sickness and mortality, it might become a source
-of agricultural increase and national wealth.<a id="FNanchor17"></a><a href="#Footnote17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote17"><a href="#FNanchor17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a>
-This subject is more particularly dwelt upon in the last Report;
-<a href="#Page261">page 261</a>.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>I would venture, likewise, to express an opinion that the
-City of London is peculiarly interested in the accomplishment
-of this great public work, not only on general grounds
-relating to the conservancy of the river, but likewise and
-especially on sanitary grounds, by reason of the large bank-side
-population, subjects of the City, who now, instead of
-deriving advantage from their nearness to the stream, are
-constantly disgusted and injured by its misuse.</p>
-
-<p>While the consideration of this most important measure
-is pending, I would invite attention to some circumstances,
-by which even the present evil is needlessly aggravated.</p>
-
-<p>In the first place the sewers are of defective length, so
-that during the ebb of the tide their contents, as they
-escape, are suffered to flow in a stream of some length<span class="pagenum" id="Page16">[16]</span>
-across the mud of the retreating river. The stream, together
-with the mud which it saturates, and the open mouth
-of the sewer, evolve copious and offensive exhalations,
-and I would recommend that measures be taken for abatement
-of the nuisance. This purpose, as concerns the
-sewer, would be fulfilled by the addition, in each instance,
-of a sufficient length of brick or cast-iron work, to prolong
-the canal beyond low water mark; but the great extent of
-mud which is left uncovered at each tide, and which during
-the present pollution of the river is a source of extreme
-nuisance and of disease, constitutes an evil for which no
-remedy can be found till the stream shall be narrowed and
-embanked.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, the complaints which reached the Committee
-of Health during the summer, together with the results of
-my own inspection, lead me to believe that the several small
-docks which lie along the City bank of the river from the
-Tower to the Temple, fulfil little really useful purpose;
-that they are to a great extent used as laystalls for their
-vicinage; that copious deposits and accumulations of filth
-take place in them; that they are a nuisance and injury,
-except to the very few who are interested in their maintenance;
-and that it would be of public advantage that they
-should be filled up.</p>
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page17">[17]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="Ref02">WATER-SUPPLY.</h3>
-
-<p>II. I am sure that I do not exaggerate the sanitary
-importance of water, when I affirm that its unrestricted
-supply is the first essential of decency, of comfort, and of
-health; that no civilization of the poorer classes can exist
-without it; and that any limitation to its use in the metropolis
-is a barrier, which must maintain thousands in a state
-of the most unwholesome filth and degradation.</p>
-
-<p>In the City of London the supply of water is but a
-fraction of what it should be. Thousands of the population
-have no supply of it to the houses where they dwell. For
-their possession of this first necessary of social life, such
-persons wholly depend on their power of attending at some
-fixed hour of the day, pail in hand, beside the nearest stand-cock;
-where, with their neighbours, they wait their turn&mdash;sometimes
-not without a struggle, during the tedious dribbling
-of a single small pipe. Sometimes there is a partial
-improvement on this plan; a group of houses will have a
-butt or cistern for the common use of some scores of
-inmates, who thus are saved the necessity of waiting at a
-standcock, but who still remain most insufficiently supplied
-with water. Next in the scale of improvement we find
-water-pipes laid on to the houses; but the water is turned
-on only for a few hours in the week, so that all who care<span class="pagenum" id="Page18">[18]</span>
-to be adequately supplied with it must be provided with
-very spacious receptacles. Receptacles are sometimes provided:
-and in these, which are often of the most objectionable
-description, water is retained for the purposes of
-diet and washing, during a period which varies from twenty-four
-to seventy-two hours. One of the most important purposes
-of a water-supply seems almost wholly abandoned&mdash;that,
-namely, of having a large quantity daily devoted to
-cleanse and clear the house-drains and sewers; and in many
-cases where a waste-pipe has been conducted from the
-water-butt to the privy, the arrangement is one which
-gives to the drainage little advantage of water, while it
-communicates to the water a well-marked flavour of
-drainage.</p>
-
-<p>I consider the system of intermittent water-supply to be
-radically bad; not only because it is a system of stint in
-what ought to be lavishly bestowed, but also because of the
-necessity which it creates that large and extensive receptacles
-should be provided, and because of the liability to
-contamination incurred by water which has to be retained
-often during a considerable period. In inspecting the
-courts and alleys of the City, one constantly sees butts,
-for the reception of water, either public, or in the open
-yards of the houses, or sometimes in their cellars; and these
-butts, dirty, mouldering, and coverless; receiving soot and
-all other impurities from the air; absorbing stench from
-the adjacent cesspool; inviting filth from insects, vermin,
-sparrows, cats, and children; their contents often augmented
-through a rain water-pipe by the washings of the roof, and
-every hour becoming fustier and more offensive. Nothing<span class="pagenum" id="Page19">[19]</span>
-can be less like what water should be than the fluid obtained
-under such circumstances; and one hardly knows whether
-this arrangement can be considered preferable to the precarious
-chance of scuffling or dawdling at a standcock. It
-may be doubted, too, whether, even in a far better class of
-houses, the tenants&#8217; water-supply can be pronounced good.
-The cisternage is better, and all arrangements connected
-with it are generally such as to protect it from the grosser
-impurities which defile the water-butts of the poor; but the
-long retention of water in leaden cisterns impairs its fitness
-for drinking; and the quantity which any moderate cistern
-will contain is very generally insufficient for the legitimate
-requirements of the house during the intervals of supply.
-Every one who is personally familiar with the working of
-this system of intermittent supply, can testify to its inconvenience;
-and though its evils press with immeasurably
-greater severity on the poor than on the rich, yet the latter
-are by no means without experience on the subject.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">The following are the chief conditions in respect of water
-supply, which peremptorily require to be <span class="nowrap">fulfilled:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>1. That every house should be separately supplied with
-water, and that where the house is a lodging-house, or
-where the several floors are let as separate tenements, the
-supply of water should extend to each inhabited floor.</p>
-
-<p>2. That every privy should have a supply of water, applicable
-as often as it may be required, and sufficient in
-volume to effect, at each application, a thorough flushing
-and purification of the discharge-pipe of the privy.</p>
-
-<p>3. That in every court, at the point remotest from the<span class="pagenum" id="Page20">[20]</span>
-sewer-grating, there should be a standcock for the cleansing
-of the court; and</p>
-
-<p>4. That at all these points there should always and
-uninterruptedly be a sufficiency of water to fulfil all reasonable
-requirements of the population.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">Now, if my statements are accurate with regard to the
-imperfect manner in which thousands participate in the distribution
-of water, even for their personal necessities; if my
-statements are again accurate with respect to house-drainage,
-and to the immense increase of water distribution which
-must accompany any improvement in this respect&mdash;and I
-am quite prepared, if necessary, to adduce ample evidence
-on these subjects; if, again, it be considered that the appreciation
-of water by the multitude, who have so long suffered
-from lack of it, will lead to a vast augmentation of its domestic
-use; then, I apprehend, it cannot be doubted that
-the subject of water-supply to the City is one that requires
-now to be looked at almost as though it were to-day
-broached for the first time.</p>
-
-<p>Those important conditions, which I just enumerated as
-urgently requiring fulfilment, may certainly be accomplished,
-so far as mechanical construction is concerned, in more than
-one way. It may be possible, no doubt, in further compliance
-with the principle of intermittent supply, to furnish
-every tenement in the City with a cistern of proper dimensions,
-and with its usual appurtenances of ballcock, waste-pipe,
-&amp;c.; but this, I need hardly say, would be a process
-involving a vast expenditure of money, and hardly to be
-recommended on the mere ground of conformity with what
-has hitherto been done in the matter. It may be possible,<span class="pagenum" id="Page21">[21]</span>
-on the other hand, to convert the whole water-supply of the
-City into a system of uninterrupted supply, and to construct
-all new works in conformity with this system.</p>
-
-<p>I beg to suggest that the choice between these alternatives
-is one of immense and very urgent importance to the sanitary
-welfare of the City; and I would earnestly commend it
-to the best consideration of your Hon. Court.</p>
-
-<p>The system of a constant supply is now no longer a
-novelty. In Philadelphia, in New York, in Nottingham, in
-Preston, in Glasgow, in Newcastle, in Bristol, and in various
-other places, this system has been adopted; its practicability
-and its advantages have been amply demonstrated.<a id="FNanchor18"></a><a href="#Footnote18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> Five
-years ago, when evidence on the subject was given before
-the House of Commons, it appeared that in the city and
-suburbs of Philadelphia 25,816 houses were supplied at an
-average rate of five dollars per house; that in Preston more
-than 5,000 houses were supplied continually at high-pressure,
-and that the company was increasing its tenants at the
-rate of 400 annually; that in Nottingham about 8,000
-houses, containing a population of 35,000 persons, were<span class="pagenum" id="Page22">[22]</span>
-supplied in the same manner; and in respect of many other
-towns, public experience has been equally extensive and
-satisfactory. About a month ago, the Sanitary Committee
-of the last-mentioned town published what I may call a
-report of congratulation on their freedom from cholera,
-which had visited the town with great severity in 1832.
-They detail the measures by which Nottingham has been
-rendered a healthy town, and the first item in that enumeration
-stands thus:&mdash;&#8216;An unlimited supply of wholesome
-filtered water, forced, by day and night, at high pressure,
-through all the streets to the tops of almost all the houses,
-at a cost, for the dwellings of the poor, of about five
-shillings per week.&#8217;</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote18"><a href="#FNanchor18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a>
-It seems almost unnecessary to remind the reader that five more
-years have added infinite additional testimony to that mentioned in
-the text as existing in 1849; and that, two years ago, in a special
-Act of Parliament, it was enjoined on the Water Companies of the
-Metropolis that, within seven years, they should follow the precedent
-so extensively established. In the face of such evidence&mdash;with
-the knowledge that Manchester has a constant supply and that
-Glasgow is arranging one, it certainly tests one&#8217;s credulity to hear
-it rumoured that our Metropolitan Water-Merchants are hoping to
-resist that requirement, on the ground that such a supply in London
-would be <i>impossible</i>.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>On the relative merits or demerits of the two competing
-systems of supply, I have only to speak so far as their
-adaptation to sanitary purposes is concerned. In this
-respect, I have no hesitation in saying that the system
-of constant supply is immeasurably superior to its rival;
-so superior, that unless competent engineering authorities
-should decide on its practical inapplicability to the City
-of London, I would strongly recommend its adoption as
-the only one, in my judgment, by which the growing
-necessities of the population can be fully and effectively
-satisfied.</p>
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page23">[23]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="Ref03">OFFENSIVE AND INJURIOUS TRADES.</h3>
-
-<p>III. With respect to offensive trades and occupations
-pursued within the city of London, my task of recommendation
-is an easy one. To any person conversant with the
-simplest physiological relations of cause and effect, it is
-quite notorious that the decomposition of organic matter
-within a certain distance of human habitations unfailingly
-tends to produce disease; and every one who is competent
-by knowledge and impartiality to pronounce an opinion
-on the subject, must feel that no occupation which ordinarily
-leaves a putrid refuse, nor any which consists in the
-conversion or manufacture of putrescent material, ought,
-under any circumstances, to be tolerated within a town.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">1. First, in regard to slaughter-houses, I may remind
-you that, on the 23rd of January last, when your Hon.
-Commission first met under the new Act of Parliament, I
-recommended to you on sanitary grounds, that in such rules
-as you might make for the regulation of slaughter houses,
-all underground slaughtering should be absolutely prohibited.
-It was laid down, however, that your Act of Parliament
-would not enable you to establish this restriction,
-which (it was argued) would be equivalent to a direct suppression
-of many existing slaughter-houses.<a id="FNanchor19"></a><a href="#Footnote19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote19"><a href="#FNanchor19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> Slaughtering in cellars was rendered illegal by the amended
-City Sewers Act, 1851, and since that year has been entirely discontinued
-in the City. See <a href="#Page192">page 192</a>.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page24">[24]</span></p>
-
-<p>Considering that, in my first recommendations to the
-Commission I ought to confine myself to objects attainable
-by means of the Act of Parliament then just coming into
-operation, I felt myself precluded for the time from entering
-on the subject (however important in itself) of the total abolition
-of urban slaughtering. Now, however, while treating
-generally of sanitary improvement for the City, I can have
-no hesitation in repeating an opinion which I have already
-submitted to the Health-Committee of the Common Council;
-and I beg accordingly to state, that I consider slaughtering
-within the City as both directly and indirectly prejudicial to
-the health of the population;&mdash;<i>directly</i>, because it loads the
-air with effluvia of decomposing animal matter, not only in
-the immediate vicinity of each slaughter-house, but likewise
-along the line of drainage which conveys away its washings
-and fluid filth; <i>indirectly</i>, because many very offensive and
-noxious trades are in close dependence on the slaughtering
-of cattle, and round about the original nuisance of the
-slaughter-house, within as narrow limits of distance as circumstances
-allow, you invariably find established the concomitant
-and still more grievous nuisances of gut-spinning,
-tripe-dressing, bone-boiling, tallow-melting, paunch-cooking,
-&amp;c. Ready illustrations of this fact may be found in the
-gut-scraping sheds of Harrow-alley, adjoining Butchers&#8217;-row,
-Aldgate; or in the Leadenhall skin-market, contiguous
-to the slaughtering places, where the stinking hides of cattle
-lie for many hours together, spread out over a large area of
-ground, waiting for sale, to the great offence of the neighbourhood.</p>
-
-<p>Such evils as those to which I have adverted are inseparable
-from the process of slaughtering, however carefully<span class="pagenum" id="Page25">[25]</span>
-and cleanlily conducted; and they may easily be aggravated
-to an unlimited extent by defects in drainage, in water
-supply, or in ventilation, or by the slovenly habits and impunctuality
-of those to whom the removal of filth and offal
-is intrusted.</p>
-
-<p>In short, I believe it to be quite impossible, so to conduct
-the process of slaughtering within the City of London
-as to remove it from the category of nuisances, or to render
-it harmless to the health of the population; and I believe it
-to be equally impossible so to superintend the details of its
-performance as to prevent them, where ill-administered,
-from rising into considerable and fatal importance among
-the promoting causes of epidemic and infectious disease.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">It is scarcely necessary, after this expression of my
-opinion, that I should say how strongly I would recommend
-that measures should be taken for the discontinuance of all
-slaughtering within the City; and that, with the abolition
-of slaughtering, all establishments which deal with animal
-matter approaching putrefaction, and all sheds and stalls for
-the continued keeping of cattle, should likewise be prohibited
-and suppressed.</p>
-
-<p>The number of slaughter-houses at present registered and
-tolerated within the City amounts to 138, and in 58 of these
-the slaughtering occurs in vaults and cellars. How overwhelming
-an amount of organic decomposition must be
-furnished by these establishments, can neither be estimated
-nor conceived; but the influence of that decomposition
-admits of being measured in its effects on the population,
-and in the high zymotic mortality which denotes an
-atmosphere over-laden with organic poison.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page26">[26]</span></p>
-
-<p>Before leaving this subject, I think it right very briefly to
-allude to an argument which is often objected to the view
-here stated. The objector looks to a particular district, or
-to a particular slaughter-house, and says that the mortality
-of the district is an average one; or he points to Mr. A. or
-Mr. B.&mdash;the butcher or the butcher&#8217;s man, saying, &#8216;Who
-can be healthier than A. or B.? Surely, if the pursuit be
-injurious, these men ought to have been poisoned long ago.&#8217;
-Now, to this I reply;&mdash;first, as regards the men employed
-in these crafts, we have no statistics of any value to decide
-on their mortality, and judgment on the matter cannot be
-deduced from some half-dozen cases, known to any of us
-individually; but, further, if we admit (which I by no
-means know to be the case) that they are persons of average
-longevity and healthiness, then it must be remembered that
-their activity, their out-door exercise, and, above all, their
-unlimited supply of animal food, are circumstances conducing
-to give them health beyond the average of their
-station; and it must be remembered that these palliating
-circumstances, though they may counteract the evil for those
-persons most nearly concerned in it, contribute nothing
-towards deodorising the neighbourhood, or towards preserving
-its poorer inhabitants from the depressive influence of
-putrid emanations.</p>
-
-<p>And, as regards the district&mdash;although we have certain
-evidence that organic decomposition is a chief cause of
-disease, yet we do not invariably find disease generated in
-immediate proximity to the source of nuisance. Drainage
-beneath the soil, and currents of air above it, convey the
-materials of decomposition to a distance; and if the particular
-slaughter-houses be placed on a high level amidst the<span class="pagenum" id="Page27">[27]</span>
-surrounding City, so that their drainage be effectual and
-their ventilation complete, then obviously their influence
-must be sought for, not so much in any special aggravation
-of the local mortality, as in certain remoter effects of their
-diffused emanation; in effects, namely, which are discoverable
-along their lines of drainage and ventilation, and in
-the various consequences of a highly zymotic atmosphere
-generally through the entire town.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">2. With regard to such trades as are considered to be
-simply offensive, and where the evidence of injury to health
-is indirect and uncertain, I can hardly doubt that a wise
-legislation would exclude them also from the circle of the
-metropolis. Tallow-melting, whalebone-boiling, gas-making,
-and various other chemical proceedings, if not absolutely
-injurious to life, are nuisances, at least in the ordinary
-language of the law, or are apt to become such. It is the
-common right of the neighbourhood to breathe an uncontaminated
-atmosphere; and, with this common right, such
-nuisances must, in their several degrees, be considered to
-clash. It might be an infraction of personal liberty to
-interfere with a proprietor&#8217;s right to make offensive smells
-within the limits of his own tenement, and for his own separate
-inhalation; but surely it is a still greater infraction of personal
-liberty when the proprietor, entitled as he is to but
-the joint use of an atmosphere which is the common property
-of his neighbourhood, assumes what is equivalent to
-a sole possession of it, and claims the right of diffusing
-through it some nauseous effluvium which others, equally
-with himself, are thus obliged to inhale. Such, as it appears
-to me, is the rational view of this matter; and although I am<span class="pagenum" id="Page28">[28]</span>
-not prepared to speak of these trades in the same terms
-as I applied to slaughtering and its kindred occupations,&mdash;although,
-that is to say, I cannot speak of them as injurious
-to health on any large scale, yet I would respectfully submit
-to your Hon. Court that your Act of Parliament empowers
-you to deal with such nuisances in respect of their being
-simply offensive.<a id="FNanchor20"></a><a href="#Footnote20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote20"><a href="#FNanchor20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> City Sewers Act, 1848, &sect; 113.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">3. Under the same head, I would likewise beg leave to
-suggest whether it might not be practicable for your Hon.
-Court to regulate the operation of establishments which
-evolve large volumes of smoke. The exterior dirtiness and
-dinginess of London depend mainly on this cause; and the
-same influence, by rendering domestic cleanliness difficult
-and expensive, creates an additional impediment to its cultivation.
-People naturally despair of cleansing that which a
-day&#8217;s exposure to the atmosphere blackens again with soot;
-or they keep their windows shut, breathing a fusty and unwholesome
-air, in the hope of excluding the inconvenience.
-Now, when it is remembered that all the smoke of London
-is but so much wasted fuel, it must surely be felt that the
-enforcement of measures for its consumption would be to
-the interest of all parties; amply economizing to the manufacturer
-whatever might be the trifling expense of appropriate
-arrangements, while it would relieve the public of that
-which, called by the mildest name, is a nuisance and a
-source of heavy expense.</p>
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page29">[29]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="Ref04">INTRAMURAL BURIAL.</h3>
-
-<p>IV. The subject of intramural burial is the next on
-which I have to report, as affecting the health of the City.</p>
-
-<p>In compliance with an order of the Health Committee, I
-have examined as fully as circumstances would allow into
-the requirements of the City of London in respect of burial
-accommodation, and the result of my inquiry obliges me to
-express my conviction, that the City can no longer with
-safety or propriety be allowed to furnish intramural interment
-to its dead.</p>
-
-<p>In all those larger parochial burying-grounds where the
-maintenance of a right to bury can be considered important,&mdash;in
-all such, and in most others, too, the soil is saturated
-and super-saturated with animal matter undergoing slow
-decomposition. There are, indeed, few of the older burial-grounds
-of the City where the soil does not rise many feet
-above its original level, testifying to the large amount of
-animal matter which rots beneath the surface. The vaults
-beneath churches are, in many instances, similarly overloaded
-with materials of putrefaction, and the atmosphere,
-which should be kept pure, and without admixture for the
-living, is hourly tainted with the f&#339;tid emanations of the
-dead. For the most part, houses are seen to rise on all
-sides in immediate contiguity to the burial-ground, forbidding
-the possibility of even such ventilation as might
-diminish the evil; and the inhabitants of such houses complain<span class="pagenum" id="Page30">[30]</span>
-bitterly, as they well may, of the inconvenience which
-they suffer from this confined and noxious atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">With respect to burial in vaults, which prevails to a very
-great and dangerous extent in this City, I may observe that,
-among persons who are ill-informed on the subject, there
-exist erroneous notions as to the preservation of bodies
-under these circumstances. They are supposed, from the
-complete closure of their coffins, to remain unchanged for
-ages, like the embalmed bodies of Egypt and Peru; or at
-least&mdash;if perhaps they undergo some interior and invisible
-change (as the chrysalis within its sheath) that there is no
-interference with the general arrangement, no breach in the
-compactness of the envelope. Nothing can be less correct
-than this supposition.</p>
-
-<p>It is unnecessary that I should detail to you the process
-of decay, as it occurs within the charnel-house; nor need I
-inquire for your information whether indeed it be true, as
-alleged, that part of the duty of a sexton consists in tapping
-the recent coffins, so as to facilitate the escape of gases
-which otherwise would detonate from their confinement. It
-is sufficient to state, that&mdash;whether such be or be not the
-duty of the functionary in question, the time certainly
-comes, sooner or later, when every corpse buried in the
-vault of a church spreads the products of its decomposition
-through the air as freely as though no shell had enclosed it.
-It is matter of the utmost notoriety that, under all ordinary
-conditions of vault-sepulture, the wooden case of the coffin
-speedily decays and crumbles, while the interior leaden one,
-bending with the pressure of whatever mass may be above
-it (or often with its own weight) yields, bulges, and bursts, as<span class="pagenum" id="Page31">[31]</span>
-surely as would a paper hat-box under the weight of a laden
-portmanteau.</p>
-
-<p>If the accuracy of this description be doubted, let inquiry
-be made on a large scale after the coffins of 40 years back<a id="FNanchor21"></a><a href="#Footnote21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a>&mdash;let
-it be seen how many will appear! If, on the contrary,
-its accuracy be granted, then I apprehend nothing
-further need be urged, to establish the importance of
-abolishing a system which maintains on so large a scale the
-open putrefaction of human remains within places of frequent
-resort, and in the midst of populous habitations.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote21"><a href="#FNanchor21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> Perhaps the expressions in my text are somewhat too general;
-not indeed as to the fact of the coffins <i>ultimately</i> giving vent to their
-f&#339;tid contents (which is the real point at issue) but as to the time
-within which this occurs. In the dryer and better kept vaults, a
-longer period certainly elapses than that suggested; in the worse,
-probably a shorter one. The sooner or later is of little practical
-importance: but, on re-perusing my Report, I think it right to add
-this qualification.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>It is a very serious matter for consideration, that close beneath
-the feet of those who attend the services of their
-church, there often lies an almost solid pile of decomposing
-human remains, co-extensive with the area of the building,
-heaped as high as the vaulting will permit, and generally
-(as I have shown) but very partially confined. And if it be
-the case, as perhaps it may be, that the frequenters of the
-place of worship do not complain of any vitiation of their
-atmosphere, or perhaps do not experience it, not the less is
-it true that such a vitiation occurs, and&mdash;whether to the
-special detriment of the congregation or not, contributes to
-the overladen putrefactiveness of our London atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p>In respect of such vaults, I do not consider that the<span class="pagenum" id="Page32">[32]</span>
-mere cessation of burial in them will be sufficient; seeing
-that at the present moment they contain amongst them
-many thousand coffins, as yet tenanted by the materials of
-decomposition; and year after year, if left in their present
-state, these will be poisoning the air with successive instalments
-of their progressive decay. It seems to me quite
-indispensable that some comprehensive measure should be
-undertaken, for abolishing at once and for ever all burial
-within the City of London. Conjointly with the general
-application to Parliament, for prohibition of further intramural
-sepulture, I would recommend that authority be obtained
-by the City for its several parishes to procure the
-decent removal to extramural cemeteries of such coffins as
-already occupy their vaults; or, failing this measure, I
-would recommend that all coffins now lying within vaults,
-be walled up in their present resting-places with uniform
-impermeable masonry. For very obvious reasons, I should
-prefer the former plan to the latter.<a id="FNanchor22"></a><a href="#Footnote22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote22"><a href="#FNanchor22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a>
-Probably the most successful attempt at hermetical enclosure of
-organic matters would not reach beyond effecting a postponement of
-their diffusion through the atmosphere. The true principles for
-burial of the dead lie rather in recognising their decomposition as
-inevitable, and in providing only lest it be offensive or injurious to
-the living. This is best attained by interment in a well-chosen soil, at
-a depth proportioned to the qualities of the ground; with no pretence
-of everlasting coffins and impenetrable cerements; but with
-ample vegetation above, to relieve the upper earth from whatever
-products of decay may mount and mingle there; and especially with
-thorough drainage below, so that down-currents of air and rainfall
-may freely traverse the putrefactive strata, ventilating and washing
-the soil, and diffusing its organic contents through deeper levels, till
-their oxidation is complete and their new inodorous combinations
-are discharged in watery solution.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page33">[33]</span></p>
-
-<p>Intramural burial is an evil, no doubt, that varies in its
-intensity according to the numbers interred; becoming
-appreciable in its effects on health, so far as the rough
-measure of statistics can inform us, only when many interments
-occur annually, or when ground is disturbed
-wherein much animal matter had previously been left to
-decay. But, be the evil large or little in any particular
-case, evil undoubtedly it is in all, and an unmitigated
-evil.</p>
-
-<p>The atmosphere in which epidemic and infectious diseases
-most readily diffuse their poison and multiply their
-victims is one, as I have already often stated, in which
-organic matters are undergoing decomposition. Whence
-these may be derived signifies little. Whether the matter
-passing into decay be an accumulation of soaking straw and
-cabbage leaves in some miserable cellar, or the garbage of a
-slaughter-house, or an overflowing cesspool, or dead dogs
-floated at high water into the mouth of a sewer, or stinking
-fish thrown overboard in Billingsgate-dock, or the remains
-of human corpses undergoing their last chemical changes
-in consecrated earth, the previous history of the decomposed
-material is of no moment whatever. The pathologist knows
-no difference of operation between one decaying substance
-and another; so soon as he recognises organic matter
-undergoing decomposition, so soon he recognises the most
-fertile soil for the increase of epidemic diseases; and I may
-state with certainty, that there are many churchyards in the
-City of London where every spadeful of soil turned up in
-burial sensibly adds to the amount of animal decomposition
-which advances too often inevitably around us.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page34">[34]</span></p>
-
-<p>Nor can I refrain from adding, as a matter claiming
-attention, that, in the performance of intramural interment,
-there constantly occur disgusting incidents dependent on
-overcrowdedness of the burial-ground; incidents which
-convert the extremest solemnity of religion into an occasion
-for sickness or horror; perhaps mingling with the ritual
-of the Church some clamour of gravediggers who have
-mis-calculated their space; perhaps diffusing amidst the
-mourners some nauseous evidence and conviction, that a
-prior tenant of the tomb has been prematurely displaced, or
-that the spade has impatiently anticipated the slower dismembering
-of decay. Cases of this nature are fresh in
-the memory of the public; cases of extreme nuisance and
-brutal desecration in place of decent and solemn interment;
-and it is unnecessary that I should revive the record
-of transactions inconsistent with even the dawn of civilisation.<a id="FNanchor23"></a><a href="#Footnote23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote23"><a href="#FNanchor23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a>
-It happened that during the few months preceding the presentation
-of this Report, there had occurred some of the most flagrant
-and disgusting illustrations of the evils adverted to.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">From the circumstances which I have mentioned, it can
-hardly fail to appear most desirable to you, that the use of
-some spacious and open cemetery at a distance from the
-City should be substituted for the present system of intramural
-interment, and the urgency of this requirement will
-be demonstrated all the more cogently, when it is remembered
-that the annual amount of mortality in the City
-averages above 3000, and that under the present arrangements
-every dead body buried within our walls receives its<span class="pagenum" id="Page35">[35]</span>
-accommodation at the expense of the living, and to their
-great detriment.</p>
-
-<p>In recommending that consideration be given, at as early
-a period as possible, to the means for establishing some
-sufficient municipal cemetery (a consideration which, for
-obvious reasons, must be prior to any Parliamentary proceedings
-for the prohibition of intramural interments) there
-are three points to which, even now, I think it advisable to
-advert, as essential to the admissibility of such a plan. I
-would submit, first, that the site of any such cemetery must
-be sufficiently remote from the metropolis to obviate any
-repetition of the present injury to a resident population;
-and I hardly know how this purpose can be attained, without
-going some distance beyond the immediate suburbs of
-London as indicated by the Bills of Mortality:&mdash;secondly,
-that the space required for the proper inhumation of the dead
-of the City of London<a id="FNanchor24"></a><a href="#Footnote24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> would be not less than 54 acres; and,
-thirdly, I would suggest that the charter of such an establishment
-ought to contain provisions against the erection of
-houses within a certain distance of the burial-ground, so that
-this may at all times and under all circumstances be surrounded,
-exterior to its wall, by a considerable belt of land
-totally devoid of resident population. The absence of such
-a provision as the last would very soon lead to the extramural
-cemetery becoming <i>intramuralised</i> by the growth of
-a new suburb around it, and would again evince, by new and
-unnecessary illustrations, how incompatible with each other
-are the Dead and the Living as tenants of one locality.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote24"><a href="#FNanchor24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> See Special Report on Extramural Interment,
-<a href="#Page285">page 285</a>.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page36">[36]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="Ref05">HOUSES PERMANENTLY UNFIT FOR
-HABITATION.</h3>
-
-<p>V. Under the last heads of my Report I have touched
-on matters, which (in so far as they cannot be adjusted
-without Parliamentary interference) may be considered to
-lie beyond the present jurisdiction of the Commissioners of
-Sewers; and the topic which I now approach may, perhaps,
-be considered equally foreign to the scope of your ordinary
-functions.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">I have to report that there are houses and localities
-within the City which are irremediably bad;&mdash;places, which
-the uninterrupted presence of epidemic disease has stamped
-as absolutely unfit for human habitation; places, where
-drainage and water-supply, indeed, are defective, but where
-the perfection of these necessaries might exist, in all probability,
-without giving healthiness to the inhabitants. The
-predominant evil in the localities referred to is their thorough
-impossibility of ventilation.</p>
-
-<p>While treating of the manner in which noxious emanations
-are conveyed to a distance, and are enabled to diffuse their
-influence over a whole town, instead of concentrating it in
-some single slaughter-house or burial-ground, I indirectly
-suggested what I have now to illustrate; that all the evils
-of all the nuisances in existence acquire their utmost local
-intensity of action when the diffusion of their gaseous products
-is interfered with, and when, from absence of ventilation,<span class="pagenum" id="Page37">[37]</span>
-these are retained in the immediate vicinity of their
-source.</p>
-
-<p>The inhabitants of open streets can hardly conceive the
-complicated turnings, the narrow inlets, the close parallels
-of houses, and the high barriers of light and air, which are
-the common characteristics of our courts and alleys, and
-which give an additional noxiousness even to their cesspools
-and their filth. There are very few who, without personal
-verification, would credit an account that might be given of
-the worst of such dwelling-places. Let any one, however,
-who would do full justice to this frightful subject, visit
-the courts about Bishopsgate, Aldgate, and the upper
-portion of Cripplegate, which present some of the
-worst, though by no means the only instances of pestilential
-residence. A man of ordinary dimensions almost
-hesitates, lest he should immovably wedge himself, with
-whomsoever he may meet, in the low and narrow crevice
-which is called the entrance to some such court or alley;
-and, having passed that ordeal, he finds himself as in a well,
-with little light, with less ventilation, amid a dense population
-of human beings, with an atmosphere hardly respirable
-from its closeness and pollution. The stranger, during his
-visit, feels his breathing constrained, as though he were in a
-diving-bell; and experiences afterwards a sensible and immediate
-relief as he emerges again into the comparatively
-open street.</p>
-
-<p>Now, I am prepared to show that there are many, very
-many, courts within the City, to which the above description
-accurately applies; courts and alleys hemmed in on all
-sides by higher houses; having no possibility of any current<span class="pagenum" id="Page38">[38]</span>
-of air; and (worst of all) sometimes so constructed back to
-back, as to forbid the advantage of double windows or back
-doors, and thus to render the house as perfectly a <i>cul-de-sac</i>
-out of the court, as the court is a <i>cul-de-sac</i> out of the next
-thoroughfare.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">It is surely superfluous to observe, that these local conditions
-are utterly incompatible with health. Among their
-dense population, it is rare to see any other appearance than
-that of squalid sickness and misery; and the children, who
-are reproduced with the fertility of a rabbit-warren, perish in
-early infancy. In the worst localities probably not more
-than half the children born survive their fifth year, and of
-the 3763 deaths registered last year in the City of London
-generally, 1410 were at or under seven years of age.</p>
-
-<p>The diseases of these localities are well marked. Scrofula
-more or less completely blights all that are born: often
-extinguishing life prematurely; in childhood, by hydrocephalus;
-in youth, by pulmonary and renal affections, which
-you read of as consumption and dropsy; often scarring and
-maiming where it does not kill, and rendering life miserable
-by blindness, decrepitude, or deformity; often prolonging
-itself as a hereditary curse in the misbegotten offspring of
-those who, under such unnatural conditions, attain to maturity
-and procreation.</p>
-
-<p>Typhus prevails there too, not as an occasional visitor,
-but as an habitual pestilence.</p>
-
-<p>It is impossible for me, by numbers, to give you an exact
-knowledge of the fatality of such spots; because, in the
-greater part of the City, hospitals, dispensaries, and private<span class="pagenum" id="Page39">[39]</span>
-practice, divide with the parochial officers the treatment of
-the sick, and diminish the returns of sickness which those
-officers would otherwise have to show. But this I may tell
-you, as an illustration of what I mean;&mdash;that in the few
-houses of Seven-Step-alley and its two offsets, (Amelia-place
-and Turner-square,) there occurred last year 163
-parochial cases of fever; in Prince&#8217;s-place and Prince&#8217;s-square,
-176 cases&mdash;think, Gentlemen, if this had occurred in
-Southampton-place and Russell-square! that behind the
-east side of Bishopsgate, in the very small distance from
-Widegate-street to New-street, there were 126 cases; that
-behind the west side, from Primrose-street to Half-moon-street,
-there were 245 cases; that the parish of Cripplegate
-had 354 cases over and above the number (probably a very
-large one) treated by private practitioners, by hospitals, and
-especially by dispensaries. Similarly, though with less perfect
-information, I am enabled to trace fever to a terrible
-extent in very many other localities of the City, even on the
-verge of its better residences, and close behind its wealthiest
-thoroughfares; in Plumtree-court, in Plough-court and
-place, in Poppin&#8217;s-court, Neville&#8217;s-court, Blackhorse-alley,
-Union-court, Plough-court in Holborn, Field-lane; in the
-courts right and left of King-street, Smithfield, in Hanging-sword-alley
-and its vicinity, in Peahen-court, in Bell-alley
-and its neighbourhood, in Priest&#8217;s-alley, in Beer-lane, in
-Friar&#8217;s-alley, in Bromley&#8217;s-buildings, and in the whole large
-space which stretches from Ludgate-hill to beside the
-river.</p>
-
-<p>And in most of these localities, in addition to other
-sanitary errors, there predominates that particular one to<span class="pagenum" id="Page40">[40]</span>
-which I am now inviting your attention&mdash;the absence,
-namely, of sufficient ventilation.</p>
-
-<p>It was in districts such as these, that in the year 1665,
-the Great Plague of London found the readiest facilities
-for its reception; and it was by the destruction of such districts
-that the Great Fire of the following year rendered the
-utmost conceivable service to the sanitary progress of the
-people, and completed their emancipation from the horrors
-of an unparalleled pestilence. Long intervening years have
-sufficed to reconstruct these miserable habitations almost
-after their first type, and to re-exemplify all the evils which
-belong to them; so completely indeed, that if the infection
-of that same plague should light again amongst us, I
-scarcely know why it might not traverse the City and decimate
-its population as quickly and as virulently as before.
-Meanwhile, however, typhus with its kindred disorders,
-and the occasional epidemics of influenza and cholera,
-maintain their attachment to the soil, and require no further
-re-inforcement from the pestilence of other climates. From
-these fatal diseases we no longer hope to be rescued by the
-recurrence of the former casualty. The almost two centuries
-which have elapsed since the period referred to, have
-taught men better methods than a general conflagration for
-remedying such evils; and it is a satisfaction to believe
-that the wisdom and humanity of the Corporation of the
-City of London will apply those methods with effect.</p>
-
-<p>As a palliative measure, applicable in many of the least
-aggravated instances, I may suggest the removal of unnecessary
-walls which intercept the current of air from
-place to place; the formation of counter-openings in various<span class="pagenum" id="Page41">[41]</span>
-blind courts; and, not least, in regard of many houses thus
-situated, the admission of light and air by additional windows.
-I cannot pass this portion of the subject without
-recording my opinion that the operation of the window-tax
-is in direct opposition to the sanitary interests of the
-people; and I must venture to express my hope that some
-different method of assessment may presently be adopted,
-in place of one which presses on the occupier in proportion
-to the healthiness of his tenement.<a id="FNanchor25"></a><a href="#Footnote25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> I think it very desirable,
-indeed almost indispensable, that your Hon. Court should
-have the power, under certain circumstances, to order and
-enforce the opening of additional windows in houses occupied
-by large numbers of persons, when your Officer of
-Health may report their ventilation defective; and if it
-should seem expedient to you to seek this authority from
-the Legislature, it might with the greatest advantage be accompanied
-by some concession from her Majesty&#8217;s Government,
-to the effect that the formation of additional windows,
-occurring thus under your orders for the immediate necessities
-of health and life, should not occasion any further
-assessment on the occupiers of the house.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote25"><a href="#FNanchor25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> I ought not to pass this page without a grateful mention of
-Lord Duncan&#8217;s name in connexion with the removal of the Window
-Tax, at length happily effected. It remains, however, greatly to be
-desired, in respect of certain specifiable houses inhabited by the
-poorer classes, that Local Boards of Health should have power to
-enforce improvements of ventilation.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">But, Gentlemen, within the City of London there exist,
-to a very large extent, architectural evils for which no such<span class="pagenum" id="Page42">[42]</span>
-palliative treatment is possible; evils against which I would
-venture to say (borrowing a metaphor from my profession)
-that no safety can be found except in amputation.</p>
-
-<p>To dwell in hovels like pits, low-sunken between high
-houses, hemmed in by barriers which exclude every breath of
-direct ventilation&mdash;this can never be otherwise than a cause of
-sickness and mortality to those whose necessities allot them
-such residence; and, if it be an incontrovertible fact that
-subsistence in closed courts is an unhealthy and short-lived
-subsistence in comparison with that of the dwellers in
-open streets, then, I apprehend, it cannot be doubted that
-such a manner of life ought to be dealt with as a great evil,
-and ought as much as possible to be interrupted.</p>
-
-<p>A surveyor&#8217;s inspection of the City would reveal to you
-many places answering to the description I have given;
-places to which no ventilation could arrive except by removal
-of whole streets of houses which wall them in.</p>
-
-<p>To remove the well-constructed houses of the City, in
-order that its wretched courts and alleys should participate
-in the blessings of light and air, might seem one method of
-conquering the difficulty which is before you; but I apprehend
-the opposite alternative, of proceeding to a gradual
-suppression of all residence in the former class of dwellings,
-may more naturally have your approbation.</p>
-
-<p>To the latter aim, sooner or later, the sanitary efforts of
-the Corporation must be directed.</p>
-
-<p>There are many parts of the City where great and immediate
-advantage would arise from an expenditure of
-money applied solely to the purpose of destruction; parts,
-where the purchase of an entire court, or series of courts,
-for the sole object of pulling down houses, and leaving<span class="pagenum" id="Page43">[43]</span>
-open spaces in their stead, would be the cheapest as well as
-the most effective manner of dealing with their sanitary
-difficulties. And I have earnestly to suggest for your consideration,
-that proceedings of this nature will require to be
-pursued to a very great extent, and at a large annual expense,
-within the City, before the cleanliness and habitability
-of its poorer localities will stand in their legitimate
-proportion to the modern stateliness of thoroughfare and
-grandeur of public buildings which attest the magnificence
-of the Corporation.</p>
-
-<p>I would, therefore, beg to recommend that a survey be
-made of the worst districts which I have specified, with a
-view to the immediate purchase and destruction of some
-considerable portion of the court-property lying in them;
-and, still more, I would urge that this is an exertion, which
-for some years must proceed systematically, in order to thin
-the density of a population which now breeds pestilence and
-augments mortality by its overcrowding and excess.</p>
-
-<p>I am aware that considerable difficulties lie in the way of
-accomplishing an object of this sort with immediate rapidity.
-It is my great hope, however, that the principle
-may be distinctly recognised; and that the City will not
-tolerate within its municipal jurisdiction the continuance of
-houses absolutely incompatible with healthy habitation.
-This principle being once established, and a certain annual
-expenditure devoted to enforce it, I feel assured that within
-a few years opportunities will have arisen for that outlay to
-have been made in the most judicious manner, and for its
-results amply to have demonstrated the advantages of the
-system which I recommend.</p>
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page44">[44]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="Ref06">SOCIAL CONDITION OF THE POOR.</h3>
-
-<p>VI. Last, and not least, among the influences prejudicial
-to health in the City of London, as elsewhere, must
-be reckoned the social condition of the lower classes; and I
-refer to this the more especially, because often, in discussion
-of sanitary subjects before your Hon. Court, the filthy, or
-slovenly, or improvident, or destructive, or intemperate, or
-dishonest habits of these classes, are cited as an explanation
-of the inefficiency of measures designed for their advantage.
-It is constantly urged, that to bring improved domestic
-arrangements within the reach of such persons is a waste
-and a folly; that if you give them a coal-scuttle, a washing-basin,
-and a watercloset, these several utensils will be applied
-indifferently to the purposes of each other, or one to the purposes
-of all; and that meanwhile the objects of your charitable
-solicitude will remain in the same unredeemed lowness
-and misery as before. Now it is unquestionable, and
-I admit it,&mdash;that in houses containing all the sanitary evils
-which I have enumerated&mdash;undrained, and waterless, and
-unventilated&mdash;there do dwell whole hordes of persons, who
-struggle so little in self-defence against that which surrounds
-them, that they may be considered almost indifferent to its
-existence, or almost acclimated to endure its continuance. It
-is too true that, among these classes, there are swarms of
-men and women, who have yet to learn that human beings
-should dwell differently from cattle; swarms, to whom personal<span class="pagenum" id="Page45">[45]</span>
-cleanliness is utterly unknown; swarms, by whom delicacy
-and decency in their social relations are quite unconceived.
-Men and women, boys and girls, in scores of each, using
-jointly one single common privy; grown persons of both
-sexes sleeping in common with their married parents; a
-woman suffering travail in the midst of the males and
-females of three several families of fellow-lodgers in a
-single room; an adult son sharing his mother&#8217;s bed during
-her confinement;&mdash;such are instances recently within my
-knowledge (and I might easily adduce others) of the degree
-and of the manner in which a people may relapse into the
-habits of savage life, when their domestic condition is neglected,
-and when they are suffered to habituate themselves
-to the uttermost depths of physical obscenity and degradation.</p>
-
-<p>Here again, as in an earlier part of my Report, I think it
-requisite to remark, that I do not mean in any degree to
-suggest that the evils adverted to present themselves within
-the City to a greater extent than in sundry other parts of
-the metropolis. My sphere of duty lies within the City
-boundary, and it would be an impertinence in me to comment,
-either favourably or unfavourably, on districts which
-lie within another jurisdiction than that of the Commission
-which I have the honour to address. Simply to guard
-myself against the possibility of being misunderstood, I
-again draw attention to the fact that I studiously refrain
-from instituting comparisons with other metropolitan
-localities. Let me likewise observe that I am far from insinuating,
-or suspecting, that the majority of the poorer
-population of the city has fallen to that extreme debasement
-which I have just illustrated as affecting some portion (perhaps<span class="pagenum" id="Page46">[46]</span>
-not an inconsiderable portion) of the poorest; but I
-dare not suppress my knowledge that such instances exist,
-nor can I refrain from stating my belief, that ignorance and
-poverty will soon contribute to increase them, if sanitary
-and social improvement do not co-operate against their
-continuance.</p>
-
-<p>Contemplating such cases, I feel the deepest conviction
-that no sanitary system can be adequate to the requirements
-of the time, or can cure those radical evils which infest the
-under-framework of society, unless the importance be distinctly
-recognised, and the duty manfully undertaken, of
-improving the social condition of the poor.</p>
-
-<p>Those who suffer under the calamitous sanitary conditions
-which I have disclosed, have been led, perhaps, to consider
-them as inseparable from poverty; and after their long
-habituation to such influences, who can wonder if personal
-and moral degradation conform them more and more to the
-physical debasement of their abode? In the midst of inevitable
-domestic filth, who can wonder that personal cleanliness
-should be neglected? In an atmosphere which forbids
-the breath to be drawn freely, which maintains habitual
-ill health, which depresses all the natural spring and buoyancy
-of life, who can wonder that frequent recourse should
-be had to stimulants, which, however pernicious in themselves,
-still for a moment dispel the malarious languor of
-the place, give temporary vigour to the brain, and cheer the
-flagging pulses of a poisoned circulation? Who can wonder
-that habits of improvidence and recklessness should arise in
-a population, which not only has much ignorance and prejudice
-amongst it, but is likewise often unaccustomed to
-consideration and kindness? Who can wonder that the<span class="pagenum" id="Page47">[47]</span>
-laws of society should at times be forgotten by those whom
-the eye of society habitually overlooks, and whom the heart
-of society often appears to discard?</p>
-
-<p>I believe that now there is a very growing feeling
-abroad, that the poor of a Christian country can no longer,
-in their own ignorance and helplessness, be suffered
-to encounter all the chances which accompany destitution,
-and which link it often indissolubly to recklessness,
-profligacy, and perdition. The task of interfering
-in behalf of these classes, however insensible they may
-be of their own danger and frequent degradation, begins
-at length to be recognised as an obligation of society; and
-as such an interference may be fraught with the utmost
-advantage to sanitary progress, I shall now proceed to
-point out the manner in which, with this view only, it may
-most usefully and most humanely be made.</p>
-
-<p>First of all I would point out to you, that within your
-Act of Parliament there are contained some enactments on
-this subject which might be of great value, were it not for
-their very limited application:&mdash;&#8216;Whereas the owners and
-keepers of lodging-houses of an inferior description, for the
-accommodation of mendicants, strangers, and other persons
-for the night, or other short periods, allow the same to be
-crowded, by receiving more lodgers than such lodging-houses
-are adapted to contain with a due regard to health,&#8217;
-therefore, and for some other reasons enumerated in the
-91st clause, it is enacted that you may require the registration,
-and may order the periodical inspection of such houses;
-that you may from time to time fix and determine the
-number of lodgers who may be accommodated in each
-lodging-house; that you may issue &#8216;rules or instructions<span class="pagenum" id="Page48">[48]</span>
-regarding health, cleanliness, and ventilation;&#8217; that you
-may &#8216;order that a ticket, containing the number of lodgers
-for which the house is registered,&#8217; together with your rules
-and regulations, &#8216;shall be hung up, or placed in a conspicuous
-part of each room into which lodgers are received;&#8217;
-and finally, &#8216;that if any keeper of such lodging-house shall
-offend against any of these provisions, he shall be liable for
-each such offence to a penalty not exceeding 5<i>l.</i>, and the
-like penalty for every day after the first upon which any
-such offence shall be continued.&#8217; The spirit of these enactments
-is excellent; but unhappily the definition given at
-the end of the clause excludes from the operation of the
-law those very cases which most need to fall within it.
-&#8216;Common lodging-house&#8217; (it runs) &#8216;shall, for the purposes
-of this act, mean any public lodging-house, not being a
-licensed victualling-house, in which persons are harboured
-or lodged for hire, for a single night, or for less than a
-week at one time, or in which any room is let for hire to be
-occupied by more than one family at one time.&#8217; Lodging-houses,
-according to this definition, are (I am informed)
-hardly to be found within the City of London; and the
-clause has remained, and seems in its present form likely to
-remain, quite inoperative. If, in any future renewal or
-amendment of your Act, the definition could be modified
-in such a manner, that the powers given in respect of
-lodging-houses should be extended to all the poorer tenements
-of the City, where the several floors are let separately
-at a weekly rent, the clause in question would be rendered
-one of the most serviceable in the Act, and one of the most
-general application. In its present form, the clause barely
-enables you to deal with the temporary bed-accommodation<span class="pagenum" id="Page49">[49]</span>
-of trampers and vagrants,&mdash;a class happily not very numerous
-in the City; while, modified in the manner I suggest,
-it would put under your sanitary regulation the whole
-household economy of the permanent industrial population
-of the City; and, if effectively worked, would conduce
-beyond all estimation to the physical, social, and moral
-improvement of that class.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">Secondly, and as a matter of even higher importance, I
-would beg you to consider the incalculable good which
-may be conferred on the poorer classes of society, by the
-direct educational influence of those in better and more enlightened
-circumstances than their own. When I say that
-all the social errors to which I now more particularly refer,
-would gradually but swiftly vanish under the influence of
-education, I do not mean that the cure would lie in learning
-to read and to write and to sum:&mdash;though these attainments,
-of course, would largely increase the power, usefulness,
-and market value of their possessor. The education
-to which I refer, as an all-important influence for sanitary
-progress, is that which would consist in exhibiting to the
-lowest classes of society frequent practical evidences of the
-attainability and the advantages of higher civilization; an
-education which, by model and examples, would lead them
-to know cleanliness from dirt, decency from grossness,
-human propriety from brutish self-abandonment; an education
-which, by sensible experience, would teach them to
-feel the comfort and the profit of sanitary observances, and
-would apply their instinct of self-preservation to the deliberate
-avoidance of disease.</p>
-
-<p>It is in this point of view, gentlemen, that I would<span class="pagenum" id="Page50">[50]</span>
-solicit your attention to the useful and philanthropic
-exertions of three societies which have been established
-during the last few years, with the object of improving the
-condition of the labouring classes; and I would venture
-to suggest that the course which those societies have
-adopted in various parts of the metropolis, is one that
-might with the utmost advantage be pursued within the
-City of London.</p>
-
-<p id="Ref07">The establishment of <i>Model Dwelling</i> and <i>Lodging-houses</i>,
-and of <i>Public Baths</i> and <i>Laundries</i>, for the use of
-the labouring population, is now no longer a matter of
-recent speculation. Under the beneficent auspices of the
-Societies to which I have referred, the following experiments
-have been <span class="nowrap">tried:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>The Committee for promoting the establishment of Baths
-and Wash-houses, having at first Mr. W. Cotton, and then Sir
-H. Dukinfield, for its Chairman, and including in its number,
-with other influential persons, several members of this
-Corporation, founded, at great pains and expense, a model
-institution at Goulston-square, Whitechapel. In spite of
-many circumstances conspiring to render this first and
-experimental establishment particularly expensive, it has
-more than supported itself by the small payments of the
-poor; and its arrangements are sufficiently extensive for it
-to have given in one day as many as 932 baths. This fact,
-having occurred in the first year of its establishment, shows
-how much the poor must have appreciated the additional
-comfort placed within their reach; and I may add that,
-from the first opening of the building, the annual receipts
-have been progressively on the increase. Somewhat earlier,
-and under the influence of the same parent-committee,<span class="pagenum" id="Page51">[51]</span>
-though specially directed by a branch-committee, a similar
-establishment was founded in George-street, Euston-square.
-During the year 1848 the number of payments made here
-for bathing was 111,788; the number of payments for
-washing in the laundries, 246,760. This establishment has
-not only proved self-supporting, but has been enabled to
-accumulate a large surplus, which is now being applied to
-enlarge and improve the building. At Glasshouse-yard,
-near the entrance to the London Docks, there has been
-founded, on the same model, a small establishment of free
-baths and washhouses for the destitute poor. It was opened
-in May, 1845. In the first year the baths given amounted
-to 27,662; the usings of the laundry to 35,840; and its
-total working expenses were covered by &pound;378.</p>
-
-<p>No language, however eloquent&mdash;no comment, however
-instructive, could equal the significance of the figures which
-I have cited as illustrating the great utility of these institutions;
-and, as regards their pecuniary success, it is impossible
-to furnish you with better testimony than is comprised
-in the fact, that the Guardians of the Poor in a great
-metropolitan parish<a id="FNanchor26"></a><a href="#Footnote26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> have recently, out of the poor-rates,
-founded an institution of this nature. They have become
-witnesses to the financial economy of that sanitary and
-social boon. In their establishment, which is not only self-supporting,
-but amply remunerative, the poor are enabled
-to have baths at an expense of a penny for a cold bath, and
-twopence for a warm bath; and the women are enabled to
-do their washing, ironing, and drying, with an unlimited<span class="pagenum" id="Page52">[52]</span>
-water-supply, and with other arrangements of most admirable
-completeness, at an expense of only twopence for the first
-two hours, during which they occupy the separate chambers
-allotted to them. A very considerable proportion of the
-expense is covered by the receipts for baths given at the
-higher price of sixpence, and with some additional luxuries,
-to persons of a higher grade in society than those who use
-the ordinary baths; the former, though used by a different
-class of persons, being sought with almost as much avidity
-as the latter.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote26"><a href="#FNanchor26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> St. Martin&#8217;s in the Fields.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>In the sanitary point of view, I probably need not insist
-much on the advantages which these establishments have
-conferred. You will hardly doubt how good and wholesome
-a thing it has been for so many thousands to have
-had the means of cleanliness; who, in the absence of such
-facilities, must often have carried about their persons accumulations
-that one sickens to think of; and whose narrow,
-crowded chambers must constantly have steamed with
-wash-tubs, and been hung round with reeking clothes.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">Next, very briefly, let me allude to what has been done
-in respect of the habitations of the poor; first, by the
-Society for the Improvement of the Condition of the
-Labouring Classes, under the patronage of their Majesties
-the Queen and the Queen Dowager, with the Prince Albert
-for its President, and Lord Ashley for its Chairman;
-secondly, by the Metropolitan Association for Improving
-the Dwellings of the Industrious Classes, under the Chairmanship
-of Sir Ralph Howard, and with a committee which,
-like that of the former society, includes many of the best<span class="pagenum" id="Page53">[53]</span>
-and wisest, as well as the highest persons of the country.
-Under the influence of these societies the following experiments
-have been <span class="nowrap">made:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>In the Old Pancras-road a very large building has been
-erected, to accommodate 110 families separately and distinctly,
-in sets of two and three rooms each. Each set of
-rooms has its own boiler, range, oven, and coalbox; its
-separate scullery, in which are sink, cistern, and dust-shaft;
-its own watercloset, its own ample supply of water, and
-many other conveniences. The rents vary from 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> to
-5<i>s.</i> per week for a set of two rooms; and from 4<i>s.</i> 9<i>d.</i> to
-6<i>s.</i> 3<i>d.</i> for a set of three rooms. The founders of this
-establishment have recently purchased land at the end of
-Spicer-street, Spitalfields, on which to erect a lodging-house
-for 300 single men, and also houses for families.</p>
-
-<p>In the Lower-road, Pentonville, houses of three different
-classes have been built, on the same general principle of
-furnishing every convenience and sanitary requisite. They
-accommodate, on the whole, 23 families and 30 single
-women&mdash;widows, or of advanced age. The entire houses
-for families, with all the above-mentioned conveniences, are
-at a rent of 6<i>s.</i>, having a good-sized living room, two bedrooms,
-with additional enclosed recesses for children&#8217;s beds,
-a yard at the back of the house, and the joint use of
-a wash-house and drying yard. A floor of two rooms is
-rented at 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>, and a single room by a single person at
-1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p>In George-street, St. Giles&#8217;s, a model lodging-house has
-been established, affording accommodation to 104 single
-men, and combining everything essential to such an establishment.<span class="pagenum" id="Page54">[54]</span>
-The ventilation and drainage have been carefully
-attended to; an ample supply of water is provided, gas extends
-through the house, the dormitories are arranged so as
-to keep their inmates private from each other; there are
-washing-closets fitted up with every requisite for cleanliness;
-there is a bath-room supplied with hot and cold water; there
-are a kitchen and wash-house furnished with all appropriate
-utensils, a pantry-hatch, with separate, ventilated, and
-secure compartments for the food of each inmate; in the
-pay-office is a small well-selected library, for the service of
-the lodgers, and the use of a spacious coffee-room is likewise
-for their common convenience. Their pay is 4<i>d.</i> per
-night, or 2<i>s.</i> a week&mdash;an amount little above the ordinary
-rent paid for the most miserable accommodation in a
-trampers&#8217; lodging-house.</p>
-
-<p>At 76, Hatton-garden, a lodging-house for 57 single
-women has recently been opened, consisting of three floors
-of dormitories, divided into separate compartments, and a
-basement fitted up with kitchen, washhouse, bath, pantry,
-safes, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>In Charles-street, Drury-lane, three tenements, originally
-separate, have been converted into a single lodging-house
-for 82 single men, on the same general plan and at the same
-rent as that in George-street, St. Giles&#8217;s.</p>
-
-<p>All the lodging-houses are furnished; and the inmates
-are supplied with utensils for their food and other purposes,
-which must be returned, or made good, at their leaving.</p>
-
-<p>In all these lodging-houses rules exist for the purpose of
-insuring cleanliness, sobriety, carefulness, and general propriety
-of conduct; any infraction of which subjects the<span class="pagenum" id="Page55">[55]</span>
-offender to immediate expulsion. For the sake of those
-who choose to avail themselves of the opportunity, Scripture
-readings are appointed to take place in the common room
-every evening at 9 o&#8217;clock; and copies of the Scriptures,
-with other well-chosen books, are left in charge of the
-superintendent for distribution among the lodgers, in the
-hope that they may thus be induced to occupy their leisure
-to advantage.</p>
-
-<p>In the construction of all these establishments, equally,
-the greatest pains have been taken to bring sanitary science
-to bear on the comfort, and convenience, and health of the
-inmates. Ventilation, drainage, facilities for decency and
-for cleanliness, have in every instance been made the leading
-considerations of the architect.<a id="FNanchor27"></a><a href="#Footnote27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote27"><a href="#FNanchor27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> The advantages of these admirable institutions may now be
-spoken of from longer experience. In a very remarkable pamphlet
-just published by Dr. Southwood Smith, <i>On the Results of Sanitary
-Improvement</i>, it is recorded that there has been no case of typhus
-fever in any one of the model-dwellings since they were first opened,
-and that their exemption from cholera has been as complete as from
-typhus. In the Metropolitan Buildings, during three years, the
-average annual mortality has been only 1&middot;36 per cent. For a lower
-class of population, very similar advantages have been procured by
-the regulations of the Common Lodging-House Act. Dr. Smith
-mentions that in 1308 regulated metropolitan lodging-houses (numbering
-at least 25,000 lodgers) there had not occurred a single case
-of fever during the quarter ending the 23rd of October; yet, before
-they were under regulation, twenty cases of fever have been received
-into the London Fever Hospital from some one single house
-in the course of a few weeks.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">In regard of these model houses and model lodgings, it
-would, I think, be a great error to estimate their benefit as<span class="pagenum" id="Page56">[56]</span>
-merely relative to the number of persons at any one time
-inmates of them. No doubt it is a great advantage that
-they furnish, at the ordinary prices of the day, or at a still
-lower price, so excellent accommodation to several hundreds
-of persons; and it is a still greater good (particularly in
-regard of those established for single men and single
-women) that they drill their inmates into decent and orderly
-habits, and accustom them to a high standard of household-accommodation,
-which will probably influence their subsequent
-married lives in the same desirable direction. But,
-indirectly, their utility has a far wider scope. They stand
-in bright contrast to the dark features of filth and unwholesomeness
-which environ them; they familiarise the poorest
-classes generally with all the practical advantages of cleanliness;
-they show that dirt is not inevitable; they therefore
-create and foster among the humblest members of
-society, a laudable discontent with defective sanitary arrangements;
-and they establish a strong public opinion,
-grounded on experience, in favour of those conditions of
-cleanliness and comfort, which determine the maintenance
-of health.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">That all the great results of sanitary science can be
-applied in their utmost perfectness to the dwellings of the
-poor, for the payment of a rent often below, and never
-above, the average given for some miserable doghole, that
-poisons its inhabitants, is a truth of immense importance,
-deserving the widest dissemination, and pregnant with the
-most hopeful promise. Such advantages spring from and
-illustrate the economical application of the associative principle;<span class="pagenum" id="Page57">[57]</span>
-they cannot be obtained otherwise than by the application
-of capital, in such an amount as lies only within the
-compass of wealthy corporations, or is reached by the
-voluntary combination of several private purses. While the
-labouring classes are abundantly able to maintain these
-institutions when established, and to render them amply
-remunerative to those whose capital has first founded them,
-it is obvious that no power of association lying within their
-means can suffice to originate such work.</p>
-
-<p>The task of initiation rests with others. And therefore it
-is, gentlemen, that on this occasion I have been induced to
-bring under your notice, as a most important part of my
-subject, the outline of what has been done in the matter
-of Model Dwellings and Public Baths and Washhouses.
-Feeling assured that establishments of this nature are of
-infinite utility in the several respects I have enumerated;
-feeling assured that, beyond their immediate operation on
-the health of inmates and users, they also tend, by their
-indirect educational influence, to improve the social habits,
-to promote the civilization, to elevate the general tone and
-character of the labouring classes, I earnestly recommend
-them to your attention; hoping that you may either yourselves
-confer on the poor population of the City the advantage
-of your patronage and succour in this respect, or else
-may transfer the matter to the jurisdiction of the Common
-Council, with all the influence and authority in its favour
-which your recommendation would insure.</p>
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page58">[58]</span></p>
-
-<h3>SUGGESTIONS FOR SANITARY ORGANISATION
-IN THE CITY.</h3>
-
-<p>Having now enumerated the sanitary evils of the City,
-and the remedies which appear to my mind most appropriate
-for their removal, it becomes desirable that, in concluding,
-I should point out to you the organisation which seems
-necessary to be adopted during the gradual transition of the
-City from its present to a healthier state;&mdash;an organisation
-which may render this transitional period as short as possible,
-and may most effectually contribute to mitigate, for
-the time, the pressure of such evils as cannot immediately
-be removed.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">The object of this organisation lies in a word; Inspection&mdash;gentlemen,
-inspection of the most constant, most searching,
-most intelligent, and most trustworthy kind, is that in
-which the provisional management of our sanitary affairs
-must essentially consist.</p>
-
-<p>I presume I may take for granted that, in some form or
-other, a <i>Committee of Health</i> will exist, either as a Committee
-of the Court of Common Council, or as one of this
-Hon. Court. I may, perhaps, further assume that such a
-Committee will have authority to entertain all subjects
-relative to the sanitary improvement of the City, and to
-make thereon such recommendations as shall seem fit to<span class="pagenum" id="Page59">[59]</span>
-them; and, further, that they will make it their business to
-receive periodical intelligence, as complete as possible, on
-all variations in the public health, and on all circumstances
-likely to affect it.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">In order that any Committee, acting for sanitary purposes
-within the City, shall have a reasonable chance of
-success in its endeavours for the public good, the following
-means of information will be necessary for its <span class="nowrap">use:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">1. That an account should be kept, corrected year by
-year, of every house within the City; as to the area of
-building, the number of floors, rooms, and windows; as to
-its ventilation; as to its drainage, water-supply, and other
-facilities for cleanliness; as to its method of occupation,
-and number of inhabitants:</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">2. That from this account there should be made out, at
-least twice yearly, a list of houses and streets remaining in
-an objectionable sanitary state; and a list, also, of such as
-may have been remedied to the satisfaction of the Committee
-since the formation of their last preceding list:</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">3. That, while trades injurious to health or offensive to
-their neighbourhood are suffered to continue within the
-City, there should be given periodical reports on the condition
-of such establishments, to the end that they may be
-so maintained as to be least detrimental to the public
-health:</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">4. That a record of every death registered as occurring<span class="pagenum" id="Page60">[60]</span>
-in the population of the City should lie before the Committee;
-and</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">5. I consider it quite indispensable, that they should
-likewise receive the largest and most accurate returns which
-can be procured of all sickness occurring among the poorer
-classes; and (particularly in respect of all epidemic, endemic,
-and infectious disorders) that the medical practitioner
-who communicates the fact of illness, should likewise
-report the existence of any local causes, or other influences
-of general operation, which have tended to produce, or are
-tending to continue, such illness.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">On the subject of returns of the nature last referred to, I
-have already, on various occasions, submitted my opinion
-to the judgment of your Hon. Court. A year ago, in the
-first Report which I had the honour to make here, and in
-various discussions which during some months followed the
-reception of that Report, I stated how necessary I deemed
-such returns, for the purpose of guiding and justifying the
-various recommendations which it would become my duty
-to lay before you. The period which has since elapsed,
-including its three months of pestilence, has furnished me
-with the strongest confirmation of those views. As I formerly
-stated by anticipation, so now I repeat from experience,
-that nothing deserving the name of sanitary administration
-can exist in the City, without accurate periodical
-intelligence of all such sickness (at least) as comes under
-parochial treatment; or without such reports on the local
-sanitary conditions, and on other causes of disease, as were
-desired to accompany that intelligence.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page61">[61]</span></p>
-
-<p>When the matter was previously under your consideration,
-it was argued that the reception of such intelligence
-formed no part of your functions as a Commission for
-draining, lighting, paving, and cleansing the City of London;
-that all sanitary matters, beyond these and the like, were
-foreign to your proper sphere of operation; and that your
-funds, raised by rates from the citizens of London, could
-not with propriety be applied to meet the expenses of such
-an arrangement. On this question of jurisdiction and
-finance I shall, of course, hazard no opinion. I would
-simply beg to repeat, with regard to so much of the matter
-as lies within my own professional province, that the intelligence
-in question is absolutely necessary for the present
-progress of sanitary measures within the City; that no
-Health-Committee can exist for a month without it; nor
-can any officer, having proper respect for his character, consent
-to be considered responsible for the health of a population,
-whose illnesses he learns only from their posthumous
-record in the death-register.</p>
-
-<p>During the recent prevalence of cholera, the Health-Committee
-of the Common Council complied for the time
-with my recommendation, and established a system of daily
-reports, rendered still more serviceable by free personal intercourse
-between myself and the several gentlemen having
-medical charge of the three City unions. What needed to
-be daily during a period of pestilence, might fitly become a
-weekly communication at all other times. I have already
-reported to the Health-Committee, and I beg to reiterate
-here, that the advantages derived from that system of communication
-were such as could have been attained in no
-other way.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page62">[62]</span></p>
-
-<p>I may remind you that each of the gentlemen referred to,
-serving under the Poor Law, works within a certain small
-and definite district; that he is therefore peculiarly competent
-to speak on the state of the population in that district,
-on their habits and necessities, on their customary condition
-of health, and on their liability to epidemic disease; and
-that the total staff of these officers, taken collectively, representing
-the medical practice of the whole city, can
-supply exactly that kind of detailed and precise information
-which is most serviceable to your Officer of Health, in
-guiding him to those more general and comprehensive conclusions
-which it is his business to lay before you. These
-gentlemen are the habitual medical attendants of the poorer
-classes; day by day, in the unobtrusive beneficence of their
-calling, they pass from house to house, and from court to
-court&mdash;the constant recipients of complaint, or the constant
-observers of ground of complaint&mdash;amid all that destitute
-population on whose condition you require to be informed.
-They are in the constant presence of the pestilences which
-reign in our worst localities; they are the chief treaters of
-endemic disease within the City&mdash;of that disease which, by
-its proportion, measures the success of sanitary changes, or
-indicates their failure; and it has been the professional
-education of these gentlemen, as it is their business, to trace
-such effects to their causes. Their reports would be the
-authenticated statements of experienced medical practitioners,
-familiarly conversant with their several respective
-localities.</p>
-
-<p>If it were your wish and object, with utter indifference to
-expense, to organise the best scheme for procuring to yourselves
-from time to time a succession of accurate and trustworthy<span class="pagenum" id="Page63">[63]</span>
-reports on the state of health, and condition of
-dwellings, in the several districts of the City;&mdash;if you were
-willing to engage a large number of non-medical persons
-who should give their whole time to the duty of exploring
-and reporting on that state, I am persuaded that this expensive
-and cumbrous proceeding would have a smaller
-measure of success than that which I submit to you, and
-which consists essentially in availing yourselves of the
-local knowledge and daily observations of a staff of officers,
-already organised and in active occupation for the very
-purposes in question.</p>
-
-<p>That such intelligence, embracing weekly returns from
-the eleven parochial surgeons of the City of London, and
-including their comments on the local causes of prevailing
-disease, would involve an annual expenditure of money,<a id="FNanchor28"></a><a href="#Footnote28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a>&mdash;and
-that this expenditure, sooner or later, and in some
-form or other, would be derived from the rate-paying portion
-of the community, are facts which cannot be doubted. But
-that the expenditure would be a judicious one; that it is
-indispensable to the effective working of any Health-Committee,
-or any Health-Officer within the City; that it would
-be the first step to the mitigation of the disorders reported
-on; that it would disclose evils which else must escape
-recognition and remedy; that in a few years it would
-render our general mortality of 3 per cent. on the entire
-population of the City a matter of history and a warning,
-instead of its being, as now, a present and awful reality;<span class="pagenum" id="Page64">[64]</span>
-that in lessening sickness and death, it would stay a
-large source of pauperism, would diminish the number
-of occasional and habitual claimants of Union relief, and
-would become a measure of real and considerable economy;&mdash;these
-are points on which, with the utmost sense
-of official responsibility, I beg to record my deliberate
-conviction.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote28"><a href="#FNanchor28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a>
-When the matter was last under consideration of the Commissioners,
-it appeared that the expense of such an arrangement would
-be about &pound;250 annually.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Accordingly, I have to recommend that any Committee,
-which may undertake the administration of sanitary affairs
-for the City, shall be furnished as completely as possible
-with information of the nature I have specified.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">Another element to which I think it necessary to advert,
-in connexion with a future sanitary organisation for the
-City, is this,&mdash;that some permanent arrangement should be
-made, by which the maintenance of exterior and interior
-cleanliness, the enforcement of scavengers&#8217; duties, the
-suppression of nuisances, and the like, should be brought
-under habitual and systematic surveillance; one, by which all
-breaches of your present or future sanitary regulations may
-be quickly detected, and may be visited with their appropriate
-penalties as speedily and as certainly as possible. I am
-induced the rather to bring this subject before you, as complaints
-of scavengers&#8217; duties being neglected have reached
-me at every turn. I am informed that it is usual for them
-to refuse to remove dirt and rubbish from houses, according
-to the terms of their contract, except on the tenants&#8217; payment
-of an additional gratuity; and it must be obvious to
-your Hon. Court that the arrangements which you have
-made by contract for this purpose are virtually defeated, as
-regards the poorer population, when the removal of refuse-matter<span class="pagenum" id="Page65">[65]</span>
-is made contingent on the gift of beer-money by
-those whose means are so restricted.</p>
-
-<p>It is in respect of matters of this sort, and of such only,
-that I think the services of the Police-Force might usefully
-be employed. Their want of special education, and their
-employment in other duties, are circumstances which appear
-to me quite conclusive for objecting to their utilisation as
-sanitary reporters. But while I entertain the opinion that
-their employment in the latter direction would be both
-fruitless and inconvenient, I would submit that their numbers
-and their diffusion through the City qualify them well
-to act against all causers of nuisance, as they act against
-other offenders, both detectively and preventively; and I
-would venture to repeat a suggestion, which I made in
-January last, &#8216;that the police should consider it part of
-their duty, to report on every nuisance within their knowledge,
-and on every infraction of such sanitary rules as
-this Court may establish.&#8217;</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Here, Gentlemen, terminates the list of subjects which,
-on this occasion, I have thought it my duty to bring before
-you. Long as the enumeration may have appeared, I can
-assure you that my present Report bears a small proportion,
-in point of dimensions, to the very large and very
-various mass of materials on which it is founded. In
-compressing it within the narrowest limits consistent with
-intelligibility, and in excluding from it nearly all details on
-the matters treated of, I have consulted the convenience of<span class="pagenum" id="Page66">[66]</span>
-your Hon. Court, notwithstanding the greater labour and
-difficulty of execution which belong to the plan I have
-adopted. At any time, in Court or in Committee, when
-you may wish to pursue the subject, I shall be ready to
-enter at far greater length, and with more elaborate minuteness,
-on any of those subjects which, at the present opportunity,
-I have only sketched for your general information.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">In the matters which I have enumerated, some lie distinctly
-within your province, as assigned by the Act of
-Parliament; while others may be thought to lie, just as
-distinctly, without that province. In affairs strictly under
-your jurisdiction, and within the present scope of the law,
-there remains very much to achieve. The complete enforcement
-of house-drainage, till every house washes itself into
-the sewer; the more general distribution of water, till every
-individual within the City has an abundant supply within
-his immediate reach; the effective preservation of public
-cleanliness; the construction and maintenance of sewerage,
-paving, lighting, for all the streets, courts and passages of
-this great City;&mdash;these constitute an immense amount of
-responsibility and labour. Those other objects to which I
-have referred, are partly such as cannot be accomplished
-without the further interference of the Legislature. It is a
-point solely for the discretion of your Hon. Court to determine,
-how far you may be willing to enlarge the sphere of
-your sanitary operations, and to undertake the difficulties
-of a new campaign.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">To your Officer of Health the Act of Parliament allows
-no such option. &#8216;Whereas the health of the population,<span class="pagenum" id="Page67">[67]</span>
-especially of the poorer classes, is frequently injured by the
-prevalence of epidemical and other disorders,&#8217; therefore it is
-appointed for his duty that he shall report on whatsoever
-&#8216;injuriously affects the health of the inhabitants of the
-City,&#8217; and that he shall &#8216;point out the most efficacious
-mode of checking or preventing the spread of contagious or
-other epidemic disease.&#8217; Actuated by obligation of the duty
-thus expressed in your Act of Parliament, after full reflection
-on all that those expressions imply, and with the
-deepest sense of the responsibility belonging to one who is
-honoured with the task of advising the first Corporation of
-the country in respect of its sanitary proceedings, I have
-been compelled, in the course of my present Report, to
-trench upon many subjects which do not customarily fall
-under your consideration, and which (as I have stated) may
-by some be considered as utterly foreign to your jurisdiction
-and province.</p>
-
-<p>It rests with your Hon. Court to determine what course
-you will adopt in respect of such departments of the great
-sanitary scheme;&mdash;whether you will retain them under your
-consideration, and will assume the responsibility of dealing
-with them in proportion to their magnitude and importance,
-or will transfer them to the Court of Common Council for
-the less restricted deliberation of that body.</p>
-
-<p>Let me once more declare my profound conviction of
-their importance to the health and welfare of the City.</p>
-
-<p>To provide an inoffensive outfall for the sewerage of our
-vast population; to render the river a source of unqualified
-advantage; to give wide extension and sounder principles
-to the system of water-supply; to suppress all trades and
-occupations which taint the atmosphere with materials of<span class="pagenum" id="Page68">[68]</span>
-organic decomposition; to abate the nuisance of smoke; to
-provide the facilities for extramural interment, and to procure
-the prohibition of all further burial amidst our living;
-to improve the domestic arrangements of the poor, and
-to insure for them an adequate supervision; to establish
-public baths and laundries, which may offer the utmost
-facilities and inducement for the maintenance of personal
-cleanliness; to hinder the occupation of houses which breed
-pestilence; to destroy such as are irremediably hostile to
-health, and to disperse the stifled population of courts and
-alleys; to substitute for such slums as we hope to depopulate
-and destroy, but in open streets and with perfect ventilation,
-houses and lodgings, which not only shall offer to the
-labouring classes every convenience essential to health and
-decency and comfort, but shall likewise serve as models of
-household economy for the whole district in which they
-stand;&mdash;these, Gentlemen, are the aims, briefly recapitulated,
-for the sake of which I have been obliged, as it were
-casually in my Report, to touch on many subjects perhaps
-foreign to your jurisdiction, but lying at least on the confines
-of your province, and remaining with you now either
-to retain or to transfer.<a id="FNanchor29"></a><a href="#Footnote29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote29"><a href="#FNanchor29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a>
-Perhaps, to make these passages intelligible, the reader should
-be apprised that the business of the Corporation is considered in a
-great variety of Committees, which thus have their several and particular
-provinces. Of the many matters adverted to, as foreign to
-the ordinary functions of the Commission of Sewers, some might
-belong to the <i>City-Lands</i> Committee, some to the <i>Improvement</i>, some
-to the <i>Finance</i>, some to the <i>Navigation</i>, some to the <i>Markets</i> Committee,
-and so on. Obviously it would have been out of my place to
-touch on these details of jurisdiction; and I therefore urged only
-the essentially <i>municipal</i> character of the several improvements I
-advocated.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">That the subject of sanitary improvement in its widest
-scope, and with all that even incidentally relates to it, is
-one which, according to the ancient constitution of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page69">[69]</span>
-City, rightfully belongs to the authorities of the Corporation,
-in some one or other of their municipal relations&mdash;that
-it belongs to them equally as their privilege and their
-duty, cannot for a moment be questioned. And if your
-Hon. Court should determine on a negative opinion as
-regards yourselves, and should decide on transferring these
-matters to the Common Council, I venture to hope that
-your influence may accompany them in their course, and
-may procure for them the consideration they deserve.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">Gentlemen, the history of the City of London is full of
-great examples of public service. It records many a
-generous struggle for the Country and for the Constitution;
-it records a noble patronage of arts and letters; it records
-imperial magnificence and Christian liberality; but never,
-within the scope of its annals, has the Corporation had so
-grand an opportunity as now for the achievement of an
-unlimited good. Because of the City&#8217;s illustrious history,
-and because of the vast wealth and power which have
-enabled it so often to undertake the largest measures of
-public utility and patriotism,&mdash;therefore it is, that the
-expectations of the country may well be fixed on the City
-of London in regard of this, the distinguishing movement
-of modern times&mdash;the movement to improve the social
-condition, and to prolong the lives of the poor.</p>
-
-<p>Those who are familiar with the many abiding monuments<span class="pagenum" id="Page70">[70]</span>
-of your civic munificence and splendor, may well
-expect that, in approaching this all-important question, the
-counsels of the City will be swayed by high and generous
-considerations.</p>
-
-<p>In the great objects which sanitary science proposes to
-itself,&mdash;in the immense amelioration which it proffers to the
-physical, to the social, and indirectly to the moral condition
-of an immense majority of our fellow-creatures, it transcends
-the importance of all other sciences, and in its beneficent
-operation seems most nearly to embody the spirit and to
-fulfil the intentions of practical Christianity.</p>
-
-<p>Ignorant men may sneer at its pretensions; weak and
-timorous men may hesitate to commit themselves to its
-principles, so large in their application; selfish men may
-shrink from the labour of change, which its recognition
-must entail; wicked men may turn indifferently from considering
-that which concerns the health and happiness of
-millions of their fellow-creatures. To such men an appeal
-would indeed be useless. But, to the Corporation of the
-City of London&mdash;whether as assembled in its entire Parliament,
-or as represented within the confines of this Court&mdash;to
-the Corporation which, on so many occasions, has
-attained patriotic ends by great expenditure and sacrifice;
-to men earnest, strong-minded, and practical, having
-much consideration for their fellow-creatures, and having
-little consideration for personal toil or municipal expense,
-so only that they may fulfil a great Christian duty, and
-may confirm the gratitude with which history records their
-frequent services to our kind;&mdash;to such a Corporation, and
-to such men, the Country looks for the perfection of a<span class="pagenum" id="Page71">[71]</span>
-sanitary scheme which shall serve as model and example to
-other municipal bodies undertaking the same responsibility;
-and to such a Corporation and to such men do I, likewise,
-your Officer of Health, respectfully and confidently address
-a well-founded appeal.</p>
-
-<div class="reportsig">
-
-<p class="center highline3">I have the honour,<br />
-&amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div><!--reportsig-->
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page72">[72]</span></p>
-
-<h2>FURTHER REMARKS ON WATER-SUPPLY.</h2>
-
-<p class="reportaddress">ADDRESSED TO THE HEALTH-COMMITTEE OF THE HON. THE COMMISSIONERS OF
-SEWERS OF THE CITY OF LONDON, PURSUANT TO A <span class="nowrap">REFERENCE&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore1">&#8220;<i>What would be a sufficient supply of water to the houses and premises
-within the City, and the best principle upon which to effect such supply?</i>&#8221;</p>
-
-<p class="reportdate"><i>February 21, 1850.</i></p>
-
-<p class="reportsalutation"><span class="smcap">Gentlemen</span>,</p>
-
-<p><span class="padl4">Such</span> further observations on the subject of &#8216;Water-Supply
-to the City&#8217; as you have desired me to lay before you, I have now
-the honor to submit, in as condensed a form as possible.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">First, I may remind you, that in my report of last November,
-which still remains under your consideration, I stated the following
-&#8216;as the chief conditions in respect of Water-Supply, which peremptorily
-require to be fulfilled.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;1. That every house should be separately supplied with water;
-and that, where the house is a lodging-house, or where the several
-floors are let as separate tenements, the supply of water should
-extend to each inhabited floor.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;2. That every privy should have a supply of water, applicable as
-often as it may be required, and sufficient in volume to effect at each
-application a thorough flushing and purification of the discharge-pipe
-of the privy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;3. That in every court, at the point remotest from the sewer-grating,
-there should be a stand-cock for the cleansing of the court;
-and</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;4. That at all these points there should always and uninterruptedly
-be a sufficiency of water to fulfil all reasonable requirements
-of the population.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>In re-organising the system of water-supply there are some other
-purposes, of a more public nature than these, which would likewise
-claim your attention: such as (1) an improved arrangement for meeting<span class="pagenum" id="Page73">[73]</span>
-all accidents and emergencies of fire; (2) an efficient distribution
-of water to all common urinals and privies; (3) a sufficiency of
-supply for any public baths and wash-houses, which may be hereafter
-erected; and (4) an ample surplus to be at the disposal of the
-Commission for the cleansing of streets and sewers.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">In order that those domestic purposes, which I first enumerated,
-should be adequately fulfilled, the supply of water ought, practically
-speaking, to be without limit to any individual consumer. It is the
-tendency of the system of constant supply, and constitutes a distinguishing
-advantage of that system, that it fulfils this important
-condition without any increase, or perhaps rather with a diminution,
-of the total draught of water for a large population.</p>
-
-<p>The average of requirement (estimated from the consumption of
-large communities) would probably be about 12 gallons per person
-per diem; making an amount, for the total population of the City,
-of about 1<sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>2</sub> million gallons per diem. Assuming this estimate to be
-correct, a point which I would beg you to observe is the following:
-that, although there might be very little fluctuation in the <i>total
-quantity consumed</i>, and although it might remain constant at the
-figure I have given, yet in the items of individual consumption,
-making up this gross amount, there would be almost infinite varieties.
-One family would habitually consume twice as much water as
-another family of the same size: one family would consume six
-gallons per person on five days of the week, and would require all
-its remaining quota on the other two days; and so forth. These
-differences and caprices of individual requirement do not sensibly
-affect the total quantity consumed in a given week by a population
-of 130,000 persons; one consuming more, another less, the first
-counterbalances the last in forming the materials for a fair personal
-average; and a source of supply calculated from such an
-average for a large population would, practically speaking, be unlimited
-to each individual consumer, provided only that it were so
-distributed, that each consumer could draw from the common stock
-at his own time and according to his own necessity. This advantage
-is obviously lost under the present system of intermittent
-supply, which compels a larger total distribution than would else be
-requisite, entails the expensive and unwholesome necessity for
-storage, and yet is notoriously fraught with the inconveniences of a
-restricted source, or a defective supply.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page74">[74]</span></p>
-
-<p>I have no sufficient data for judging with precision what quantity
-of water might be required to fulfil all those public purposes of
-cleanliness and of protection from fire, to which I have adverted.
-The supply would require to be <i>practically</i> inexhaustible; but the
-consumption, on an average of the four seasons, would probably lie
-considerably within half a million of gallons per diem.</p>
-
-<p>When the distribution of water is brought into its proper relations
-with the drainage of the City&mdash;that is, when the arrangements of
-domestic drainage are completed, in conformity with the intentions
-of the Act of Parliament, and when all the water, distributed for
-private consumption, is made to traverse and to cleanse all the
-channels of house-drainage, it is probable that a smaller quantity of
-water than is now consumed will suffice for the flushing of sewers,
-and for other so-called sanitary purposes.</p>
-
-<p>The quantity at present supplied to the City by its two Water-Companies
-is perhaps much in excess of the two millions of gallons
-per diem, which I have estimated as a sufficiency for our population;
-but the distribution is so unequal, and the waste of the intermittent
-system so incalculably great, that the effect produced on the population
-is, to a very great extent, that of scarcity.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">With regard to the <i>principle of supply</i> on which I have been
-desired to report, it seems certain to my mind, from such evidence
-as I can collect on the subject, that the system of continuous supply
-at high-pressure promises advantages which can never be realized
-under the present system of intermittent supply. There are many
-matters connected with the comparison of these two systems, which
-lie beyond my sphere of professional observation, and on which I
-would not be bold enough to offer any opinion to your Committee.
-The sanitary points, on which alone I would venture to insist, as
-benefits in the system of continuous supply, are&mdash;first, the practical
-inexhaustibility of the source, and secondly, the absence of necessity
-for storage. If these benefits are attainable, and especially if (as
-alleged) they can be obtained at a material economy of expenditure,
-as compared with the present system, there can be little doubt as to
-which should obtain the preference.</p>
-
-<p>If your Committee should wish, it would be easy to prepare for
-your examination a digested summary of such scientific evidence as
-has been given on these points: or it might be expedient, if such
-a course would be more satisfactory to you, that some person in your
-confidence should undertake to visit and inspect one or more of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page75">[75]</span>
-towns where the system of continuous supply is in operation, and
-where direct information can be gathered on the very important particulars
-of its practical efficiency and success. But, at all events,
-whether your Committee should wish or should not wish this personal
-investigation to be undertaken, I would suggest, that it might
-be satisfactory to you and serviceable to the inquiry in which you
-are engaged, if you would procure a report from some eminent
-hydraulic engineer, practically conversant with the system of continuous
-supply, who might furnish you with conclusive testimony as
-to the admissibility of this system within the City, and as to the
-advantages and disadvantages, sanitary and economical, which might
-attend its adoption here, as compared with that which has hitherto
-prevailed.</p>
-
-<p>It appears to me that at the present time the system of continuous
-supply might, provisionally, receive a fair trial in the City, in respect
-of some of those poorer habitations, which are now for the first time
-about to be supplied with water and drainage. The Water-Companies
-would probably not object, if desired by the Commission, to
-supply a hundred houses, experimentally, with constant pressure
-from their mains. The Commission might select for its experiment
-some of those courts about Cripplegate or Bishopsgate, where the
-drainage, as well as the water-supply, requires to be constructed
-anew: some, where there have hitherto been undrained cesspools,
-and where the water-supply has been from a stand-cock. Should
-this suggestion be found feasible, I would recommend that the
-details of its execution should be carried out under the joint superintendence
-of your Surveyor and myself, and that we should afterwards
-report to you its results, as material for guiding your decision
-with regard to the general supply of the City.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Quick, Engineer to the Southwark Water-Works, in a letter
-which is appended to Sir William Clay&#8217;s pamphlet, has recently suggested
-various arrangements for an uninterrupted supply, and these
-have no doubt been under your Surveyor&#8217;s consideration. I may
-add, too, that there are at present upwards of 40 houses within the
-City constantly supplied from the mains of the East London Water-Works;
-but as these are not houses of the poorest description, it is
-possible that they may not constitute so satisfactory a proof of the
-feasibility of the constant supply, or so complete an illustration of
-the detailed arrangements for its employment, as could be given by
-the experimental construction I have suggested.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page76">[76]</span></p>
-
-<p>While the supply remains, as at present, an interrupted one for
-the City generally, I would recommend that the Commission should
-procure from the Water-Companies an arrangement for the delivery
-to occur, under no circumstances, less than daily; and that Sunday
-should form no exception to this arrangement. Many tenants of
-the Water Companies at present receive their supply only on alternate
-days, Sunday counting as a <i>dies non</i>, so that a necessity is
-entailed in such cases for a three days&#8217; storage of water.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">Whether the <i>quality</i> of water supplied to the City by the existing
-Companies is such as it ought to be, or whether some purer source of
-supply may be found; whether their neglect of filtration, notwithstanding
-the important weight of testimony given in its favor, be not
-a serious dereliction of their duty to the public; whether the sanitary
-interests of the consumers of this first necessary of life can be properly
-protected, while at variance with those of the great trading
-companies which hold a virtual monopoly of the supply; whether it
-would not be an immense boon to the Citizens of London, that the
-control of the water-supply should be vested in the same jurisdiction
-as the drainage, paving, and sanitary cleansing of the district; are
-questions which have forced themselves closely on my attention while
-considering the sanitary affairs of the City, and on which I hope
-shortly to lay some special observations before this Committee or
-before the Court.</p>
-
-<p>I defer dwelling on these subjects at present, partly because they
-were not mentioned in your Committee&#8217;s specific reference; partly
-because I think it desirable to wait for the issue of the experiment
-which I have suggested with regard to the competing system of
-supply; and partly because I have reason to know that at the present
-moment a very extensive series of chemical investigations is
-proceeding under orders of the Government, with a view to ascertain
-the purest possible sources for the water-supply of the metropolis.
-The results of this inquiry, so far as they have transpired,
-appear to me so infinitely important in their relation to some of the
-questions just alluded to, that I think it expedient under the circumstances
-to wait for such new light as may accrue to our knowledge
-from the completion of these researches, before I touch the chemical
-division of the subject.</p>
-
-<div class="reportsig">
-
-<p class="center highline2">I have, &amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div><!--reportsig-->
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page77">[77]</span></p>
-
-<h2>SECOND ANNUAL REPORT.</h2>
-
-<p class="reportaddress">TO THE HON. THE COMMISSIONERS OF SEWERS OF THE CITY
-OF LONDON.</p>
-
-<p class="reportdate"><i>November 26th, 1850.</i></p>
-
-<p class="reportsalutation"><span class="smcap">Gentlemen</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="chapstart"><span class="startword">In</span> obedience to that clause in your Act of Parliament
-under which my office is constituted, and which enjoins on
-your Officer of Health that he shall &#8216;report periodically
-upon the Sanitary condition of the City,&#8217; I now submit
-to your Hon. Court my annual statement on this subject.</p>
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<h3>I. <span class="smcap">Mortality of the City of London.</span></h3>
-
-<p>During the fifty-two weeks, dated from September 30th,
-1849, to September 28th, 1850, there died of the population
-under your charge 2752 persons. The rate of mortality,
-estimated from these <i>data</i>, for a population<a id="FNanchor30"></a><a href="#Footnote30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> of 125,500,
-would indicate somewhat less than twenty-two deaths (21&middot;92)
-out of every thousand living persons.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote30"><a href="#FNanchor30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> With the required correction for increase of population, the
-death-rate was probably about 21&middot;25 <i>per</i> 1000.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Last year it was my painful duty to record the ravages of
-pestilence, then indeed hardly terminated, under the pressure
-of which our general death-rate had arisen to the alarming<span class="pagenum" id="Page78">[78]</span>
-height of thirty in the thousand. On this present occasion,
-I have the happier task of laying before you the evidences
-of a mortality lessened considerably below its habitual
-average; and I rejoice in congratulating your Hon.
-Court on the testimony thus borne to the success of your
-sanitary exertions. For although, without question, some
-large share of this striking improvement may have depended
-on circumstances beyond our cognizance or control; although
-it may in part be but an instance of that tendency to periodical
-alternations of activity and repose which we recognise
-in disease, as in other operations of nature; although I
-should be over-sanguine if I believed, and premature if I
-stated, that your sanitary measures during the past twelve
-months had wrought such a change in the City as to ensure
-a continuance of this year&#8217;s comparative healthfulness; yet
-I may venture without hesitation to assure you, that the
-labours of the Commission have been fruitful of real and
-demonstrable advantage to the health of the people; that a
-sensible diminution has occurred in the physical causes of disease;
-and that, from various and disinterested sources, I hear
-grateful mention of improvements which you have effected.</p>
-
-<p>In confirmation of this assurance, I may inform your
-Hon. Court that, in collecting my materials for the present
-statement, I solicited from the Union-Surgeons of the whole
-City of London certain particulars of information which
-they were peculiarly able to furnish; I inquired of them,
-namely, whether, during the past year, there had prevailed
-among the poorer classes in their several districts more or
-less than the ordinary pressure of epidemic, endemic, and
-infectious disease; and whether, in case of such difference
-having been observed, they could refer it, either for better<span class="pagenum" id="Page79">[79]</span>
-or worse, to any changes recently wrought in the physical
-conditions of their respective neighbourhoods. They have
-had the kindness to furnish me with the information requested
-of them; and their replies testify with remarkable
-uniformity, both to the abatement of disease within their
-several provinces of practice, and to the considerable dependence
-of that improved condition of health on sanitary
-works effected under your auspices.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">In order to form a correct estimate of the average mortality
-in any district, it is indispensable that one&#8217;s records
-should extend over many years. Thus only is it that fallacies
-can be avoided which arise from the alternate pressure and
-remittance of epidemic disease. The havoc effected by a
-periodical visitation of influenza, cholera, or plague, varies,
-in like manner as the ordinary death-rate varies, in different
-localities; and its variation contributes importantly to fix
-the healthiness or unhealthiness of such localities. But
-obviously, if we wish for practical purposes to calculate an
-annual rate of mortality, and to decide, in respect of any
-district, what are the chances of life for its population, we
-must distribute the peculiar mortality of the pestilence-period
-over those years which intervene between visitations of the
-pestilence.</p>
-
-<p>Hitherto, in respect of the City of London, I have the
-record of only two years; two years differing from one
-another in the proportion of 30 to 22, and the mean mortality
-deduced from that biennial period would be 26 per
-thousand per annum.<a id="FNanchor31"></a><a href="#Footnote31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a> I am,
-of course, unable to tell you<span class="pagenum" id="Page80">[80]</span>
-with certainty whether that ratio be the true average death-rate
-of the City; but I incline to believe that an average
-calculated from a longer period, with less abrupt fluctuations,
-would give a lower figure as the accurate one.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote31"><a href="#FNanchor31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a>
-On account of corrections <a href="#Footnote30">already</a> adverted to, this mean death-rate
-should be reduced, probably to 25.2.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>In future years, so long as I may have the honour of reporting
-to the Commission, I purpose proceeding, step by
-step, to the construction of a cyclical average from the
-materials which will constantly be increasing; and I trust
-that many years may elapse before any approach shall again
-be made to the high death-rate with which the cycle
-commenced.</p>
-
-<p id="Ref10">It may be useful, for the sake of comparison, that I
-should remind your Hon. Court of some of the more important
-differences which prevail throughout the country,
-in regard to the local rates of mortality. The extreme
-rates recorded in the Registrar-General&#8217;s last publication,
-relating to the septennial period 1838-44, give 14 per
-thousand per annum as the lowest average, and 33<sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>2</sub> as the
-highest average, for a population male and female in equal
-proportion. The low average belongs to a district in Northumberland,
-numbering 27-28,000 inhabitants; the high
-average is assigned to Liverpool. For the whole south-east
-division of England (comprising more than a million and a
-half of inhabitants) the death-rate is but 19; while in
-parts of the division it falls very considerably below this
-average. I have thrown these and some similar comparisons
-into a tabular form, which may perhaps be interesting
-to you.<a id="FNanchor32"></a><a href="#Footnote32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote32"><a href="#FNanchor32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> Vide <a href="#Footnote34">page 84</a>.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Possibly it may occur to you that these comparisons are<span class="pagenum" id="Page81">[81]</span>
-devoid of practical application&mdash;that it is unreasonable to
-suppose we can mitigate our London death-rate to the likeness
-of a selected country mortality&mdash;that the circumstances
-of the two populations are essentially and unalterably dissimilar&mdash;that
-the advantages of the one cannot be given to
-the other&mdash;that the traditional &#8216;threescore years and ten&#8217;
-of human life are allotted only to rustic existence&mdash;that the
-right of participating in the higher civilisation of the metropolis,
-or of trading in its larger market, is not too dearly
-purchased by the tax of half or a third of one&#8217;s fair
-expectation of life.</p>
-
-<p>On general grounds I should not hesitate to combat this
-objection, and should feel sure of convincing you of its
-invalidity. I should argue (as indeed I have already argued
-here) that the main conditions which constitute the unhealthiness
-of towns are definite, palpable, removable evils;
-that dense over-crowding of a population&mdash;that intricate
-ramification of courts and alleys, excluding light and air&mdash;that
-defective drainage&mdash;that the products of organic decomposition&mdash;that
-contaminated water and a stinking atmosphere,
-are distinct causes of disease and death; that each admits of
-being definitely estimated in its numerical proportion to the
-total mortality which it contributes to cause; that each is
-susceptible of abatement or removal, which will at once be
-followed by diminution of its alleged effects on the health
-of the population. Likewise, I should argue, that if there
-indeed exist, attached to a metropolitan residence, some
-really unavoidable and necessary disadvantages to life (a
-point which however I am not prepared to concede) there are
-likewise, as respects the poor, some peculiar advantages to
-counterbalance those evils; that in urban communities the<span class="pagenum" id="Page82">[82]</span>
-operations of charitable relief are largest and least remitting;
-that the resources of medicine for curing what cannot be
-prevented are likewise readiest and most effective.</p>
-
-<p>On all these general grounds I should be prepared to
-maintain that a lowness of mortality which has been attained
-in any considerable rustic population, may be
-attained by an urban population, if only the removable
-evils be removed, if only the practicable good be made
-practical.</p>
-
-<p>Surely too, above all, I would maintain this possibility in
-respect of our capital&mdash;the treasury as she is of all means
-for progress in civilisation, the stronghold of all applicable
-knowledge. Let but the wealth, the science, the energy,
-and the benevolence of the metropolis deal with removable
-causes of death as they have dealt with subjects infinitely
-more difficult, infinitely less promising, and certainly of not
-greater importance; and few competent persons will doubt
-that the mortality of London might speedily be reduced to
-the level of any district-mortality yet recorded by the
-Registrar-General.</p>
-
-<p>There may be those in your Hon. Court who will hesitate
-to accept for themselves the firm conviction which I
-entertain on this subject; or who, at least, will withhold
-their assent from the line of argument which I have advanced.
-To them, what I have now to state may be more
-conclusive than any other consideration: viz., during the
-year on which I am reporting, there was one sub-district of
-the City of London Union&mdash;one comprising from twelve to
-thirteen thousand inhabitants, in which (after including a
-due proportion of deaths which had occurred in the union-workhouse
-at Mile-end) the mortality stood only at 15 in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page83">[83]</span>
-thousand; one in which, if those extramural deaths had been
-excluded, the local death-rate for the year would have been
-only 13&middot;32.<a id="FNanchor33"></a><a href="#Footnote33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote33"><a href="#FNanchor33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a>
-These figures require some correction for decrease of population
-in the sub-district referred to: the death-rate, inclusive of workhouse
-mortality, was nearly 16, and exclusive of that mortality,
-nearly 14 <i>per</i> thousand.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>For an illustration of low and enviable death-rates, I
-need then no longer appeal to Northumberland, or to our
-south-eastern counties&mdash;though, no doubt, their septennial
-periods of low mortality are valuable corroborations of any
-inference which could be drawn from our more restricted
-experience;&mdash;but I may point to the last year&#8217;s death-rate in
-the north-west sub-district of the City of London Union
-as one of rare excellence, and may content myself with
-wishing that that partial rate might become universal for
-the City, and might be the permanent expression of its
-average mortality.</p>
-
-<p>A detailed consideration of our sickness and mortality
-during the last year suggests to me a few other remarks,
-which may, I think, be of practical utility to your Hon.
-Court.</p>
-
-<p>First, as regards the ages at which death occurs; the
-respective proportions of <i>timely</i> and <i>untimely</i> deaths may,
-generally speaking, be inferred from the local death-rates.
-In general terms, we know a high death-rate indicates that
-many die before their time&mdash;indicates that a proportion of
-the population, more or less considerable, instead of reaching
-old age, becomes prematurely blighted and extinguished.
-In order to illustrate this subject to you more exactly, I<span class="pagenum" id="Page84">[84]</span>
-append a table in which the deaths of the last two years
-are classified according to the ages at which they occurred.
-Of 3763 persons whose deaths are recorded in my last
-Report, 1243 died under the age of five years: of 2752
-deaths registered in the present year, 1032 belong to the
-same early period of life.</p>
-
-<p>The City of London appears peculiarly fatal to infant life.
-Reference to the Registrar-General&#8217;s last septennial record
-shows that of every 1000 male children under five years of
-age within the City of London (aggregately) nearly 113 die
-in each year; and the portion of this rate which is deduced
-from the East and West London Unions is as high as 119
-in the thousand. In the subjoined table,<a id="FNanchor34"></a><a href="#Footnote34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a>
-which illustrates<span class="pagenum" id="Page85">[85]</span>
-some points of comparative mortality, I have endeavoured
-to show the extreme and disproportionate amount of
-this pressure on infant life. In referring (for instance, in
-regard of the City of London Union) to the last three
-columns of that table, you will observe that the mortality
-of children at the age stated, during the septennial period,
-was <span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>2&middot;66</sub></span> of the entire mortality, although their class numerically
-constituted only <span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>11&middot;09</sub></span> of the entire population; so
-that they died at more than four times (4&middot;17) the rate
-which would have fallen to them as simple participators in
-the average mortality of their district. The actual infant
-mortality of the past year holds the same proportion to the
-general mortality as in the Registrar-General&#8217;s septennial
-period, being <span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>2&middot;66</sub></span> of the whole.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote34"><a href="#FNanchor34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a></p>
-
-<table class="fn34" summary="mortality">
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<th colspan="3" class="bl">Places.</th>
-<th colspan="2">General death-rate <i>per</i> thousand <i>per annum</i>.</th>
-<th>Death-rate <i>per</i> thousand <i>per annum</i> of male children under five years of age.</th>
-<th>Out of entire living population what proportion is under five years of age?</th>
-<th>Out of entire mortality what proportion occurs under five years of age?</th>
-<th>By what multiple is the mortality of children under five years in excess of the average mortality of all ages?</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3" class="place br">City of London Union</td>
-<td class="right padr0">21</td>
-<td class="br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="center br">101</td>
-<td class="center br"><span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>11&middot;09</sub></span></td>
-<td class="center br"><span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>2&middot;66</sub></span></td>
-<td class="center br">4&middot;17</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3" class="place br">E. and W. London Union</td>
-<td class="right padr0">26</td>
-<td class="left padl0 br"><sup>3</sup>&#8260;<sub>4</sub></td>
-<td class="center br">101</td>
-<td class="center br"><span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>9&middot;02</sub></span></td>
-<td class="center br"><span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>2&middot;24</sub></span></td>
-<td class="center br">4&middot;02</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3" class="place br">Metropolis</td>
-<td class="right padr0">25</td>
-<td class="br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="center br">&#8199;93</td>
-<td class="center br"><span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>8&middot;45</sub></span></td>
-<td class="center br"><span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>2&middot;45</sub></span></td>
-<td class="center br">3&middot;45</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3" class="place br">Holborn</td>
-<td class="right padr0">26</td>
-<td class="br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="center br">115</td>
-<td class="center br"><span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>8&middot;98</sub></span></td>
-<td class="center br"><span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>2&middot;20</sub></span></td>
-<td class="center br">4&middot;08</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3" class="place br">St. Giles</td>
-<td class="right padr0">27</td>
-<td class="br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="center br">122</td>
-<td class="center br"><span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>9&middot;85</sub></span></td>
-<td class="center br"><span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>2&middot;24</sub></span></td>
-<td class="center br">4&middot;39</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3" class="place br">St. Martin</td>
-<td class="right padr0">24</td>
-<td class="br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="center br">120</td>
-<td class="center br"><span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>10&middot;64</sub></span></td>
-<td class="center br"><span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>2&middot;42</sub></span></td>
-<td class="center br">4&middot;39</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3" class="place br">Bristol</td>
-<td class="right padr0">29</td>
-<td class="br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="center br">107</td>
-<td class="center br"><span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>8&middot;73</sub></span></td>
-<td class="center br"><span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>2&middot;53</sub></span></td>
-<td class="center br">3&middot;45</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3" class="place br">Liverpool</td>
-<td class="right padr0">33</td>
-<td class="br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="center br">143</td>
-<td class="center br"><span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>7&middot;35</sub></span></td>
-<td class="center br"><span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>1&middot;91</sub></span></td>
-<td class="center br">3&middot;85</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3" class="place br">Lancashire</td>
-<td class="right padr0">26</td>
-<td class="left padl0 br"><sup>3</sup>&#8260;<sub>4</sub></td>
-<td class="center br">102</td>
-<td class="center br"><span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>7&middot;19</sub></span></td>
-<td class="center br"><span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>2&middot;02</sub></span></td>
-<td class="center br">3&middot;56</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3" class="place br">Surrey</td>
-<td class="right padr0">18</td>
-<td class="br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="center br">&#8199;48</td>
-<td class="center br"><span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>7&middot;98</sub></span></td>
-<td class="center br"><span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>3&middot;22</sub></span></td>
-<td class="center br">2&middot;48</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3" class="place br">South-east divn. of England</td>
-<td class="right padr0">19</td>
-<td class="br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="center br">&#8199;52</td>
-<td class="center br"><span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>7&middot;76</sub></span></td>
-<td class="center br"><span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>3&middot;03</sub></span></td>
-<td class="center br">2&middot;56</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="place">Glendale</td>
-<td rowspan="3" class="brace bt br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="3" class="brace br">-</td>
-<td rowspan="3" class="right padr0">14</td>
-<td rowspan="3" class="br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="3" class="center br">&#8199;28</td>
-<td rowspan="3" class="center br"><span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>10&middot;32</sub></span></td>
-<td rowspan="3" class="center br"><span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>3&middot;99</sub></span></td>
-<td rowspan="3" class="center br">2&middot;58</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="place">Bellingham</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="place">Haltwhistle</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td colspan="3" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table><!--fn34-->
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Lest any undue importance should be ascribed to the influence
-of bad or inappropriate articles of diet in producing
-this large infant mortality, I may inform you that the rate
-of death is highest during that very early period of life
-when the child depends for nourishment on its mother; so
-that, of a thousand male children in the first year of life
-there die within the district of the City of London Union
-242; within that of the East and West London Unions,
-276.</p>
-
-<p>The causes which thus decimate the young population of
-London are the common conditions of district unhealthiness&mdash;the
-conditions which it lies within the scope of sanitary
-legislation to amend. But, inasmuch as the few days of
-these wretched children are passed mainly within doors,
-so their high mortality constitutes the readiest and least
-fallacious evidence of the unwholesomeness of the dwellings
-in which they die: and hence I am acquainted with no<span class="pagenum" id="Page86">[86]</span>
-correcter material for estimating the sanitary condition of a
-district than is afforded by the death-rate of its infant
-population.</p>
-
-<p>Secondly, with regard to the alleged <i>particular causes of
-death</i>; I have extracted from our general registry, and have
-grouped in a <a href="#Page167">separate table</a>, those cases of death from acute
-disease which seem peculiarly due to physical causes affecting
-large numbers of persons.</p>
-
-<p>There are deaths by cholera, epidemic diarrh&#339;a, and
-dysentery, of which during the biennial period we have had
-nearly 900; by fever, of which we have had 284; by
-erysipelas and puerperal fever, of which we have had 84;
-by small-pox, of which we have had 50; and cases of this
-sort partake of the nature of deaths by violence, not only
-because they are abrupt and untimely, but because they are
-<i>avoidable</i>. If in the instances which I have specified it were
-possible to make inquiry into the antecedent circumstances
-of the dead, you would find irrefragable evidence that life
-was lost in each individual instance by the operation of
-removable causes&mdash;by the foolhardy neglect of some familiar
-precaution, or by the obstinate retention of some notorious
-ill. The death of a child by small-pox would in most
-instances call for a verdict of &#8216;homicide by omission&#8217;
-against the parent who had neglected daily opportunities of
-giving it immunity from that disease by the simple process
-of vaccination; the death of an adult by typhus would
-commonly justify still stronger condemnation (though with
-more difficulty of fixing and proportioning the particular
-responsibility) against those who ignore the duties of property,
-and who knowingly let, for the occupation of the
-poor, dwellings unfit even for brute tenants, dwellings absolutely<span class="pagenum" id="Page87">[87]</span>
-incompatible with health. In addition to the diseases
-which I have named, there are others which owe their chief
-malignity and numerical largeness of fatality, though not
-their existence, to local and removable causes. The proportionate
-mortality from scarlatina, measles, and hooping-cough,
-is greatest when the general death-rate is greatest.
-Under similar circumstances, too, we find among the infant
-population a frequency and fatality of other diseases, not
-commonly accounted specific, which warrant us in considering
-them to be mainly of endemic and avoidable origin. Such
-are the hydrocephalus and convulsions, the diarrh&#339;a,
-bronchitis, and pneumonia of infants; often indeed referred
-to the irritation of teething, but prevailing in different
-localities with so marked a proportion to the causes
-of other endemic disease that we may be sure of their
-partial and considerable dependence on those local and
-obviable causes. I dwell on this aspect of the subject, and
-particularly invite the attention of your Hon. Court to the
-table<a id="FNanchor35"></a><a href="#Footnote35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> which illustrates it, because it is in respect of these
-diseases that your exertions have already effected valuable
-improvements for the health of the City, and because the
-future registry of such cases will attest year by year the
-further progress of your sanitary reforms. In examining
-this index of preventable deaths you will notice that those
-from fever are fewer by 29 <i>per cent.</i> in the year just terminated
-than in the previous twelve months; that those from
-scarlatina are 75 <i>per cent.</i> fewer; those from infantile
-zymotic disorders nearly 40 <i>per cent.</i> fewer; those from
-erysipelas and puerperal fever 9 <i>per cent.</i> fewer. Small-pox,<span class="pagenum" id="Page88">[88]</span>
-it is true, is doubled; but the prevention of this
-disease rests, out of your jurisdiction, in the exercise of
-individual discretion. Under the item of infantile diarrh&#339;a
-(included in the <a href="#Page167">tenth column</a>) there is likewise an increase
-of nearly a third;<a id="FNanchor36"></a><a href="#Footnote36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a> an exception probably dependent on the
-fact that, during last year, many deaths which might have
-swelled this column were (on account of the then prevalent
-influence) catalogued under the head of epidemic diarrh&#339;a
-or cholera.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote35"><a href="#FNanchor35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> <a href="#App09"><i>Appendix</i>, No. IX.</a></p>
-
-<p id="Footnote36"><a href="#FNanchor36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> In the column referred to, this is concealed by the marked
-diminution, during the present year, of other disorders classed with
-infantile diarrh&#339;a. Their reduction maintains the total of that
-column (notwithstanding the difference of diarrh&#339;a) considerably
-less for this year than for last.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>I should be misleading your Hon. Court, and practising
-a deception which next year&#8217;s registry would expose, if I
-pretended that the striking difference between the two
-years&#8217; several totals of preventable deaths (a difference
-which, leaving cholera out of the question, probably
-amounts to a diminution of 30 <i>per cent.</i> on the sum of last
-year) had resulted wholly, or even chiefly, from sanitary
-improvement, and could be interpreted as the evidence of
-permanent physical changes around the dwellings of our
-poorer population. I guard you against this impression
-now, because, however satisfactory it might be as a momentary
-belief, it would lead to subsequent disappointment;
-and any future rise in the proportion of these deaths would
-induce the erroneous, but disheartening, supposition that
-your later sanitary steps had been less successful than the
-first. In all these matters, and especially in analysing the
-details of a death-registry, it is requisite (as I have already<span class="pagenum" id="Page89">[89]</span>
-stated) to deal with cycles of many years. Periods of
-pestilence are habitually followed by periods of diminished
-mortality: partly because population is diminished, and
-especially that share of the population which suffers most
-from obviable causes of disease; partly because the great
-alarm of death has induced vigilance and precaution, public
-and private, against the occasions and beginnings of
-illness. And, beyond both these circumstances, there are
-others which we cannot analyse or explain, though we have
-scientific certainty of their operation; circumstances which
-seem to ensure a comparative quiescence of the ordinary
-causes of zymotic disease during those periods which next
-succeed the prevalence of certain fatal epidemics.<a id="FNanchor37"></a><a href="#Footnote37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote37"><a href="#FNanchor37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a>
-For the professional reader I may here throw out a hint&mdash;referring
-to the doctrine of epidemic disease stated in the <a href="#Page213">Fifth Annual Report</a>,
-that this apparent healthiness of districts after certain epidemic
-invasions probably bears relation to a temporary exhaustion of their
-zymotic atmosphere under the action of a specific ferment, and is in
-some respects analogous to that immunity from an infected fever
-which belongs to an individual who has recently suffered its attack.
-See also <a href="#Page235">page 235</a>.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Nevertheless, that the sanitary condition of the City has
-undergone considerable improvement within the last two
-years is a fact which no one can gainsay; and that a considerable
-share of the mitigation in mortality arises from
-this improvement cannot reasonably be questioned. If even
-a third of the mitigation in question, if a reduction of ten
-<i>per cent.</i> on the preventable mortality of the City, may be
-inferred from the materials which I lay before you, it is
-indeed matter for the utmost congratulation; and a continuance
-of the same reduction year by year, perpetuated<span class="pagenum" id="Page90">[90]</span>
-(as doubtlessly it may be) by a continuance of the same
-exertions, would soon raise the City of London above all fear
-of comparison, on the ground of healthiness, with urban or
-suburban populations.</p>
-
-<p>Thirdly, I would beg the attention of your Hon.
-Court to those very important <i>local differences</i> of death-rate
-which may be deduced from a study of our death-register.
-I have already had the pleasure of citing to you the low
-rate of mortality which has prevailed during the last year in
-the north-west sub-district of the City of London Union.
-The rate of death in the north division of the West London
-Union was nearly double that proportion; and between
-these extreme terms of disparity there were many intermediate
-degrees.</p>
-
-<p>Similar inequalities of mortality were observable in last
-year&#8217;s record. In the healthiest sub-district of the City the
-year&#8217;s death-rate was about 22 in the thousand; while in
-the worst it stood above 41; and for the whole West
-London Union exceeded 38.<a id="FNanchor38"></a><a href="#Footnote38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote38"><a href="#FNanchor38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a>
-I have here availed myself of the corrections given in the <a href="#Footnote15">note</a>
-of <a href="#Page6">page 6</a>.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Mainly and essentially these local differences of mortality
-depend on the proportion in which <i>preventable deaths</i> enter
-into the total; the differences, however partial, depending
-on the operation within certain districts, of removable deleterious
-influences which do not exist in certain other
-districts.</p>
-
-<p>In classifying for your consideration the deaths which,
-during the last two years, have depended on epidemic,
-endemic, and infectious diseases, I have thought it desirable<span class="pagenum" id="Page91">[91]</span>
-to distribute them according to the municipal divisions
-of the City. Strongly believing, as I have endeavoured
-to express, that this class of deaths is for the main part
-preventable, I have thought it would interest the representatives
-of the several Wards, and would more directly enlist
-their sympathies for sanitary progress, if I could enable
-them at a glance to recognise the ratio in which their
-respective constituencies contribute to this annual death-roll.
-I have included in the <a href="#Page167">table</a>, under eight different
-heads, all those acute diseases which depend in an important
-degree on local causation, either for their existence or
-for their fatality. It will be obvious, even to the unprofessional
-reader, that local causes are not of equal prevalence
-in respect of all the diseases there tabulated. Some (as
-fever and cholera) would not be known at all under perfect
-sanitary arrangements; others (as scarlatina, measles, and
-hooping-cough) would be far less malignant in their
-attacks; others (as those classified in the tenth and twelfth
-columns) would no doubt exist under the most perfect
-physical circumstances, but would probably prevail in
-numbers quite inconsiderable as compared with those
-actually observed.</p>
-
-<p>On consulting this table<a id="FNanchor39"></a><a href="#Footnote39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a>, it will be observed that in
-<i>Cordwainers</i>&#8217; Ward, during the last year, not a single death
-occurred from the causes referred to, and in the preceding
-year of epidemic visitation, only five; that in <i>Cornhill</i>
-Ward there have been only two such deaths in each of these
-years; that in <i>Coleman-street</i> they have been 66; in <i>Queenhithe</i>,
-59; in <i>Portsoken</i>, 143; in <i>Aldersgate Within</i>, 30;<span class="pagenum" id="Page92">[92]</span>
-in <i>Aldersgate Without</i>, 179; in <i>Cripplegate Within</i>, 80;
-in <i>Cripplegate Without</i>, 299; in <i>Bishopsgate Within</i>, 60;
-in <i>Bishopsgate Without</i>, 329; in <i>Farringdon Within</i>, 153;
-in <i>Farringdon Without</i>, 845.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote39"><a href="#FNanchor39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> <a href="#Page167">Page 167</a>.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>I am unable to state with accuracy, in these several
-instances, what proportion subsists between the preventable
-mortality and the number of living persons, for I have no
-means of ascertaining precisely the population of the
-separate Wards; and without this knowledge it is impossible
-to arrange them in a scale of comparative healthiness.
-I need hardly remind your Hon. Court that the Wards
-differ very considerably in their magnitude; so that the
-largest majority of cases occurring in one Ward (as in
-Farringdon Without) must not unconditionally be taken to
-imply that the Ward, <i>in proportion to its population</i>, suffers
-more deaths than one in which the apparent number is less
-considerable. In the <a href="#Page167">table</a> to which these remarks refer, I
-have endeavoured to give you the means of comparing (at
-least approximatively) the healthiness of your several
-departments, by entering against the name of each Ward
-the number of holdings for which it stands assessed to your
-rate. This entry, with some trifling modifications specified
-in the table, may be taken to express the number of houses
-contained in each Ward of the City: thus it furnishes indirectly
-the means for estimating the local population.</p>
-
-<p>It will be noticed, that the more glaring inequalities
-which I have adduced are in some degree due to the
-epidemic of last year, which did not press uniformly on all
-parts of the City. It may, however, likewise be observed,
-that the chief operation of that epidemic was to exaggerate,<span class="pagenum" id="Page93">[93]</span>
-but not importantly to misrepresent, the features of each
-locality; that the habitual sanitary proportions of districts
-to each other were for the most part preserved; that (with
-a qualification to which I shall presently revert) the Wards
-numbering fewest deaths last year numbered also fewest
-this year.</p>
-
-<p>In my <a href="#Page1">last Report</a>, when the cholera had scarcely subsided,
-when men&#8217;s minds were full of apprehension on the
-subject, and when it seemed only too possible that, with the
-recurrence of autumn, we might again suffer from its
-invasion, I was unwilling to dwell too pointedly on the
-wonderful pertinacity with which that disease fixes itself on
-particular localities, and tends to re-appear in them on each
-new occasion of its rise. Believing that no extemporaneous
-measures could counteract these local preferences of the
-epidemic, I refrained from a course which would have produced
-no good result (unless indeed it had depopulated
-certain spots of the City), and which might have caused unavailing
-and hurtful alarm. Now, however, I think it right
-to tell you that the local predilections of this dreadful
-disease are so marked and so obstinate, that we may almost
-certainly predict in what parts of the metropolis it would
-tend to arise on any renewed visitation. We may anticipate
-that at any such time its latent power of destruction
-will kindle again in the districts, the streets, the houses,
-perhaps even in the very rooms, where it recently prevailed,
-<i>unless the determining local conditions shall previously have
-been annulled</i>.</p>
-
-<p>It would be ridiculous if I should pretend to carry you
-into any medical consideration of this subject, or should<span class="pagenum" id="Page94">[94]</span>
-make my present Report the vehicle of a professional argument;
-but I may very briefly acquaint you with such generalisations
-as will justify you in pursuing a particular course
-with respect to the haunts of cholera. While doing so, I
-hope your Hon. Court will believe that I have devoted to
-this very serious subject the best consideration of which I
-am capable, and have done my utmost to arrive at conclusions
-which may be fruitful of practical good.</p>
-
-<p>Cholera visited no localities of which it could be said,
-that they were generally healthy; but still there seemed to
-be something peculiar and specific in the kind of local
-unhealthiness which determined its invasion. On the one
-hand, it is unquestionably true that many habitual seats of
-fever were visited by cholera; on the other hand, many of
-the worst fever-nests in the whole metropolis were unaffected
-by it; and it struck with extreme severity in a class of
-houses habitually exempt from fever. See, for instance,
-how malignantly it prevailed along the line of Farringdon
-and New Bridge streets, and in Fleet-street and Ludgate
-hill, where their line intersects that just mentioned; and
-here, you will observe, not only in those obscure and ill-ventilated
-courts and by-ways, where fever is the familiar
-visitant of a hungry and crowded population; but also, and
-very strikingly, in spacious and airy houses, situate along
-the main thoroughfare of the City, and inhabited by opulent
-tradesmen, by members of the various professions, or by
-officers of assurance-companies. Other infective diseases
-which habitually desolate the former class of dwellings are
-almost unknown in the latter. Cholera came as a startling
-exception. <i>Within the infected district</i> (fulfilling the classical<span class="pagenum" id="Page95">[95]</span>
-description of pale death) it trod with equal foot the
-gates of rich and poor.<a id="FNanchor40"></a><a href="#Footnote40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote40"><a href="#FNanchor40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="poemcenter fn40">
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&AElig;quo pulsat pede pauperum tabernas<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Regumque turres.<br /></span>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="up">I think it very important that this fact should be fully recognised.
-In London it has often been overlooked, from the accident that our
-most infectable districts happen to contain an excess of poor population.
-But even here it is quite easy to note that the disease spreads
-irrespectively of pauperism or privation; and in other cities, (Paris
-and Copenhagen, for instance) where the quarters of rich and poor
-are less apart than in London, cholera has killed its full share of
-dignitaries and capitalists.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Personal peculiarities, or vicious habits, or temporary
-indiscretion, may often have determined its choice of a
-victim; low nourishment&mdash;even temporary emptiness and
-exhaustion, very manifestly invited its attack; but, speaking
-generally, I may say that it was a disease prevailing
-over a certain patch of ground, and (within this limit)
-tending to strike equally, or nearly equally, in all classes of
-habitations. Crowdedness of dwellings, defective ventilation,
-squalor of inhabitants, and many forms of local
-nuisance, which are omnipotent in giving occasion to fever,
-and in adding malignity to many disorders of its class, did
-not by themselves exert so marked and specific a power in
-determining the onset of cholera.</p>
-
-<p>What then were the conditions determining its local
-preference? Consideration of its statistics, or inspection
-of a cholera-map, enables one, with some confidence, to
-answer&mdash;a peculiar condition of soil, of which dampness
-is one sure and invariable character, and organic
-decomposition (promoted by dampness) probably another.<a id="FNanchor41"></a><a
-href="#Footnote41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page96">[96]</span>
-Its local affinities have much analogy to those of
-ague, and often appear identical in their range with the sphere
-of malarious infection. Our entire metropolis, built down
-to the very margins of a large river&mdash;of a river, too, which,
-at each retreating tide, exposes acres of mud saturated
-with the reeking sewage of an immense population, is
-placed generally in circumstances not unfavourable to the
-development of the disease; and its several parts will be
-liable to suffer especially, in proportion as they are exposed
-to these general circumstances, or to special circumstances
-of their own of a like nature. The lower level of districts
-on the south side of the river, their attendant failure of
-natural land-drainage, the consequent soddenness of a soil
-from which likewise the materials of house refuse were
-never efficiently removed, accounted sufficiently for the
-frightful epidemic mortality which prevailed in those quarters
-of the metropolis.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote41"><a href="#FNanchor41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a>
-After three years&#8217; further inquiry I find no reason to modify
-this general description: but, as regards the local circumstances
-which determine the specified condition of soil and atmosphere, I
-have been able to extend my information; and the subject is therefore
-better treated in my <a href="#Page213">Fifth Annual Report</a> than in the paragraphs
-here following above.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>If you now look to the disease as it raged within your
-own jurisdiction, you will observe its fatality in two
-especial directions. First, in the line I have indicated to
-you, northward from Blackfriars Bridge, in a band of two
-or three hundred yards width; <i>there</i>, in the parallelogram
-which lies along the main road, from Stonecutter-street to
-Bridewell Hospital, were 76 deaths; <i>there</i>, in the little
-clump of houses forming the angle of Farringdon-street<span class="pagenum" id="Page97">[97]</span>
-and Holborn-hill, were 17 deaths; <i>there</i>, in a square space
-behind twenty-seven shop fronts in Fleet-street, were 57
-deaths; <i>there</i>, in the small parish of St. Ann&#8217;s, Blackfriars,
-were deaths at the rate of 25 to every thousand of its
-population. This was incomparably the most afflicted
-portion of your territory. Those who are acquainted with
-the ancient geography of the City will readily conjecture a
-reason; they will remember when &#8216;the course of water
-running at London under Old-bourne bridge and Fleet
-bridge, into the Thames, was of such bredth and depth
-that ten or twelve ships, navies at once with merchandises,
-were wont to come to the foresaid bridge of Fleet, and some
-of them unto Old-bourne bridge;&#8217; they will remember how
-this broad river (like the Thames of our day) was thronged
-on both sides with population; how (again like the Thames)
-it was a draining river, probably with wide banks of putrefying
-mud; how many fruitless attempts were made to cleanse
-and preserve its channel; but how (in Stow&#8217;s day) &#8216;the
-brooke, by meanes of continuall incrochments upon the
-banks, and casting of soylage into the stream, was become
-worse cloyed than ever it was before.&#8217; Where that <i>soylage</i>
-was cast, and where, since the days referred to, so many
-habitations have arisen that no sign of stream remains
-visible to the wayfarer above ground, its traces still remain
-below. Throughout at least a large portion of this district,
-the sub-soil (your Surveyor informs me) consists of black
-mud, the bed of the ancient river, in which are set the
-foundations of the modern houses. The river, which centuries
-ago fulfilled for a large population those vile uses
-which now pollute the Thames, has gradually yielded its
-foul banks to the residence of a growing population; and<span class="pagenum" id="Page98">[98]</span>
-the sanitary relations of that population are exactly such as
-might be imitated, if the volume of the Thames were henceforth
-slowly reduced, and if those banks of mud which are
-now exposed only at low water, were simultaneously converted
-into the site of permanent habitations.</p>
-
-<p>The history of the stream at Walbrook is, I believe, not
-dissimilar; but there is this marked difference between the
-two cases, that the comparative declivity of the latter district
-has allowed its soil to acquire a dryness and healthiness
-which have never been reached on the banks of the Fleet.
-For, owing to the extreme lowness of level in this district,
-the tidal influence of the Thames is very inconveniently
-felt; the cellars of houses are habitually exposed to dampness,
-even to flooding; and probably the whole porous sub-soil,
-at least as far north as your jurisdiction extends, is
-maintained in a sodden and malarious state.</p>
-
-<p>With respect to the second part of the City in which considerable
-groups of cholera cases were observed, it has a
-not dissimilar peculiarity. I refer to that northern part of
-the City which extends (on the other side of London Wall)
-from Bishopsgate to Aldersgate. The epidemic prevailed
-there with far less severity than in the Fleet district, but
-still with a preference which easily shows itself in a cholera-map.
-At the intersection of Whitecross-street by Beech-lane,
-in a space that the point of one&#8217;s finger would hide in
-Wyld&#8217;s large map, there were 12 deaths: in that small
-portion of the City which lies north of Barbican and Beech-street
-there were 40 deaths: in the immediate vicinity of
-Half-moon-street, Bishopsgate, 60 deaths, of which more
-than half were in the workhouse. Now, certainly, in all
-this space (and probably still further in both directions,<span class="pagenum" id="Page99">[99]</span>
-east and west) without the former gates of the City, there
-is a marked local character. It is a reclaimed marsh.<a id="FNanchor42"></a><a href="#Footnote42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a>
-Throughout this district, in the olden times of the City,
-there lay (says Stow) &#8216;a moorish rotten ground, unpassable
-but for cawswaies purposely made to that intent;&#8217; and one
-reads how &#8216;divers dikes were cast, and made to drein the
-waters of the said Moorefields, with bridges arched over
-them, whereby the said field was made somewhat more commodious,
-but yet it stood full of noisome waters;&#8217; till
-gradually &#8216;by divers sluces was this fenne or moore made
-maine and hard ground, which before, being overgrowne
-with flagges, sedges, and rushes, served to no use;&#8217; while
-&#8216;the farther grounds beyond Finsbury Court were so over-heightened
-with laystalls of dung, that divers windmills
-were thereon set, the ditches were filled up, and the bridges
-overwhelmed.&#8217;</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote42"><a href="#FNanchor42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a>
-I have reason to believe that this statement, though founded on
-the authority of Stow, is erroneous, for so much of the district as
-lies west of Moorgate-street; and that the main cause of this
-locality suffering so severely from cholera must have lain in those
-very extensive defects of house-drainage, which more recently I
-have become better able to appreciate. With the kind assistance
-of Mr. Haywood, I have been enabled to look over the memoranda
-which are kept in his office, of deep cuttings of soil made in the construction
-of sewers by himself and his predecessor, Mr. Kelsey.
-These sections do not by any means tally with Stow&#8217;s description of
-the Moor, as extending in part &#8216;from without the postern called
-Cripplegate, even to the river of Wels;&#8217; for here at least there is no
-trace of any such condition of soil.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>It is not as matter of literary curiosity that I quote these
-passages of your old historian, but simply that I may avail
-myself of his accurate local knowledge for the explanation
-and the cure of a serious existing evil. For if, as I believe,<span class="pagenum" id="Page100">[100]</span>
-the unfortunate preference for certain localities evinced by
-the recent epidemic be, <i>prim&acirc; facie</i>, a reason for doubting
-the effectiveness of their sub-soil drainage, and if the
-ancient records of the City assure one that these very localities
-are such as, from conditions then in active operation,
-would be liable to retain, perhaps for an indefinite period,
-the materials of malarious poison, useful and practical
-deductions may be drawn. And as the liability to this
-severe recurrent epidemic is an extreme detriment to the
-population of such localities&mdash;one too, which, if unremoved,
-must inevitably lead to the deterioration of property, as
-well as to the sacrifice of life, I know that your Hon. Court
-will be solicitous to adopt whatever remedial measures are
-possible.</p>
-
-<p>To those measures I shall presently return, having here
-dealt with the question only as it relates to the distribution
-of our mortality, and explains the preponderance of a large
-class of deaths in some special districts of the City.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">In the Tables which accompany this portion of my
-Report, I have arranged in a synoptical form, convenient
-for reference, the chief facts of our sanitary statistics to
-which I have invited your attention.</p>
-
-<p>In the first<a id="FNanchor43"></a><a href="#Footnote43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a> you will read a summary of the deaths as
-they have occurred, male and female, in the several districts
-and sub-districts of the City, during each quarter of the
-past year.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote43"><a href="#FNanchor43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> <a href="#App04"><i>Appendix</i>, No. IV.</a></p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>In the second<a id="FNanchor44"></a><a href="#Footnote44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> table the deaths of the year are classified
-according to the ages at which they befell.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote44"><a href="#FNanchor44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a>
-Now incorporated in the general table, <a href="#App08"><i>Appendix</i>, No. VIII.</a></p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page101">[101]</span></p>
-
-<p>In the third table,<a id="FNanchor45"></a><a href="#Footnote45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a> for the sake of comparison in
-respect both of general and of infant mortality, I have
-arranged the statistics of certain other localities side by
-side with our own.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote45"><a href="#FNanchor45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a> Now inserted at <a href="#Footnote34">page 84</a>.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>In the fourth<a id="FNanchor46"></a><a href="#Footnote46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a> (to which I have already especially referred)
-is contained an enumeration, according to the several
-Wards of the City, of those deaths, during the last two
-years, which have arisen in consequence of acute disease
-partially or entirely preventable.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote46"><a href="#FNanchor46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> <a href="#Page167">Page 167</a>.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>In tables of this nature perfection is at present impossible;
-partly because of trifling changes in the population
-which often occur, but rarely can be estimated; partly
-because of the slovenly manner in which deaths are occasionally
-recorded. While, therefore, I would not consider
-myself responsible for their absolute and infinitesimal accuracy
-(consisting as they do of so many and so various
-details) I may assure your Hon. Court that all proper pains
-have been taken to render them for every useful purpose
-correct and trustworthy: and that I believe them, in all
-essential particulars, truthfully to represent whatsoever I
-have sought to embody in them.</p>
-
-<p>The annual ratio of deaths within your district; the
-local differences of that ratio; the proportion of infantile
-mortality; the amount of preventable disease; and, in all
-these respects, a comparison of parts of the City with each
-other, and of the whole City with other inhabited districts,&mdash;these
-are the materials on which your judgment must be
-formed as to the necessity of sanitary measures, whether
-for the entire City, or for its component parts: and as a<span class="pagenum" id="Page102">[102]</span>
-main object of the appointment which I have the honour to
-hold is that I should furnish you with materials for forming
-that judgment, so I may probably stand excused for
-troubling you with these considerations at such great
-length.</p>
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<h3>II. <span class="smcap">The Causes and the Prevention of Endemic
-Disease.</span></h3>
-
-<p>According to the method adopted in my <a href="#Page1">last Annual
-Report</a>, I now proceed to offer you such observations as
-another year&#8217;s experience may justify, on those physical
-influences which prevail against life within the City of
-London, and on such remedial measures as seem aptest to
-remove them.</p>
-
-<h4><i>Sub-soil Drainage, House-Drainage, and Sewerage.</i></h4>
-
-<p>1. In respect of drainage, I have already adverted to
-those unwholesome conditions which prevail along the low-lying
-valley of the ancient Fleet, and have mentioned to
-you that frequent incursions of the river aggravate whatever
-mischief is inherent in the soil, by maintaining it as a perpetual
-swamp, and by favoring in it a constant succession
-of putrefactive changes. I have likewise illustrated
-to you the probability that, in some of the higher portions
-of the City, chiefly in the Out-Wards of Cripplegate and
-Bishopsgate, there still survive some properties of that old
-malarious fen, from which these districts were originally<span class="pagenum" id="Page103">[103]</span>
-reclaimed. Stow seems in his day to have had misgivings
-on this subject; for after describing the improvements that
-had been effected there, and the gradual levelling and
-heightening of the ground, he adds, &#8216;it seemeth to me
-that if it be made level with the battlements of the city
-wall, yet will it be little the dryer, such was then the moorish
-nature of that ground.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>From a consideration of this former geography of the
-place, and from observation of the diseases which prevail
-there, I am led to think it highly probable, that some of
-its sanitary defects depend less on defective house-drainage
-than on a still marshy undrained condition of the ground
-itself, and that these defects would be removed by an
-efficient application of sub-soil drainage.</p>
-
-<p>I would therefore respectfully recommend to you, under
-this head, that the state of soil in the specified districts be
-referred to competent authorities, and that such measures
-be adopted as inquiry may prove requisite, for relieving
-those parts where the sub-soil drainage is imperfect, and
-for protecting the house-foundations, and sewers, and sub-soil
-adjacent to the river, from being soaked or flooded
-by the tide.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">2. With respect to house-drainage, I have no addition
-to offer to those remarks which I submitted to you in my
-<a href="#Page1">last Report</a>. Your Hon. Court has fully recognised that
-immense peril to life which is connected with the presence
-of cesspools beneath houses, and which depends on
-their poisonous emanations. At the commencement of
-the present year, your Surveyor stated that he might
-take &#8216;5414, as a fair approximation of the number of cesspools<span class="pagenum" id="Page104">[104]</span>&#8217;
-then in existence within the square mile of the
-City of London. This proportion, dangerously large as
-without doubt it is, presented an important diminution
-from the number which existed a year previously, when
-your Commission first obtained from the Legislature authority
-to enforce their closure; and it may reasonably be
-anticipated that at the termination of this present year, a
-still further abatement will be recorded in the magnitude
-of that destructive nuisance.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">3. Notwithstanding the variety of stink-traps to which
-you have given trial, and notwithstanding the fact (recorded
-by your Committee of Health on the Surveyor&#8217;s authority)
-that &#8216;there does not exist within your jurisdiction a single
-gully which is untrapped,&#8217; there continue to be frequent
-complaints of offensive exhalations from the sewers.</p>
-
-<p>The mechanical difficulties in this matter of trapping
-have appeared to be, from the nature of the case, almost
-insuperable. It may, indeed, easily be conceived, how
-incompatible are the common uses of a gully-hole with such
-fineness of adjustment and delicacy of balance as would
-render the apparatus air-tight from within, and effectually
-preclude an escape of the gaseous contents of a sewer.
-Under such circumstances, your Hon. Court has desired
-that I should express my opinion, how far a different course
-might be adopted in respect of these exhalations; how far,
-namely, they might be neutralised within the sewers; how
-far it might be chemically feasible, and in a sanitary point
-of view expedient, that a systematic use should be made of
-deodorising agents; so that any gas escaping from the
-sewers should at least be divested of its original smell.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page105">[105]</span></p>
-
-<p>On this subject, I would submit to you the following
-considerations. As respects its feasibility (putting aside
-as foreign to my province all questions of the expense, and
-all details of the daily arrangement) a first and obvious
-objection is this: Granted in the abstract, that sewer-gases
-can be converted by appropriate agents into inodorous
-compounds; in the practical application of these agents,
-you would find impediments with which you are already
-familiar. Theoretically, there may be no difficulty in providing
-air-tight traps; practically there is said to be every
-difficulty. Just as that mechanical problem has defeated
-you in practice, so would the chemical one; and for the
-same reason. The fulfilment of either problem is a matter
-of nice adjustment. In proportion as your gully-hole is
-exquisitely trapped, it becomes liable to obstruction; it
-loses its use as an inlet to the sewer, nearly in the same
-measure as it becomes an effective obstacle to regurgitant
-gases. Similarly, in proportion as these alleged deodorisers
-might succeed in completely stifling the characteristic
-odour of sewage, they would be liable to diffuse perfumes
-peculiarly their own, and to establish, in the vicinity of
-gully-holes, the alternation of a new nuisance with the old.
-To proportion with accuracy the introduction of these
-chlorinous preparations to the amount of refuse traversing
-the sewers&mdash;an amount varying most considerably at different
-hours of the day, seems to me quite a visionary
-hope. Failing such accurate proportions, I am not prepared
-to say that the result would be useful; and I accordingly
-consider the scheme as not chemically feasible.</p>
-
-<p>Further&mdash;as involving an important sanitary principle, I
-would say, that the great object which must be aimed at is<span class="pagenum" id="Page106">[106]</span>
-not the mere chemical neutralisation of certain stinks which
-arise within your jurisdiction, but the closest possible
-limitation, and the promptest possible removal of all those
-materials which are decomposed into f&#339;tid products. Admirable,
-no doubt, is that arrangement by which Nature,
-stationing a sense of smell at the inlet of our breath, cautions
-us by this vigilant sentinel against the inhalation of
-many poisonous airs; but, in respect of organic decomposition,
-I am in no degree satisfied that its odorous products
-are its only, if even its principal, agents of injury; nor
-have I any reason to suppose that the real detriment to
-health which arises from breathing the miasms of sewers or
-marshes, of cesspools, burial-grounds, or slaughter-houses,
-would in any important degree be lessened by the mere mitigation
-of f&#339;tor in their effluvia. Offensive as these are,
-they at least answer the useful purpose of warning us
-against the other poisons with which they are associated.</p>
-
-<p>Let me likewise take the opportunity of correcting a misapprehension,
-which, by the use of an inappropriate word, is
-sometimes shown to exist on this subject. The agents in
-question are spoken of as <i>dis-infectant</i>. As there is no
-scientific reason whatever for believing that they in any
-degree interfere with the spread of epidemic or infectious
-disease, and as an erroneous opinion on this point may lead
-to the neglect of measures which are truly precautionary
-and useful, I think it well to state explicitly, for your
-information, that I have no evidence of their possessing
-any other utility, in the respects under consideration, than
-simply and singly that of removing stink from the atmosphere
-around them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page107">[107]</span></p>
-
-<p>For reducing to a <i>minimum</i> the exhalations which arise
-from sewers and house-drains, it appears to me that the
-following are the essential principles: First, to render the
-current through them as rapid as possible; and, above all,
-by every care for their form, their junctions, their slope,
-and their material, to provide against the occurrence of
-obstructions and deposit: Secondly, to employ in their construction,
-so far as may be possible, such substances as are
-porous in the least procurable degree; such as consequently
-will be least apt to imbibe and retain in their interstices any
-considerable impregnation from the f&#339;tid fluids running
-over them at intervals; such, too, as will be least likely to
-permit soakage into the surrounding soil: Thirdly, by
-reducing the size of drains and sewers to the lowest dimensions
-compatible with a full performance of their uses, to
-diminish to the utmost the extent of their interior evaporating
-surface, and of those large chambers which they now
-offer for the evolution, retention, and diffusion of gases.</p>
-
-<p>To the application of these principles (together with a
-sufficient and appropriate distribution of water) far more
-than to chemical agents, or to the invention of mechanical
-traps, I believe that you must look for rendering inodorous
-the vicinity of your numerous gully-holes. I content myself
-with stating them to you, as a practical deduction from
-physical laws, without venturing to offer any opinion on the
-degree in which they are applicable within your jurisdiction,
-or on the manner in which they should be applied. For
-although, as principles, they have their foundation in
-physics, and although their importance to sanitary improvement
-is beyond measure great, all details relating to their<span class="pagenum" id="Page108">[108]</span>
-application lie out of my province, and belong to a class of
-subjects in which your Surveyor&#8217;s opinion will, of course,
-be infinitely more useful to you than mine.</p>
-
-<h4><i>Water-Supply.</i></h4>
-
-<p>During the past year, as in the preceding one, I have
-given frequent consideration to the subject of water-supply
-within the City.</p>
-
-<p>I have already endeavoured to convey to you the deep
-sense which I entertain of its importance, and I have
-every reason to believe that your Hon. Court recognises,
-at its full weight, the necessity of providing for the City
-of London a supply of water which in quantity shall be
-ample, in quality pure, in distribution constant and accessible.</p>
-
-<p>In my <a href="#Page1">former Annual Report</a>, and in some remarks subsequently
-addressed to your Committee of Health, I dwelt
-especially on such defects of our present system as relate
-to the quantity and distribution of water; endeavouring to
-illustrate the insufficiency of its supply to the poorer tenements
-of the City, and the extreme inconvenience which
-is entailed on their inmates, sometimes by dependence on
-a common tap, sometimes by the troublesome, expensive,
-and unwholesome necessity of storing water.</p>
-
-<p>In reverting to this subject, I may correct a fallacy
-which is apt to prevail with respect to the abundance of
-supply. I have no reason whatever to doubt that a very
-liberal allowance of water is daily pumped into the City&mdash;enough,
-or more than enough, so far as I know, to fulfil all
-necessary purposes.</p>
-
-<p>But those purposes are not fulfilled by it. A certain<span class="pagenum" id="Page109">[109]</span>
-large figure is stated as representing the average quantity
-daily driven through the mains of the City; this quantity is
-divided by the number of residents within your area, and
-the inference is drawn that each individual inmate of the
-City has at his disposal 25 gallons a day; or (after deduction
-for public purposes and the like) 21<sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>4</sub> for his domestic
-supply. As an arithmetical conclusion from the premises
-this may be true: nothing can be less accurate as a practical
-representation of the facts. An average amount of
-three million gallons <i>per diem</i> may, or may not, be pumped
-through the mains of the City: but to calculate the <i>available
-water-supply</i> from this dividend, without previous
-deduction for the immense escape of <i>un-available water</i> by
-waste-pipes or otherwise, gives a most fictitious result. The
-large waste which naturally arises in the system of intermittent
-supply has been well illustrated by some evidence
-given by Mr. Lovick before the late Metropolitan Commission
-of Sewers, in respect of a particular block of
-nearly 1200 houses.<a id="FNanchor47"></a><a href="#Footnote47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a> Some of the houses were of the
-higher, and many of the poorer class, but the average might
-be stated to be of the middle class, and to present a fair
-example of an urban population. The drainage of all these
-houses was discharged through one main sewer. The run
-of water through this sewer was carefully watched and
-gauged every hour, during the night as well as the day,
-on days when the water was on, that is to say, when the
-intermittent supplies were delivered, and also on the ordinary
-days, when the consumption of the houses was from<span class="pagenum" id="Page110">[110]</span>
-butts and cisterns, into which the intermittent supplies were
-delivered. The gaugings of the discharge of waste water
-into the sewer were checked by gaugings of the consumption
-of water from the butts and cisterns, during the
-interval of the delivery of the supply by the company. It
-was ascertained that the average quantity discharged <i>per
-diem</i> through the sewers was 44<sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>2</sub> gallons per house; but
-it appeared that, on the days when the intermittent supplies
-of water were on, the quantity discharged <i>per diem</i>
-was 209 gallons <i>per</i> house. The waste in this district
-from defects in house apparatus of distribution, incident
-to an intermittent supply of water, was, on the water days,
-three and three quarter times greater than the consumption
-on those days.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote47"><a href="#FNanchor47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> General Board of Health Report on Supply of Water to the
-Metropolis, page 120.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>No similar gaugings have, I believe, been made within
-the City; so I am unable to tell you with accuracy what
-are the proportions of waste and consumption. In an
-interview with your Committee on Health, when they were
-collecting information on the subject, Mr. Mylne, the
-engineer of the New River Company, stated (as a reason
-against fulfilling some object desired by the Committee)
-that within the City of London, in connexion with its
-distributing apparatus, there existed for the escape and
-waste of water, during the period of supply, &#8216;at least 10,000
-open cocks.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Assuming the accuracy of this statement, I doubt whether
-the average available supply of water for domestic purposes
-within the City can possibly exceed a quarter of its alleged
-quantity; and I am persuaded that there must be large
-numbers of persons to whom the enjoyment even of that
-reduced average is utterly unknown. Your Hon. Court,<span class="pagenum" id="Page111">[111]</span>
-observing the incalculable waste, and knowing that the cost
-of water-supply (as of all other commodities) must of necessity
-vary according to the quantity supplied, can appreciate
-the consequences of so much fruitless expenditure.</p>
-
-<p>I would beg likewise to observe to you that this unapplied
-flood of water is in itself not unobjectionable. It would
-be of questionable advantage if the drainage of the City
-were so perfect as to carry all away without inundation
-of the soil; while under opposite circumstances, in every
-quarter where drainage is absent or faulty, evil must arise
-from the extensive and habitual infiltration of moisture.</p>
-
-<p>On the extreme inconvenience which attends the storage
-of water in the poorer habitations of the City, I have
-already reported to you, and will now only add that increased
-experience has given much confirmation to my
-view. Their receptacles are generally such as contribute
-to the contamination of water, and are constantly so
-arranged as to invite an admixture of the most varied
-impurities.</p>
-
-<p>In the large proportion of them, which are open casks,
-one sees habitually a film of soot floating on the surface;
-one sees (if indeed one can see so deeply into water which
-is often turbid and opaque) that filth and rubbish lie at the
-bottom; one sees the interior of the cask itself dirty and
-mouldering.</p>
-
-<p>I now merely glance at this part of the subject, because
-you have already on other occasions allowed me to state
-my knowledge at greater length. But there is one evil in
-particular to which I would beg leave to advert. Those
-works of drainage which are established under your orders
-depend for their efficiency on a proper supply of water; and<span class="pagenum" id="Page112">[112]</span>
-in every case where you enforce the construction of house-drains,
-you order that those drains shall be served efficiently
-with water. Your wishes on this subject are nominally
-complied with by those on whom your orders are served,
-but are often virtually evaded by a filthy and ineffectual
-contrivance. The butt or cistern of the house&mdash;that on
-which the inmates depend for their supply of fresh and pure
-drinking-water, is placed in immediate contiguity to the
-privy, so as to reduce the requisite length of connecting
-pipe to the fewest possible number of inches; the application
-of water is not made discretionary on the users of the privy,
-nor are any of the cheap and common self-acting contrivances
-introduced; but the waste-pipe of the butt or
-cistern is conducted into the discharge-pipe of the privy,
-so that, <i>periodically</i>, with a frequency varying according to
-the arrangements of the water-company, the arrears of
-excrement are removed, so far as the overflow of the
-water-receptacle may have power to dislodge and propel
-them. Frequent evidence has been before me of the insufficiency
-of this arrangement: and, in addition to its actual
-failure (on the reasons of which your Surveyor can speak
-more competently than I) there is strong reason to object
-to its prevalence on other grounds. Water, as you probably
-know, is a very active absorbent of many gaseous materials;
-and the open butts, which are thus placed in immediate
-contact and communication with privies, must rapidly become
-infected by their foulness. I need not explain to you
-how injurious an addition this is to the other objectionable
-incidents of water-storage, or how unattractive as a beverage
-to the poor inhabitants of the City must be this vapid,
-privy-flavoured stuff.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page113">[113]</span></p>
-
-<p>For this arrangement I can suggest to your Hon. Court
-no easy alternative or remedy, so long as the distribution of
-water continues to be on its present intermittent plan: but
-it is matter for extreme regret that, by circumstances over
-which you have no control, the success of your sanitary
-measures should be seriously diminished. By the enforcement
-or execution of house-drainage, your Hon. Court has
-conferred great advantages on many districts of the City;
-but it is my duty to tell you that, in my judgment, the
-present condition of the water-trade contributes to neutralise
-those advantages, and constitutes a restriction on your
-power of doing good.</p>
-
-<p>As respects the evils to which I have just adverted,
-unquestionably they admit of abatement by devoting separate
-water-receptacles to the very different uses of diet and
-drainage. But the expense of additional cisterns in tenements
-so poor cannot be considered trifling; and I believe
-that your Hon. Court would hesitate, even if you have the
-power, to enforce this double burthen on the owners of
-house-property, at a time when one may reasonably hope
-that the necessity for cisterns will be superseded.</p>
-
-<p>There can be no doubt on the extreme degree in which it
-is desirable for the poor of the City of London, that water
-should be delivered to their houses on the principle of constant
-supply, and that they should thus be relieved from the
-expensive and unwholesome necessity of storing it in small
-quantities and in improper receptacles. That it is <i>desirable</i>
-is a certainty within my official knowledge and on which
-therefore I can give an opinion of my own. That it is
-<i>practicable</i> is not within my official knowledge; for in this
-part of the question are involved various considerations of<span class="pagenum" id="Page114">[114]</span>
-hydraulic engineering, on which I am incompetent to offer
-an opinion. But I cannot ignore the fact, that in many
-parts of England and Scotland the practicability of a
-constant supply has been evinced by the very conclusive
-evidence of its success. To some such instances I alluded
-in my last <a href="#Page1">Report</a>, and from the present year I can quote
-you a striking additional one. At Wolverhampton, in 1849,
-the system of supply, which had previously been intermittent,
-was made continuous. Instead of waste ensuing on the
-change, its immediate effect was a reduction of 22 <i>per cent.</i>
-on the quantity consumed. So great had been the unpopularity
-of the intermittent system of supply, that at the time
-of the change the company had not more than 600 customers.
-Immediately on the adoption of the new system,
-their customers increased, and within ten months had risen
-to 1400. This increase was continuing up to the date of
-the Report (May 4th, 1850), at which time they were adding
-to the number of their customers at the rate of 50 each
-week. The above facts (as is well observed by the resident
-engineer, Mr. Marten) may be taken as a fair test that the
-system of continuous supply is one of superior adaptation to
-the domestic wants of the public.</p>
-
-<p>This case is but an inconsiderable fraction of the evidence
-which lies before the public on the subject of continuous
-supply. With such evidence before me, in contrast to what
-I observe of the distribution of water within the City of
-London, I cannot refrain from repeating to your Hon. Court
-my confirmed and deliberate opinion that our method of
-supply is essentially bad, and that it withholds from the
-poorer population of the City a large proportion of those
-sanitary advantages which it is the object of water to confer.<span class="pagenum" id="Page115">[115]</span>
-No doubt it will occur to you that against evils of this
-nature&mdash;evils arising in the conflictive interests of water-buyer
-and water-seller, the first principles of commerce
-imply a resource; and that in this matter, as in others of
-the sort, a customer holds in his own hands the remedy for
-his dissatisfaction. But although the supply of water, in
-the hands of the powerful companies who vend it, is in many
-respects a common transaction of trade, and as such is in
-theory open to competition, yet I would beg to point out to
-your Hon. Court that, in regard of the City under your jurisdiction,
-no such check and no such stimulus as competition
-can virtually be said to exist. In every practical sense the
-sale of water is a monopoly. The individual customer,
-dwelling in Cripplegate or in Farringdon, who is dissatisfied
-with his bargain in water, can go to no other market; and
-however legitimate may be his claim to be supplied with
-this prime necessary of life at its cheapest rate, in the most
-efficient manner, and of the best possible quality, your
-Hon. Court, hitherto, possesses no power to enforce it.</p>
-
-<p>All who have given impartial consideration to the subject
-seem to concur as to the advantages which result from a
-control over the supply and distribution of water being
-possessed by those who are responsible for the drainage and
-cleanliness of a district. These different duties are in such
-essential relation to each other that they would seem almost
-of necessity to require a single direction and control.
-House-drainage pre-supposes water-supply; water-supply
-pre-supposes house-drainage; the efficiency of either implies
-their mutual adaptation; just as the circulation of blood
-within an animal body implies uninterrupted continuity of
-arteries and veins, each harmonising with the uses of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page116">[116]</span>
-other, to ensure the efficiency of the whole. But while the
-works of drainage executed under your orders lose much of
-their sanitary usefulness for want of an effectual water-supply,
-your Hon. Court has no power of interference in
-the matter, closely associated as it is with the performance
-of your other functions. These anomalies would be removed,
-and a most beneficial power over the distribution of
-water would be vested in the hands of your Commission, if
-in the renewal of your Act of Parliament you procured
-authority to represent the citizens in this matter. All the
-advantages which could possibly be gained by competition,
-together with many benefits which no competition could
-ensure, would thus be realised to the population under your
-charge; if, namely, a clause were inserted in your Bill, empowering
-you, at your discretion, to contract corporately
-with any person or any company for the supply of water to
-the City of London.</p>
-
-<p>In the Public Health Act (passed simultaneously with
-yours) an enactment of this nature exists, authorising local
-boards of health to &#8216;provide their district with such a
-supply of water as may be proper and sufficient,&#8217; and for
-this purpose &#8216;to contract with any person whomsoever to
-do and execute all such works, matters, and things as shall
-be necessary and proper, and to require that houses shall
-be supplied with water,&#8217; and to &#8216;make and levy water
-rates upon the premises, at a rate not exceeding twopence
-per week.&#8217; With a power like this in your hands, you
-would easily enforce for the City of London whatever
-method of supply you might deliberately believe to be best;
-and you would then be enabled and entitled, in the application
-of other clauses in your Act, to require of landlords<span class="pagenum" id="Page117">[117]</span>
-acting under your orders, a far completer, though less
-expensive, improvement of their property than you are yet
-in a position to obtain.</p>
-
-<p>In submitting to your Hon. Court my views as to the
-expediency of your having a controlling power over the
-supply of water, I am glad to find myself supported by the
-recorded opinion of the present Lord Mayor, himself formerly
-the Chairman of a Commission of Sewers; and I am
-induced to believe that such an addition to your functions
-might not be objectionable to the water companies, as I
-observe that Sir William Clay, the chairman of two metropolitan
-companies, has expressed himself strongly on its
-&#8216;great and obvious convenience.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">2. Of equal importance with anything which relates to
-the distribution of water are those momentous questions
-which relate to its <i>quality</i>, and which tend to determine its
-fitness for human consumption.</p>
-
-<p>Considering the great share of public attention which
-these questions at present very properly obtain, the many
-projects which are broached for improving the quality of
-our metropolitan supply, and the importance of your being
-in a position to decide as to the merits of any plan which
-may affect the City of London, I have thought it desirable
-in this Report to submit to you some general observations
-on the subject. During the last few months, I have accordingly
-been collecting such information as might, in my
-judgment, be useful for this purpose. In pursuing one
-portion of my inquiry&mdash;that which relates to the chemical
-constitution of certain waters, I have availed myself of
-the permission of your Hon. Court to procure a limited<span class="pagenum" id="Page118">[118]</span>
-amount of assistance from some one more conversant than myself
-with the practice of analysis. For this purpose I have
-addressed myself to Mr. Thomas Taylor, lately Lecturer on
-Chemistry at St. Thomas&#8217;s Hospital, a gentleman on whose
-skill and impartiality I can implicitly trust. His account
-of the very careful analyses which he has made is subjoined
-to my Report.<a id="FNanchor48"></a><a href="#Footnote48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a> Concurrently with the experience of other
-chemists, it has furnished me with material for many of the
-conclusions which I am about to lay before you.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote48"><a href="#FNanchor48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> See <a href="#Page168">page 168</a>.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The water which is supplied by the New River and East
-London companies for the consumption of the City of
-London is substantially of one kind. The River Lea, on
-which the East London Company entirely depends, furnishes
-likewise much of the supply conveyed by the New
-River.<a id="FNanchor49"></a><a href="#Footnote49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a> The springs in which the latter originate are of
-the same chemical kind as those which contribute to the
-Lea; and the artificial aqueduct runs its forty miles of
-course through much the same country as the natural river.
-Chemically, therefore, one description may apply to both;
-and I the rather speak of them conjointly, as any extension
-of its resources for our supply which the New River might
-obtain, would apparently be provided by increasing considerably
-its present draught from the Lea.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote49"><a href="#FNanchor49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a> It appears that the New River Company at present derives
-about two-thirds of its supply from the River Lea, and proposes
-to draw from this source a still larger proportion. Any chemical
-difference of quality in the City pipe-water (as between that supplied
-by the New River and that by the East London Company)
-would probably not exceed those limits of difference which prevail
-in respect of waters gathered <i>under varying circumstances</i> from one
-and the same source.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page119">[119]</span></p>
-
-<p>The pipe-water consumed in the City has for its general
-chemical character, that it contains a considerable quantity
-of carbonate of lime, held in solution by an excess of carbonic
-acid. To this and another salt of lime (the sulphate)
-the water chiefly owes the property which is complained of
-under the name of <i>hardness</i>: it is by reason of these salts,
-namely, that it decomposes a certain large proportion
-of whatever soap is used with it; preventing the formation
-of a lather, till those salts are exhausted by a
-wasted proportion of soap, by boiling or otherwise, and
-hindering to that extent the several purposes for which soap
-is employed. You are probably aware that soda is extensively
-used in the laundry, as an antidote to this objectionable
-quality of hard waters; and the excess of its employment
-tends, by corrosion, very observably to hasten the
-destruction of washed articles of dress. In the same measure
-as water possesses the property of decomposing soap,
-its utility as an universal solvent is impaired; it extends to
-various other substances which one seeks to dissolve in it
-(especially to many vegetable matters) that same disposition
-to waste them in the form of insoluble precipitates. Its
-conveniences for the purposes of cooking and manufacture
-are <i>pari passu</i> diminished.</p>
-
-<p>Of the actual extent of which these disadvantages are
-sustained within the City of London, I have no means of
-forming an exact opinion; but statements are before the
-public (from the general correctness of which I have no
-reason to withhold reliance and belief) rating the pecuniary
-loss to the metropolis, in the two articles of soap and tea,
-at a very high figure. You will see from Mr. Taylor&#8217;s
-observations the proportion in which waste occurs, as<span class="pagenum" id="Page120">[120]</span>
-regards one of these articles; namely that, for the production
-of a lather in washing, the pipe-water of the City of
-London, used without boiling, consumes from 13 to 19
-times as much soap as distilled water would consume.<a id="FNanchor50"></a><a href="#Footnote50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote50"><a href="#FNanchor50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a>
-It has been alleged that, by the use of soft water, the saving in
-soap would probably be equivalent to the whole of the money at
-present expended on water-supply; and that in the article of tea, the
-economy would amount to about one-third of the tea now consumed
-in the metropolis. It strikes me as possible that, in forming these
-estimates, the argument may have proceeded too much from a consideration
-of the hardness of London waters in their unboiled state;
-and that sufficient allowance may not have been made for the change
-which boiling produces. If boiling were prolonged for some hours
-before culinary or detergent use of the water, the results (for tea or
-soap) would be identical with those produced under the employment
-of soft water. Notoriously this precaution is not taken: but to avoid
-disputable ground, I confine myself to <i>the fact of considerable pecuniary
-loss</i>, arising from the cause in question, and I avoid any attempt
-to determine its exact amount.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The chemical constitution of these waters occasions
-another inconvenience. Their carbonate of lime is held in
-solution (in the chemical form of bicarbonate) by an excess
-of carbonic acid: under the influence of heat this excess
-is gradually disengaged and driven off; consequently, as
-they approach the boiling point, they begin to precipitate
-the earthy salt which that gas was instrumental in dissolving.
-Each gallon of water under these circumstances
-would deposit from ten to fifteen grains of earthy matter
-on the interior of whatever vessel might contain it, or on
-the surface of whatever solid&mdash;linen or mutton, might be
-contained in the boiler. Hence arises the well-known
-<i>furring</i> of vessels in which such waters have habitually
-been boiled.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page121">[121]</span></p>
-
-<p>I refrain from dwelling on the economical considerations
-which arise in these points of the subject, as very obvious
-inferences from the result of chemical analysis; and I pass
-to other matters more strictly within my own province of
-observation.</p>
-
-<p>Is water thus constituted in any degree detrimental to
-the health of those who drink it? It is not in a single
-word that this question can be fairly answered. Almost
-insuperable difficulty belongs to it, from the absence of any
-statistical method by which we might isolate the water-drinking
-portion of our population, and might compare
-them, in regard of the diseases to which they are liable,
-with similar sections of population in soft-water districts and
-in harder-water districts. Obviously, no other method of comparison
-can be unobjectionable; and, in arguing the subject
-from such materials as I have, I can pretend to nothing
-more than a rational approximation to truth.</p>
-
-<p>Except in the comparatively few instances where active
-medicinal agents are naturally dissolved in a water, its
-effects, if injurious, would be so slow as to elude ordinary
-observation. If, as is exceedingly probable, the same
-constitution of water as impairs its solvency out of the
-body, do likewise operate against its being the most eligible
-menstruum or dissolvent for processes occurring within the
-body&mdash;such processes I mean as attend the act of digestion;
-if the lime and other hardening ingredients which waste
-soap in our laundries, and tea in our parlours, do similarly
-waste within us those organic agencies by which our food
-is dissolved and converted; any result arising from this
-source would be of gradual operation, would not easily
-admit of being traced to its source, and (except in susceptible<span class="pagenum" id="Page122">[122]</span>
-persons) would rarely produce such symptoms as
-might immediately draw attention to their cause. The ill
-effects (whatever they may be) arising from the use of hard
-waters must be looked for in chronic impairment of digestion,
-and in those various derangements of nutrition in
-distant parts (the skin and teeth particularly) which follow
-as secondary results on such chronic disorder. It would
-be ridiculous to look for the operation of an ill-chosen
-water, after its habitual use during two centuries, as though
-one were inquiring for the symptoms of an acute poison.
-The signs that are to be ascertained among a population,
-if such signs exist, are those which would evidence a premature
-exhaustion of the power of digestion, and would
-testify that the machine on which we depend for that power
-had been exposed to unnecessary and avoidable fatigue.
-This, I believe, is the utmost which Medicine, proceeding
-from theoretical grounds, would venture to say on the
-subject.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps I need not inform you that indigestion, with all
-that follows from it, is so frequent in the metropolis, in
-persons after the first strength of youth, that, for large
-classes of society, a perfect discharge of the natural process
-of digestion (such a discharge of it as a lecturer would
-describe to be the exact type and intention of Nature), is
-exceptional and rare. Unquestionably, in large numbers of
-cases, wine and beer and spirits, rather than water, have to
-do with this effect. Unquestionably, other influences of
-metropolitan life&mdash;and, not least, the mental wear and tear
-which belong to its large excitement, contribute immensely
-to this chronic derangement of health; but there are reasons<span class="pagenum" id="Page123">[123]</span>
-likewise for believing, that the quality of water consumed
-is not a matter of indifference to the result. We cannot
-but give it an important place among those influences of
-health or unhealth which we consider <i>local</i>; and we cannot
-refuse to recognise the fact, that in recommending our
-patients (as we do often recommend them) to try &#8216;change
-of air&#8217; for complaints which baffle us by their obstinacy, so
-long as the subject of them remains in London, the course
-on which we rely for success implies &#8216;change of water,&#8217;
-equally with that other change to which more popular
-importance is attached.</p>
-
-<p>In illustration of this view, I may quote to you the
-experience of two other towns. Dr. Sutherland stated, in
-evidence before the General Board of Health, that having
-lived for a number of years at Liverpool (where the water is
-said to be of about the same degree of hardness as ours),
-he had long entertained a conviction that &#8216;the hard water,
-in a certain class of constitutions, tends to produce visceral
-obstructions; that it diminishes the natural secretions, produces
-a constipated or irregular state of the bowels, and
-consequently deranges the health. He had repeatedly
-known these complaints to vanish on leaving the town, and
-to re-appear immediately on returning to it, and it was such
-repeated occurrences which fixed his attention on the hard
-selenitic water of the new red sandstone as the probable
-cause, as he believed it to be, of these affections.&#8217; (Rep.
-p. 51). And Dr. Leach, of Glasgow, stated before the
-same Board, as the result in that town of two years&#8217; experience
-of a substitution of soft for hard drinking-water, that
-in his opinion, &#8216;dyspeptic complaints had become diminished<span class="pagenum" id="Page124">[124]</span>
-in number;&#8217; and that it had &#8216;been observed,
-since this change, urinary diseases have become less frequent,
-especially those attended by the deposition of gravel.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Inferences useful for ourselves cannot be drawn from
-statements like the above, on the fullest assumption of their
-accuracy, without comparing the waters referred to with
-our own, more completely than is done by the one characteristic
-of &#8216;hardness;&#8217; and there may likewise be other
-qualifications requisite for an application of the analogy.
-But those disorders of health which are specified by the
-gentlemen quoted, as produced by the use and diminished
-by the disuse of hard waters, are such as might very
-probably stand in the relation of effect to their alleged
-cause; results, namely, primary and secondary, of disordered
-digestion.</p>
-
-<p>Practically, I may tell you, that there are many individuals
-whose stomachs are extremely sensitive to the impression
-of hard water, who derive immediate inconvenience
-from its use, and who refuse to drink it without artificial
-reduction of its objectionable quality. I may likewise
-inform you that a physician, recently deceased, whose
-knowledge of indigestion and its chronic effects (especially
-in relation to the skin and urinary organs) was most profound
-and accurate, and whose consulting practice in such
-disorders was for many years almost a monopoly (I mean
-Dr. Prout) was in the habit of enjoining on his patients the
-use of distilled water. He evidently considered that the
-consumption of such waters as are habitually drunk in the
-metropolis was detrimental, at least to an enfeebled digestion.
-This is an opinion which, I have reason to believe,
-is generally entertained by medical practitioners in London.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page125">[125]</span></p>
-
-<p>It may not be irrelevant to mention to you (since the
-influence of imagination or of artificial habits can have little
-to do with this result) that horses are liable to be much
-inconvenienced by hard water, if unaccustomed to its use;
-and it is, I believe, notorious that grooms in charge of
-racers habitually take the trouble of conveying with them,
-to their temporary racing stables, a supply of the accustomed
-water. Veterinary surgeons say that under the
-continued use of hard water, which horses will avoid if
-possible, their coats become rough and staring;&mdash;an effect,
-I may observe, analogous to those skin-disorders of the
-human subject which are apt to occur from impairment of
-the digestive functions.</p>
-
-<p>Taking into account all these considerations, together
-with others of a more technical description; and believing
-that water is eligible for human consumption in proportion
-as it is free from the admixture of any material foreign to
-its simple elementary constitution&mdash;exception being made
-only of so much dissolved air as will render it sparkling and
-palatable; I entertain no doubt that a water, devoid of
-considerable hardness, would (<i>c&aelig;teris paribus</i>) for the purposes
-of cooking and drinking, be far preferable to that
-which the companies now distribute through the City of
-London.</p>
-
-<p>Hitherto, however, I have spoken of the waters supplied
-to the City, merely as regards that large impregnation of
-earthy material which they gather from their source; and
-I have criticised them only in respect of that admixture.
-Their essential chemical quality is one native to the soil
-from which they are derived; and whatever censure thus
-far belongs to them could only have been avoided by<span class="pagenum" id="Page126">[126]</span>
-the selection of a different source. Chemistry, in the days
-of Morrys and Myddleton, was not sufficiently advanced to
-inform the water-merchants of a city on those different conditions
-which determine the fitness of a soil to serve as the
-natural or artificial <i>gathering-ground</i> of a supply; and by
-which (as they vary in different localities) hardness is
-imparted to the rain-fall of one district, while softness is
-preserved for that of another.</p>
-
-<p>But there are other evils belonging to these waters, less
-appreciable indeed by chemistry, but open to universal
-observation, and meriting unqualified blame. They are
-conducted to the metropolis in open channels; they receive
-in large measure the surface-washing, the drainage, and
-even the sewage of the country through which they pass;
-they derive casual impurities from bathers and barges;
-they are liable to whatever pollutions mischievous or filthy
-persons may choose to inflict on them; and then on their
-arrival in the metropolis (after a short subsidence in reservoirs,
-which themselves are not unobjectionable) are distributed,
-without filtration, to the public. Whatever chemistry
-may say on this subject (and I need not remind you of very
-powerful causes of disease which lie beyond its cognisance), I
-cannot consider it matter of indifference, that we drink&mdash;with
-whatever dilution, or with whatever imperfect oxidation,
-the excremental and other impurities which mingle
-in these sources of our supply. Such admixtures, though
-in their <i>quantity</i> less, are in their <i>quality</i> identical with
-those which render Thames-water, as taken at London
-Bridge, inadmissible for domestic consumption, and which
-occasion it, when stored for sea-use, to undergo, before it
-becomes fit to drink, a succession of offensive changes
-strictly comparable to putrefaction.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page127">[127]</span></p>
-
-<p>In this slovenly method of conveyance and distribution
-there is a neglect of common precaution for the purity and
-healthfulness of the supply, which I must report to you as
-highly objectionable: and this&mdash;the method of supply to
-our great metropolis, strikes one the more with astonishment
-and disgust, as one reflects on the long experience
-and admirable models which past centuries in foreign countries
-have supplied; and especially, as one remembers those
-colossal works which, more than two thousand years ago,
-were constructed under the Roman government, for the
-cool and cleanly conduction of water.</p>
-
-<p>The present imperfections of knowledge forbid me to cite,
-as definite causes of disease, the contaminations to which I
-have adverted: I cannot say to you&mdash;pointing to our classified
-list of sickness and mortality, <i>this</i> depends on drinking
-the diluted drainage of Hertford, <i>that</i> on the contributions
-of Ware. Indeed I know that, under the influence of the
-river and the atmosphere, very considerable changes occur
-in the materials thus furnished, tending eventually to render
-them inert; and if injury to life occur from their ingestion,
-it is probably only under peculiar and exceptional
-conditions, increasing their quantity, or delaying their
-oxidation. In protesting against their continued distribution
-as articles of diet, I therefore insist less on inferences
-deducible from medicine, and shall probably have the concurrence
-of your Hon. Court in grounding my appeal on the
-common principles of taste.</p>
-
-<p>On the incidental contaminations to which the pipe-water
-consumed within the City becomes liable, by reason of its
-storage in receptacles both foul in themselves and surrounded
-by causes of foulness, I have already addressed
-you; and I have shown to you the dependence of this evil<span class="pagenum" id="Page128">[128]</span>
-on the system of intermittent supply as adapted to the
-houses of the poor.</p>
-
-<p id="Ref11">Of other sources of water-supply existing within the City
-of London, there are many of small extent in the form of
-superficial springs. These are eagerly sought after, sometimes
-from a distance, on account of their coolness and
-sparkling condition. In the Appendix<a id="FNanchor51"></a><a href="#Footnote51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a> you will find an
-account of one of these waters&mdash;that in the vicinity of
-Bishopsgate church, which is very much drunk in that
-quarter of the City. Any praise given to it illustrates exceedingly
-the fallacy of popular judgment on such subjects,
-and shows how easily those qualities of coolness and freshness,
-which are absent from stored waters, impose on the
-palate, and induce a preference to be given to waters which
-are relatively most objectionable.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote51"><a href="#FNanchor51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> See <a href="#Page170">page 170</a>.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The chemical faults which belong to our London pipe-water
-are possessed in a far greater degree by this water of
-Bishopsgate pump, and the latter has moreover some vices
-which are absent from the former; but the vapidity and
-fustiness of water which has been stored in cisterns are so
-repugnant to the taste, that the water chemically preferable
-is not in practice preferred.</p>
-
-<p>To the use of waters of this description, within a large
-city, there is always much objection. In addition to extreme
-hardness, which in London they universally possess,
-they are liable, in a dangerous degree, to become contaminated
-by the leakage of drains, and by other sources of
-impurity; as, for instance, where situated within the immediate
-vicinity of grave-yards they derive products of animal<span class="pagenum" id="Page129">[129]</span>
-decomposition from the soil.<a id="FNanchor52"></a><a href="#Footnote52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a> Very recently, a celebrated
-pump within the City of London, that adjoining St. Bride&#8217;s
-church-yard, has been abandoned on account of such
-impregnations. Or perhaps I should rather say (for the
-difference again illustrates the readiness with which the
-palate is deceived or corrupted) that it was not <i>abandoned</i>&mdash;for
-till almost the last moment the neighbours adhered to
-it with fondness; but the parochial authorities&mdash;alarmed
-by the proximity of cholera&mdash;caused its handle to be
-locked.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote52"><a href="#FNanchor52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a> This is illustrated in the analysis of Bishopsgate pump-water,
-just alluded to. The very large quantity of <i>nitrates</i>, there referred
-to that water, must be due to the oxidation of human bodies
-in the adjoining soil, which serves in part as gathering-ground to the
-spring. I should fear that, during rain-fall, this oxidation of organic
-compounds may not always have completed itself, and that materials
-of decomposition <i>still in progress of decay</i> may thus often be mingled
-in the water. [I have lately had occasion to recommend that the use
-of Aldgate pump should be discontinued on account of its water
-containing, in addition to a large quantity of alkaline nitrate, so
-much unoxidised organic matters, as were sufficient to give it a
-foul taste.&mdash;J. S., 1854.]</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>As an available source of supply to the City of London,
-the use of deep (Artesian) wells has been recommended:
-the clearness and softness of these waters, together with
-their freedom from organic matters, having concurred to
-suggest their employment. I feel bound to express the
-strongest opinion against the fitness of these waters for the
-purpose of beverage. They uniformly contain a considerable
-proportion of medicinal ingredients; they are capable
-of exerting definite and demonstrable influence over the
-natural actions of the body; and information is before me
-of various injury to health, affecting large numbers of<span class="pagenum" id="Page130">[130]</span>
-persons, arising from the continued dietetic use of such
-waters.</p>
-
-<p>In addressing your Hon. Court on the subject of water-supply
-for the City, it is impossible that I should do otherwise
-than advert to the fact, that, during the last few months,
-under the auspices of Her Majesty&#8217;s government, as represented
-for sanitary purposes by the General Board of Health,
-a plan has been gradually maturing itself, for the supply of
-the entire metropolis with pure soft water. Founding itself
-on very extensive investigations as to the qualities of water,
-as to the influence of soils on its chemical composition, as
-to the relation between streams and rain-fall, as to the
-hydraulic principles of distribution, and the like, this plan
-proposes to gather water in certain silicious soils, which can
-impart to it the least possible admixture of foreign ingredients;
-to conduct it in closed channels, with every
-precaution for its perfect purity; and to distribute it
-throughout the metropolis, at a rate which shall be from 30
-to 50 <i>per cent.</i> less than our present water-charges. The
-proposed area for the collection of this supply is in the extensive
-range of sandy soil in the south of Surrey, extending
-around Farnham, about ten miles in each direction.
-Since the publication of the first Report made on this
-subject by the General Board of Health, unremitting inquiry
-has been advancing, under their direction, into all details of
-the plan; and the Hon. William Napier, who, with others,
-has been engaged in the investigation of the proposed
-sources, has advocated an important modification, which
-promises to reduce very considerably the anticipated expense
-of the undertaking. The essential and most important
-principles which governed the Board, in arranging<span class="pagenum" id="Page131">[131]</span>
-their plan, were, first, to seek their supply in a silicious
-soil, where little soluble material could exist for its contamination;
-secondly, to take possession of the water so near
-to its source that all its original purity might be preserved;
-and, during conduction, to isolate it from those contaminations
-which are incidental to the onward passage of a stream
-through miles of promiscuous country. To fulfil these
-indications, there were two conceivable courses; and studious
-local inquiries could alone determine which of them
-was preferable: on the one hand, if the streams which represent
-the natural drainage of the country should be found
-uniformly pure and copious, they might admit of being conducted
-bodily into the artificial river of supply: on the
-other hand, it might be requisite to carry the interference of
-art still further, to absorb the filtering moisture of this large
-sand-district before it had become confluent into streams,
-and thus from day to day, by extensively ramified works of
-artificial sub-drainage, to derive immediately from the soil,
-the varying contributions of rain-fall and dew. The Board,
-apparently solicitous for the completer security of their plan,
-preferred to estimate its cost on the latter very expensive
-supposition; they allowed apparently for the diffusion of
-drain-pipes over 150 square miles of country, and for a
-reservoir which should contain storage of water equivalent
-to a very long metropolitan consumption. The later examination,
-made by Mr. Napier and confirmed by others, tends
-and appears to show, that these large sources of expense
-may be avoided; that the waters may be collected of unusual
-purity and softness, where they have united themselves into
-rivulets of considerable volume; that the gauged and estimated
-discharge of these rivulets is sufficient day by day<span class="pagenum" id="Page132">[132]</span>
-for the needs of the metropolis, according to the largest
-construction of those needs; that capillary drain-pipes and
-very extensive storage-room may thus be dispensed with;
-and that under the modification of arrangement suggested
-by these facts, some very large reduction might be inferred
-for the total estimate of this comprehensive plan.</p>
-
-<p>Many of these particulars are already before the public;
-but in a matter of so much importance to the health of the
-City, as that of participating in a supply of pure water, collected
-and distributed on the soundest principles, and sold at
-the cheapest rate, I did not think it would become me, as
-your Officer of Health, to remain an indolent auditor. I
-have felt it my duty to inform myself, so far as I could, on
-the real merits of this scheme, and on its probable relation
-hereafter to the sanitary condition of the metropolis. I have
-spent three days on the site of the proposed sources, and
-many other days in informing myself on all the bearings of
-the subject. I have likewise collected water from a proposed
-tributary of the future supply, which has been analysed,
-and which shows (as my <a href="#Ref08">Appendix</a> will illustrate to
-you) a remarkable and rare excellence. On one occasion of
-visiting the country, I was accompanied by Mr. T. Taylor,
-and we made on the spot a sufficient number of extemporaneous
-examinations, to assure us that the essential features,
-shown in the more elaborate analysis, are (as geological
-considerations would lead us to believe) the general
-characters of water throughout the district.</p>
-
-<p>On any other than the sanitary relations of this subject I
-can have nothing officially to say; but, confining myself to
-these relations, I may certify to your Hon. Court that
-the water in question is, in my judgment, of a quality admirably<span class="pagenum" id="Page133">[133]</span>
-suited for domestic purposes; that its distribution
-through the City of London would conduce to the health
-and comfort of the population; and that the principles,
-proposed by the Board for its collection and conveyance,
-appear to me such as sanitary science, in its present condition,
-should counsel for the water-service of the metropolis.</p>
-
-<p>There is, however, one aspect of the subject which must
-not pass unconsidered. Water that is free from earthy
-ingredients requires a peculiar distributory apparatus. If
-conveyed in leaden pipes with access of air, or if stored in
-leaden cisterns, it corrodes the metal of which they are
-composed, and is liable to derive from this source an impregnation
-very hazardous to life. Under certain circumstances,
-especially under alternations of air and water (such
-as occur in the intermittent supply), or where organic impurities
-are held in solution or suspension, or probably
-where from any cause uncombined carbonic acid is present,
-even the hardest waters are not free from this risk. Speaking
-generally, however, it affects soft water chiefly; distilled
-water most of all: and the Farnham water (in common with
-all pure water) is decidedly liable to this empoisonment, if
-used with leaden apparatus of conduction and storage. In
-my <a href="#Ref09">Appendix</a> you will find some interesting particulars on
-this head; and you will observe that with experiments conducted
-by Mr. Taylor in imitation of the constant supply
-(i. e. with total submersion of the metal) the formation of
-carbonate of lead in the Farnham water was exceedingly
-gradual. This concurs with the alleged experience of
-Aberdeen, where it is said by Professor Clark to have been
-found (to my mind, by a somewhat dangerous trial) that
-pure and soft water, <i>distributed on the principle of constant<span class="pagenum" id="Page134">[134]</span>
-supply</i>, does not exert on the leaden pipes any action injurious
-to the health of the population. You will likewise
-observe, that when hard water, as at present employed in
-the City, is softened by boiling, it acquires this property of
-pure water, and becomes capable of acting on lead; and
-here is an important observation, as it has been proposed by
-similar artificial means, employed on a very large scale, to
-soften all the water now distributed in the metropolis.</p>
-
-<p>Obviously, as regards one and all of the many proposals
-for supplying water destitute of hardening ingredients, any
-chemical process, or any change of source, which might lead
-to the distribution of such pure water through the metropolis,
-could not be considered as a single and separate
-reform, but must be undertaken conjointly with such alterations
-in the distributive arrangements as might be requisite
-for removing from the new plan <i>any chance, however slight
-or remote, of injuring the population by metallic poison</i>.</p>
-
-<p>What those alterations must be, it would now be premature
-to decide. The experience of Aberdeen might seem
-to suggest, that the system of constant supply (on all other
-accounts so eminently desirable for the metropolis) would
-in itself, if accompanied by the total disuse and prohibition
-of leaden cisternage, give sufficient security against the
-danger in question; or, on the other hand, further inquiry
-may show it to be quite indispensable for a safe distribution
-of the new supply, that leaden pipage should be entirely
-superseded by the use of some non-metallic material, as
-earthenware or glass. Should this change become necessary,
-its adoption would no doubt be facilitated by the comparative
-cheapness of these preferable materials.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page135">[135]</span></p>
-
-<h4><i>Offensive or injurious Trades.</i></h4>
-
-<p>With respect to offensive or injurious trades and occupations
-pursued within the City of London, you were reminded
-by your Committee of Health, in their Report of March
-26th, &#8216;that upon your attempting to put in force the powers
-of your Act of Parliament in reference thereto, it was found
-that considerable difficulties were opposed to your efforts.
-Sufficient powers (the Report proceeds to say) are not given
-by the City of London Sewers Act to meet some of the cases
-alluded to, while other legal and technical objections presented
-themselves to the enforcement of the powers in
-question.&#8217; The Committee concluded their Report by
-&#8216;pointing out to you the necessity, when the question of
-renewing your Act should come into consideration, of procuring
-additional powers which may enable you effectually
-to remedy those evils.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>On the grounds thus expressed by your Committee, I
-avail myself of the present opportunity for bringing the
-subject again under your notice.</p>
-
-<p>In my <a href="#Page1">former Report</a> I spoke particularly of those <a href="#Page23">trades
-and occupations</a> which deal with animal substances liable to
-decomposition; and in expressing my knowledge of their
-danger to the health of an urban population, I argued that
-no occupation which ordinarily leaves a putrid refuse, nor
-any which consists in the conversion or manufacture of
-putrescent material, ought, under any circumstances, to be
-tolerated within a town. To that subject I now revert, only
-to assure your Hon. Court that the past year has given me
-no reason to alter my opinion. But the trades to which I
-wish, on this occasion, more especially to request your
-attention, are those which are complained of on the ground<span class="pagenum" id="Page136">[136]</span>
-of their offensiveness, rather than of their injury to health&mdash;as
-nuisances rather than as poisons. During the year,
-I have received a very considerable number of complaints of
-this nature; some of them perhaps frivolous, but many
-well-founded and reasonable.</p>
-
-<p>At the head of this class of evils stands the flagrant
-nuisance of smoke. Those members of the Court who have
-visited foreign capitals where other fuel than coal is employed,
-will remember the contrast between their climate
-and ours&mdash;will remember (for instance even in Paris) the
-transparence of air, the comparative brightness of all colour,
-the visibility of distant objects, the cleanliness of faces and
-buildings, instead of our opaque atmosphere, deadened
-colours, obscured distance, smutted faces, and black architecture.
-Those, even, who have never left our metropolis,
-but who, by early rising or late going to rest, have had opportunities
-of seeing a London sunrise, can judge, as well
-as by any foreign comparison, the difference between London
-as it might be, and London as it is. Viewed at dawn and
-at noon-day, the appearances contrast as though they were
-of different cities and in different latitudes. Soon after daybreak,
-the great factory shafts beside the river begin to
-discharge immense volumes of smoke; their clouds soon
-become confluent; the sky is overcast with a dingy veil; the
-house-chimneys presently add their contributions; and by
-ten o&#8217;clock, as one approaches London from any hill in the
-suburbs, one may observe the total result of this gigantic
-nuisance hanging over the City like a pall.</p>
-
-<p>If its consequences were confined to rendering London
-(in spite of its advantages) the unsightliest metropolis in
-Europe, to defacing all works of art, and rendering domestic
-cleanliness expensive, I should have nothing officially to say<span class="pagenum" id="Page137">[137]</span>
-on the subject; but inasmuch as it renders cleanliness more
-difficult, and creates a despair of cultivating it with success,
-people resign themselves to dirt, domestic and personal, which
-they could remove but so temporarily: or windows are kept
-shut, in spite of immeasurable fustiness, because the ventilation
-requisite to health would bring with it showers of
-soot, occasioning inconvenience and expense. Such is the
-tendency of many complaints which have reached me, and
-of their foundation in truth and reason I have thorough
-conviction and knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>I would submit to your Hon. Court that these evils are
-not inconsiderable; and that beside the injury to property
-(with which I have nothing to do) the detriment to health,
-if only indirect, claims to be removed. Yet, while I am
-cautious to speak of this latter injury, as though it were
-only indirect&mdash;only by its obstruction of healthy habits, I
-ought likewise to tell you, that there are valid reasons for
-supposing that we do not with impunity inhale day by day
-so much air which leaves a palpable sediment; that many
-persons of irritable lungs find unquestionable inconvenience
-from these mechanical impurities of the atmosphere; and
-(gathering a hint from the pathology of vegetation) that
-few plants will flourish in the denser districts of London,
-unless the air which conduces to their nourishment be previously
-filtered from its dirt.</p>
-
-<p>If the smoke of London were inseparably identified with
-its commercial greatness, one might willingly resign oneself
-to the inconvenience. But to every other reason against its
-continuance must be added as a last one, on the evidence of
-innumerable competent and disinterested witnesses, that the
-nuisance, where habitual, is, for the greater part or entirely,
-voluntary and preventable; that it indicates mismanagement<span class="pagenum" id="Page138">[138]</span>
-and waste; that the adoption of measures for the
-universal consumption of smoke, while relieving the
-metropolis and its population from injury, would conduce
-to the immediate interest of the individual consumer, as
-well as to indirect and general economy. For all the smoke
-that hangs over us is wasted fuel.</p>
-
-<p>The consumption of smoke in private houses is unfortunately
-a matter to which hitherto little attention has been
-given; and it would be vain to hope that the reform should
-begin with those, whose individual contributions to the
-public stock of nuisance are comparatively trifling. With
-the progress of knowledge on these subjects, a time will
-undoubtedly arrive, and at no distant period, when chimneys
-will cease to convey to the atmosphere their present immense
-freight of fuel that has not been burnt, and of heat
-that has not been utilised; when each entire house will be
-uniformly warmed with less expenditure of material than
-now suffices to its one kitchen fire; and our successors<a id="FNanchor53"></a><a href="#Footnote53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a> will
-wonder at the ludicrous ingenuity with which we have so
-long managed to diffuse our caloric and waste our coal
-in the directions where they least conduce to the purposes
-of comfort and utility.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote53"><a href="#FNanchor53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a> To the philosophical thinker there would seem to exist no
-important difficulty which should prevent the collective warming of
-many houses in a district by the distribution of heat from a central
-furnace&mdash;perhaps even so, that each house might receive its <i>ad
-libitum</i> share of ventilation with warmed air. Ingenuity and enterprise,
-in this country, have accomplished far more arduous tasks;
-and I little doubt that our next successors will have heat-pipes laid
-on to their houses, with absence of smoke and immense economy
-of fuel, on some such general organisation as we now enjoy for gas-lighting
-and water-supply.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>But, while the arrangements of private establishments<span class="pagenum" id="Page139">[139]</span>
-may, perhaps wisely, be left to the operation of this
-spontaneous reform, I would venture to recommend in
-regard to furnaces, employed for steam-engines and otherwise
-for manufactures within the City, that you should
-endeavour to control the nuisance of smoke.</p>
-
-<p>The members of your Hon. Court are probably cognisant
-of the great mass of evidence on this subject,
-collected by two separate committees of the House of
-Commons, and of the almost unanimous conclusions to
-which that evidence led; &#8216;that opaque smoke issuing
-from steam-engine chimneys may be so abated as no
-longer to be a public nuisance; that a variety of means
-are found to exist for the accomplishment of this object,
-simple in construction, moderate in expense, and applicable
-to existing furnaces and flues of stationary steam-engines;
-that a sufficient body of evidence has been adduced,
-founded upon the experience of practical men, to
-induce the opinion that a law, making it imperative upon
-the owners of stationary steam-engines, to abate the issue
-of opaque smoke is desirable for the benefit of the community;&#8217;<a id="FNanchor54"></a><a href="#Footnote54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a>
-&#8216;that the expense attendant on putting up whatever
-apparatus may be required to prevent smoke arising
-from furnaces is very trifling, and (as some of the witnesses
-observed) the outlay may be repaid within the year, by the
-diminished consumption of fuel; that the means of preventing
-smoke might also be applied to the furnaces of steam-boats,
-but such application would be attended with rather
-more expense than on land, from the occasional want of
-space, and the setting of boilers in a steam-vessel. No
-doubt, however, existed, in the opinions of those examined,<span class="pagenum" id="Page140">[140]</span>
-that the prevention of smoke could be accomplished in
-steam-vessels.&#8217;<a id="FNanchor55"></a><a href="#Footnote55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote54"><a href="#FNanchor54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a> Report of Committee, 1845.</p>
-
-<p id="Footnote55"><a href="#FNanchor55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a> Report of Committee, 1849.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>In two local improvement Acts (those of Leeds and
-Manchester) clauses have been introduced in accordance
-with the sense of these conclusions; and in order to render
-them as little oppressive as possible to those whose interests
-might be affected by their operation, the enactments (which
-apply to every variety of furnace) have been so framed as to
-enforce penalties for the issuing of smoke only when it
-should appear (as no doubt it commonly would appear)
-that the proprietor had refrained from &#8220;using the best
-practicable means for preventing or counteracting such
-annoyance.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Surely if such applicable means exist, it is a just and
-reasonable thing that the public should be defended against
-offence and injury, arising in the mere indifference or
-obstinacy of those who inflict them; and I venture to hope
-that your Hon. Court, in renewing your application to
-Parliament, may procure the enactment of a clause, giving
-you control over so much of the nuisance as is wanton and
-avoidable.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">There are still under the present head, some points to
-which I am anxious to advert. During the two years that
-your Act has been in operation, various complaints have
-been made with respect to nuisances arising in particular
-trades; and with many of the causes of complaint you have
-been unable effectually to contend. Soap-makers, tallow-melters,
-gut-spinners, naphtha-distillers, preparers of patent
-manure, dealers in soot, exposers of stinking hides, wire-makers,<span class="pagenum" id="Page141">[141]</span>
-dealers in kitchen-stuff, fish-curers, tripe-boilers,
-type-founders, gold-refiners, slaughterers, varnish-makers,
-roasters of coffee and chicory, whalebone-boilers, iron and
-brass-founders, keepers of cattle-sheds, makers of printing-ink,
-dealers in camphine, cookers of cats&#8217;-meat, and manufacturing
-chemists, have all, at different times and in various
-degrees, been complained of.</p>
-
-<p>In respect of those of the enumerated trades which deal
-in the manufacture or sale of organic materials in a putrid
-or putrescent state, I have already submitted to you my
-opinion that the City of London, the home of a large and
-crowded population, is no place for them. With regard to
-the many other occupations, it would obviously be absurd,
-in the present state of society, to think of banishing them
-from the City which their industry has contributed to enrich,
-and where immemorial custom has given sanction to their
-continuance, unless you could with certainty affirm of them,
-that they cause direct and inevitable detriment to their
-neighbourhood. Every useful purpose, as regards the
-health of the City, might be fulfilled by the enactment of
-some moderate restriction.</p>
-
-<p>Manifestly, it is opposed to the spirit of your Act of
-Parliament, that any trader or manufacturer should possess
-the right of diffusing in the vicinity of his house, to the
-detriment and disgust of his neighbours, any product
-(whether in the form of running fluid, or volatile dust, or
-vapour, or smoke, or odour) which is either disagreeable to
-the senses or may be hurtful to the health. Many of
-the instances which I have enumerated fall within this
-description, and yet remain unaffected by the restrictive
-sections of your Act.</p>
-
-<p>I would submit to the consideration of your Hon.<span class="pagenum" id="Page142">[142]</span>
-Court, whether, in the renewal of your Act, some comprehensive
-clause might not be introduced, which should
-deal with these difficulties, as well as with the nuisance of
-smoke&mdash;and deal with them, too, on the same principle: a
-clause, which (without enumerating all trades which have
-been, or possibly may become, sources of nuisance in the
-City, and without specifying too narrowly the nature of the
-nuisances to be guarded against) should empower your
-Commission generally, in respect of every trade practised
-within the City, to require that its operations shall be conducted
-with the least possible amount of inconvenience to
-the neighbourhood; and which should enable you to enforce
-penalties in case of every nuisance arising in such operations,
-unless it should be distinctly shown on the part of
-the proprietor, that every practicable measure for abatement
-of the inconvenience had been constantly and thoroughly
-employed.<a id="FNanchor56"></a><a href="#Footnote56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote56"><a href="#FNanchor56"><span class="label">[56]</span></a>
-Such a clause was introduced in the Act of 1851 (see <a href="#Page193">page 193</a>)
-and has been worked with considerable advantage.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>I would beg to express my conviction that your possession
-of the authority with which such a clause would
-invest you, would very largely increase your powers of
-utility, in respect of many acknowledged grievances hitherto
-beyond your control; and the influence of your example,
-in the achievement of this great municipal purpose, would,
-I doubt not, speedily lead to the adoption of general
-measures throughout the metropolis, for the total suppression
-of smoke, and for the mitigation of other nuisances
-which now exist around your territory no less than
-within it.<a id="FNanchor57"></a><a href="#Footnote57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote57"><a href="#FNanchor57"><span class="label">[57]</span></a>
-This expectation has recently been fulfilled in the Smoke Prevention
-Act, for which the metropolis has to thank Lord Palmerston.&mdash;J.
-S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page143">[143]</span></p>
-
-<h4><i>Burial-Grounds.</i></h4>
-
-<p>In my <a href="#Page1">last year&#8217;s Report</a> I had occasion to represent to
-your Hon. Court the evils of <a href="#Page29">intramural sepulture</a>. I testified
-to that large accumulation of human remains, by which,
-in numerous parts of the City, the soil of burial-grounds
-has been raised many feet above its original level; and I
-advised you of the injury which must accrue to health from
-the constant organic decomposition thus suffered to proceed
-in the midst of our crowded population. I likewise invited
-your attention to the still greater evil of burial in vaults; I
-explained and endeavoured to remove the misconception
-which commonly prevails, as to the preservation of bodies
-under those circumstances; and I showed you how unfailingly,
-sooner or later after such burial, the products of
-putrefaction make their way from within the coffin (whatever
-may have been its construction) and diffuse themselves
-offensively and injuriously through the air. I concluded
-by expressing to you my strong conviction of the necessity
-that some comprehensive measure should be undertaken, for
-abolishing, at once and for ever, all burial within the City
-of London.</p>
-
-<p>During the session of Parliament that has intervened
-between that Report and my present one, an event has
-occurred, which promises to remove effectually the evils on
-which I then addressed you. Her Majesty&#8217;s government,
-acting at the instigation of the General Board of Health,
-carried through Parliament a Bill, enacting that the Queen,
-by Order in Council, may prohibit further burials within
-any district of the metropolis, so soon (after the close of
-this year) as the General Board of Health should have provided<span class="pagenum" id="Page144">[144]</span>
-the means of extramural interment. The operation
-of this Act of Parliament is such as, I have every reason to
-believe, you will welcome within the City of London: and I
-look forward to the complete cessation of burial within
-your territory, as a matter for warm congratulation among
-all who are interested in the cause of sanitary improvement.<a id="FNanchor58"></a><a href="#Footnote58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote58"><a href="#FNanchor58"><span class="label">[58]</span></a>
-The Act of Parliament here referred to never passed into operation,
-and was repealed in 1852 by a second Metropolitan Burials
-Act, under which the City Commissioners of Sewers are at present
-acting as a Burial Board for the City of London. See the last
-Reports of this Volume, from <a href="#Page280">page 280</a> to the end.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>From the terms of the Act in question I find that Her
-Majesty&#8217;s Order in Council is to be preceded by a Report
-from the General Board of Health, stating their opinion of
-the expediency, that (in any particular case reported on)
-burial should forthwith be discontinued. Accordingly, in
-the present state of the law, it will devolve on that Board to
-initiate whatever measures may be necessary for the prohibition
-of further interment in the City.</p>
-
-<p>Two clauses of your Act of Parliament, which have
-hitherto been inoperative, may perhaps come into requisition
-whenever Her Majesty&#8217;s Order in Council closes the burial-grounds
-of the City; viz., clause 89, which empowers your
-Commission, if you shall &#8220;think fit, to provide fit and
-proper places, in which the poor, under proper rules and
-regulations, may be permitted to deposit the bodies of their
-dead previous to interment;&#8221; and the following clause,
-which authorises your Officer of Health, in case of necessity,
-and for protection of the living, to cause any dead
-body to be removed at your expense, to whatever building
-may have been provided for the reception of the dead,
-previous to interment. It may hardly be necessary that I<span class="pagenum" id="Page145">[145]</span>
-should trouble you with any remarks on the subject of
-these clauses, till such time as they are likely to come into
-operation.</p>
-
-<p>With respect to the burial-grounds within the City, which
-will fall into disuse so soon as the new Interment Act becomes
-operative, I trust that your Hon. Commission will
-procure the power of regulating and supervising their maintenance,
-so that they may no longer be hurtful to the
-health of their vicinity. The arrangement of them, which
-would be most advantageous to their locality, would be that
-of planting them with whatever trees or shrubs may be
-made to flourish in a London atmosphere. The putrefactive
-changes, which for some years longer must proceed in these
-saturated soils, will be rendered comparatively harmless
-and imperceptible, if at the same time there advance in the
-ground a sufficiency of vegetation, which for its growth
-would gradually appropriate, as fast as they are evolved, the
-products of animal decay.</p>
-
-<p>It seems almost superfluous for me to observe, that, from
-the time when burials are discontinued, no unnecessary disturbance
-of the soil should be allowed; nor any attempts at
-levelling or the like, except under the direct sanction of
-your Hon. Court.</p>
-
-<p>Another point in connexion with these burial-grounds, to
-which I may here advert (though I must recur to it hereafter)
-is, that while great advantage may be expected from
-the discontinuance of their former uses, if their several
-areas be left open and without building, so as to subserve
-the ventilation of their neighbourhood, all that advantage
-would be lost, and a heavier evil inflicted on the neighbourhood
-than that of which it purports to be relieved, if these<span class="pagenum" id="Page146">[146]</span>
-spaces were at any time to be covered with houses; and I
-trust it may be found within the province of your Hon.
-Court to obtain authority for preventing any encroachment
-of this nature on the limited breathing-spaces of the City.</p>
-
-<h4><i>Habitations and Social Condition of the Poor.</i></h4>
-
-<p>In my <a href="#Page1">last Report</a> (under its <a href="#Ref05">fifth</a> and <a href="#Ref06">sixth heads</a>) I
-particularly solicited the attention of your Hon. Court to
-certain circumstances connected with the <a href="#Ref05">dwellings</a> and
-<a href="#Ref06">habits</a> of the poor, which, though they then lay apparently
-out of your jurisdiction, as defined by the Act of Parliament,
-yet appeared to me of immeasurable weight in the sanitary
-fluctuations of the City, as tending in their operation constantly
-to thwart your endeavours for improvement, and to
-neutralise day by day whatever good you could achieve.</p>
-
-<p>I reported to you that there were sanitary defects, inherent
-in certain large proportions of your municipal cure,
-which the most absolute control of drainage and water-supply
-would do nothing to amend,&mdash;constructional defects
-of houses and of courts, whereby their crowded inhabitants
-were excluded from a sufficiency of light and air, and were
-constrained, without remission or change, to breathe an
-atmosphere fetid with their own stagnant exhalations. I
-reported to you that, however unexceptionable might be the
-arrangement of such localities in matters already within your
-control&mdash;however clean their pavements, however pure their
-water, however effective their drainage, yet fever and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page147">[147]</span>
-allied disorders could never be absent from their population;
-while under opposite arrangements, with nuisances around
-them, with organic poisons rising from the soil or mingling
-in the water, their mortality would rise to the horrors of
-pestilence, and might easily renew the most awful precedents
-in history. I described to you the class of miserable dwellings
-alluded to&mdash;&#8216;Courts and alleys with low, dark, filthy,
-tenements, hemmed in on all sides by higher buildings,
-having no possibility of any current of air, and (worst
-of all) sometimes so constructed, back to back, as to
-forbid the advantage of double windows or back doors,
-and thus to render the house as perfect a <i>cul-de-sac</i> out of
-the court, as the court is a <i>cul-de-sac</i> out of the next
-thoroughfare:&#8217; I affirmed that &#8216;this could never be otherwise
-than a cause of sickness and mortality to those whose
-necessities allot them such residence;&#8217; and assured you of
-the &#8216;incontrovertible fact, that subsistence in closed courts
-is an unhealthy and short-lived subsistence, in comparison
-with that of the dwellers in open streets.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>In habitations of this kind the death-rate would of necessity
-be high, even if the population were distributed thinly
-in the district. A single pair of persons, with their children,
-having such a court for their sole occupancy, would hardly
-be otherwise than unhealthy; the infants would die teething,
-or would live pallid and scrofulous; or a parent would
-perish prematurely&mdash;the father, perhaps, with typhus, the
-mother with puerperal fever. Judge then, gentlemen, how
-the mortality of such courts must swell your aggregate
-death-rate for the City, when I tell you that their population
-is in many instances so excessive, as, in itself, and by its
-mere density, to breed disease.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page148">[148]</span></p>
-
-<p>Statistics can give you no conception of this crowding.
-If you refer to the results of the last census, you find the
-average population <i>per</i> house, in the City of London Union
-to be 7&middot;1; in the East and West London Unions, 8&middot;8; for
-the construction of these averages, the most dissimilar
-materials are blended together; and the density of population
-is apparently reduced by the very large number of
-business-houses which have no resident inmates, beyond
-the porter or the housekeeper who has charge of them. If
-you turn from the deceptions of an average to the exact
-analysis of detail, you will find many single rooms in the
-City with a larger number of inmates than you might otherwise
-ascribe to entire houses. Instances are innumerable,
-in which a single room is occupied by a whole family&mdash;whatever
-may be its number, and whatever the ages and
-sexes of the children; where birth and death go on side by
-side; where the mother in travail, or the child with small-pox,
-or the corpse waiting interment, has no separation
-from the rest.</p>
-
-<p>This is evil enough; but worse remains behind. It is no
-uncommon thing, in a room of twelve feet square or less,
-to find three or four families <i>styed</i> together (perhaps with
-infectious disease among them) filling the same space night
-and day&mdash;men, women, and children, in the promiscuous
-intimacy of cattle.<a id="FNanchor59"></a><a href="#Footnote59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a>
-Of these inmates it is nearly superfluous<span class="pagenum" id="Page149">[149]</span>
-to observe, that in all offices of nature they are gregarious
-and public; that every instinct of personal or sexual
-decency is stifled; that every nakedness of life is uncovered
-there. Such an apartment is commonly hired in the first
-instance by a single pair, who sub-let a participation in the
-shelter, probably to as many others as apply. Sometimes
-a noxious occupation is carried on within the space: thus,
-I have seen mud-larks (<i>chiffonniers</i>) sitting on the floor with
-baskets of filth before them, sorting out the occasional bit of
-coal or bone, from a heterogeneous collection made along
-the bed of the river, or in the mouths of the sewers; and
-this in a small room, inhabited night and day by such a
-population as I have described.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote59"><a href="#FNanchor59"><span class="label">[59]</span></a>
-I purposely refrain from any attempt to illustrate all the horrors
-which are incidental to this method of life; but, as a single exemplification
-of the text (chosen, not because of its rarity, but because it
-happens to occur at the moment) I insert an extract from a note,
-with which I was favoured a fortnight ago, by Mr. Hutchinson,
-Surgeon to the North District of the West London Union: &#8216;I was
-sent for to attend a poor Irish woman in labour, at half-past six o&#8217;clock
-yesterday morning, at 17, Fox and Knot court. There were three
-families, each consisting of a man and wife and two or more
-children, in a small room, 15 feet by 8, all lying upon dirty rags on
-the floor. I found one of the children suffering under small-pox.
-The adjoining room was occupied by six grown-up persons and two
-children.&#8217; In the circumstances to which my Report refers, scenes
-of this description must of necessity be <i>habitual</i>: and it is to their
-habit, not to their exceptional occurrence, that my remarks apply.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Who can wonder at what becomes, physically or morally,
-of infants begotten and born in these bestial crowds?</p>
-
-<p>In my <a href="#Page1">former Report</a>, I drew your attention to this pestilential
-heaping of human beings, and suggested to you its
-results; and on many occasions, during the past year, complaints
-have been before your Hon. Court which have had
-their real origin in this uncontrolled evil. I revert to it
-because of its infinite importance. While it maintains
-physical filth that is indescribable, while it perpetuates
-fever and the allied disorders, while it creates mortality<span class="pagenum" id="Page150">[150]</span>
-enough to mask the results of all your sanitary progress, its
-moral consequences are too dreadful to be detailed. I
-have to deal with the matter only as it relates to bodily
-health. Whatever is morally hideous and savage in the
-scene&mdash;whatever contrast it offers to the superficial magnificence
-of the metropolis&mdash;whatever profligacy it implies
-and continues&mdash;whatever recklessness and obscene brutality
-arise from it&mdash;whatever deep injury it inflicts on the community&mdash;whatever
-debasement or abolition of God&#8217;s image
-in men&#8217;s hearts is tokened by it&mdash;these matters belong not
-to my office, nor would it become me to dwell on them.
-Only because of the physical sufferings am I entitled to
-speak; only because pestilence is for ever within the circle;
-only because Death so largely comforts these poor orphans
-of civilisation. To my duty it alone belongs, in such
-respects, to tell you where disease ravages the people under
-your charge, and wherefore; but while I lift the curtain to
-show you this&mdash;a curtain which propriety might gladly
-leave unraised, you cannot but see that side by side with
-pestilence there stalks a deadlier presence; blighting the
-moral existence of a rising population; rendering their
-hearts hopeless, their acts ruffianly and incestuous; and
-scattering, while society averts her eyes, the retributive
-seeds of increase for crime, turbulence, and pauperism.</p>
-
-<p>While I refer to these painful topics, I may remind your
-Hon. Court of the Report of your Committee on Health, in
-respect of the same heads in my previous communication,
-and may strengthen myself with their testimony: &#8216;We feel
-it due to Mr. Simon to add, from the result of personal
-investigation, that the statements contained in his Report
-under this subject, distressing as they are, are not exaggerated:<span class="pagenum" id="Page151">[151]</span>&#8217;
-and, as regards whatever I may have recapitulated
-from that Report, I would beg leave to add, that my experience
-during the past year has confirmed the opinions
-which I then expressed; assuring me more and more, that
-the correction of these crying evils must advance simultaneously
-with the other labours of sanitary reform.</p>
-
-<p>Recently, while having the honour to attend your Committee
-of Health in their deliberations on your Act of Parliament,
-I have submitted to them, as my view of what is
-desirable for legislation on the subject of my present section,
-substantially the same suggestions as I formerly laid before
-your Hon. Court. As their recommendations must shortly
-come before you for consideration, and as I entertain the
-deepest conviction that the subject is of paramount importance
-to the cause in which you are interested, I have
-hoped you would excuse my recurrence to it, and my brief
-repetition of those suggestions which the incompleteness
-of your Act of Parliament has hitherto prevented your
-adopting.</p>
-
-<p>1. There are within the City some blocks of houses which
-are, I fear, irremediably bad and pestilential from such
-errors of construction as I have already described; and
-which, further, are so dilapidated, as to show at a glance
-their little pecuniary value. In many instances the destruction
-of such a block of houses would confer a sensible
-advantage on the population of a considerable district. Of
-this class I could hardly give you a better illustration than
-would be seen in the ground-plan of Seven-step alley.
-There are other instances (frequent in Cripplegate) where
-the removal of a single house at the extremity of a court or
-passage would make a material difference to the ventilation<span class="pagenum" id="Page152">[152]</span>
-of several houses, and to the health of a numerous population.</p>
-
-<p>2. Again, in very many parts of the City, you find illustrations
-of a constructional error to which I have adverted
-as in the highest degree pernicious to health. You find a
-number of courts, probably with very narrow inlets, diverging
-from the open street in such close succession, that their
-backs adjoin with no intermediate space whatsoever. Consequently,
-each row of houses has but a single row of windows,
-facing into the confined court; and thus there is no
-possibility of ventilation, either through the court generally,
-or through the houses which compose it. In the
-Out-Wards of Cripplegate, Farringdon, and Bishopsgate,
-examples of this arrangement are both most numerous, and
-I believe, most removable: but they may likewise be found
-in considerable numbers in the In-Wards of the City; <i>e.g.</i>,
-in the neighbourhood of Printing-house-square, of Great
-Bell-alley, of Leadenhall-street, of Aldgate, of Skinner-street,
-and of St. Martin&#8217;s-le-Grand.</p>
-
-<p>In many of these cases, if the management of the property
-were under a single control, it is possible that effectual
-relief might be given, by converting any two rows of houses
-which are back to back, each having windows only on one
-side, into a single row of houses, with doors and windows
-both before and behind: and if changes of this nature were
-accompanied by the removal of an occasional house, or
-other impediment to the circulation of air, I would guarantee
-to your Hon. Court that the next year&#8217;s register
-would show a very large diminution in the local amount of
-preventable sickness and mortality.</p>
-
-<p>3. In other cases, the immediate impediment to ventilation<span class="pagenum" id="Page153">[153]</span>
-apparently consists in the operation of the window-tax.
-Your Hon. Court, at various times, has heard how unfortunate
-for the health of cities is this ill-chosen method of
-taxation, assessing the amount of rate for houses in proportion
-to their means of ventilation. You can easily
-conceive how much it would impede your endeavours to
-promote health and cleanliness within the City, if an additional
-direct tax were levied on houses by reason of their
-<i>drainage</i>; or if the assessor regulated his rate according
-to the <i>consumption of water</i> for household purposes. The
-working of the window-tax is on this principle; and although
-it may be very true that health is the greatest of
-treasures, and that, on this ground, its means and appliances
-are eligible for taxation, I cannot but regret that a
-struggling population should be tempted by the hope of
-some small saving, to make a sensible diminution in their
-chances of life, by retrenching within the narrowest measures
-their inlets of ventilation and light.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">In reference to the more important constructional errors
-which I have described to you, as affecting the courts and
-alleys of the City, it will be obvious, from the remedies
-which I have suggested, that no hope of alteration can be
-expected from landlords. To throw together the adjoining
-houses of two different courts, or to remove one house for
-the advantage of certain others, or to destroy a whole block
-of houses for the sake of its neighbourhood, could evidently
-be undertaken, as a matter of private enterprise, only where
-property of very considerable extent, and close juxtaposition,
-happened to be in the hands of a single individual;
-and, as regards the City of London, this is rarely or<span class="pagenum" id="Page154">[154]</span>
-never the case. The only manner, then, it occurs to me, in
-which the requisite remedies could be applied, would be
-through the wealth and benevolence of the Corporation. If
-there were vested in your Hon. Court (or in any other
-authority of the Corporation) the power to make compulsory
-purchases of house-property, on the ground of its unfitness
-for human habitation, it would be easy to correct the
-extreme errors which exist; and, under a single large landlordship
-of this nature, it might not improbably be found
-that measures such as I have described would give to the
-localities in which they might be effected as much improvement
-in value as in health. After the necessary alterations,
-such houses would no longer need to continue under tenure
-of the Corporation, and the proceeds of their sale might
-again be applied to the reclamation of similar property in
-other parts of the City.</p>
-
-<p>In throwing out this suggestion to your Hon. Court, I, of
-course, do not pretend to offer you any details for its realisation.
-These can more fitly be supplied by others; nor should
-I have introduced even this general mention of a plan, but
-for the vividness with which its practicability and usefulness
-have struck me. During my period of office, I have seen
-distinctly that what seems incurable in the dark intricacies
-of our worst courts and alleys often depends for its difficulty
-on the <i>number</i> of landlords, and on their mutual independence.
-The conviction had thus been forced on me, which
-I have endeavoured briefly to express to you; that the only
-available cure for such evils would consist in the Corporation
-assuming to itself (if only for a time, and in gradual
-succession) the proprietage of such wretched tenements, and
-fulfilling towards them those large and liberal duties of<span class="pagenum" id="Page155">[155]</span>
-landlordship, which now remain unperformed through the
-multiplicity and neediness of petty owners. And, as a precedent
-for one species of such improvement, I may mention
-to your Hon. Court, that in such property as I have
-described to you, situated in other parts of the metropolis,
-private societies have already effected purchases which have
-enabled them to convert bad and unwholesome residences
-into the form of model lodgings for the working classes.</p>
-
-<p>Before leaving the consideration of evils, in which over-density
-of building and defective ventilation form such
-important parts, I would avail myself of the opportunity to
-observe, that it is of incalculable importance to preserve, for
-the health of the City, every open space which at present
-exists. The density of buildings within the City of London
-Union is very great, and in the East and West London
-Unions, is very considerably greater than in any other part
-of the metropolis; and not merely are the houses closely
-packed together, but (as I have already described them) very
-thickly inhabited. Within the City of London Union, each
-human being, on an average, has less than an eighth part of
-the space he would have if residing in the district of Islington;
-and, small as is this pittance, it is more than double
-what he would enjoy if he were living in the district of the
-East and West London Unions. With such density of
-population, it would, of course, be advantageous if any
-space now occupied by buildings should hereafter become
-vacant, so as to increase the breathing-room of the neighbourhood;
-and your Hon. Court will see the imperative
-necessity of discountenancing, so far as may be, the erection
-of additional houses on the few unoccupied spaces which
-remain. In order to do this effectually, it would be desirable<span class="pagenum" id="Page156">[156]</span>
-to procure the enactment of a clause, giving you absolute
-prohibiting power in this respect, whenever, for sanitary
-reasons, you might think it right to interfere.</p>
-
-<p>With respect to those evils which I have set before you,
-as arising from the unrestricted accumulation of persons of
-both sexes, and of all ages, within a single sleeping-room&mdash;dreadful
-as they are, I do not consider them irremediable.
-In the first place, I would beg you to observe, that the very
-restricted definition of a &#8216;lodging-house&#8217; given in your
-Act of Parliament, has hitherto rendered it impossible, in
-any degree, to regulate dwellings of the description referred
-to. An amendment of that definition might bring them
-within your control, and might enable you, not only in these
-instances, but in many others, to restrict the numbers of
-inmates, to compel the removal of persons with infectious
-disease, and to enforce provisions of decency, cleanliness,
-and ventilation.</p>
-
-<p>Not, however, alone to restrictive and compulsory measures
-do I look for the social improvement of numbers,
-now so destitute and miserable. That our entire industrial
-population within the City might, in such respects, gain
-great advantage from an enlightened supervision and guidance,
-I formerly endeavoured to show. I sought (from
-other experience) to illustrate the benefits they would derive,
-not only from your exercising habitual inspection, and possessing
-a more extensive control, in many matters relative to
-their dwellings and mode of life; but likewise, from the
-establishment, under the auspices of the Corporation, of
-institutions which, raising before them a higher standard of
-civilisation, would improve their social habits by an indirect
-educational influence, and would elevate the general tone
-and character of their class.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page157">[157]</span></p>
-
-<p>On the <a href="#Ref07">subject</a> of Model Dwellings for the labouring
-classes, and of Public Baths and Wash-houses, as illustrating
-this view, I dwelt at some length in my <a href="#Page1">former
-Report</a>; and, deeply convinced of the boon which their
-establishment would confer on the poor, I explained, to the
-best of my ability, the nature and the extent of their
-usefulness.</p>
-
-<p>I now recur to the subject, only that I may repeat my
-profound conviction of its importance; and that in doing
-so, I may congratulate your Hon. Court, and may utter my
-deep thankfulness for the labouring and suffering poor of
-this great community, that, in compliance with the Standing
-Orders of Parliament, formal notice has been given on the
-part of the Corporation of the City of London, of their
-intention, in the approaching session of the Legislature, to
-apply for authority which may enable them to achieve, for
-their dependent fellow-citizens, this almost incalculable
-good.<a id="FNanchor60"></a><a href="#Footnote60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote60"><a href="#FNanchor60"><span class="label">[60]</span></a> The intention of the Corporation, here spoken of, has not
-hitherto been carried into effect.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>I cannot too strongly express the importance I attach to
-this implied intention of the Corporation, to establish
-model dwellings for the industrial population of the City.
-But the first and immediate operation of such an Act will,
-from the nature of things, hardly reach to those very destitute
-and degraded classes of which I have spoken. Model
-lodgings of the ordinary character will become the residence
-of men, who now pay from two to five shillings a week for
-such space as they occupy, and who have the habit of
-sleeping in beds. To them the gain will be very great;<span class="pagenum" id="Page158">[158]</span>
-and the example of improved domestic habits will be beneficial
-to their entire class. But among the lowest order
-which I have described to you, as it subsists in thronged
-and pestilent heaps within your worst quarters, there is little
-knowledge of beds. The first hirer of the room may possibly
-have a pile of rags on which he lies, with his wife and
-children, in one corner of the tenement; but the majority of
-his sub-tenants (paying for their family-lodging from sixpence
-to ten-pence a week) lie on straw, or on the bare
-boards. It will be obvious to you, that no <i>Model</i> Lodging-house
-could be reduced to the level of their means. By
-those restrictions to which I have adverted, something may
-be done, no doubt, for improving the arrangement of houses
-so tenanted&mdash;something to prevent the more glaring outrages
-of decency which at present prevail&mdash;something to
-maintain comparative cleanliness, and to check the spread of
-disease. I fear that no further remedy than this would
-prove effectual, unless it were universal for the metropolis.
-Unquestionably, it would be possible, with persons even of
-the lowest sort above pauperism, to proceed on the same
-principle as in the establishment of model-lodgings for the
-working orders; to provide for them, namely, under respectable
-control and supervision, the best accommodation which
-their price could purchase, of the kind to which they have
-been habituated; to give them the means of lying down,
-free from damp or cold, partitioned from one another, and
-with isolation of sexes, in a building constructed or arranged
-for the purpose, where the ventilation and the facilities
-for cleanliness might be complete. There seems little
-room to doubt that this might be done, on a very large
-scale, at a rate considerably less than the poorest now pay<span class="pagenum" id="Page159">[159]</span>
-for the right of lairage amid vermin, filth, obscenity, and
-fever; and with such dormitories, obviously, there might be
-connected other arrangements for giving comfort and cleanliness
-to the very poor and destitute, at the lowest possible
-price. Of gratuitous reception I do not speak, because that
-is already provided, under certain regulations, in all the
-work-houses of the metropolis. But while I conceive that
-such a measure, if generally adopted throughout London,
-would defray its own cost, and would remove evils and
-miseries horrid to contemplate, I cannot but feel that it
-would be inadmissible (in its cheapest form) as a local
-measure. For if the price of reception&mdash;for instance, here,
-were so low as to allure the wretched population in question
-from their places of present resort within the City, it cannot
-be doubted that its influence would extend beyond your jurisdiction,
-and would throng your dormitories with the destitute
-of other districts. As the evil is metropolitan, so
-ought the remedy to be; and if there were thus instituted
-within each Union of the metropolis, a <i>Ragged Dormitory</i>
-of the nature described, I am persuaded, from my knowledge
-of the poorest classes, that its establishment would be of
-infinite advantage in improving the habits, and diminishing
-the mortality of those who would become its inmates.</p>
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page160">[160]</span></p>
-
-<h3>III. <span class="smcap">Suggested Alterations in the Act of
-Parliament.</span></h3>
-
-<p>Finally, gentlemen, considering that you are about to
-procure a renewal of your Act of Parliament, and that you
-contemplate strengthening it with such additional clauses
-as may render it effective for the eradication of all preventable
-disease within the City of London, I would ask permission,
-in this point of view, to submit to you in a connected
-series, such modifications as in my judgment would
-contribute to that purpose. Most of these I have already
-had the advantage of suggesting to your Committee on
-Health; and to many of them I have adverted by anticipation,
-in previous passages of my Report. I would beg to
-enumerate the <i>desiderata</i> under the following heads, <i>viz.</i></p>
-
-<p>1. A clause, which would give you control over the
-supply and distribution of water, would enable you in your
-corporate capacity to contract with any person or any company
-for the total service of the City; and would authorise
-you to defray the expenses of such contract by certain
-specified rates.</p>
-
-<p>2. A clause empowering you to require, that every trade
-or manufacture practised within the City shall be carried on
-with such precautions, and with such available improvements,
-from time to time, as shall reduce to the lowest
-practicable amount whatever nuisance or inconvenience to
-the neighbourhood is apt to arise therefrom.</p>
-
-<p>3. Such change in the definition affixed to your 91st<span class="pagenum" id="Page161">[161]</span>
-clause as would render this operative for the regulation and
-improvement of a larger number of houses; and such addition
-to the clause as would enable you, on the joint certificate
-of your Officer of Health and Surveyor, to enforce
-the making of additional windows, where requisite for the
-proper ventilation of houses.</p>
-
-<p>4. A clause permitting and empowering you, on sufficient
-medical testimony, to remove, or to call upon the Board of
-Guardians to remove, from any lodging-house, within the
-new definition of your Act, any person diseased with fever
-or other infectious malady, whose continuance there would
-endanger the lives of other inmates.</p>
-
-<p>5. A clause prohibiting the occupation of under-ground
-cellars for the purposes of dwelling.</p>
-
-<p>6. A clause prohibiting the keeping of cattle in or under
-dwelling-houses.</p>
-
-<p>7. A clause vesting in the Commission a right to purchase
-houses by jury valuation, in any case where they shall
-determine that such houses are permanently unwholesome
-and unfit for human habitation, or that their alteration or
-removal is necessary for the public health.</p>
-
-<p>8. A clause enabling the Commission to control all further
-encroachments on spaces which are now open within
-the City; so that on ground now unoccupied by buildings,
-no future erection shall be made, except with the sanction
-of the Commission.</p>
-
-<p>9. A clause to protect the purity and wholesomeness of
-human food, as sold within the City, by affixing penalties to
-its exposure for sale in any adulterated, decayed, or corrupted
-condition, which may impair its fitness for consumption.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page162">[162]</span></p>
-
-<p>These are the heads under which it has appeared to me
-that the most useful additions might be made to your Act
-of Parliament, in matters within the scope of my official
-observation. There are some other minor modifications,
-which I have submitted to your Committee of Health, and
-which, as they relate merely to detail, it is unnecessary
-for me to bring before you. All the recommendations which
-I have made on this subject result from a careful scrutiny
-of the operation of your present Act, during the two years
-that I have had the honour of serving you. Each separate
-paragraph of my enumeration founds itself upon a distinct
-recollection of occasions, sometimes numerous, wherein, for
-want of such enactments, nuisances which you were anxious
-to suppress have eluded your authority, or advantages
-which you were desirous to realise have stood beyond your
-attainment.</p>
-
-<p>It was in the nature of things that this should be so; for
-the period has been one of experiment. When the City
-Sewers Act became law for a period of two years, every one
-interested in its success must have felt the advantage of
-that limited duration, and have rejoiced in the opportunity,
-thus afforded, of rendering it eventually the most perfect
-embodiment of sanitary law.</p>
-
-<p>Parts of the Act have abundantly fulfilled your intention.
-In the all-important particular of house-drainage&mdash;in the
-enforcement of water-supply, so far as circumstances rendered
-possible&mdash;in the effective preservation of exterior
-cleanliness&mdash;in the abatement of innumerable nuisances&mdash;in
-the provision and maintenance of sewerage and paving
-and lighting throughout the City&mdash;the public has seen your
-Hon. Court exercising very large powers with very unusual<span class="pagenum" id="Page163">[163]</span>
-success. And this, let me add, during a time of no ordinary
-difficulty: a time when, day by day, the vast importance of
-sanitary improvement has been gaining ground among the
-educated classes of the country, as a deep and settled conviction;
-a time when the feelings of all classes have been
-powerfully excited, and when the metropolis especially has
-been convulsed with alarm, in the anticipation and in the
-aspect of a pestilence.</p>
-
-<p>In some other respects the Act has been less operative,
-and for an obvious reason. To legislate for health was new
-to you. It was only through the gradual investigation of
-officers, appointed under the Act, that you could become
-adequately informed of those sanitary requirements on
-which your ultimate legislation for the City must found
-itself. Only by their slow experience, only by failure as
-well as by success, was it possible that correct knowledge
-could be obtained of the powers really needful for fulfilling
-your sanitary intentions.</p>
-
-<p>In carefully watching the fluctuations of health amid
-your population; in investigating the causes which determine
-them; and in testing, on every occasion, how far
-these causes are amenable to the control of your Act of
-Parliament, I have arrived at the conclusions submitted to
-you in the present and in my previous Report.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">To excuse the length at which I have addressed you, I
-have but another word to say. My apology consists in the
-assurance, which again I lay before you, that in spite of all
-your exertions, untimely and preventable death still prevails
-most largely in the population under your charge. If the
-deliberate promises of Science be not an empty delusion, it<span class="pagenum" id="Page164">[164]</span>
-is practicable to reduce human mortality within your jurisdiction
-to nearly the half of its present prevalence.</p>
-
-<p>It is the sad prerogative of my Profession to have such
-knowledge of death as cannot lie within your experience.
-Knowing all that is implied in each one separate instance of
-its visitation&mdash;how much pain and sorrow, often how much
-bereavement and destitution, we, perhaps better than others,
-learn to appreciate that vast amount of social misery which
-has its symbol in the high death-rate of a population.
-It is from this practical point of view that I have ever estimated
-the importance of your functions, and have fixed the
-obligations of my own humbler office. Notwithstanding all
-that Medicine can achieve, to succour the body as it
-struggles against actual disease&mdash;notwithstanding those resources
-of drugs and handicraft, by which the physician or
-surgeon opposes death or mitigates pain in the detailed
-exercise of his art, all past experience, and every transaction
-of our daily practice, confirm the popular adage that
-<i>prevention is better than cure</i>. If this be true in any particular
-case, much more is it true in the largest application.
-While <i>Curative Medicine</i>&mdash;ministering step by step to the
-individual units of a population, can produce only minute
-and molecular changes in the health of society; Sanitary
-Law, embodying the principles of <i>Preventive Medicine</i>,
-may ensure to the aggregate masses of the community prolongation
-of life and diminution of suffering: in the working
-of some single enactment, it may affect the lives of
-generations of men, and may moderate in respect of
-millions the sources of orphanage and poverty.</p>
-
-<p>Surely, it is no common epoch in the history of the
-metropolis when you are appealing to the Legislature, on<span class="pagenum" id="Page165">[165]</span>
-behalf of the Corporation, for the grant of additional powers
-towards the accomplishment of so great a beneficence. To
-me it has always been an act of the deepest and most
-anxious responsibility to address you; and it would ill have
-become me now, in the attempt to discharge so grave a
-duty, if I had spared any pains or withholden any conviction.</p>
-
-<p>While endeavouring in this, and in my previous Report,
-faithfully and in detail to depict for you the actual condition
-of human life within the City, and while seeking to deduce
-for you, from reason and experience, those sanitary principles
-which are applicable for its improvement, I have had
-no trivial or easy task; and you will pardon me, I hope,
-both if I have incompletely surmounted the difficulties of so
-large a subject, and if, by the length of my Report, I have
-made too great claims on your indulgence.</p>
-
-<div class="reportsig">
-
-<p class="center highline2">I have the honour to remain,<br />
-&amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div><!--reportsig-->
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page166">[166]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center fsize90 highline2">Note to Column I.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">Speaking generally, this column may be taken to express the
-number of houses in each Ward. Exception must be made, however,
-in respect of the four wards marked with asterisks; for in them
-the real number of houses somewhat exceeds the number of assessments.
-This discrepancy depends on the fact that, in the specified
-wards, a court containing several houses is often assessed by composition
-as a single property. Mr. Daw informs me that in order
-to correct on this score the numbers which stand opposite the Wards
-in question, addition should be made as follows:&mdash;to Bishopsgate
-Without, 80&mdash;raising its number to 1100; to Cripplegate Without,
-150&mdash;raising its number to 1112; to Farringdon Without, 100&mdash;raising
-its number to 3633; to Portsoken, 150&mdash;raising its number
-to 1408. This would raise the total number to 16,384, which is
-about the estimated number of houses in the City. From the results
-of the last census it appeared that the population of the City was
-distributed as follows:&mdash;within the district of the City of London
-Union on an average of 7&middot;1 persons to each house; within the district
-of the East and West London Unions on an average of 8&middot;8
-persons to each house.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page167">[167]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center highline2"><i>Comparative prevalence, in the several Wards of the City, of such Deaths as particularly
-depend on local circumstances.</i></p>
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<table class="compprev" summary="comparative prevalence">
-
-<tr class="bt">
-<th class="bl">I.</th>
-<th colspan="3">II.</th>
-<th>III.</th>
-<th colspan="2">IV.</th>
-<th colspan="2">V.</th>
-<th colspan="2">VI.</th>
-<th colspan="2">VII.</th>
-<th colspan="2">VIII.</th>
-<th colspan="2">IX.</th>
-<th colspan="2">X.</th>
-<th colspan="2">XI.</th>
-<th colspan="2">XII.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<th class="bl">Number<br />of<br />Assess-<br />ments.<br /><i>vide</i><br /><a href="#Page166">Note</a>.</th>
-<th colspan="3">WARDS.</th>
-<th>Total<br />for the<br />biennial<br />period,<br />from<br />Oct. 1,<br />1848,<br />to<br />Sept.<br />28,<br />1850.</th>
-<th colspan="2">Separate<br />Totals<br />of the<br />two years<br />ending<br />respec-<br />tively<br />Sept. 29.</th>
-<th colspan="2">Cholera,<br />Dysentery,<br />Epidemic<br />Diarrh&#339;a.<br />Year<br />ending<br />Sept.</th>
-<th colspan="2">Fever, <i>&amp;c.</i><br />Year<br />ending<br />Sept.</th>
-<th colspan="2">Small Pox,<br /><i>&amp;c.</i><br />Year<br />ending<br />Sept.</th>
-<th colspan="2">Erysipelas,<br />Puerp.<br />Fever,<br />Py&aelig;mia,<br /><i>&amp;c.</i><br />Year<br />ending<br />Sept.</th>
-<th colspan="2">Scarlet<br />Fever,<br />Cynanche<br />Maligna,<br /><i>&amp;c.</i><br />Year<br />ending<br />Sept.</th>
-<th colspan="2">Diarrh&#339;a,<br />Pneumonia,<br />&amp;<br />Bronchitis<br />of Infants.<br />Year<br />ending<br />Sept.</th>
-<th colspan="2">Infantile<br />Zymotic<br />Dis.<br />Hooping-<br />cough,<br />Croup,<br />Measles,<br /><i>&amp;c.</i><br />
-Year<br />ending<br />Sept.</th>
-<th colspan="2">Hydro-<br />cephalus,<br />Con-<br />vulsions,<br /><i>&amp;c.</i><br />Year<br />ending<br />Sept.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<th class="bl">&nbsp;</th>
-<th colspan="3">&nbsp;</th>
-<th>&nbsp;</th>
-<th>1849</th>
-<th>1850</th>
-<th>1849</th>
-<th>1850</th>
-<th>1849</th>
-<th>1850</th>
-<th>1849</th>
-<th>1850</th>
-<th>1849</th>
-<th>1850</th>
-<th>1849</th>
-<th>1850</th>
-<th>1849</th>
-<th>1850</th>
-<th>1849</th>
-<th>1850</th>
-<th>1849</th>
-<th>1850</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">184</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Aldersgate Within</td>
-<td class="data">30</td>
-<td class="data">15</td>
-<td class="data">15</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">572</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Aldersgate Without</td>
-<td class="data">179</td>
-<td class="data">122</td>
-<td class="data">57</td>
-<td class="data">32</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">15</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">14</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">27</td>
-<td class="data">12</td>
-<td class="data">13</td>
-<td class="data">9</td>
-<td class="data">16</td>
-<td class="data">19</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">809</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Aldgate</td>
-<td class="data">102</td>
-<td class="data">66</td>
-<td class="data">36</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">18</td>
-<td class="data">9</td>
-<td class="data">9</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">20</td>
-<td class="data">10</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">133</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Bassishaw</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">314</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Billingsgate</td>
-<td class="data">33</td>
-<td class="data">28</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">15</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">334</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Bishopsgate Within</td>
-<td class="data">60</td>
-<td class="data">43</td>
-<td class="data">17</td>
-<td class="data">20</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">6</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">*1020</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Bishopsgate Without</td>
-<td class="data">329</td>
-<td class="data">231</td>
-<td class="data">98</td>
-<td class="data">88</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">18</td>
-<td class="data">13</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">10</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">41</td>
-<td class="data">19</td>
-<td class="data">32</td>
-<td class="data">15</td>
-<td class="data">35</td>
-<td class="data">31</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">251</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Bread Street</td>
-<td class="data">22</td>
-<td class="data">16</td>
-<td class="data">6</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">6</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">205</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Bridge</td>
-<td class="data">18</td>
-<td class="data">12</td>
-<td class="data">6</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">536</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Broad Street</td>
-<td class="data">42</td>
-<td class="data">29</td>
-<td class="data">13</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">6</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">194</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Candlewick</td>
-<td class="data">13</td>
-<td class="data">12</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">499</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Castlebaynard</td>
-<td class="data">103</td>
-<td class="data">75</td>
-<td class="data">28</td>
-<td class="data">28</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">6</td>
-<td class="data">11</td>
-<td class="data">10</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">20</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">341</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Cheap</td>
-<td class="data">32</td>
-<td class="data">22</td>
-<td class="data">10</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">626</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Coleman Street</td>
-<td class="data">66</td>
-<td class="data">42</td>
-<td class="data">24</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">8</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">10</td>
-<td class="data">9</td>
-<td class="data">6</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">12</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">294</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Cordwainer</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">158</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Cornhill</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">471</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Cripplegate Within</td>
-<td class="data">80</td>
-<td class="data">50</td>
-<td class="data">30</td>
-<td class="data">8</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">12</td>
-<td class="data">8</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">14</td>
-<td class="data">12</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">*962</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Cripplegate Without</td>
-<td class="data">299</td>
-<td class="data">207</td>
-<td class="data">92</td>
-<td class="data">86</td>
-<td class="data">11</td>
-<td class="data">15</td>
-<td class="data">6</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">17</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">33</td>
-<td class="data">29</td>
-<td class="data">31</td>
-<td class="data">15</td>
-<td class="data">19</td>
-<td class="data">21</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">232</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Dowgate</td>
-<td class="data">25</td>
-<td class="data">20</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">12</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">961</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Farringdon Within</td>
-<td class="data">153</td>
-<td class="data">117</td>
-<td class="data">36</td>
-<td class="data">67</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">9</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">15</td>
-<td class="data">17</td>
-<td class="data">9</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">11</td>
-<td class="data">10</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">*3533</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Farringdon Without</td>
-<td class="data">845</td>
-<td class="data">613</td>
-<td class="data">232</td>
-<td class="data">370</td>
-<td class="data">19</td>
-<td class="data">48</td>
-<td class="data">40</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">10</td>
-<td class="data">13</td>
-<td class="data">12</td>
-<td class="data">34</td>
-<td class="data">10</td>
-<td class="data">56</td>
-<td class="data">72</td>
-<td class="data">33</td>
-<td class="data">31</td>
-<td class="data">57</td>
-<td class="data">38</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">409</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Langbourn</td>
-<td class="data">29</td>
-<td class="data">12</td>
-<td class="data">17</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">166</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Lime Street</td>
-<td class="data">8</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">*1258</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Portsoken</td>
-<td class="data">143</td>
-<td class="data">82</td>
-<td class="data">61</td>
-<td class="data">29</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">14</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">9</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">14</td>
-<td class="data">10</td>
-<td class="data">12</td>
-<td class="data">10</td>
-<td class="data">9</td>
-<td class="data">18</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">343</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Queenhithe</td>
-<td class="data">59</td>
-<td class="data">36</td>
-<td class="data">23</td>
-<td class="data">14</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">611</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Tower</td>
-<td class="data">46</td>
-<td class="data">22</td>
-<td class="data">24</td>
-<td class="data">9</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">8</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">253</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Vintry</td>
-<td class="data">14</td>
-<td class="data">11</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">235</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Walbrook</td>
-<td class="data">24</td>
-<td class="data">15</td>
-<td class="data">9</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td class="col1">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">City of London Union</td>
-<td class="data">25</td>
-<td class="data">18</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">15904</td>
-<td rowspan="3" class="allcauses">The Deaths from all<br />causes within same<br />period were 6551</td>
-<td rowspan="3" class="brace bt br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="3" class="brace br">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">2795</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">1932</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">863</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">825</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">54</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">166</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">118</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">17</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">33</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">44</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">40</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">135</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">32</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">285</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">243</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">196</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">124</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">264</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">219</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1 bb">480</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">16384</td>
-<td class="databot">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="databot">2795</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="databot">879</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="databot">284</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="databot">50</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="databot">84</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="databot">167</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="databot">528</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="databot">320</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="databot">483</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table><!--compprev-->
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<table class="compprev" summary="comparative prevalence">
-
-<tr class="bt">
-<th class="bl">I.</th>
-<th colspan="3">II.</th>
-<th>III.</th>
-<th colspan="2">IV.</th>
-<th colspan="2">V.</th>
-<th colspan="2">VI.</th>
-<th colspan="2">VII.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<th class="bl">Number<br />of<br />Assess-<br />ments.<br /><i>vide</i><br /><a href="#Page166">Note</a>.</th>
-<th colspan="3">WARDS.</th>
-<th>Total<br />for the<br />biennial<br />period,<br />from<br />Oct. 1,<br />1848,<br />to<br />Sept.<br />28,<br />1850.</th>
-<th colspan="2">Separate<br />Totals<br />of the<br />two years<br />ending<br />respec-<br />tively<br />Sept. 29.</th>
-<th colspan="2">Cholera,<br />Dysentery,<br />Epidemic<br />Diarrh&#339;a.<br />Year<br />ending<br />Sept.</th>
-<th colspan="2">Fever, <i>&amp;c.</i><br />Year<br />ending<br />Sept.</th>
-<th colspan="2">Small Pox,<br /><i>&amp;c.</i><br />Year<br />ending<br />Sept.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<th class="bl">&nbsp;</th>
-<th colspan="3">&nbsp;</th>
-<th>&nbsp;</th>
-<th>1849</th>
-<th>1850</th>
-<th>1849</th>
-<th>1850</th>
-<th>1849</th>
-<th>1850</th>
-<th>1849</th>
-<th>1850</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">184</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Aldersgate Within</td>
-<td class="data">30</td>
-<td class="data">15</td>
-<td class="data">15</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">572</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Aldersgate Without</td>
-<td class="data">179</td>
-<td class="data">122</td>
-<td class="data">57</td>
-<td class="data">32</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">15</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">809</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Aldgate</td>
-<td class="data">102</td>
-<td class="data">66</td>
-<td class="data">36</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">133</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Bassishaw</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">314</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Billingsgate</td>
-<td class="data">33</td>
-<td class="data">28</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">15</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">334</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Bishopsgate Within</td>
-<td class="data">60</td>
-<td class="data">43</td>
-<td class="data">17</td>
-<td class="data">20</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">*1020</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Bishopsgate Without</td>
-<td class="data">329</td>
-<td class="data">231</td>
-<td class="data">98</td>
-<td class="data">88</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">18</td>
-<td class="data">13</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">251</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Bread Street</td>
-<td class="data">22</td>
-<td class="data">16</td>
-<td class="data">6</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">205</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Bridge</td>
-<td class="data">18</td>
-<td class="data">12</td>
-<td class="data">6</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">536</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Broad Street</td>
-<td class="data">42</td>
-<td class="data">29</td>
-<td class="data">13</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">194</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Candlewick</td>
-<td class="data">13</td>
-<td class="data">12</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">499</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Castlebaynard</td>
-<td class="data">103</td>
-<td class="data">75</td>
-<td class="data">28</td>
-<td class="data">28</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">341</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Cheap</td>
-<td class="data">32</td>
-<td class="data">22</td>
-<td class="data">10</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">626</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Coleman Street</td>
-<td class="data">66</td>
-<td class="data">42</td>
-<td class="data">24</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">8</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">294</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Cordwainer</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">158</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Cornhill</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">471</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Cripplegate Within</td>
-<td class="data">80</td>
-<td class="data">50</td>
-<td class="data">30</td>
-<td class="data">8</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">*962</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Cripplegate Without</td>
-<td class="data">299</td>
-<td class="data">207</td>
-<td class="data">92</td>
-<td class="data">86</td>
-<td class="data">11</td>
-<td class="data">15</td>
-<td class="data">6</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">232</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Dowgate</td>
-<td class="data">25</td>
-<td class="data">20</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">12</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">961</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Farringdon Within</td>
-<td class="data">153</td>
-<td class="data">117</td>
-<td class="data">36</td>
-<td class="data">67</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">9</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">*3533</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Farringdon Without</td>
-<td class="data">845</td>
-<td class="data">613</td>
-<td class="data">232</td>
-<td class="data">370</td>
-<td class="data">19</td>
-<td class="data">48</td>
-<td class="data">40</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">10</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">409</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Langbourn</td>
-<td class="data">29</td>
-<td class="data">12</td>
-<td class="data">17</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">166</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Lime Street</td>
-<td class="data">8</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">*1258</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Portsoken</td>
-<td class="data">143</td>
-<td class="data">82</td>
-<td class="data">61</td>
-<td class="data">29</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">14</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">343</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Queenhithe</td>
-<td class="data">59</td>
-<td class="data">36</td>
-<td class="data">23</td>
-<td class="data">14</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">611</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Tower</td>
-<td class="data">46</td>
-<td class="data">22</td>
-<td class="data">24</td>
-<td class="data">9</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">253</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Vintry</td>
-<td class="data">14</td>
-<td class="data">11</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">235</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Walbrook</td>
-<td class="data">24</td>
-<td class="data">15</td>
-<td class="data">9</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td class="col1">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">City of London Union</td>
-<td class="data">25</td>
-<td class="data">18</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">15904</td>
-<td rowspan="3" class="allcauses">The Deaths from all<br />causes within same<br />period were 6551</td>
-<td rowspan="3" class="brace bt br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="3" class="brace br">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">2795</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">1932</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">863</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">825</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">54</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">166</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">118</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">17</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">33</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1 bb">480</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">16384</td>
-<td class="databot">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="databot">2795</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="databot">879</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="databot">284</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="databot">50</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table><!--compprev part 1/2-->
-
-<table class="compprev" summary="comparative prevalence">
-
-<tr class="bt">
-<th class="bl">I.</th>
-<th colspan="3">II.</th>
-<th colspan="2">VIII.</th>
-<th colspan="2">IX.</th>
-<th colspan="2">X.</th>
-<th colspan="2">XI.</th>
-<th colspan="2">XII.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<th class="bl">Number<br />of<br />Assess-<br />ments.<br /><i>vide</i><br /><a href="#Page166">Note</a>.</th>
-<th colspan="3">WARDS.</th>
-<th colspan="2">Erysipelas,<br />Puerp.<br />Fever,<br />Py&aelig;mia,<br /><i>&amp;c.</i><br />Year<br />ending<br />Sept.</th>
-<th colspan="2">Scarlet<br />Fever,<br />Cynanche<br />Maligna,<br /><i>&amp;c.</i><br />Year<br />ending<br />Sept.</th>
-<th colspan="2">Diarrh&#339;a,<br />Pneumonia,<br />&amp;<br />Bronchitis<br />of Infants.<br />Year<br />ending<br />Sept.</th>
-<th colspan="2">Infantile<br />Zymotic<br />Dis.<br />Hooping-<br />cough,<br />Croup,<br />Measles,<br /><i>&amp;c.</i><br />
-Year<br />ending<br />Sept.</th>
-<th colspan="2">Hydro-<br />cephalus,<br />Con-<br />vulsions,<br /><i>&amp;c.</i><br />Year<br />ending<br />Sept.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<th class="bl">&nbsp;</th>
-<th colspan="3">&nbsp;</th>
-<th>1849</th>
-<th>1850</th>
-<th>1849</th>
-<th>1850</th>
-<th>1849</th>
-<th>1850</th>
-<th>1849</th>
-<th>1850</th>
-<th>1849</th>
-<th>1850</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">184</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Aldersgate Within</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">572</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Aldersgate Without</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">14</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">27</td>
-<td class="data">12</td>
-<td class="data">13</td>
-<td class="data">9</td>
-<td class="data">16</td>
-<td class="data">19</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">809</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Aldgate</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">18</td>
-<td class="data">9</td>
-<td class="data">9</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">20</td>
-<td class="data">10</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">133</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Bassishaw</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">314</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Billingsgate</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">334</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Bishopsgate Within</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">6</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">*1020</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Bishopsgate Without</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">10</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">41</td>
-<td class="data">19</td>
-<td class="data">32</td>
-<td class="data">15</td>
-<td class="data">35</td>
-<td class="data">31</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">251</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Bread Street</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">6</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">205</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Bridge</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">536</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Broad Street</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">6</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">194</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Candlewick</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">499</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Castlebaynard</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">6</td>
-<td class="data">11</td>
-<td class="data">10</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">20</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">341</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Cheap</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">626</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Coleman Street</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">10</td>
-<td class="data">9</td>
-<td class="data">6</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">12</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">294</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Cordwainer</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">158</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Cornhill</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">471</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Cripplegate Within</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">12</td>
-<td class="data">8</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">14</td>
-<td class="data">12</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">*962</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Cripplegate Without</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">17</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">33</td>
-<td class="data">29</td>
-<td class="data">31</td>
-<td class="data">15</td>
-<td class="data">19</td>
-<td class="data">21</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">232</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Dowgate</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">961</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Farringdon Within</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">15</td>
-<td class="data">17</td>
-<td class="data">9</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">11</td>
-<td class="data">10</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">*3533</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Farringdon Without</td>
-<td class="data">13</td>
-<td class="data">12</td>
-<td class="data">34</td>
-<td class="data">10</td>
-<td class="data">56</td>
-<td class="data">72</td>
-<td class="data">33</td>
-<td class="data">31</td>
-<td class="data">57</td>
-<td class="data">38</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">409</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Langbourn</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">166</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Lime Street</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">*1258</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Portsoken</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">9</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">14</td>
-<td class="data">10</td>
-<td class="data">12</td>
-<td class="data">10</td>
-<td class="data">9</td>
-<td class="data">18</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">343</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Queenhithe</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">611</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Tower</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">8</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">253</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Vintry</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">235</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">Walbrook</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">4</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">5</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td class="col1">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="ward">City of London Union</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">...</td>
-<td class="data">3</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">15904</td>
-<td rowspan="3" class="allcauses">The Deaths from all<br />causes within same<br />period were 6551</td>
-<td rowspan="3" class="brace bt br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="3" class="brace br">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">44</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">40</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">135</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">32</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">285</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">243</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">196</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">124</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">264</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="datamid">219</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1 bb">480</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">16384</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="databot">84</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="databot">167</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="databot">528</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="databot">320</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="databot">483</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table><!--compprev part 2/2-->
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page168">[168]</span></p>
-
-<p class="hind02 blankbefore2">Letter by Mr. <span class="smcap">Thomas Taylor</span>, Lecturer on Chemistry
-at the Medical School of the Middlesex Hospital, on
-the Chemical Qualities of certain Waters.</p>
-
-<p class="right fsize90 blankbefore15"><span class="padr2">4, Vere-street, Oxford-street,</span><br />
-<span class="padr6">November, 1850.</span></p>
-
-<p class="padl6 blankbefore15 fsize90"><span class="smcap">Dear Sir</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="taylor"><span class="padl2">Having,</span> by your desire, submitted the following samples
-of water to chemical analysis, I now beg leave to lay before you the
-result; and also, at the same time, to reply to certain questions
-which you likewise proposed.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">The samples of water taken for examination were derived from
-the following <span class="nowrap">sources:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<ul class="sources">
-
-<li>A. Water supplied by the New River Company.</li>
-
-<li>B. Water supplied by the East London Company.</li>
-
-<li>C. Water from a spring in the neighbourhood of Haslemere, Surrey.</li>
-
-<li>D. Water from a well in Bishopsgate-street.</li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<p class="taylor blankbefore1">A. This water was taken from an upright pipe in a court-yard of
-the Guildhall. It was slightly opalescent, inodorous, and tasteless;
-numerous small particles floated in it, which took a considerable
-time to subside. The matter deposited was of a rust colour, and
-consisted of peroxide of iron, with a little sulphate and carbonate
-of lime, and organic matter. It is to be observed that, as the water
-from this pipe is seldom used, these impurities collect in the pipe,
-and are therefore in some measure accidental, although, prior to collecting
-the water, a considerable quantity had been allowed to run
-away. The water was allowed to free itself from these impurities
-by subsidence, before being submitted to analysis.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">By evaporation to dryness, an imperial gallon left a solid residue,
-weighing 17&middot;33 grs., which consisted <span class="nowrap">of&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<table class="analysis" summary="analysis">
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Carbonate of lime, with a little oxide of iron</td>
-<td class="qty">11&middot;12</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Carbonate of magnesia</td>
-<td class="qty">0&middot;60</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Sulphate of lime</td>
-<td class="qty">1&middot;56</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Chloride of sodium</td>
-<td class="qty">2&middot;40</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Silicic acid</td>
-<td class="qty">0&middot;37</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Organic matter</td>
-<td class="qty">1&middot;19</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="qty bt">17&middot;24</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page169">[169]</span></p>
-
-<p class="taylor">When heated, this water became turbid; and, by continued boiling
-for two hours in an apparatus so arranged that the whole of the
-steam was condensed and returned to the water, 10&middot;95 grs. of the
-earthy carbonates, coloured by oxide of iron, were deposited.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">The relative hardness of this water, as determined by the soap
-test, distilled water being taken as unity, was 13&middot;3.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor blankbefore1">B. The second sample of water was taken from a small tap in
-the house of Mr. Hall, Bishopsgate-street. The tap was attached to
-the main.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">This water was without smell or taste, and free from floating
-matter. After standing some time, it deposited a very small quantity
-of oxide of iron. Although clear and transparent, it was not
-bright.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">It contained 19&middot;10 grs. of solid matter in the imperial gallon. The
-solid matter consisted <span class="nowrap">of&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<table class="analysis" summary="analysis">
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Carbonate of lime, with a little oxide of iron</td>
-<td class="qty">14&middot;58</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Carbonate of magnesia</td>
-<td class="qty">0&middot;44</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Sulphate of lime</td>
-<td class="qty">1&middot;54</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Chloride of sodium</td>
-<td class="qty">1&middot;71</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Silicic acid</td>
-<td class="qty">0&middot;32</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Organic matter</td>
-<td class="qty">0&middot;72</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="qty bt">19&middot;31</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p class="taylor">Like the preceding water it became turbid when heated to the
-boiling point, and by continued ebullition for two hours, 12&middot;90 grs.
-of carbonate of lime, coloured by oxide of iron, were precipitated.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">Hardness in reference to distilled water as unity = 19.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor blankbefore1" id="Ref08">C. This water was taken by ourselves from a spring-head near
-Haslemere, Surrey. The spring issued from the foot of a low sand-hill
-covered with bushes, and was received into a natural basin about
-four or five feet in diameter, the bottom of which was lined with
-pebbles and small gravel. From this basin the water flowed into a
-large shallow pond.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">The temperature of the spring at its source was 49&deg; Fahr., that of
-the air being 56&deg; Fahr.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">This water was perfectly clear and brilliant, but not sparkling. It
-had no appreciable taste, but was peculiarly soft and agreeable. It
-did not contain carbonic acid in a free state, for when mixed with a<span class="pagenum" id="Page170">[170]</span>
-solution of chloride of calcium and of ammonia not the slightest turbidity
-was produced. When boiled it did not lose its transparency,
-nor produce any deposit, until concentrated to about one-sixth of its
-volume, when glittering scales of hydrated silicic acid separated.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">An imperial gallon, when evaporated to dryness, left a solid
-residue, which weighed 5&middot;24 grs.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">This residue was perfectly white when dried at 300&deg; Fahr.; when
-heated to low redness, it charred slightly at the edges. The quantity
-of organic matter was therefore exceedingly small.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">Hardness in reference to distilled water as unity = 2&middot;4.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">On analysis, an imperial gallon was found to <span class="nowrap">contain&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<table class="analysis" summary="analysis">
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Carbonate of lime</td>
-<td class="qty">2&middot;00&#8199;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Chloride of sodium</td>
-<td class="qty">1&middot;46&#8199;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Sulphate of soda</td>
-<td class="qty">0&middot;407</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Silicic acid</td>
-<td class="qty">1&middot;143</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Organic matter</td>
-<td class="qty">0&middot;23&#8199;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="qty bt">5&middot;24&#8199;</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p class="taylor">Traces of an alkaline nitrate were also detected.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">During the short visit I made with you to Farnham, we examined
-several other springs near to their sources. In their general characters
-these waters closely resembled the preceding sample, all of
-them being remarkably soft, clear, transparent, inodorous, and free
-from any excess of organic matter, or of oxide of iron.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">By your desire two samples were subsequently sent to me; one
-marked &#8216;Barford,&#8217; the other &#8216;Boorley.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">The water marked Barford contained 6&middot;30 grs. of solid matter in
-the imperial gallon; when evaporated, scales of silicic acid separated
-from it in the same manner as from the water taken at Haslemere.
-Neither of these waters contained any trace of carbonic acid.
-Their relative hardness (distilled being unity) was&mdash;Barford 2&middot;4,
-Boorley 1&middot;5.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor blankbefore1">D. The fourth sample of water was drawn from the pump near
-the church in Bishopsgate-street.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">This water was selected as exemplifying the general composition
-of the shallow well-water of the City of London, when the well
-is situated near to a burial-ground, as is frequently the case with the
-parochial wells.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">The water from this well is perfectly bright, clear, and even brilliant;
-it has an agreeable soft taste, and is much esteemed by the<span class="pagenum" id="Page171">[171]</span>
-inhabitants of the parish, although, as will be seen by the subjoined
-analysis, it is an exceedingly hard water, and the large quantity of
-earthy salts it contains renders it unfit for all culinary and for most
-domestic purposes.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">When heated to the boiling point, this water becomes turbid, and
-by continued boiling of an imperial gallon of the water for two hours,
-23&middot;03 grs. of solid matter were deposited, consisting of 22&middot;15 grs.
-carbonate of lime, and 0&middot;88 carbonate of magnesia, with a trace of
-phosphate of lime.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">An imperial gallon of this water, when evaporated to dryness and
-the residue dried at a temperature of about 300&deg; Fahr., left a residue
-which amounted to 88&middot;07 grs. From another sample of the same
-water taken a month afterwards, 84&middot;53 grs. of solid residue were
-obtained.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">By an analysis, an imperial gallon of the water <span class="nowrap">gave&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<table class="analysis" summary="analysis">
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Carbonate of lime</td>
-<td class="qty">28&middot;97</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Carbonate of magnesia</td>
-<td class="qty">2&middot;61</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Sulphate of lime</td>
-<td class="qty">17&middot;85</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Chloride of sodium</td>
-<td class="qty">16&middot;95</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Nitrate of potass</td>
-<td class="qty">12&middot;40</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Nitrate of soda</td>
-<td class="qty">1&middot;50</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Nitrate of magnesia</td>
-<td class="qty">4&middot;92</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Nitrate of ammonia</td>
-<td class="qty">4&middot;01</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Silica</td>
-<td class="qty">0&middot;80</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Phosphate of lime</td>
-<td class="qty">traces</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">Organic matter</td>
-<td class="qty">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="chemical">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="qty bt">90&middot;01</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p class="taylor">The residue left by evaporation was of a light brown colour; when
-calcined at a low red heat it became slightly charred; but I could
-not, with any degree of certainty, determine the precise quantity of
-organic matter it contained: it was certainly very small.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">The excess of solid matter, as shown by the analysis, over the
-quantity obtained by evaporating the water to dryness, is owing to
-the decomposition of the nitrate of ammonia.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">The quantity of alkaline and earthy nitrates in this water is very
-remarkable. These salts are doubtless derived from the decomposition
-of animal matter in the adjacent churchyard. Their presence,
-conjoined with the inconsiderable quantity of organic matter which
-the water contains, illustrates in a very forcible manner the power
-the earth possesses of depriving the water that percolates it of any<span class="pagenum" id="Page172">[172]</span>
-animal matter it may hold in solution; and moreover shows in how
-complete and rapid a manner this process is effected.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">In this case the distance of the well from the churchyard is little
-more than the breadth of the footpath, and yet this short extent of
-intervening ground has, by virtue of the oxidizing power of the
-earth, been sufficient wholly to decompose and render inoffensive the
-liquid animal matter that has oozed from the putrefying corpses in
-the churchyard.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor blankbefore1">The result of these analyses confirms the general statement that
-the water derived from the sandy districts of Farnham and Bagshot
-is of eminent purity, and therefore peculiarly fitted for all those
-purposes of domestic and manufacturing economy which require the
-use of a very soft water.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">When regarded in conjunction with the analyses made by other
-chemists, of the water taken from the streams, pools, and other collections
-of water in the same locality, it also points out that, if it be
-desirable to secure the water in its utmost state of purity, it should
-be collected at its very source, before it has had time to become impregnated
-with the various mineral and saline ingredients of the
-different soils through which it would have to pass. The total
-absence of free carbonic acid in these waters is a very remarkable
-fact, and one which I believe has not been hitherto noticed.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">It will also be perceived that the principal solid constituent of the
-water supplied by the New River and the East London companies
-is carbonate of lime, held in solution by an excess of carbonic acid,
-an opinion already expressed by several chemists. These waters
-also contain an appreciable quantity of oxide of iron.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">When the water from these sources is boiled, or simply brought
-to the boiling temperature, the excess of carbonic acid is driven off,
-and the carbonate of lime being thus deprived of its solvent, the
-greater portion of it, together with the oxide of iron, is thrown down
-in the form of an insoluble crystalline powder, while the water is
-rendered comparatively soft and pure.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">Were it therefore possible that means could be devised by which
-the quantity of water necessary for the daily supply of London
-could be deprived of its excess of earthy carbonates in a manner
-sufficiently economic, comprehensive, and effectual, the citizens of
-the metropolis would enjoy the advantage of a tolerably pure soft
-water, free from those inconveniences which attend the use of the
-present hard-water supply.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page173">[173]</span></p>
-
-<p class="taylor" id="Ref09">Confining myself wholly to a chemical view of the subject, the
-principal disadvantages attending the use of hard river waters <span class="nowrap">are&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p class="taylor">First, The precipitation of earthy matter on the inside of vessels
-in which the water is heated. This furring of the vessel, as it is
-called, leads to its more rapid destruction, and has also the inconvenience
-of rendering it more difficult to cleanse, so that the flavour
-and odour of the various substances cooked in it are not readily
-removed. From the non-conducting power of the earthy crust, an
-increased consumption of fuel is also required for the due heating of
-the vessel.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">Secondly, The admixture of the earthy salts with the various articles
-of food submitted to the action of hot water.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">Thirdly, Diminished solvent power, as required for the purposes
-of the chemist, the brewer, and for many domestic purposes, as in
-the making of tea, soups, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">Fourthly, Diminished cleansing power, both as regards the direct
-solvent action of the water, and also as causing the decomposition of
-soap, and consequent increased consumption of that article. I must,
-however, remark that the annual loss reported to arise from this
-cause appears to me considerably overrated, since water is rarely
-used for the washing of linen until previously boiled, and the
-common practice of adding carbonate of soda to the water completely
-destroys the ill effects resulting from the hardness of the
-water. The additional expense of the carbonate of soda, thus
-added, is too trifling to merit notice; but when this salt is used in
-excess, as is generally the case, it produces the more serious evil of
-materially impairing the strength of the fabric submitted to its
-action.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">The only real advantage which hard water possesses over soft
-(and in the present state of things one of considerable importance),
-is, that it does not act upon or erode the lead of the pipes and
-cisterns in which it is contained.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">There are also some particular cases of minor importance in which
-hard water is preferred; thus dyers prefer hard water for rinsing
-of their goods, soft water extracting too much of the colour; but
-these cases are comparatively rare, and might be easily accomplished
-by an artificial hardening of the water.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">The following Table indicates the relative hardness of the different
-waters as determined by the Soap test; distilled water being
-taken as unity, as proposed by Professor Brande. It also shows the
-effect of boiling in reducing the hardness of the water. The numbers<span class="pagenum" id="Page174">[174]</span>
-express the direct quantity of an alcoholic solution of soap,
-which an equal bulk of each water requires in order to form a lather
-remaining permanent for from five to ten minutes.</p>
-
-<table class="analysis" summary="analysis">
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="water2">Distilled water</td>
-<td class="qty">1&middot;0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="water1">Water from</td>
-<td class="water2">Haslemere</td>
-<td class="qty">2&middot;4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="water1">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="water2">Boorley</td>
-<td class="qty">1&middot;5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="water1">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="water1">Barford</td>
-<td class="qty">2&middot;4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="water2">Water of the New River Company</td>
-<td class="qty">13&middot;3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="water1 padl4">Ditto</td>
-<td class="water2">after being boiled</td>
-<td class="qty">4&middot;7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="water2">Water of the East London Company</td>
-<td class="qty">19&middot;0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="water1 padl4">Ditto</td>
-<td class="water2">after being boiled</td>
-<td class="qty">5&middot;6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="water2">Water from the well in Bishopsgate-street</td>
-<td class="qty">47&middot;4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="water1 padl4">Ditto</td>
-<td class="water2">after being boiled</td>
-<td class="qty">26&middot;0</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p class="taylor blankbefore1">The experiments which I have recently made on the action of
-pure water upon lead, clearly point out the necessity of keeping the
-pipes always full, especially in those instances in which the water
-has a tendency, however slight, to erode the lead. As the importance
-of this part of the question does not appear to have been sufficiently
-appreciated by the advocates of a constant instead of an
-intermittent supply, I will briefly recount the facts of the case,
-although I do not offer them as presenting anything particularly
-novel. If a piece of bright lead be placed in a stoppered bottle, completely
-filled with recently distilled water, so that the access of air
-be wholly excluded, the lead is but very slightly acted upon, and it
-is only after the lapse of three or four days that its surface becomes
-spangled with a few minute crystals of carbonate of lead.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">If the stopper of the bottle be now removed, the lead still remaining
-beneath the surface of the water, the erosive action of the water
-on the lead proceeds more rapidly, but still slowly. But if now a
-portion of the water be poured off, so as to leave the lead only partially
-immersed, rapid action on the lead immediately commences.
-In the course of thirty-six or forty-eight hours, its surface becomes
-coated with crystalline scales of carbonate of lead, which, falling off,
-are succeeded by others, so that after the lapse of a few days an
-abundant deposit of carbonate and hydrated oxide of lead is found
-at the bottom of the vessel. If the experiment be made with distilled
-water that has been previously agitated with air, so as to completely
-a&euml;rate it, the lead is more rapidly acted upon, even in a closed
-vessel, thus clearly showing how much the action of the water upon
-the lead depends upon the presence or absence of atmospheric air.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page175">[175]</span></p>
-
-<p class="taylor">Now, in a minor degree, this is precisely what takes place in a
-leaden pipe conveying water capable of eroding lead. While the
-pipe is full, comparatively but little action occurs; but when the
-pipe is filled alternately with air and with water, it is placed under
-the most favourable circumstances to ensure a rapid erosion of its
-substance, and consequent contamination of the water.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">The rush of water necessarily produced by an intermittent flow
-must also detach portions of carbonate of lead from the sides of the
-pipe, even in those cases where the water has no very decided action
-on lead, and it is therefore far from improbable that in this manner
-the poison of lead is occasionally conveyed into our kitchens, and
-becomes mixed with our food.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">According to your desire, I have examined the action of the
-waters from the above-mentioned sources on clean lead, and have
-arrived at the following conclusions:&mdash;the water from Haslemere
-has a slow though decided action upon the metal, no effect taking
-place until the lead had been partially immersed for four or five
-days. After that time, a small deposit of carbonate of lead was perceptible
-at the bottom of the vessel, although none could be detected
-in solution. The absence of carbonic acid in the water from Haslemere,
-Boorley, and Barford, would in all probability prevent their
-acting upon lead, were atmospheric air at the same time excluded.
-A piece of lead that had been kept for a week in a closed bottle
-filled with water from Haslemere did not exhibit the least trace of
-carbonate of lead, nor could the presence of lead be detected in the
-water.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">It is scarcely necessary to add, that the water as drawn from the
-pipes of the New River and East London Companies does not exhibit
-the least solvent action upon lead; when, however, purified by boiling,
-and placed in contact with lead, crystals of carbonate of lead
-were observable after the lapse of three days in the water of the
-New River Company, while, owing to its greater hardness, the water
-of the East London Company did not exhibit any traces of carbonate
-of lead until the expiration of more than a week, and even then only
-in a slight degree. The same waters purified by the patented process
-of Clark did not exhibit so decided an action upon lead as when
-purified by boiling; but after evaporating to dryness the water in
-which lead had been immersed for three weeks, and dissolving the
-residue in dilute nitric acid, the presence of a minute quantity of
-lead was rendered evident.</p>
-
-<p class="taylor">It therefore appears that if leaden pipes, and especially if leaden<span class="pagenum" id="Page176">[176]</span>
-cisterns, are to be employed in the distribution and storage of
-water, on the system of interrupted supply, it will be a necessary
-safeguard, that the water thus conveyed and stored should not be
-of less hardness than from six to seven degrees, compared with
-distilled water as unity; and conversely, it also follows, that if the
-inhabitants of the metropolis are to gain the advantage of using a
-still purer and softer water, it will be requisite to do away with the
-existing leaden pipes and cisterns, and to substitute for them some
-material which shall not communicate any poisonous or noxious
-ingredient to the water. As matters now stand, we escape daily
-poisoning by the use of water loaded with earthy salts, and are thus
-compelled to drink an impure water on account of the impurity of
-our vessels. Would it not be better, and is it impossible, to drink
-the pure element from a pure cup?</p>
-
-<div class="reportsig">
-
-<p class="center fsize90 highline2 blankbefore15">I remain, dear sir, with much respect,<br />
-Yours obediently,<br />
-<span class="smcap righttext">Thomas Taylor.</span></p>
-
-</div><!--reportsig-->
-
-<p class="noindent fsize90">To <span class="smcap">John Simon</span>, Esq., F.R.S.,<br />
-<span class="padl8">Officer of Health to the City of London.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page177">[177]</span></p>
-
-<h2>THIRD ANNUAL REPORT.</h2>
-
-<p class="reportdate"><i>November 25th, 1851.</i></p>
-
-<p class="reportsalutation"><span class="smcap">Gentlemen</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="chapstart">I&nbsp; <span class="startword">have</span> the honour of laying before you, in the various
-subjoined tables, such information as will enable you
-to measure the present sanitary condition of the City of
-London.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">1. The first table (<a href="#App01">Appendix, No. I.</a>) contains a statement
-of the present population of the City, as derived from the
-Registrar-General&#8217;s recent census; and it compares the existing
-numbers in each division of the City with those given
-at the last enumeration in 1841.</p>
-
-<p>In examining this table you will observe that, during these
-ten years, the general population of the City has increased
-about 3<sup>2</sup>&#8260;<sub>5</sub> <i>per cent.</i>; that this increase has not been uniform
-through the nine sub-districts of your jurisdiction; that in
-some it has been unimportant; that in others there has
-been an actual decrease, extending even to 4<sup>2</sup>&#8260;<sub>3</sub> <i>per cent.</i> on
-the previous population; while in the whole East London
-Union the numbers have risen considerably above the
-aggregate rate of increase, and in the St. Botolph sub-district
-exceed those of the former census by more than 16
-<i>per cent.</i></p>
-
-<p>Passing over the minor differences which have taken
-place in the distribution of the population, I cannot regard<span class="pagenum" id="Page178">[178]</span>
-that larger increase without apprehension and regret. Probably
-for the most part it represents the continued influx
-of a poor population into localities undesirable for residence,
-and implies that habitations&mdash;previously unwholesome by
-their over-crowdedness&mdash;are now still more densely thronged
-by a squalid and sickly population.</p>
-
-<p>I congratulate your Hon. Court on the recent acquisition
-of powers (to the nature of which I shall presently advert)
-for the reduction and prevention of this serious evil.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">2. The second table<a id="FNanchor61"></a><a href="#Footnote61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a>
-presents a summary of the City
-mortality for the year which terminated at Michaelmas last;
-showing the deaths, as they have occurred, male and female,
-during each quarter of the year, in the several districts and
-sub-districts of the City; and including at the foot of each
-column, a statement of the year&#8217;s death-rate <i>per</i> thousand of
-the living in each such district and sub-district.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote61"><a href="#FNanchor61"><span class="label">[61]</span></a> <a href="#App05"><i>Appendix</i>,
-No. V.</a> The calculated death-rates are omitted from
-this, as from the other annual tables:&mdash;the quinquennial rates
-(<a href="#App02">App. No. II.</a>) giving more useful results.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>You will observe that, during the 52 weeks, dated from
-September 29th, 1850, to September 27th, 1851, there have
-died of the population under your charge 2978 persons;
-giving, for the City aggregately, a rate of nearly 23 deaths
-for every thousand living persons.</p>
-
-<p>The rate of last year was little over 21 <i>per</i> thousand.</p>
-
-<p>In my <a href="#Page77">last Annual Report</a> I suggested that the death-rate
-then prevailing was probably (from temporary circumstances)
-more favourable than the true average of the City;
-that it corresponded to the period of recovery from severe<span class="pagenum" id="Page179">[179]</span>
-epidemic influences; that it seemed exceptional; and that
-you might be prepared for this year&#8217;s mortality showing
-again a tendency to increase.</p>
-
-<p>Such has been the case; and it illustrates the necessity
-of appealing to cyclical averages for correct intelligence
-as to the healthiness of a population. To my mind the
-increased mortality of this year does not indicate any
-deterioration of the City in respect of sanitary matters
-under your control; it shows merely that the death-rate,
-which must be considered our present average for the City,
-is in truth higher than that which favourable circumstances,
-foreign to your jurisdiction, last year permitted us
-to attain.</p>
-
-<p>Looking to the total mortality of the last three years
-(the period for which I have had the honour of serving your
-Commission), I find that 9493 deaths have taken place;
-which, the mean population of the time being 129,922, gives
-an average rate of 24&middot;35 deaths <i>per</i> thousand <i>per annum</i>.
-This accords very nearly with a death-rate (24&middot;36) deduced
-from the septennial period 1838-44, during which (according
-to the Registrar-General) 22,127 deaths occurred in a
-population estimated at 129,739.<a id="FNanchor62"></a><a href="#Footnote62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote62"><a href="#FNanchor62"><span class="label">[62]</span></a>
-Since 1841, when the Census gave these figures, the limits of the
-West London Union have been slightly altered. The Inner Temple
-and Barnard&#8217;s Inn have been added to it, while part of St. Sepulchre&#8217;s
-parish has been taken away.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Assuming our City mortality to be accurately represented
-by these averages, I need not inform your Hon. Court that
-such a death-rate is unduly high. I have already, in previous
-Reports, laid before you the materials for measuring
-its excess,&mdash;materials which seem to show that our existing<span class="pagenum" id="Page180">[180]</span>
-death-rate is nearly the double of that which better circumstances
-have elsewhere rendered attainable.<a id="FNanchor63"></a><a href="#Footnote63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote63"><a href="#FNanchor63"><span class="label">[63]</span></a>
-The death-rate to which I particularly refer in the text, and which
-I <a href="#Ref10">cited</a> in my last year&#8217;s report, is that of a large district in Northumberland,
-numbering 27,628 inhabitants, where, during the seven
-years 1838-44, the mortality was at the rate of only 14 <i>per</i> thousand
-<i>per annum</i>; and even in this comparatively low proportion a very
-distinct share might still be called preventable deaths.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>It is not to the City alone of metropolitan districts that
-this high mortality belongs. Unhappily it affects the entire
-Metropolis; and we may find other towns in England, and
-still more on the Continent, where the death-rate is higher
-than under your jurisdiction. Yet your Hon. Court will
-not doubt that the standard to be adopted for your estimate
-of healthiness ought to be the lowest known death-rate;
-that every avoidable death represents an evil to society;
-and that, if a mortality of 12, or 13, or 14 <i>per</i> thousand
-<i>per annum</i> can be reached for one mixed population, there
-is ample room for discontent among any other population,
-which finds itself doomed to perish at double the rate of
-the first.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">3. In the third table<a id="FNanchor64"></a><a href="#Footnote64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a>
-all the deaths of the last three
-years are enumerated in a form which may enable you to
-compare one year with another, and one sub-district with
-another, in respect of their several contributions to the total
-mortality.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote64"><a href="#FNanchor64"><span class="label">[64]</span></a>
-This information is now included in the Quinquennial Synopsis,
-<a href="#App02"><i>Appendix</i>, No. II.</a></p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">4. In the fourth table<a id="FNanchor65"></a><a href="#Footnote65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a>
-are classified, according to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page181">[181]</span>
-ages at which they occurred, 9476<a id="FNanchor66"></a><a href="#Footnote66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a> deaths of the last three
-years. This table is arranged in a manner to display its
-results&mdash;(1) for each year separately, and (2) for each
-Union separately, in order that you may observe what local
-or annual differences have obtained as to the ages of chief
-mortality. You will notice that in 3469 instances, nearly
-three-eighths of the whole, death has befallen children
-under five years old. Children at this age constitute about
-a tenth part of the population of the City. They accordingly
-die at about four times the rate which would fall to
-them as equal participators in the average mortality of the
-district. The <a href="#App09">next table</a> will throw some light on this
-disproportionate excess of infant deaths.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote65"><a href="#FNanchor65"><span class="label">[65]</span></a> Now embodied in <a href="#App08">Table VIII.</a></p>
-
-<p id="Footnote66"><a href="#FNanchor66"><span class="label">[66]</span></a> In the remaining number (17)
-the particulars of age and residence
-could not be correctly ascertained.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">5. In it<a id="FNanchor67"></a><a href="#Footnote67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a>
-an enumeration is made of such deaths, during
-the last three years, as have arisen in consequence of acute
-disease partially or entirely preventable. They amount to
-3923&mdash;more than two-fifths of the entire mortality of the
-period.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote67"><a href="#FNanchor67"><span class="label">[67]</span></a>
-<a href="#App09"><i>Appendix</i>, No. IX.</a> includes this Table.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>I would especially beg the attention of your Hon. Court
-to the particulars set forth in the successive columns of
-this table.</p>
-
-<p>The first column shows 391 deaths by fever; and of
-these, without hesitation, I would speak as entirely preventable.
-Under favourable sanitary conditions fever is
-unknown. The deaths arising from it befall for the most
-part persons in the prime of life, whose premature removal,
-in the midst of their vigour and usefulness, is not only a<span class="pagenum" id="Page182">[182]</span>
-direct weakening of society, but is also, in respect of
-orphanage and widowhood, a frequent source to the public
-of indirect detriment and expense.</p>
-
-<p>In the second column, swelled by the epidemic visitation
-of 1849, you will find 902 deaths referred to Asiatic
-Cholera, and to other kindred diseases. Comparatively few
-cases of the kind have occurred since Michaelmas, 1849;
-an overwhelming majority belonged to the summer quarter
-then terminating, when the Metropolis generally was suffering
-from the presence of Cholera. I have already had
-occasion to show you that this frightful pestilence belongs
-only to localities which, by their general epidemic mortality,
-have previously been stigmatised as unhealthy; that, over
-districts otherwise healthy, it migrates without striking a
-blow; that it may, therefore, with confidence be spoken of
-as a disease proportionate to removable causes&mdash;in other
-words, as a preventable disease.</p>
-
-<p>I cannot pass over these two columns, without begging
-you to observe what perhaps may be novel to you. If,
-instead of reckoning the cholera-deaths as belonging solely
-to the one year in which they happened, you reckon them
-as belonging to the whole term of years which elapsed
-between the two visitations of the epidemic, and distribute
-them equally over that period, so as to form an average&mdash;say
-for fifteen years, you cannot fail to notice how largely,
-in the long run, the destruction by fever (which is always
-here) surpasses the fatality of that Eastern disease; so much
-so, that the average annual mortality by the latter probably
-does not amount to half the fatality of the former.</p>
-
-<p>Nor must it be lost sight of, that if the <i>deaths</i> by typhus
-double in number those produced by cholera, the list of
-<i>persons attacked</i> by the former disease, and thereby for a<span class="pagenum" id="Page183">[183]</span>
-long while incapacitated and suffering, is immeasurably
-beyond this proportion. Two or three times the number of
-deaths by cholera would give you the number of seizures,
-and enable you to estimate all the direct mischief caused by
-it; while, in regard of typhus, probably for one death there
-are twenty cases of protracted illness, tardy convalescence,
-and injured constitution. Not only are the deaths double
-in number, but each of them indicates an infinitely larger
-amount of sickness and suffering not immediately productive
-of death.</p>
-
-<p>The frightful suddenness of the rarer disease, and the
-condensation of its epidemic fatality into some single year,
-give it more apparent importance than belongs to the familiar
-name of typhus; but I can assure your Hon. Court,
-that if a large amount of preventable death, and a still
-larger amount of preventable misery, be strong arguments
-for sanitary improvement and activity, those arguments are
-more abundantly derivable from the constant pressure of
-fever and its kindred maladies, than from the sharper but
-infrequent visitations of the foreign pestilence.</p>
-
-<p>In the third column of this table come deaths by scarlatina.
-Of these, perhaps a certain proportion would occur
-even under favourable circumstances; for, whatever may
-have been the original derivation of the disease, it is impossible
-to doubt that the severity of its attack mainly
-depends on conditions peculiar to the person of the patient,
-and that no perfection of external circumstances will ensure
-mildness of infection. But on the other hand it is certain,
-that, under attacks of the disease at first equally malignant,
-adequate ventilation with pure air will enable one patient to
-wrestle successfully against the poison, while another, less
-favourably circumstanced, will rapidly sink beneath its influence;<span class="pagenum" id="Page184">[184]</span>
-and hence I have no hesitation in assuring you, in
-respect of the 213 deaths registered under this head, that a
-majority would have been avoided under improved domestic
-arrangements.</p>
-
-<p>In the fourth column, you will read of 91 deaths by
-small pox. Your judgment will not be a harsh one, if you
-assume that 90 of these were the result of criminal negligence.
-Under the present administration of the Poor
-Laws, vaccination is not only accessible to all members of
-the community, but is literally pressed on the acceptance of
-the poor. Those stupid prejudices, which for some years
-retarded the universal adoption of Jenner&#8217;s great discovery,
-have now died away; the neglect of vaccination must be
-regarded as the omission of a recognised and imperative
-duty. Deaths of children, arising in this parental neglect,
-ought to be considered in the same light as if they arose in
-the neglect to feed or to clothe; and I am disposed to
-believe, that the readiest way of bringing this view of the
-case before those uneducated classes, where the omission
-usually arises, would be to procure Coroner&#8217;s inquests every
-year in respect of some half dozen or more instances where
-the evidence of neglect might happen to be glaring.</p>
-
-<p>In the fifth column of the table stand recorded a hundred
-deaths by the poison of erysipelas, in one form or another;
-arising sometimes spontaneously, sometimes in connection
-with the child-bearing state, sometimes in sequel of accidental
-lesions and surgical operations.</p>
-
-<p>My daily experience as a Surgeon&mdash;especially as a
-Hospital-Surgeon, enables me confidently to speak of these
-diseases as an artificial product of unhealthy exterior conditions.
-The contrasting results of surgical operations in
-town and in country&mdash;of operations undertaken amid pur-ventilation,<span class="pagenum" id="Page185">[185]</span>
-in spacious cleanly rooms and dry localities,
-with those undertaken under opposite circumstances (in
-the dwellings of the poor for instance, or wherever else
-amid damp, dirt, and over-crowding), and the similar experience
-which exists as to the origination of puerperal
-fever, would be quite conclusive as to the fact, that of the
-101 deaths under this head, a large majority might have
-been prevented.</p>
-
-<p>Next, in the sixth, seventh and eighth columns, stand
-deaths arising in the chief acute diseases of infancy, those
-to which the disproportionate mortality of infants is mainly
-due. Many careful statistical observations, as well as personal
-experience, convince me that the immense fatality recorded
-under this head, is, to a very great extent, due to
-obviable causes.</p>
-
-<p>To bring this matter distinctly before you, I must take,
-as a standard of comparison, some district where the general
-death-rate is sufficiently low to distinguish it as eminently
-healthy; and in such an one you will notice a marked diminution,
-not only (of course) in the <i>number</i> of infant
-deaths, but likewise in their <i>proportion</i> to the total
-mortality.</p>
-
-<p>Such a district is that of the combined parishes of
-Glendale, Bellingham and Haltwhistle, in the county of
-Northumberland. In it the general death-rate is 14; in
-the East and West London Unions of the City of London,
-the general death-rate is 26&middot;73. In the former district,
-children under five constituting more than an eighth of the
-population (<span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>7&middot;6</sub></span>), their deaths form about a quarter of the
-whole mortality; while in the latter district, where the
-children are in smaller proportion&mdash;namely about <span class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>9</sub></span> of the
-population, their deaths are not much less than half (<span
-class="nowrap"><sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>2&middot;21</sub></span>)<span class="pagenum" id="Page186">[186]</span>
-of the whole mortality. Thus, in the healthier district they
-die at less than double the average rate for all ages; in the
-unhealthier, at more than four times that average.</p>
-
-<p>A still better method of district-comparison, is to arrange
-in a series the death-rates prevailing in several localities
-for persons <i>over five years of age</i>, and side by side with
-this column, another for the death-rates of children <i>under
-five years of age</i>. The first column will of course indicate
-very well the relative sanitary conditions of the districts;
-but the differences between them will be expressed far
-more clearly, and, as it were, in a magnified form, in
-the column of infantine death-rates. Thus, for instance&mdash;to
-repeat the comparison just instituted between the
-Northumberland and the London district; the death-rate
-for all ages over five is about 12 in the former district,
-and nearly 15 in the latter; a difference quite sufficient
-to establish the inequality of their sanitary conditions.
-But, how much more strongly is this disparity expressed
-in the comparison of the infantine death-rates&mdash;26&middot;5 for
-the healthier district, 107&middot;57 for the unhealthier one!</p>
-
-<p>Nothing can be more conclusive than the evidence
-afforded by statistics, as to the dependence of high infantine
-mortality on the general causes of endemic unhealthiness.
-My own observation within the City gives complete confirmation
-to this view, showing me that the diseases specified
-in my table (diarrh&#339;a, bronchitis and pneumonia, hooping-cough,
-croup and measles, hydrocephalus and convulsions)
-however various in nature they may seem, and however apt
-you may be to dissociate their occurrence from the thought
-of local causation, yet unquestionably multiply their victims,
-in proportion to the otherwise demonstrable unhealthiness<span class="pagenum" id="Page187">[187]</span>
-of a place, owe most of their fatality to local causes, and
-may, therefore, to a great extent he disarmed of their
-malignity.</p>
-
-<p>The last column gives the total of those which have preceded
-it, and shows, out of 9493 deaths, 3923, all from
-acute disease, in intimate dependence on local and obviable
-causes. It will be a moderate computation with respect
-to these deaths, if we estimate that two-thirds of them
-might have been hindered.</p>
-
-<p>And yet it is not only by <i>acute</i> disorders, that preventable
-death succeeds in ravaging the population. If we turn to
-the examination of <i>chronic</i> ailments producing death, we
-may quickly recognise many indications of their preventability,
-and may satisfy ourselves that here also the general
-mortality might be very largely reduced.</p>
-
-<p>Look, for instance, at the whole immense class of scrofulous
-diseases, including pulmonary consumption, a class
-probably causing, directly or indirectly, at least a quarter of
-our entire mortality; and consider the vast influence which
-circumstances exert over its development.</p>
-
-<p>Of such circumstances some lie within your control, and
-affect masses of the people; but the more special causes of
-chronic disease lie rather out of your jurisdiction, and the
-option of avoiding them is a matter of individual will.
-Vicious habits and indiscretion; a life too indolent, or too
-laborious; poverty and privation; vicissitudes of weather
-and temperature; intemperance in diet; unwholesome and
-adulterated food; and, not least, inappropriate marriages
-tending to perpetuate particular kinds of disease; these
-words may suggest to you, briefly, that there are many influences,
-within the sphere of private life, by which the<span class="pagenum" id="Page188">[188]</span>
-aggregate death-rate of a population is largely enhanced,
-but the control of which, if attainable, lies almost entirely
-at the discretion of the classes subject to their operation.</p>
-
-<p>Considering all these causes, and the needless waste of
-life occasioned by them, I can have little doubt that as
-much might be done by individuals, under the influence of
-improved education, to lessen the mortality from chronic
-disease, as by sanitary legislation to stay the sources of
-epidemic death. And regarding both classes of disease
-together&mdash;those, on the one hand, which are of endemic
-origin (arising in imperfect drainage, in defective water-supply,
-in ill-devised arrangement of buildings, in offensive and
-injurious trades, in the putrefaction of burial-grounds, and
-the like) and those classes, on the other, which arise in the
-circumstances of individual life, I can have no hesitation in
-estimating their joint operation at a moiety of our total
-death-rate, or in renewing an assertion of my <a href="#Page77">last years&#8217;
-Report</a>, &#8216;if the deliberate promises of Science be not an
-empty delusion, it is practicable to reduce human mortality
-within your jurisdiction to the half of its present average
-prevalence.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>To revert, however, to your more special branch of the
-subject,&mdash;I have thought the present a convenient time for
-indicating to you the pressure of preventable death, arising
-in acute disease, because of the great addition which you
-have recently gained to your powers for enforcing prevention.</p>
-
-<p>That an average death-rate of nearly 25 <i>per</i> thousand
-<i>per annum</i> prevails in the City; that three-eighths of your
-mortality consists in a premature extinction of infant life;
-that fatal disease, in more than two-fifths of its visitations,<span class="pagenum" id="Page189">[189]</span>
-is of a kind which operates endemically and preventably;&mdash;these
-are the facts to which I have appealed, as my evidence
-of the need for sanitary activity and perseverance.</p>
-
-<p>On other occasions I have endeavoured to set before you
-what are those agencies hostile to life, which affect the
-masses of an urban population; and during the last three
-years your Hon. Court has shown its recognition of these
-causes, and has devoted attention to the means of counteracting
-them by appropriate sanitary measures.</p>
-
-<p>In too many instances, the powers first given you by the
-Legislature were inadequate to this great purpose. But
-now, armed with the further authority of your new Act of
-Parliament, you enjoy such means for sanitary improvement
-as have never yet been possessed by any Corporation in the
-country; such means as, judiciously wielded, cannot but
-produce the greatest advantage to persons living under
-your jurisdiction.</p>
-
-<p>As you are only now entering on the exercise of these
-powers, it may be convenient that I should submit to you a
-brief account of them, and I gladly turn from contemplating
-the spectacle of preventable death, to analyse the means of
-prevention now vested in you by the Legislature.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">1. In regard of <i>public drainage or sewerage</i>, the first and
-most elementary condition of endemic health, I need hardly
-tell you that within the City, your powers are absolute.
-You have entire and sole responsibility for the construction
-and maintenance of sewers, for their cleaning or
-flushing, and for the prevention of noxious effluvia from
-their innumerable gully-holes.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">2. In the all-important particular of <i>house-drainage</i>, your<span class="pagenum" id="Page190">[190]</span>
-authority is sufficient for every purpose. You can order
-the complete abolition of cesspools; the construction of
-drainage in any premises within fifty feet of a sewer; its
-repair, cleansing, or renewal, whenever it may be disordered:
-and not only can you order these works to be done, but&mdash;failing
-the owner&#8217;s compliance with your notice, you can
-devolve the performance of his duty on your own workmen,
-and can recover your expenses from the recusant.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">3. In regard of <i>water-supply to houses</i> your powers are
-equally cogent, though the unsatisfactory condition of the
-water-trade continues a serious obstacle to their effective
-employment. You have authority here, as with house-drainage,
-to order the construction of all necessary apparatus,
-and to enforce the fulfilment of your order.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">Under both these heads, you possess a power hitherto but
-imperfectly used, the complete and constant exercise of
-which I would strongly recommend to your Hon. Court. In
-all those clauses of your Acts of Parliament, which relate to
-private works of house-drainage and water-supply, there
-occurs a very important phrase:&mdash;such works shall be constructed
-&#8216;to the satisfaction of the Commissioners.&#8217; Now,
-of private works effected under the authority of your Act,
-during the last three years, a certain, not inconsiderable,
-share proves inoperative and bad. The mere overflowing of
-a water-butt (and in numberless instances this is the arrangement
-evasively adopted under your orders) can never
-suffice for the effectual cleansing of house-drains. I need
-scarcely inform you that an obstructed drain and choked
-privy, wherever they occur, are equivalent to a cesspool;<span class="pagenum" id="Page191">[191]</span>
-shedding abroad the same effluvia, and producing the same
-deadly results. No gain is gotten to the wholesomeness of
-a house, by substituting for its former cesspool an equally
-offensive and inoperative drain. To my knowledge, much
-of the drainage done during the last three years is liable to
-this risk; and it appears to me indispensable that you
-should exert direct supervision against so serious an evil.</p>
-
-<p>I would recommend to your Hon. Court that, in issuing
-orders for the construction of drainage and water-supply,
-you should require a full specification to be delivered you of
-the works about to be undertaken, and should distinctly
-decide as to their sufficiency; or by a still simpler process,
-that you should fix and determine a certain standard of
-combined works; a model plan, in short, for house-drainage,
-privies, and water-supply, and should direct your Inspectors
-to certify to you the sufficiency of only such works as may
-accurately correspond to this design.</p>
-
-<p>I cannot but regard it as a grave calamity, that the
-general supply of water to the City remains beyond your
-control, in the hands of irresponsible traders; for its imperfect
-adaptation to the requirements of the public constitutes
-the largest sanitary evil of the day.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">4. You have entire control over the <i>pavement of every
-public way</i> within the City, for its construction, maintenance,
-and cleansing; and in this respect you exercise a
-power of great sanitary value. The preservation of cleanliness
-along the whole extended surface of the City, including
-its many hundred courts and alleys, is indeed a branch of
-your functions which can hardly be over-estimated for its
-importance; and the fines which you have the power of<span class="pagenum" id="Page192">[192]</span>
-levying from your contractors, whenever the scavenging is
-neglected, are useful securities for the general performance
-of their duties.</p>
-
-<p>It lies within your power to order, wherever you may
-think fit, the employment of the hose and jet for the purpose
-of surface-cleansing in courts and alleys: and, I may add,
-that the advantages of this most effective sanitary process
-have been highly appreciated where you have directed its
-application.</p>
-
-<p>In some of the poorer localities, complaints have arisen in
-a matter relating to the pavements, where you are not able
-to afford the complainants effectual relief: viz., with respect
-to certain inhabitants throwing refuse and offensive matters
-from the houses into the public way, so that nuisance is
-created. I have already suggested to your Hon. Court, and
-I beg leave here to repeat, that in the 41st clause of the
-City Police Act, provision is made for the prevention of this
-particular offence, and that your four Inspectors are manifestly
-unable to relieve the Police Force of their legal
-responsibility in the matter.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">5. Your powers for enforcing the wholesome <i>cleanliness
-of private premises</i> are equally considerable. You can order
-the removal of offensive matter, the purification and whitewashing
-of premises, and the abatement of any nuisance
-arising in conditions of filth. In case of need, as shown by
-a medical certificate, you can summon the offender before
-your Court; and (under your new Act) you can punish with
-a heavy fine any repetition of the nuisance against which
-your order has once been issued.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">6. So long as <i>slaughter-houses</i> are tolerated within the<span class="pagenum" id="Page193">[193]</span>
-City (and it is to be hoped this may not be long) you have
-power to regulate their use, according to your discretion,
-with a view to their cleanliness and better management; and
-in case of disobedience to your orders, you have power to
-enforce the temporary suspension of slaughtering. Your
-new Act renders illegal any slaughtering in cellars, or any
-keeping of cattle there: and it prohibits that offensive exposure
-of putrescent hides, which has so often been complained
-of in the vicinity of Leadenhall Market.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">7. In close connection with the regulation of slaughter-houses,
-your new Act gives you authority in a matter
-hitherto quite foreign to your jurisdiction, but where your
-vigilance may no doubt be exercised with great advantage
-to the public health. You are authorised to <i>appoint Inspectors
-of slaughter-houses and of meat</i>; and these officers
-are required to inspect shops, markets, and slaughter-houses,
-and to seize and destroy any meat which may appear
-to them unsound or unwholesome. A further clause of very
-extensive application enables you to deal generally with all
-cases, where <i>unwholesome provisions</i> are exposed for sale;
-and this clause is so constructed as to include and render
-penal all those <i>fraudulent adulterations of food</i> which
-render it detrimental to health.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">8. You are invested with important authority against
-<i>such trades and occupations as are offensive or injurious</i> to
-their neighbourhood. Under your former Act, you can
-subject to penalties any person who shall &#8216;roast or burn,
-boil, distil, or otherwise decompose any root, drug, or other
-article or thing, in any house or building, and thereby cause<span class="pagenum" id="Page194">[194]</span>
-offensive or injurious smells or vapours to be emitted therefrom,
-so as to become a common nuisance;&#8217; and the same
-Act also gave you a very inoperative clause against such
-nuisance-causing manufactories as might begin to work in
-the City after the commencement of that Act.</p>
-
-<p>Your new law enacts that everything practicable shall be
-done for the suppression of all nuisances arising in manufactures
-and the like:&mdash;that, after the first of January next,
-every furnace used in the City shall be such as to consume
-its own smoke; and that whatever trade or business may
-occasion noxious or offensive effluvia, or otherwise annoy
-the inhabitants of its neighbourhood, shall be required to
-employ, to your satisfaction, the best known means for
-preventing or counteracting such annoyance.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">9. You have certain powers, to which I adverted in <a href="#Page77">my
-former Report</a>, as likely to come into activity whenever the
-injurious practice of intramural burial might cease; powers,
-namely, relating to the <i>disposal of dead bodies</i> in certain
-specified cases: and under your new Act, you have acquired
-some further authority (likewise only to be exercised after
-that cessation, and with the consent of the Bishop of
-London) to <i>appropriate the disused burial-grounds</i> for purposes
-of improvement. At the time of my last Report I
-looked &#8216;forward to the complete discontinuance of burial
-within your territory as a matter for warm congratulation
-among all who are interested in the cause of sanitary improvement;&#8217;
-and it is with proportionate disappointment
-and regret, that I have now to report to you that the Order
-in Council, which was to have closed all metropolitan burial
-grounds, has never yet been issued; and that negociations,<span class="pagenum" id="Page195">[195]</span>
-conducted by the General Board of Health for the purchase
-of a sufficient extramural cemetery, were suddenly arrested
-at the close of the last session of Parliament. Your powers
-in relation to these matters remain of course meanwhile
-inoperative.<a id="FNanchor68"></a><a href="#Footnote68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote68"><a href="#FNanchor68"><span class="label">[68]</span></a> In the Parliamentary Session of 1852, the Interments Act of
-1850, which had remained inoperative, was repealed under a new
-&#8216;Act to amend the Laws concerning the Burial of the Dead in the
-Metropolis,&#8217; which became law July 1st, 1852. Under this Act,
-the powers, alluded to in <a href="#Page280">a later part</a> of this volume, were given to
-the Commissioners of Sewers of the City of London as a Burial
-Board for the City.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">10. The most important additions made to your power
-relate to the <i>dwellings of the poor</i>, and are embodied chiefly
-in the tenth section of your new Act. The definition of
-&#8216;lodging-house&#8217; given in this clause is so extensive, and
-the power of regulation conceded to you is so unconditional
-(where once the necessity for your interference is shown)
-that your Hon. Court can now exert your authority for
-every legitimate object, in respect of all the poorer houses
-in the City.<a id="FNanchor69"></a><a href="#Footnote69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a> The definition is, that &#8216;the expression
-<i>common lodging-house</i> shall, for the purposes of this Act,
-mean any house, not being a licensed victualling house, let,
-or any part of which is let, at a daily or weekly rent not
-exceeding the rate of three shillings and sixpence per week;
-or in which persons are harboured or lodged for hire for a
-single night, or for less than a week at one time; or in
-which any room let for hire is occupied by more than one<span class="pagenum" id="Page196">[196]</span>
-family at one time.&#8217; And your powers are to the following
-effect:&mdash;Wherever over-crowding has taken place unwholesomely
-or indecently&mdash;wherever undue illness has prevailed&mdash;wherever
-from any one of several causes the house is
-unfit for occupation, you can require its <i>immediate registration</i>;
-you can then <i>make such rules</i> as you think fit
-for the <i>maintenance of decency and health</i>; and you can
-enforce conformity to those regulations with appropriate
-penalties.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote69"><a href="#FNanchor69"><span class="label">[69]</span></a> Circumstances, which need not here be detailed, have led to
-disappointment in the working of this clause, and have shown, to my
-great regret, that I over-estimated the benefits it was capable of
-conferring.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The terms of the clause throw on your Medical Officer
-the responsibility of initiating these proceedings; and his
-task in the matter will be one of anxiety and arduousness.
-In most other clauses of your Acts of Parliament, an alternative
-is allowed as to your taking the opinion &#8216;of the
-Officer of Health, or of any two duly qualified Medical
-Practitioners:&#8217; but in this clause you are expressly restricted
-to the certificate of your Officer of Health.</p>
-
-<p>In my two former Reports, I have addressed you at
-length on those conditions relative to the dwellings and
-social habits of the poor which made the enactments of
-this clause indispensable; and I look forward to its
-operation with a sanguine belief that it may be rendered
-one of the most important boons ever conferred on the
-labouring classes of the community.</p>
-
-<p>I subjoin to my Report the schedule which I would
-suggest for the registration of lodging-houses, and which
-(as you will observe) requires detailed information as to
-every sanitary particular of the dwelling.<a id="FNanchor70"></a><a href="#Footnote70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a> I would recommend
-that in every case, where registration is made, the
-owner&#8217;s specification of these particulars should be accompanied
-by a written certificate from your Inspector; testifying<span class="pagenum" id="Page197">[197]</span>
-(in some such form as that annexed to the schedule
-in my Appendix) first, to the accuracy of the statement, and,
-secondly, to the general condition of the house.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote70"><a href="#FNanchor70"><span class="label">[70]</span></a> Vide <a href="#Page210">page 210</a>.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>With respect to the rules, which, under authority of this
-clause, you may find it requisite to lay down for better
-regulating the residences of the poor,&mdash;the conditions for
-which you have to legislate are so various and complicated,
-that no formula will apply universally; and you will often
-be called on to adapt special rules to particular cases as
-they come before you. I can therefore only venture at
-present to offer you general suggestions on the subject.</p>
-
-<p>You will find that the houses in which your interference
-is required fall into three cases, characterised as follows:&mdash;(1)
-Where the house is let in several independent holdings
-(often as many holdings as rooms) each occupied by a
-single family and no more, and paid for at a rent not exceeding
-3s. 6d. <i>per</i> week;&mdash;(2) Where the house is thus let in
-several independent holdings, and where the renter of each
-or any portion, admits other persons to share his holding
-with him, on their payment to him of a sub-rent <i>per</i> week
-or <i>per</i> night, so that a room comes to be occupied by more
-than one family at a time;&mdash;(3) Where the entire house,
-or all such part as is let in lodgings is under the direct
-management of a single resident proprietor or keeper, where
-the lodgings are let at .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp; <i>per</i> night, and where many
-persons not belonging to one single family are lodged
-together in some single room, or in various single rooms of
-the house.</p>
-
-<p>Of the first arrangement, where a single room is the
-residence of a single family, you have innumerable illustrations
-in the City; as, for instance in the large houses of
-Windsor-street (to which I have recently drawn your attention)<span class="pagenum" id="Page198">[198]</span>
-where in one house there are sixteen such holdings:&mdash;of
-the second arrangement&mdash;the most abominable and
-brutalising which can be conceived, you have sufficient illustrations
-in Plumtree-court:&mdash;of the third&mdash;comparatively
-little known in the City, there are instances in Field-lane.</p>
-
-<p>In respect of the first class of houses, I should be disposed
-to look upon each holding as the house of its occupier,
-and not to interfere within his threshold, except on the
-ground of some commanding necessity. I would require
-only that the general arrangements of the house should be
-adapted to the number of its holdings; that, for instance,
-numerous families should not be left competing for the use
-of a single privy, but that such accommodation should be
-provided in strict proportion to the requirements of the
-inmates; that every room should be efficiently ventilated;
-that water should be supplied to the highest occupied part
-of the house, and a water-tap and sink furnished on every
-floor; that the dust and refuse of the house should be
-removed at least once daily.</p>
-
-<p>In dealing with the worst specimens of this class, it may
-be requisite to go further than I have here intimated; and
-it appears to me that for this purpose your Hon. Court
-must address your regulations not to the tenant, but to the
-landlord. He, I apprehend, must be held responsible for
-the decent and wholesome condition of his property, and
-for such conduct of his tenants as will maintain that
-condition.</p>
-
-<p>Seeing the punctuality with which weekly visitation is
-made for the collection of rents in these wretched dwellings,
-it would not be unreasonable, I think, to insist on some
-such regulation as the following:&mdash;The owner of the house,<span class="pagenum" id="Page199">[199]</span>
-or his agent, or collector, shall visit each room on an
-appointed day, at least once weekly, between the hours
-of eleven and three; he shall see that the floor and other
-woodwork of the room have been properly washed on that
-day, that the room be free from all dirt, rubbish, or offensive
-smell, that no objectionable trade be pursued in it,
-and that it be generally in good and proper repair; he shall
-see that the premises generally<a id="FNanchor71"></a><a href="#Footnote71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a> be in a clean and wholesome
-condition, that water be sufficiently supplied, and that
-the dustman&#8217;s work be regularly performed; and failing either
-of the two latter conditions, he shall forthwith lay complaint
-thereof before your Commission; in case of any
-inmate suffering from cholera, small-pox, erysipelas, or any
-kind of fever, the owner, or his agent or collector, shall
-immediately give notice of such illness to the Inspector of
-his district; and at the meeting of the Commission next
-after such notice, he shall, if required, attend your Court,
-to receive any order which you may issue for reducing the
-number of his lodgers, or for improving the condition of
-his house, or for employing any disinfectant process; and
-he shall fulfil any such order within the time therein
-specified.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote71"><a href="#FNanchor71"><span class="label">[71]</span></a>
-Namely&mdash;passages, staircases, area, cellar, yard, privy, &amp;c.,
-and if common privies and urinals exist, he shall provide for the
-cleansing of these, where requisite, at least once daily.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>In a proceeding so experimental as the present, I cannot
-assure you of infallible means for meeting every evil contingency;
-but it seems to me that a regulation having the
-general tendency here indicated, enforced by moderate
-penalties, would work an important revolution in the economy
-of dwellings affected by its operation, would render it<span class="pagenum" id="Page200">[200]</span>
-indispensable to the landlord of such holdings to promote
-cleanly and decent habits among his tenants&mdash;even to obtain
-security for their good behaviour, and it would make
-it difficult or impossible for persons of opposite habits to
-obtain holdings under a landlord who would be virtually
-punishable for their misconduct.</p>
-
-<p>Such a regulation would apply, as I have said, to the
-lowest and filthiest specimens of the first class of lodging-houses;
-for, to the large majority of that class less stringent
-rules would suffice; and it would apply most usefully to
-the second class of lodging-houses&mdash;those in which the
-single rooms of a house are severally occupied by more than
-one family. So great are the physical and moral evils
-attending this indiscriminate admixture of adult persons of
-both sexes (as I have submitted to you in my former
-reports), that I entertain no doubts of the necessity for prohibiting
-it in the most absolute manner. A regulation to
-the following effect would, probably, fulfil the purpose
-contemplated by the law, and would disperse these loathsome
-heaps of disease, destitution, and profligacy: viz.&mdash;There
-shall not be lodged in a sleeping-room, at any one
-time, more than two persons over fourteen years of age, if of
-different sexes; nor more than<a id="FNanchor72"></a><a href="#Footnote72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a> &mdash;&mdash; such persons, if they
-be all of one sex.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote72"><a href="#FNanchor72"><span class="label">[72]</span></a> This number would be proportioned to the cubical contents of
-the room, and its facilities for ventilation, of which mention would
-be made in the registration-schedule of the house.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>This order&mdash;in addition to its wholesome influence on the
-second class of lodging-houses, would apply beneficially to
-the third class; and, in further relation to the latter, there
-would probably be required various minor regulations with<span class="pagenum" id="Page201">[201]</span>
-respect to facilities for washing, lighting, ventilation and the
-like, which admit of being fixed in detail, only as each particular
-case comes under your notice, with its deficiencies
-recorded in the schedule of its registration.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">11. In addition to this power of regulating lodging-houses,
-a further authority has been conceded you by
-the Legislature, for the <i>amendment or removal of houses
-presenting aggravated structural faults</i>. Wherever your
-Officer of Health may certify to you that any house or
-building is permanently unwholesome and unfit for human
-habitation, you are empowered to require of the owner (or,
-in his neglect, yourselves to undertake) the execution of
-whatever works may be requisite for rendering the house
-habitable with security to life.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">Finally,&mdash;under your former Act you were authorised,
-and indeed <i>required, to appoint Inspectors of Nuisances</i>,
-whose duties were to consist in the following particulars:&mdash;They
-were to superintend and enforce the due execution of
-all duties to be performed by the scavengers; to report to
-your Commission all breaches of your rules and regulations;
-to point out the existence of nuisances; to record whatever
-complaints might arise in relation to the supply of water,
-or in relation to any infraction, either of the Act, or of any
-of the regulations made by you under its authority for the
-preservation of order and cleanliness and for the suppression
-of nuisances.</p>
-
-<p>Hitherto your Hon. Court has deemed it sufficient compliance
-with the terms of the Act, to engraft the functions
-above described on the office of your previously appointed<span class="pagenum" id="Page202">[202]</span>
-Inspectors of Pavements; and these Officers have endeavoured
-very diligently to fulfil the multifarious obligations
-thus imposed on them. During the past year it has become
-obvious to me that this arrangement of their duties is inconvenient,
-and that the occupation of their time as Inspectors
-of Pavements prevents them devoting the requisite number
-of hours to the other important duties.</p>
-
-<p>I need hardly add, for the information of your Hon.
-Court, that the immense increase of sanitary business
-implied in your new Act (an increase probably equivalent
-to doubling or trebling the former amount) renders a continuance
-of the former arrangement still less possible than
-heretofore; the important functions assigned to your Inspectors
-of Nuisances will now require to be discharged,
-under the superintendence of your Officer of Health, with
-uninterrupted assiduity and vigilance; and I would therefore
-take the liberty of begging your Hon. Court to refer
-this subject to the consideration of your Committee, together
-with some other points relative to the administration
-of your new powers.<a id="FNanchor73"></a><a href="#Footnote73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote73"><a href="#FNanchor73"><span class="label">[73]</span></a> Two additional Inspectors came into work, under appointment
-of the Commission, at Christmas, 1853. See <a href="#Page213">last Annual Report</a>.&mdash;J.
-S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Here, gentlemen, terminates my statement of the powers
-now vested in you for the maintenance of the public health.
-Authority so complete for this noble purpose has never
-before been delegated to any municipal body in the country.
-In exercising the means of such wide beneficence, your<span class="pagenum" id="Page203">[203]</span>
-Hon. Court will be discharging duties of immeasurable
-importance to the public welfare; and those who have the
-honour and responsibility of giving you professional advice
-will have a task of more than ordinary difficulty.</p>
-
-<p>It is easy to foresee the numerous obstacles which interested
-persons will set before you to delay the accomplishment
-of your great task. Sometimes technical objections
-will be raised to your proceedings: sometimes vexatious
-delays and evasions will occur in the fulfilment of your
-injunctions.</p>
-
-<p>When your orders are addressed to some owner of objectionable
-property&mdash;of some property which is a constant
-source of nuisance, or disease, or death; when you would
-force one person to refrain from tainting the general atmosphere
-with results of an offensive occupation; when you
-would oblige another to see that his tenantry are better
-housed than cattle, and that, while he takes rent for
-lodging, he shall not give fever as the equivalent;&mdash;amid
-these proceedings, you will be reminded of the &#8216;rights of
-property,&#8217; and of &#8216;an Englishman&#8217;s inviolable claim to do
-as he will with his own.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Permit me, gentlemen, to remind you that your law
-makes full recognition of these principles, and that the
-cases in which sophistical appeal will oftenest be made to
-them, are exactly those which are most completely condemned
-by a full and fair application of the principles
-adverted to. With private affairs you interfere, only when
-they become of public import; with private liberty, only
-when it becomes a public encroachment. The factory
-chimney that eclipses the light of heaven with unbroken
-clouds of smoke, the melting-house that nauseates an entire<span class="pagenum" id="Page204">[204]</span>
-parish, the slaughter-house that forms round itself a circle
-of dangerous disease&mdash;these surely are not private, but
-public affairs. And how much more justly may the neighbour
-appeal to you against each such nuisance, as an interference
-with his privacy; against the smoke, the stink, the
-fever, that bursts through each inlet of his dwelling, intrudes
-on him at every hour, disturbs the enjoyment and
-shortens the duration of his life. And for the rights of
-property&mdash;they are not only pecuniary. Life, too, is a
-great property; and your Act asserts its rights. The landlord
-of some overthronged lodging-house complains, that
-to reduce the numbers of his tenantry, to lay on water, to
-erect privies, or to execute some other indispensable sanitary
-work, would diminish his rental: in the spirit of your
-Act, it is held a sufficient reply, that human life is at stake,
-and that a landlord, in his dealings with the ignorant and
-indefensive poor, cannot be suffered to estimate them at the
-value of cattle, to associate them in worse than bestial
-habits, or let to them for hire, at however moderate a rent,
-the certain occasions of suffering and death.</p>
-
-<p>And indeed, gentlemen, the mere pecuniary import of life
-thus squandered is not inconsiderable. The costs of
-medical attendance on these superfluities of disease are
-heavy items of parochial expenditure: and although much
-of the undue mortality is of children, and consists in the
-premature extinction of life that hitherto has no market
-value&mdash;costing only the tears that are shed for it; yet
-there likewise occur among your preventable deaths, very
-many cases in which adult life is sacrificed, with all its
-strength and utility; and where, besides the wasted capital
-which that loss implies, there often remains for the district<span class="pagenum" id="Page205">[205]</span>
-which has poisoned the man an entailment of orphanage
-and widowhood.</p>
-
-<p>Nor, again, can it be questioned, that year by year, as
-general education advances, the sanitary condition of a
-district will be an important element in determining the
-value of its property. In engaging houses, men will not
-only look to rent, and to rates on rent; they will look also
-to rates on life, and will doubt the cheapness of a town
-residence, however small in rental, where their lease of life
-must be shortened from its intended duration, and form part
-of an average mortality two-thirds higher than in the
-suburbs. It is an instinct in this direction, or perhaps the
-guidance of knowledge, that within late years has given so
-much extension to suburban residence, and has carried
-numbers of the wealthier inhabitants of the City to dwell so
-far from their places of daily business: and the same instinct
-or knowledge yearly acts more towards the less
-affluent classes, urging them to fly as far as possible beyond
-the smoke and crowding and unwholesome vapours of the
-metropolis. I entertain great hope and little doubt, that,
-within a few years, the working classes will have organised
-for themselves extensive means of suburban residence; that
-vast barracks of model-houses, rising on healthier soil and
-amid purer atmosphere, will receive hundreds of thousands
-of inmates from those classes of society which now throng
-the courts and alleys of the metropolis; and that by this
-spontaneous emigration, in so far as it may affect the City,
-great assistance will be given to those endeavours which
-will be made, under authority of your Act, to thin the court
-population of the City, and to diminish the too dense array
-of houses inhabited by the poor.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page206">[206]</span></p>
-
-<p>As I look to the poor-rates of the City of London, as
-well as to the other circumstances just adverted to, I feel
-the deepest conviction that <i>property</i>, no less than <i>life</i>, is
-interested in the progress of sanitary reform: and once
-again, most earnestly, I beg leave to congratulate your
-Hon. Court on the acquisition of powers, conferring on you
-the inestimable privilege of doing so much good for those
-whom you represent, and for the often unrepresented poor;
-of relieving so much suffering; of prolonging so much
-life.</p>
-
-<p>That much improvement remains to be accomplished
-within your province, is a certainty which I have endeavoured
-here, as on former occasions, plainly to set before
-you.</p>
-
-<p>But I cannot close my Report without adverting to the
-fact, that both within and around the City, there are sanitary
-evils for which you are not responsible&mdash;evils beyond
-your control&mdash;powerful causes of diseases in hourly operation;
-and that these are so extensive in their agency, as
-to neutralise much of the good which it lies in your competence
-to effect.</p>
-
-<p>The mere fact, that for the metropolis generally there is
-hitherto no sanitary law, such as you possess for your territory,
-is an evil to you. When, at the commencement of
-next year, you will be proceeding to suppress the several
-nuisances against which you are armed; when the various
-trades of the City will have ceased to send forth smoke or
-stink, you can raise no barrier against invasions from
-around; southward, you cannot exclude the unwholesome
-airs wafted from the river and from across it; nor on either
-side, east or west, the soot that showers down from innumerable<span class="pagenum" id="Page207">[207]</span>
-shafts encircling you; nor northward, the odours
-that rise from the shambles of Clerkenwell.</p>
-
-<p>And likewise within the City there will be remaining&mdash;out
-of your control, unremedied evils, the existence of
-which has long been denounced, and the removal long
-expected.</p>
-
-<p>In 1849, with the cholera amidst us, great exertions were
-made, and greater promises. In that dreadful week, when
-two thousand victims of our metropolitan population fell
-beneath its poison; when every household, from hour to
-hour, trembled at the visible nearness of death; the public
-were scared out of indifference. If the visitation could have
-been bought away, at the expense of doubling all local rates
-in perpetuity, no doubt the sacrifice would have been made.
-Public opinion was kindled to overwhelm all opposition.</p>
-
-<p>The metropolis was to be drained afresh; the outfall of
-sewerage was no longer to be beneath our windows; the
-river was to be embanked; its rising tide was no longer to
-make our sewers disgorge their poisonous contents into our
-streets and houses; dead bodies in their decay, were no
-more to desecrate the breathing-space of the living; water
-was no longer to be supplied&mdash;clumsily, insufficiently, and
-unwholesomely, at the discretion of private capitalists: all
-was to be amended.</p>
-
-<p>For participation in these advantages, the City had to
-look beyond its own representatives, and to await the more
-comprehensive measures of Her Majesty&#8217;s Government.</p>
-
-<p>Two years have elapsed, and none of the measures referred
-to has made visible progress. The water question
-remains unsettled; arrangements for extramural interment
-of the dead have been disconcerted at what seemed the<span class="pagenum" id="Page208">[208]</span>
-moment of their completion; the river still receives the
-entire sewage of this immense metropolis, and still at each
-retreating tide, spreads amid the town, as heretofore, its
-many miles of fetid, malarious mud.</p>
-
-<p>In justice it should indeed be remembered, that any one
-of the required amendments could only be the result of long
-preparatory labour, and that its organisation would often
-of necessity be the travail of some single mind, not insusceptible
-of fatigue. Particularly as respects the scheme
-(now understood to approach its maturity) for the complete
-drainage of the metropolis, it cannot be overlooked that very
-extensive surveys, superficial and subterranean, with innumerable
-drawings and specifications, were necessary to the
-construction of so comprehensive a plan.</p>
-
-<p>But neither can it be disguised or disregarded, that meanwhile,
-in the absence of these sanitary works, there are
-dying needlessly and prematurely thousands of the population;
-that preventable death, hitherto unprevented, is proceeding
-at its accustomed pace; that children continue to
-perish at three or four times their due rate; that time,
-which carries us from one visitation of the great epidemic
-and obliterates the remembrance of our alarm, also, too probably,
-carries us towards the day of another outbreak: that
-typhus&mdash;our home-bred and daily visitant, rehearses the
-same warnings as heretofore, moving uniformly onward
-like the shadow on a dial, toward the hour when that
-Eastern pestilence may again be here.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, gentlemen, I have felt it my duty to represent
-to you that, in the promotion of those metropolitan works,
-the population of the City of London have an incalculable
-interest;&mdash;that the emancipation of human life from such<span class="pagenum" id="Page209">[209]</span>
-fetters of disease as weigh on it, can never even approximate
-to completion within your City, while the saturated
-burial-grounds still continue to receive their annual multitudes
-of the dead, while the administration of the water-supply
-interposes an effectual hindrance to your most
-important functions, and while the river, contaminated and
-unembanked, diffuses injurious miasms through the whole
-extent of your jurisdiction. And I would further venture
-to urge on the consideration of your Hon. Court, that
-your legitimate influence with Her Majesty&#8217;s Government
-and with Parliament&mdash;your influence as trustees of the
-Public Health for so large a constituency, exerted in
-furtherance of those metropolitan reforms to which I have
-adverted&mdash;would be tending, not only to the general good,
-but directly and eminently to the sanitary advantage of the
-City of London.</p>
-
-<div class="reportsig">
-
-<p class="center highline1 blankbefore2">I have the honour,<br />
-<span class="padl6">&amp;c., &amp;c.</span></p>
-
-</div><!--reportsig-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page210">[210]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center blankbefore2"><i>Proposed Schedule of specification for the Register of
-Lodging-houses.</i></p>
-
-<div class="register">
-
-<div class="split5050">
-
-<div class="leftsplit">
-
-<p class="highline2 noindent">House situate at No. _____________________________________<br />
-Name and Address of Owner ______________________________</p>
-
-</div><!--left-->
-
-<div class="rightsplit">
-
-<p class="highline2 noindent">Number of Floors (including Cellars and Lofts) ____________________<br />
-<span class="padl4">&#8222;</span><span class="padl4">Rooms</span><span class="padl6">&#8222;</span>
-<span class="padl8">&#8222;</span><span class="padl7">____________________</span></p>
-
-</div><!--right-->
-
-</div><!--split5050-->
-
-<p class="thinline allclear">&nbsp;</p>
-
-<table border="1" class="register1" summary="register data">
-
-<tr>
-<th rowspan="8" class="highline2">Ac-<br />count<br />of<br />Rooms<br />sepa-<br />rate-<br />ly.</th>
-<th rowspan="2">No.<br />on<br />door.</th>
-<th>Situation.</th>
-<th>Height.</th>
-<th>Length.</th>
-<th>Breadth.</th>
-<th rowspan="2">Windows.</th>
-<th rowspan="2">Flooring.</th>
-<th rowspan="2">Fire-place.</th>
-<th rowspan="2">Ventilators.</th>
-<th>Rent.</th>
-<th colspan="2">Number of<br />Inmates.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<th>Floor, Aspect.</th>
-<th>ft.<span class="padl1 padr1">&nbsp;</span>in.</th>
-<th>ft.<span class="padl1 padr1">&nbsp;</span>in.</th>
-<th>ft.<span class="padl1 padr1">&nbsp;</span>in.</th>
-<th>Weekly, or<br />nightly, or<br />per person.</th>
-<th>Under<br />9 years<br />of age.</th>
-<th>Over<br />9 years<br />of age.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="left padl1 padr1">1</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="left padl1 padr1">2</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="left padl1 padr1">3</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="left padl1 padr1">4</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="left padl1 padr1">5</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="left padl1 padr1">6, &amp;c.</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table><!--register1-->
-
-<table class="register2" summary="register">
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="4" class="left">Staircase, if with windows or skylight _________________________</td>
-<td class="left w50p">Sinks _________________________________________________________</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="left">Privies</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="left">Number _________________________________________</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="top left">Dustbin _______________________________________________________</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Situation ________________________________________</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table><!--register2-->
-
-<table class="register2" summary="register">
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="4" class="left">Water-supply</td>
-<td rowspan="4" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="4" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="3" class="left">Receptacles</td>
-<td rowspan="3" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="3" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="left">Material _____________________</td>
-<td class="left w50p">Yard&mdash;size of uncovered area _____________________________________</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Capacity _____________________</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="left">Pavement _____________________________________________________</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Situation _____________________</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="4" class="left">Taps, where situated _________________________</td>
-<td class="left">Laundry ______________________________________________________</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table><!--register2-->
-
-<p class="center highline2">Date _______________________<span class="padl1 padr1">&nbsp;</span>
-Signature of Owner __________________________</p>
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Note.</span>&mdash;I, _________________________, Inspector for the Commissioners of Sewers
-of the City of London, do certify that the above
-schedule contains a true account of the matters to which it relates;
-also that I have examined the privies, drains, sinks, and water-supply
-in the above house, and do find the same to be in an efficient and
-satisfactory condition; also that the house generally is in good
-repair, perfectly clean, and free from disagreeable smell.</p>
-
-<p class="center highline2">Date______________, signed _____________________ Inspector.</p>
-
-</div><!--register-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo250.png" alt="Form" width="600" height="418" />
-</div>
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page211">[211]</span></p>
-
-<h2>FOURTH ANNUAL REPORT.</h2>
-
-<p class="reportdate"><i>September 28th, 1852.</i></p>
-
-<p class="reportsalutation"><span class="smcap">Gentlemen</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="chapstart">I&nbsp;<span class="startword">beg</span> leave to lay before your Hon. Court the
-several tables<a id="FNanchor74"></a><a href="#Footnote74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a> which I have prepared, to illustrate the
-mortality of the City of London during the past year. They
-refer to fifty-two weeks, dating from September 28th, 1851,
-to September 25th, 1852.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote74"><a href="#FNanchor74"><span class="label">[74]</span></a>
-These tables are not here reprinted in a separate form, except
-the enumeration of deaths for the year, which is <a href="#App06">No. VI.</a> in the
-<a href="#Page264">Appendix</a>. The others are embodied in the different quinquennial
-tables of the Appendix.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<div class="rep4quote">
-
-<p class="fsize90">In the <a href="#App06">first table</a> I have distributed the 3064 deaths of the period,
-according to their localities and seasons; showing them as they
-occurred, male and female, during each quarter of the year, in the
-several districts and sub-districts of the City. For the foot of each
-column, I have calculated the year&#8217;s death&#8217;s rate, per thousand of
-the living, in the district or sub-district referred to; and at the head
-of the columns, for facility of reference, I have introduced an
-analysis of the population, founded on the Registrar-General&#8217;s recent
-census.</p>
-
-<p class="fsize90">In the second table all the deaths of the last four years are stated,
-in a form which will enable you to compare one year with another,
-and one sub-district with another, in respect of their several contributions
-to the total mortality of the period.</p>
-
-<p class="fsize90">In the third table 12,540 deaths<a id="FNanchor75"></a><a href="#Footnote75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a>
-of the last four years are classified
-according to the ages at which they befell. This table is<span class="pagenum" id="Page212"><span class="fsize110">[212]</span></span>
-arranged in a manner to display its results, first for each year separately,
-and next for each Union separately; in order that you may
-observe what local or annual differences have obtained as to the ages
-of chief mortality.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote75"><a href="#FNanchor75"><span class="label">[75]</span></a> In the remaining number (17)
-the particulars of age and residence
-could not be correctly ascertained.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p class="fsize90">The fourth table also relates to the last four years. It restricts
-itself to those various forms of acute disease&mdash;epidemic, endemic,
-and infectious, which occasion, most of all, the predominant mortality
-of particular districts or seasons; and which are susceptible, in the
-highest degree, of being mitigated or removed under an efficient
-sanitary system.</p>
-
-</div><!--rep4quote-->
-
-<p>In their general import these documents agree very
-nearly with last year&#8217;s record; though showing unfortunately
-a somewhat higher death-rate (23&middot;62) and especially a larger
-proportion of fever.</p>
-
-<p>On former occasions I have examined, with great minuteness,
-all such facts as these tables set forth, and have offered
-you the best suggestions in my power for the mitigation of
-preventable disease.</p>
-
-<p>The sanitary condition of the City is now substantially
-the same as at the date of my last Report; and any comment
-which I might make on the present tables could be
-little else than a repetition of arguments already submitted
-to your notice.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, as other topics<a id="FNanchor76"></a><a href="#Footnote76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a> of importance to the health of
-the City press for more immediate consideration, I refrain
-from occupying your time by any further remark on the
-materials which I subjoin.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote76"><a href="#FNanchor76"><span class="label">[76]</span></a>
-We were at this time closely occupied in considering the general
-questions of extramural interment for the City.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<div class="reportsig">
-
-<p class="center highline3">I have the honour,<br />
-<span class="padl8">&amp;c., &amp;c.</span></p>
-
-</div><!--reportsig-->
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page213">[213]</span></p>
-
-<h2>FIFTH ANNUAL REPORT.</h2>
-
-<p class="reportdate"><i>November 29th, 1853.</i></p>
-
-<p class="reportsalutation"><span class="smcap">Gentlemen</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="chapstart">A<span class="startword">ccording</span> to the practice of previous years, I lay
-before you, in the annexed <a href="#App07">tables</a>, a brief digest of your
-death-register for the fifty-two weeks which terminated at
-Michaelmas last.</p>
-
-<p>The deaths there enumerated amount to 3040&mdash;being 24
-fewer than in the last preceding similar period.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond these statistics of the past year, there are other
-facts which I have thought it well to tabulate for your
-information. They relate to the entire term of five years,
-during which I have kept record of your mortality. Midway
-in this quinquennial period&mdash;namely, in the spring of
-1851, the general census happened to occur. The inhabitants
-of the City, then enumerated, may fairly be taken
-to represent the mean of your somewhat fluctuating population;
-and the five years&#8217; mortality, compared with the numbers
-of this mean population, will express pretty accurately
-their habitual death-rate.</p>
-
-<p>The period mentioned is indeed short for the purpose of
-establishing an average; but ten years at least must elapse
-before even similar materials can again be given for calculation,
-and a still longer time before the statistical basis
-can be enlarged. I have therefore thought it desirable to
-make the best use in my power of such facts as were before<span class="pagenum" id="Page214">[214]</span>
-me, for the construction of quinquennial tables; out of
-which, with sufficient accuracy for all practical purposes,
-you may draw your own inferences as to the health
-of that large population which is under your sanitary
-government.</p>
-
-<p>The facts are classified, as heretofore, in the manner
-which will most easily display their practical meaning.
-First, namely, the deaths of the period are recorded in their
-local distribution, so that you may compare one part of the
-City with another in respect of healthiness. Next, they are
-so tabulated according to ages, as to indicate the prevailing
-proportion of untimely death. Thirdly, those of them are
-separately enumerated which, in their several classes, chiefly
-occur as results of acute disease in connexion with removable
-causes.</p>
-
-<p>In after years, when sanitary improvements, now only in
-contemplation or commencement, shall have produced their
-legitimate results and rewards, these tables may serve an
-important use. Indicating the standard of public health
-within the City before such works were achieved, and constituting
-a permanent record of your starting-point, they
-will qualify your successors to estimate the amount of amelioration
-which your endeavours shall have produced.</p>
-
-<p>The details of your present sanitary condition, as varying
-in different sub-districts of the City, and as fluctuating in
-the several years and seasons of the quinquennial period,
-are expressed in the figures of these tables more compendiously
-and more clearly than I could hope to convey
-them in words. Here, therefore I restrict myself to telling
-you very briefly their general results.</p>
-
-<p>The population of the City&mdash;about 130,000 persons&mdash;has<span class="pagenum" id="Page215">[215]</span>
-been dying during these five years at the rate of about 24
-<i>per</i> thousand <i>per annum</i>. The sub-district rates which give
-this aggregate vary from under 18 to above 29; the former
-death-rate belonging to your healthiest locality&mdash;the north-west
-sub-district of the City of London Union; while the
-latter&mdash;more than 60 <i>per cent.</i> higher&mdash;mortality belongs to
-the north sub-district of the West London Union. The
-lowest death-rate hitherto attained in this country for a considerable
-population, during a term of seven years, has been
-14 <i>per</i> thousand <i>per annum</i>; which your worst sub-district
-mortality more than doubles.</p>
-
-<p>As different districts contribute unequally to your average
-death-rate, so also do different ages. Among all the population
-exceeding five years of age, the death-rate is under 17
-<i>per</i> thousand <i>per annum</i>; while, for children under five
-years of age, the rate is nearly 85. And these rates are unequally
-constituted by your three chief districts in the
-following proportion; <span class="nowrap">viz.:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<table class="deathrates" summary="death rates">
-
-<tr>
-<th>Annual Rate of Deaths to<br />1000 living persons.</th>
-<th>Over 5<br />Years<br />of age.</th>
-<th>Under 5<br />Years<br />of age.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="district">East London Union</td>
-<td class="number">16&middot;68</td>
-<td class="number">91&middot;99</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="district">West London Union</td>
-<td class="number">20&middot;58</td>
-<td class="number">94&middot;84</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="district">City of London Union</td>
-<td class="number"><span class="bb">15&middot;06</span></td>
-<td class="number"><span class="bb">71&middot;72</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="district">Average death-rate in the City</td>
-<td class="number">16&middot;85</td>
-<td class="number">84&middot;72</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>How various are the diseases which have conspired to
-produce your annual average of 3120 deaths, it would be
-tedious to describe; and in the table which I have devoted
-to a partial analysis of this subject, I have restricted myself
-to a consideration of those ailments which are likely to
-become less fatal under a well-developed sanitary system.<span class="pagenum" id="Page216">[216]</span>
-To the annual average typhus has contributed 140 deaths;
-choleraic affections (including the epidemic of 1849) 196;
-scarlet fever, 76; small pox, 40; erysipelas, 30; the acute
-nervous and mucous diseases of children, 572; their measles,
-hooping-cough, and croup, 182;&mdash;making, from this class of
-disorders, an annual average of about 1250 deaths&mdash;nearly
-two-fifths of the entire mortality.</p>
-
-<p>My tables will show you that the different seasons of the
-year have pressed somewhat differently on human life; and
-there is exhibited in them a point of some interest to which
-I would beg your attention. In your healthier sub-districts
-it is easy to perceive the influence, the almost inevitable
-influence, exerted by the inclemency of winter against the
-aged and feeble. In your unhealthier sub-districts, this
-effect is completely masked, and summer becomes the fatal
-season; its higher temperature acting in some sort as a test
-of defective sanitary conditions, and giving to the several
-local causes of endemic disease an augmentation of activity
-and virulence.</p>
-
-<p>On the facts which these tables set forth, I have nothing
-further to say than would consist in a repetition of arguments
-already submitted to your notice. In my third Annual
-Report, especially, I endeavoured to lay before you the conclusions
-which are fairly deducible from the proportions of
-early death, and from the partial allotment of particular
-diseases.</p>
-
-<p>These conditions, indeed, are in obvious mutual relation.
-To human life there has been affixed a normal range of duration;
-and when it prematurely fails&mdash;when children perish
-in the cradle, or adults amid the glow of manhood, the exception
-in every case is a thing to be investigated and<span class="pagenum" id="Page217">[217]</span>
-explained. Of the 15,597 persons who have died within
-your jurisdiction, not an eighth part had reached the traditional
-&#8216;threescore years and ten;&#8217; while nearly three-eighths
-died in the first five years of life. In proportion as
-facts like these appear in the death-tables of a particular
-district, in the same proportion we can trace the local prevalence
-of particular diseases, to explain the abridgment of
-life; and passing from such a locality to other districts,
-where the natural term of existence is more nearly attained,
-invariably we find that these diseases have fallen into comparative
-inertness. Finally, in grouping the fatal results
-of such diseases in their proportionate geographical allotment,
-invariably we find that their prevalence or non-prevalence,
-here or there, has been associated with demonstrable
-physical differences; that life has not capriciously been long
-in one place and short in another, but that, where short, it
-has been shortened; that its untimely extinction has depended
-on the direct operation of local and preventable
-causes.</p>
-
-<p>In this recognition of cause and effect, which the experience
-of late years has rendered vivid and precise; and
-in that higher appreciation of human life, which belongs to
-civilized nations in peaceful times; and in that deeper sympathy
-for the suffering poor, which should be at the heart
-of every Christian government, sanitary legislation had its
-origin in this country; and it has been the good fortune of
-the City of London (in respect of your two Acts of Parliament)
-to precede the rest of the metropolis in acquiring and
-exercising authority for the mitigation of preventable
-disease.</p>
-
-<p>Nearly five years have now passed over your tenure of<span class="pagenum" id="Page218">[218]</span>
-this very grave responsibility; and although in many respects
-the period must be regarded as one of apprenticeship
-to a new and difficult career&mdash;although you have hardly yet
-arrived at what may permanently represent your method of
-action&mdash;although important changes which you have determined
-to adopt are not yet in actual working&mdash;although
-the far greatest evils still remain for correction&mdash;yet I
-rejoice to inform you that sensible improvement has already
-shown itself in the sanitary state of your population. My
-comparison of the past five years with any considerable previous
-period cannot be as precise as I would wish, owing to
-the absence of circumstantial records for the time anterior
-to my appointment; but, judging from such information as
-I can consult on the subject, I am induced to believe that
-the deaths, for equal numbers of population, are about four
-<i>per cent.</i> fewer than before your Acts of Parliament came
-into operation, and that the disproportionate mortality of
-children is decidedly lessened.</p>
-
-<p>On this first improvement&mdash;the beginning, I would fain
-hope, of a long series of similar steps for regaining the
-allotted duration of human life, I beg to offer my respectful
-congratulations to your Hon. Court, under whose
-auspices it has been effected. Further impetus in the same
-direction will shortly be given by the removal of sanitary
-evils, already in fact or in principle condemned. The approaching
-institution of your extramural cemetery, and, I
-venture to hope, the translation of all slaughtering establishments
-to the site of your new Smithfield, will be important
-contributions to this effect. I therefore make bold to
-speak with some sanguineness of the slight change of death-rate
-already noticed; though, while so much remains to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page219">[219]</span>
-accomplished, I doubt not you will welcome the amelioration
-rather as an encouragement to proceed, than as the
-final reward of a completed task.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Here, Gentlemen, terminates all that I have to submit
-for your consideration in respect of your past and present
-record of deaths. The greater extension which, during the
-last two years, I have given to my habitual Weekly Reports,
-and to sundry occasional statements which it has been my
-duty to lay before you, may seem, at least generally, to
-render it superfluous for my Annual Report to contain anything
-beyond such statistical particulars as I have now
-brought under your notice. But, however this may generally
-be, there exist exceptional circumstances at the present
-time which induce me to trouble you at somewhat greater
-length.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">II. Two years ago&mdash;adverting to the non-completion of
-metropolitan sanitary works, on which the health of entire
-London is vitally dependent, I could not but comment<a id="FNanchor77"></a><a href="#Footnote77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a> on
-the utter unpreparedness with which the metropolis was
-awaiting any sudden return of Asiatic cholera. It was
-indeed impossible to foresee how soon, or how late, that
-dreadful visitation might recur to desolate our homes&mdash;whether
-it might return at once, or never. But typhus&mdash;averaging
-in fifteen years double the fatality of that rarer
-epidemic&mdash;was adding day by day to its list of preventable<span class="pagenum" id="Page220">[220]</span>
-deaths; and other endemic diseases were co-operating with
-it, demonstrably, uninterruptedly, to decimate, impoverish,
-and abase the people.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote77"><a href="#FNanchor77"><span class="label">[77]</span></a> <a href="#Page177">Third Annual Report</a>,
-<a href="#Page206">p. 206</a>.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Whatever doubts might have existed as to a return of the
-foreign pestilence were soon solved: whatever hasty conclusions
-had been formed, as to its again remaining absent
-during half a generation, were soon disappointed and
-reversed. Even while I was addressing you on the subject,
-the plague had again kindled its smouldering fire, and was
-widening its circle of destruction. Perhaps from the eastern
-centres of its habitual dominion&mdash;from the alluvial swamps
-and malarious jungles of Asia, where it was first engendered
-amid miles of vaporous poison, and still broods over wasted
-nations as the agent of innumerable deaths; or perhaps from
-the congenial flats of Eastern Europe, where it may have
-lingered latent and acclimatised; the subtle ferment was
-spreading its new infection to all kindred soils. Repelled
-again from the dry and airy acclivities of the earth, and
-their hardier population, it filtered along the blending-line
-of land and water&mdash;the shore, the river-bank, and the
-marsh. Conducted by the Oder and Vistula from the
-swamps of Poland to the ports of the Baltic, it raged east
-and west, from St. Petersburg to Copenhagen, with frightful
-severity, and, obedient to old precedents, let us witness its
-arrival at Hamburg.</p>
-
-<p>Twice in the European history of cholera, had this town
-seemed the immediate channel of epidemic communication
-to our island; the disease having on each occasion commenced
-in our north-eastern sea-ports within a very short
-time of its outburst there. A third time, not unexpectedly,
-has this dreadful guest, following the line of former visitation,<span class="pagenum" id="Page221">[221]</span>
-touched upon the banks of the Tyne; where<a id="FNanchor78"></a><a href="#Footnote78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a> a worse
-than beastly condition of the crowded poor, and sewage-water
-diluted through the people&#8217;s drink, had prepared it an
-appropriate welcome.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote78"><a href="#FNanchor78"><span class="label">[78]</span></a> Having had recent occasion to examine judicially into the
-matters here adverted to, I think it proper to mention that the
-allusions in my text were long prior to this examination, and were
-founded chiefly on the Registrar-General&#8217;s Reports of the time,
-with other official statements.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Next, the disease was rumoured to be in London. Hope
-and belief are too near akin for this not to have been
-doubted and denied; but the last few weeks have shown,
-with sad incontrovertible certainty, that after only four years
-absence, Cholera has again obtained its footing on our soil.
-Six or seven hundred deaths, registered in the metropolis
-since the beginning of September, have already attested its
-presence.</p>
-
-<p>Anxiously adverting to the future, and asking what may
-be the onward progress of the disease, we can appeal only
-to a narrow experience. Before us lie the records of but
-two complete visitations of the disease, and the commencement
-of this, the third. It would be a shallow philosophy
-that should pretend, from two observations, to predict the
-possible orbit of this obscurely wandering plague.</p>
-
-<p>Yet I dare not disguise from you that such knowledge as
-we have, to justify scientific anticipation, is pregnant with
-threats and gloom. For&mdash;let me remind you of the past.
-At each former period of attack, the infection, after a
-certain course over Continental Europe, struck upon our
-eastern coast in the summer of an unforgotten year. In
-the northern parts of Great Britain, so soon as it had lit
-among the population, each time it burst forth into explosive<span class="pagenum" id="Page222">[222]</span>
-activity, and worked its full measure of destruction
-without delay. More faintly it reached the South. On
-each occasion, indeed, at the close of summer, London was
-sensibly affected by the disease; but, we hoped, under a
-milder infliction. Here and there, within its Bills of Mortality
-(as at Tooting in 1848) there was thrown some
-astounding flash on a particular hot-bed of co-operating
-poison; but on the whole it seemed to the sanguine, on
-each occasion, that the fury of the epidemic was expending
-itself in our northern towns, and that the metropolis was to
-be comparatively spared.</p>
-
-<p>Each time, at the commencement of the new year, our
-London mortality from Cholera seemed stationary within
-the limit of a few hundred deaths. Each time winter and
-spring allowed a long respite to our invaded City, and confirmed
-the omens of the hopeful.</p>
-
-<p>But each time there was disappointment. Each time, as
-the warmth of summer requickened the exterior conditions
-of chemical activity, the dormant fire kindled afresh&mdash;slowly
-at first, but with speedy acceleration of rate. Each time,
-in the few weeks before Michaelmas&mdash;amid almost universal
-threatenings of the disease, and amid such panic of death
-as the metropolis had not known since the Great Plague,
-there suddenly fell many thousands of the population.</p>
-
-<p>Thus then our position stands. Scientific prediction of
-phenomena can arise only in the knowledge of laws. That
-the phenomena of this disease, however capricious they may
-seem, are obedient to some absolute uniformity as yet
-beyond our ken&mdash;are enchained by that same rigid sequence
-of cause and effect which is imposed on all remaining
-Nature&mdash;it would be impossible to doubt. But these conditions
-are hitherto unknown to science. Hitherto we can<span class="pagenum" id="Page223">[223]</span>
-speak of the facts alone, with a short empirical knowledge
-of their succession. Yet in this light, such as it is, the
-conclusion is only too obvious. If the disease, already
-notorious for a tendency to return on its former vestiges,
-repeat on this third occasion the steps of its two previous
-courses; or, perhaps I should rather say, if it now proceed
-consistently to complete a repetition which it has already
-half-effected; Asiatic Cholera will be severely epidemic in
-London in the third quarter of next year&mdash;will proceed,
-with a stern unflattering test, to measure the degree in
-which those promises of sanitary improvement have been
-redeemed, which the terror of its recent visitation extorted
-even from the supinest and most ignorant of its witnesses.</p>
-
-<p>In the face of so great a danger, you will reasonably
-claim of your Officer of Health that he shall report to you,
-how far the City is already fortified against this dreadful
-invasion&mdash;how far the hygienic defences of life, if weak,
-may be strengthened&mdash;how far there remain breaches now
-insusceptible of repair.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">1. It forms an all-important part of these considerations
-for resistance to the disease, to recognise quite accurately
-what is its fashion of attack. Since I last addressed you
-on the subject, in my <a href="#Page77">Report for 1849-50</a>, the materials for
-correct generalisation have been very largely increased by
-Dr. Farr&#8217;s admirable Report to the Registrar-General on
-the Cholera in England, and by numerous other important
-publications. By collating with these works the more
-restricted, yet not uninstructive, experience which arose
-within your particular jurisdiction, I hope to have enlarged
-my knowledge of the subject, and to have become able with
-greater confidence to submit my conclusions for your acceptance.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page224">[224]</span></p>
-
-<p>The first and most obvious characteristic of the disease
-is its preference for particular localities. It is eminently a
-district-disease. And the conditions which determine its
-local settlement are demonstrable physical peculiarities.</p>
-
-<p>After carefully reviewing the subject, I do not know that
-I need qualify, except to express more confidently, the
-account I formerly gave you of those peculiarities, as consisting
-in the conjunction of dampness with organic decomposition.</p>
-
-<p>It is in respect of these conditions&mdash;especially among
-dense urban populations, that the level of occupied ground,
-relatively to the nearest water-surface, becomes of primary
-importance. The low level, in itself, or rather in respect of
-the watery dampness which it implies, is not enough to
-localise the pestilence. To be afloat at sea might be the
-safest lodging.</p>
-
-<p>The sub-district of St. Peter&#8217;s, Hammersmith, averages
-only four feet above high-water level; that of St. Olave&#8217;s,
-Southwark, two feet higher; yet among the former and
-worse placed of these two populations, the Cholera-mortality
-was only 18 per 10,000; while among the latter and better
-placed it rose to 196&mdash;multiplying nearly eleven times the
-minor phenomena of a lower level. So also within your
-own jurisdiction. Side by side along the river lie four of
-your sub-districts; three at the elevation of twenty-one
-feet, one at the elevation of twenty-four feet. The Cholera-mortality,
-if simply proportioned to level, should have been
-nearly the same for these four sub-districts, but somewhat
-less in the last one than in the first three. Yet contrary
-was the fact; for in two of these sub-districts the Cholera-mortality,
-for equal numbers of population, was 4<sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>2</sub> times as
-great as in the other two.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page225">[225]</span></p>
-
-<p>It would, therefore, appear that in certain low-lying
-levels&mdash;to constitute them favorable soils for the disease,
-there must be joined to their first condition of lowness
-(with the mere watery dampness which it implies) some
-other and second condition; one, which is of extreme frequency
-in such districts, though not essentially present there.</p>
-
-<p>This second condition impends wherever there dwells at
-such levels a certain density of population; <i>it mainly
-varies with the degree in which that dense population lives
-in the atmosphere of its own excrements and refuse</i>. In
-this respect I cannot refrain from saying, that the giant
-error of London is its present system of drainage. Probably
-in considerable parts of the metropolitan area, house-drainage
-is extensively absent: probably in considerable
-parts, the sewers, from the nature of their construction, are
-very doubtful advantages to the districts they traverse: but
-the evil, before all others, to which I attach importance in
-relation to the present subject, is that habitual empoisonment
-of soil and air which is inseparable from our tidal
-drainage. From this influence, I doubt not, a large proportion
-of the metropolis has derived its liability to Cholera.
-A moment&#8217;s reflection is sufficient to show the immense
-distribution of putrefactive dampness which belongs to this
-vicious system. There is implied in it that the entire
-excrementation of the metropolis (with the exception of
-such as, not less poisonously, lies pent beneath houses)
-shall sooner or later be mingled in the stream of the river,
-there to be rolled backward and forward amid the population;
-that, at low water, for many hours, this material shall
-be trickling over broad belts of spongy bank which then
-dry their contaminated mud in the sunshine, exhaling f&#339;tor<span class="pagenum" id="Page226">[226]</span>
-and poison; that at high water, for many hours, it shall be
-retained<a id="FNanchor79"></a><a href="#Footnote79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a> or driven back within all low-level sewers and
-house-drains, soaking far and wide into the soil, or leaving
-putrescent deposit along miles of underground brickwork,
-as on a deeper pavement. Sewers which, under better
-circumstances, should be benefactions and appliances for
-health in their several districts, are thus rendered inevitable
-sources of evil. During a large proportion of their time
-they are occupied in retaining or re-distributing that which
-it is their office to remove. They furnish chambers for an
-immense f&aelig;cal evaporation; at every breeze which strikes
-against their open mouths, at every tide which encroaches
-on their inward space, their gases are breathed into the
-upper air&mdash;wherever outlet exists, into houses, foot-paths,
-and carriage-way.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote79"><a href="#FNanchor79"><span class="label">[79]</span></a>
-I am informed that in large districts on the south side of the
-river, this retention of sewage is prolonged for two-thirds of every
-tide&mdash;sixteen hours out of every twenty-four.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>To you, Gentlemen, as Commissioners of Sewers for the
-City of London, these remarks may seem superfluous; the
-rather so, as the worst evils of tidal drainage are not largely
-exemplified within your jurisdiction. But it seems to me
-of extreme moment at the present time, when very costly
-improvements of the metropolitan drainage are about to
-undergo parliamentary discussion, that the public should be
-well aware how indispensable such improvements are for the
-general health of London, and how important, in fact, they
-are to thousands who at first sight might think themselves
-little interested in their completion.</p>
-
-<p>To some individual householder, dwelling at a high<span class="pagenum" id="Page227">[227]</span>
-level, all concern in the subject may seem to terminate with
-the defluxion of his own sewage. So that his own pipes
-remain clear, little cares he for the ultimate outfall of his
-nuisance! Perhaps, if he knew better, he would care more.
-His gift returns to him with increase. Down in the valley, whither
-his refuse runs, converge innumerable kindred contributions.
-From city and suburb&mdash;from an area of a hundred square
-miles covered by a quarter of a million of houses, with
-their unprecedented throng of metropolitan life, there pours
-into that single channel every conceivable excrement, outscouring,
-garbage and refuse, from man and beast, street
-and slum, shamble and factory, market and hospital. From
-the polluted bosom of the river steam up, incessantly though
-unseen, the vapours of a retributive poison; densest and
-most destructive, no doubt, along the sodden banks and
-stinking sewers of lowest level; but spreading over miles
-of land&mdash;sometimes rolled high by wind, sometimes blended
-low with mist, and baneful, even to their margin that curls
-over distant fields. For, not alone in Rotherhithe and
-Newington&mdash;not alone along the Effra or the Fleet, are
-traced the evils of this great miasm. The deepest shadows
-of the cloud lie here; but its outskirts darken the distance,
-A fever hardly to be accounted for, an infantile sickness of
-undue malignity, a doctor&#8217;s injunction for change of air,
-may at times suggest to the dweller in our healthiest
-suburbs, that while draining his refuse to the Thames, he
-receives for requital some partial workings of the gigantic
-poison-bed which he has contributed to maintain.</p>
-
-<p>The subject of these remoter effects I refrain from pursuing,
-as foreign to my present purpose. That on which I
-wish to insist is the character of the river, in its relation to<span class="pagenum" id="Page228">[228]</span>
-the marginal sub-districts which it habitually dampens and
-occasionally floods with putrescent soakage, and in its relation
-to the sewers of low gradient which it converts (often
-with their adjoining soil) into the similitude and hurtfulness
-of cesspools. I wish emphatically to point out, that
-the several parts of London have suffered, and are likely
-again to suffer, from Cholera, in proportion as either this
-malarious influence is exerted on them, or other kindred
-miasms are furnished by their soil. And it is my belief,
-from such evidence as is before me, that the general liability
-of London to suffer the epidemic visitation will cease,
-whenever an efficient and inodorous system of drainage,
-conveying all refuse of the metropolis beyond range of its
-atmosphere, shall be substituted for our present elaborate
-disguise of an unremoved nuisance. I deem it right to state
-this explicitly: not only because it is my duty to give you,
-in simple truth, the conclusions to which I am led by
-careful reflection on the facts; but likewise because&mdash;for
-the credit of sanitary medicine and for your justification in
-the awful presence of a recurrent pestilence within your
-jurisdiction&mdash;it ought to be thoroughly known how much of
-the cause is common to the entire metropolis, and has not
-admitted of removal by measures of partial improvement.
-And the circumstances will perhaps excuse me if I repeat to
-your Hon. Court&mdash;represented as you are both in the
-Metropolitan Commission of Sewers and in Parliament,
-where this question must shortly be discussed&mdash;that the
-universal reform of our metropolitan drainage, at whatever
-imaginable pecuniary cost, is an urgent claim and necessity,
-unless this great city is again, as two centuries ago, to<span class="pagenum" id="Page229">[229]</span>
-live under the constant alarm of increasing epidemic destruction.</p>
-
-<p>Reverting, however, to the more especial relations of the
-disease within your territory, you will remember that,
-among your four bank-side sub-districts, two suffered in
-marked excess; their Cholera-mortality having been 4<sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>2</sub>
-times as great as that of the other two. The fact is instructive;
-because those two suffering sub-districts (though
-not of lower mean level than the others) were marginal to
-the valley of the Fleet, and were therefore exposed, more
-than any other part of your province, to the class of evils
-I have described. For a considerable part of this locality
-may be regarded as but recently<a id="FNanchor80"></a><a href="#Footnote80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a> a creek of the Thames;
-its shelving banks, singularly foul from ancient misuse,
-though now built over and paved, undergo in their lower
-levels very considerable soakage; while those vast sewers
-which lie in the mid-channel of the former river, are more
-liable than any within your jurisdiction, to suffer injurious
-interference from the action of the tide. At every such
-interference, and at every current of air setting up the
-sewers, all gases generated in these large chambers would
-diffuse themselves, not only in the low level, but likewise
-widely east and west, up those important slopes which
-depend on this valley for their drainage. I can easily
-understand that the radical cure of this district may be
-possible, only as part of those metropolitan improvements<span class="pagenum" id="Page230">[230]</span>
-to which I have adverted; but I do think it of supreme
-importance, in reference to any such visitation as we dread,
-that, during the next twelve months, there should be taken
-every precaution which technical knowledge can suggest,
-for restricting, even by palliative and temporary expedients,
-those mischievous effects which I have endeavoured to
-illustrate.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote80"><a href="#FNanchor80"><span class="label">[80]</span></a>
-New Bridge Street was built over the Fleet in 1765. The present
-site of Farringdon Street had been arched in thirty years
-earlier, for the purposes of the Fleet Market.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>In describing to you the local affinities of cholera, I have
-intimated that, in its preference for our low metropolitan
-levels, it selects these soils specifically in respect of their
-being damp with organic putrefaction. A moment&#8217;s consideration
-will suffice to show that, if this be true, the
-higher levels of the metropolis will be exempt from the
-disease, only in proportion as they exempt themselves
-from the local conditions which invite it&mdash;only in proportion
-as they avail themselves of those natural advantages
-which their situation enables them to command. Let a
-district be defective in house-drainage, so that its soil is
-excavated by cesspools and sodden by their soakage; let
-its sewers be ill-constructed and foul, so that offensive
-gases are ventilated into the immediate breathing-air of the
-inhabitants; let its pavement be absent or imperfect, scattered
-with refuse and puddled with water;&mdash;you will easily
-conceive that, under these circumstances, all distinctions of
-level are merged in the strong identity of filth, and whatever
-diseases belong to putrefactive dampness of soil will strike
-here as readily as on the low-lying mud-banks of the river.</p>
-
-<p>So, likewise, in still narrower limits&mdash;the predisposition
-of a house to Cholera may be stated in the same
-terms as define the liability of a district&mdash;viz., that the
-humid gases of organic decomposition, in proportion as they<span class="pagenum" id="Page231">[231]</span>
-are breathed into one house in a district more than into
-other houses there, will engender the greater liability of
-that house, as compared with its collaterals, to suffer an
-invasion of Cholera. And thus it often happens, during
-epidemic prevalence of the disease, that sporadic cases are
-determined in localities which might generally claim to be
-free from infection: for, what avails it to be on the highest
-ground and the best soil, with every neighbouring facility
-of sewers and scavenage, if, owing to individual carelessness
-and filth, the conditions of dampness and putridity are by
-choice retained within a house, and its basement flooded
-with rotting liquids, or piled with accumulated refuse?</p>
-
-<p>I might give you many instances in illustration of these
-points&mdash;showing you how, under the operation of specific
-sanitary faults, the Cholera-mortality of districts acquires
-an artificial exaltation; but few comparisons will suffice.
-At the period of the epidemic of 1849, your best conditioned
-sub-district was the north-west of the City of London
-Union; and (among those of the same level) your worst
-was the sub-district of Cripplegate, which at that time
-was in a very unsatisfactory state, abounding in open cesspools
-and their consequences. In the former of these sub-districts
-the Cholera-mortality <i>per</i> 10,000 was 19; in the
-latter 47; and it is easy to show that additional sanitary
-errors soon develop a larger fatality. Not far from your
-boundary, at the same level with these two sub-districts, in
-the Hackney-Road division of Bethnal-Green, it rose to
-110; this large mortality being principally confined to
-a very small portion of the district, wherein (the local
-Registrar reports) sewers were almost entirely absent,
-houses were contaminated with the filth of years, streets<span class="pagenum" id="Page232">[232]</span>
-were remaining for days uncleansed from accumulating dirt,
-and all waste water (including animal secretions) was uniformly
-thrown into the public way.</p>
-
-<p>Such are the conditions under which, at any imaginable
-height in the metropolis, Cholera may decimate a population:
-such, in their worst form, were the conditions which
-at Merthyr-Tydvil&mdash;several hundred feet above the water-level,
-carried the Cholera-mortality to more than double the
-high metropolitan rate just mentioned. Taught by this
-case the power of human mismanagement to futilise the
-favours of Nature; taught that perverse ingenuity can construct
-poison-beds for the development of Cholera, high
-above the usual track of its devastation; one gladly turns
-from the horrible instructiveness of such a lesson, to gather
-the kindred evidence of contrast: and happily there is abundant
-evidence to show how much may be effected, even in
-the most tainted districts, to purchase a circumscribed
-exemption from the disease by the judicious application of
-sanitary care.</p>
-
-<p>In the remarks which I have made on the local distribution
-of Cholera, you will have observed that I dwell
-particularly on one class of sanitary evils as concerned in its
-production; on that class, namely, which consists in the
-retention and soakage of organic refuse&mdash;on that class,
-which has its appointed antidote in a system of inodorous
-drainage, of uninterrupted pavement, of complete and
-punctual scavenage.</p>
-
-<p>On this I particularly insist, because I believe that
-here is the very atmosphere without which Cholera would
-cease.</p>
-
-<p>Sanitary evils abound; and, if I were speaking of other<span class="pagenum" id="Page233">[233]</span>
-diseases, I might have more to say of other causes. I am
-unwilling, even for a moment, to seem indifferent to those
-remaining fertile sources of suffering that surround the poor
-of our metropolitan population&mdash;to their over-crowded condition,
-to their scantiness of ventilation, to their insufficient
-or disgusting water-supply, to their frequent personal dirt,
-to their habitually defective diet. These several influences
-have their own characteristic sequels and retribution, on
-which I have often addressed you, and which I am little
-likely to underrate; believing, as I do, that, in the lapse of
-years, the aggregate of their effects is far more fatal than any
-periodical epidemic visitation. Likewise, I cannot doubt
-that, under certain circumstances, and in respect of particular
-cases, they may assist the operation of the choleraic
-poison. Nor will I pretend so exactly to limit the affinities
-of that which evolves this poison, as to deny that rooms,
-f&#339;tid with animal exhalations, may (like cesspool-sodden
-cellars) be ready to answer the stimulus of its infection.
-And at any rate, I think it highly important to recognise
-that all sanitary defects which embarrass the excretive
-purification of the human body&mdash;whether by breathing or
-otherwise, do naturally tend in the same direction as the
-causes of Cholera, and are liable&mdash;if only by indirect means,
-to become accessory in its destructive work.</p>
-
-<p>But, deeply impressed as I am with the importance of
-these considerations, I esteem it of still higher consequence,
-if measures are ever to be taken for an effective prevention
-of the disease, that the principle of its <i>specific causation</i>
-should be steadfastly kept in view. What may be the exact
-chemistry of this process, I do not pretend to say: urging
-only, that, in all human probability, the poison arises in<span class="pagenum" id="Page234">[234]</span>
-specific changes impressed by some migratory agent upon
-certain refuse-elements of life. Perhaps nowhere, and certainly
-not before your Hon. Court, can it be desirable,
-in the present immaturity of pathological knowledge, to
-argue as to the first origin or absolute nature of that wandering
-influence which determines in particular localities
-the generation of epidemic malaria. Simply, since it leads
-to all-important practical conclusions, let this distinction be
-recognised: that which seems to have come to us from the
-East is not itself a poison, so much as it is a test and touchstone
-of poison. Whatever in its nature it may be, this at
-least we know of its operation. Past millions of scattered
-population it moves innocuous. Through the unpolluted
-atmosphere of cleanly districts, it migrates silently, without
-a blow: that which it can kindle into poison, lies not there.
-To the foul, damp breath of low-lying cities, it comes like a
-spark to powder. Here is contained that which it can
-swiftly make destructive,&mdash;soaked into soil, stagnant in
-water, griming the pavement, tainting the air&mdash;the slow rottenness
-of unremoved excrement, to which the first contact
-of this foreign ferment brings the occasion of changing into
-new and more deadly combinations.</p>
-
-<p>These are matters which it is hateful to hear, and, believe
-me, to speak about. But the thing is worse than the
-statement; and I would suggest to you this easy test of its
-reality. Take at random any consecutive hundred entries
-of Cholera-Deaths in the Registrar-General&#8217;s metropolitan
-returns, where local conditions are described; and let any
-man decide for himself, whether what I have sketched in
-general terms convey more than the essential features of<span class="pagenum" id="Page235">[235]</span>
-these several records. In 1849, such an atmosphere as these
-influences engender existed continuously and intensely on
-the low-lying south side of the river, and to some distance
-inland, from Greenwich to Wandsworth; it existed also
-continuously, but in far less intensity, and with comparatively
-little extension inland, along the northern side of the
-river from Poplar to Chelsea, and it existed very intensely
-in several independent centres, scattered about those
-healthier levels of the metropolis, which, by their better
-position, ought to have been exempted from such a reproach.
-The Cholera struck in the same proportion as this atmosphere
-prevailed; and herein, I repeat, lies that definite local
-condition, except for which&mdash;to the best of my knowledge
-and belief, the migratory ferment (whatever it may be) would
-pass harmlessly through the midst of us.</p>
-
-<p>For, towards the chemical constitution of local atmospheres,
-it seems that the several principles of epidemic
-diseases stand in the same sort of fixed respective relations,
-as do the several principles of infective fevers towards certain
-elements in the blood of individual persons. Just as
-the infective ferment acts on man, so appears the epidemic
-ferment to act on locality. We know that, in a given group
-of human beings, small-pox chooses one victim, scarlatina
-another, measles a third, by reason of some material quality
-in each person respectively, which his blood possesses, and
-which his neighbour&#8217;s blood does not possess. By virtue of
-this quality&mdash;not the less chemical because chemists have no
-name for it, that specific exterior agency, which we call infection,
-has the power of affecting each such person&mdash;has
-the power of producing in him a succession of characteristic<span class="pagenum" id="Page236">[236]</span>
-chemical changes which tend to an eventual close by exhausting
-this material which feeds them.<a id="FNanchor81"></a><a href="#Footnote81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote81"><a href="#FNanchor81"><span class="label">[81]</span></a>
-For the scientific reader, I may perhaps be permitted to add,
-that the very difficult Subject, at which here I can only venture to
-glance, is discussed at some length in one of my Pathological Lectures,
-delivered at St. Thomas&#8217;s Hospital in 1850, published at that
-time in the <i>Lancet</i>, and subsequently reprinted.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Strictly analogous to this, in its principle of choice and in
-its method of operation, appears the epidemic action&mdash;not
-on persons indeed, but on places. The specific migrating
-power&mdash;whatever its nature, has the faculty of infecting
-districts in a manner detrimental to life, only when their
-atmosphere is fraught with certain products susceptible,
-under its influence, of undergoing poisonous transformation.</p>
-
-<p>These products, it is true, are but imperfectly known to
-us. Under the vague name of putrefaction we include all
-those thousand-fold possibilities of new combination, to
-which organic matters are exposed in their gradual declension
-from life. The birth of one such combination rather
-than another is the postulate for an epidemic poison.</p>
-
-<p>Whether the ferment, which induces this particular
-change in certain elements of our atmosphere, may ever be
-some accident of local origin, or must always be the creeping
-infection from similar atmospheres elsewhere similarly
-affected; whether the first impulse, here or there, be given
-by this agency or by that&mdash;by heat, by magnetism, by
-planets or meteors&mdash;such questions are widely irrelevant to
-the purpose for which I have the honour of addressing you.
-The one great pathological fact, which I have sought to
-bring into prominence for your knowledge and application,<span class="pagenum" id="Page237">[237]</span>
-is this:&mdash;that the epidemic prevalence of Cholera does not
-arise in some new cloud of venom, floating above reach and
-control, high over successive lands, and raining down upon
-them without difference its prepared distillation of death;
-but that&mdash;so far as scientific analysis can decide, it depends
-on one occasional phase of an influence which is always
-about us&mdash;on one change of materials which in their other
-changes give rise to other ills; that these materials, so perilously
-prone to explode into one or other breath of epidemic
-pestilence, are the dense exhalations of animal uncleanness
-which infect, in varying proportion, the entire area of our
-metropolis; and that, from the nature of the case, it must
-remain optional with those who witness the dreadful infliction,
-whether they will indolently acquiesce in their continued
-and increasing liabilities to a degrading calamity,
-or will employ the requisite skill, science, and energy, to
-remove from before their thresholds these filthy sources of
-misfortune.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">2. If, gentlemen, I have detained you long in stating conclusions
-as to the habits of the disease, and as to the significance
-of its local partialities, it has been in order to render
-quite obvious to you the intention of those precautionary
-measures which it is now my duty to recommend.</p>
-
-<p>First, I would allude to influences of an exterior and
-public kind; and here, all that I have to advocate might be
-included in a single stipulation, that cleanliness&mdash;in the
-widest sense of the word&mdash;should be enforced to the full
-extent of your authority.</p>
-
-<p>Over the pollutions of the river, and over the tidal exposure
-of its malarious banks, you have no power.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page238">[238]</span></p>
-
-<p>Whether for the relief of your low-lying districts&mdash;subject
-to imminent risk from causes I have described&mdash;there can be
-found any temporary protection to save their atmosphere
-from contamination, is a question which you will resolve
-upon other judgment than mine.</p>
-
-<p>Along the river-bank there is one especial source of nuisance
-which has repeatedly been under your notice, and
-which is likely to become of serious local import under the
-presence of epidemic disease. I refer to the docks, and
-chiefly to that of Whitefriars. I mention it particularly,
-not only because the accumulations of putrid matter there
-have often been alarmingly great, but likewise because, at
-the head of this dock, during the former invasion of
-Cholera, there was remarkable prevalence of the disease;
-and I can well remember how often the offensive condition
-of the dock was accused, not unjustly, of contributing to
-the mortality of the neighbourhood. The f&#339;tid materials,
-floated into these several recesses of the river, and left
-stranded there by the receding tide, are often so copious as
-to produce very objectionable effects on the atmosphere
-which surrounds them; and I would beg leave strongly to
-urge that such sources of nuisance should be thoroughly
-and permanently removed.</p>
-
-<p>Further&mdash;from what I have said as to the conditions of
-our vulnerability by Cholera, you will be prepared to think
-it of great importance that, during the next six months, you
-should be certified on the state of your sewers, in every
-part of the City, as to their greatest possible cleanliness and
-least possible offensiveness of ventilation. Fifty miles of
-sewer, reticulated through the City, sufficiently attest your
-active desire to provide for the complete and continuous<span class="pagenum" id="Page239">[239]</span>
-carrying away of all excremental matters: and you will
-excuse me, I hope, in consideration of the anxieties of my
-office, if I seem superfluously cautious in reminding you
-that the test of successful sewers lies in an inodorous fulfilment
-of their duty, and that every complaint of offensive
-emanations indicates, in proportion to its extent, a failure
-of that sanitary object for which the construction was
-designed.</p>
-
-<p>There is one precaution&mdash;always of great value to the
-health of towns, and especially useful against any malarious
-infection, which happily I find it needless to recommend.
-The paving of all public ways within the City&mdash;including
-every court and alley&mdash;is already so complete as to constitute
-a very favorable point in your sanitary defences. In
-order that this excellent arrangement may give its full
-fruit, it will be requisite&mdash;though this again I need hardly
-press on your consideration, that the duties of scavengers
-and dustmen be thoroughly and punctually performed.</p>
-
-<p>Again, I would particularly advise that great vigilance
-be exercised in all markets, slaughtering-places, and other
-establishments under your jurisdiction, to prevent the
-retention of refuse-matter, animal or vegetable. I would
-urge the strictest enforcement of all regulations which you
-have made for the cleanliness of such places, and for the
-removal of their putrefiable refuse.</p>
-
-<p>Likewise, I have to suggest that after the month of May,
-at latest, no disturbance of earth to any considerable depth
-should be allowed to take place, either in your works or in
-those of gas and water companies, except under circumstances
-of urgent necessity. In the lower levels of the
-City, particularly, I conceive this prohibition to be a matter<span class="pagenum" id="Page240">[240]</span>
-of paramount importance; because the soil, never of unexceptionable
-cleanliness in towns, is here especially apt to be
-of offensive quality.</p>
-
-<p>On the subject of water in its general relations to the
-City, I have only again to express my deep regret that it
-lies out of your present power to compel a continuous supply,
-and that your means are restricted to choosing what
-may best compensate for the absence of this sanitary boon.
-It must be your aim to mitigate, so far as may be, the evils
-that belong to an ill-regulated intermittent system in its
-adaptation to the houses of the poor&mdash;evils which imply, as
-I have often told you, not only much domestic dirt, but
-likewise a frequent suspension of all efficiency in the drainage
-of innumerable houses. With a view to the best alternative
-for a continuous supply, I would recommend that at
-least a daily filling of all cisternage take place, and expressly
-that Sunday form no exception to the advantages of this
-rule. If a choice of evils must be made, I trust it is no
-heathen&#8217;s part to urge that the Christian Sabbath suffers
-more desecration in the filth and preventable unwholesomeness
-of many thousand households, than in the honest
-industry of a dozen turncocks. I likewise submit, that it
-would be highly advantageous to the labouring poor, most
-of whose domestic cleansing is reserved for the last day of
-the week, that, on that day, a second delivery of water
-should take place at some hour in the afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>I wish it were in my power to tell your Hon. Court
-that the supply of water to the City of London had become,
-in quality, all that I think it might be rendered.
-Such as it is, however, there depend other very important<span class="pagenum" id="Page241">[241]</span>
-issues on its being delivered in ample abundance for all
-the purposes of cleanliness; and I am glad to have learned
-from the eminent engineer of the New River Company, that
-he has it in expectation very shortly to be able to furnish to
-the City a largely increased and practically inexhaustible
-supply.</p>
-
-<p>The subject of water in its district relations ought hardly
-to be passed without a word of caution as to the use of
-pumps within the City. I need hardly inform you that
-every spring of water represents the drainage of a certain
-surface or thickness of soil, and that&mdash;such as are the qualities
-of this gathering ground, such must be the qualities
-of the water. You will, perhaps, remember that in my
-account of one celebrated City pump, which sucks from beneath
-a churchyard, I showed you ninety grains of solid
-matter in every gallon of its water. In virtue of that wonderful
-action which earth exerts on organic matter, the
-former contents of a coffin, here re-appearing in a spring,
-had undergone so complete a change as to be insusceptible
-of further putrefaction: the grateful coolness, so much admired
-in the produce of that popular pump, chiefly depending
-on a proportion of nitre, which arises in the chemical
-transformation of human remains, and which being
-dissolved in the water, gives it, I believe, some refrigerant
-taste and slight diuretic action. Undoubtedly this water is
-an objectionable beverage in respect of its several saline
-ingredients; but my present object in adverting to them is
-rather to illustrate an anterior danger which they imply.
-Their presence indicates a comparative completion of the
-putrefactive process, effected by the uniform filtration of<span class="pagenum" id="Page242">[242]</span>
-organic solutions through a porous soil.<a id="FNanchor82"></a><a href="#Footnote82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a> Let that soil
-have frequent fissures in its substance; or let its thickness
-be scanty in proportion to the organic matters to be acted
-on: and the water, imperfectly filtered, would run off foul
-and putrescent. Now this risk, more or less, belongs to all
-pumps within the City of London. They draw from a
-ground excavated in all directions by sewers, drains, cesspools,
-gas-pipes, burial-pits. The immense amount of organic
-matter which infiltrates the soil does undoubtedly, for
-the greater part, suffer oxidation, and pass into chemical
-repose: but in any particular case it is the merest chance,
-whether the glass of water raised to the mouth shall be
-fraught only with saline results of decomposition&mdash;in itself<span class="pagenum" id="Page243">[243]</span>
-an objectionable issue&mdash;or shall contain organic refuse in
-the active and infectious stage of its earlier transformations.
-Some recent cutting of a trench, or breakage of a
-drain in the neighbourhood, may have converted a draught,
-which before was chronicly unwholesome, into one immediately
-perilous to life. Such facts ought to be known to
-all persons having custody of pumps within urban districts;
-and it ought likewise to be known that this infiltrative
-spoiling of springs may occur to the distance of many
-hundred yards.<a id="FNanchor83"></a><a href="#Footnote83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote82"><a href="#FNanchor82"><span class="label">[82]</span></a>
-This very important influence, exerted by the earth on various
-organic infiltrations, is referred to in the text only under one point
-of view; only as it occasions the deterioration of land-springs in
-urban districts, and renders their water unfit for consumption. But
-the subject has another equally important side. Such springs,
-having their waters laden with nitrates, represent the continuous
-removal of organic impurities which otherwise would contaminate
-the air. The evil of spoiled springs, therefore&mdash;while it necessitates
-for every urban population that their water-supply shall be artificially
-furnished from a distance, has great countervailing advantages.
-A given organic soakage will cease to vitiate the atmosphere by
-evaporation, in proportion as it gravitates to lower levels, and undergoes
-those chemical changes which accompany filtration through the
-soil. Hence it is evident that, for the healthiness of inhabited districts
-(where extensive soakage of organic matters is almost invariable)
-it becomes most important to maintain, or by artificial measures
-to accelerate, this down-draught through the soil; and the reader
-will scarcely need to be reminded, that, in those improvements of
-metropolitan sewerage, which it is a chief object of this Report to
-advocate, complete provision for the continuous drainage of soil is
-implied as an essential part.</p>
-
-<p id="Footnote83"><a href="#FNanchor83"><span class="label">[83]</span></a>
-For a fact strikingly illustrative of this, I am indebted to my
-colleague, Dr. <span class="smcap">R. D. Thomson</span>, Lecturer on Chemistry at St.
-Thomas&#8217;s Hospital. At Liverpool&mdash;in three wells which he examined,
-distant severally 760, 800, and 1050 yards from the Mersey,
-he found the water brackish from marine soakage, containing four
-or five hundred grains of solid matter <i>per</i> gallon, and totally unfit
-for consumption.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>In final reference to the quality of water, whether supplied
-by our trading companies or derived from springs
-within the City, I think it expedient to mention that,
-against its lesser impurities, great protection is given by
-filtration through animal charcoal, as in various &#8216;filters
-and purifiers&#8217; which are before the public. These protective
-means do not lie within reach of the poorer
-classes; nor, whatever their accessibility to individuals, can
-any such personal arrangements render it less important to
-provide that water&mdash;the first necessary of life&mdash;be supplied
-for universal use in its utmost procurable purity.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">Beyond the above points, which are of general application
-within the City, all your remaining precautions will
-relate to the condition of private houses: and of these&mdash;occupied<span class="pagenum" id="Page244">[244]</span>
-by the poorer classes, there exist in the City some
-thousands over which it will be requisite, by repeated inspection,
-to maintain an efficient sanitary watch. From
-circumstances to which I have already referred, it appears
-that your defences against Cholera will very mainly consist
-in removing the causes of disease from within individual
-houses; and it is only by an organised system of inspection,
-for detecting and removing every unclean condition, that
-this object can be attained. For your encouragement in
-this task, I may venture to express my belief that, throughout
-a considerable portion of the City, the local affinities
-for Cholera are not too strong to be greatly modified and
-obviated by such a system.</p>
-
-<p>With respect to this important work of sanitary inspection,
-what I now propose is no new proceeding within the
-City. More or less since the date of my appointment,
-but I hope with gradual increase of completeness and efficiency,
-weekly visitations on a considerable scale have been
-made, under my direction, by your four Inspectors of
-Nuisances. Acting under your authority, and guided by
-what information I could obtain on the existence of endemic
-disease<a id="FNanchor84"></a><a href="#Footnote84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a> in your several districts, I have furnished
-the Inspectors every week with a variable list of houses,
-ranging probably from fifty to one hundred and fifty at a<span class="pagenum" id="Page245">[245]</span>
-time, for their visitation and inquiry. The information
-which I have directed them to seek has referred of course to
-the various details of sanitary condition: to questions of lodgment,
-ventilation, cleanliness, drainage, water-supply, dust-removal,
-paving of yards and cellars, existence of nuisances,
-and the like: and I have constructed <a href="#Page210">tabular forms</a> for their
-use, which admit of this information being recorded and reviewed
-in the readiest manner. Week by week, before each
-meeting of your Court, I have had the habit of going through
-every particular of these somewhat considerable details. I
-have sorted out of them those very numerous cases in
-which your lawful powers could be usefully exerted. When
-I have deemed it necessary, I have myself made visits of
-verification or inquiry; and have finally laid before you, in
-the form which is familiar to your weekly meetings, such
-recommendations as the week&#8217;s survey has shown necessary,
-for enforcing works of local improvement under the
-powers of your Acts of Parliament. I find that within the
-last twelve months there have been made 3147 visitations
-of this nature, the results of which are recorded in your
-office; and, founded on the result of these inspections,
-there have been issued 983 orders for abatement of causes
-of disease.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote84"><a href="#FNanchor84"><span class="label">[84]</span></a>
-This information has been mainly derived from two sources:&mdash;first,
-from the weekly Death-Returns of the nine City Registrars,
-which the Registrar-General most kindly allows me to have transcribed
-so soon as they arrive at his office;&mdash;secondly, from weekly
-returns which the Medical Officers of the three City Unions have had
-the great kindness and liberality to supply for my assistance, as to the
-existence of fever and kindred disorders in the several localities
-under their charge.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>I am very far from considering that these arrangements
-have been perfect. Circumstances beyond my control have
-prevented me from constructing as complete an organisation
-as I could wish; and the fact that your Inspectors are very
-largely employed in other duties, has perhaps occasionally
-given some hurry and imperfection to their share of the
-work. Still, such as it is, this system has been the means
-of considerable advantage; and I am glad to be able to<span class="pagenum" id="Page246">[246]</span>
-claim for your Hon. Court the distinction of being first in
-the metropolis to have established an arrangement for the
-systematic sanitary visitation of the dwellings of the poor.
-In relation to this subject, I beg to inform your Hon. Court
-that your Inspectors have discharged, with much zeal, intelligence,
-and industry, the duties which you authorised me
-to impose on them.</p>
-
-<p>During the last few weeks it has become obvious to your
-Hon. Court that the duties of this department of your
-service have grown to such dimensions as to necessitate
-some increase of your staff; and acting on this opinion,
-mainly with a view to render more complete your sanitary
-supervision of the City, you have just appointed two additional
-Inspectors of Nuisances. In making this appointment,
-you have determined not to restrict any two or three
-Inspectors exclusively to the business of house-inspection, but
-to allot the joint duties, sanitary and surveying, equally among
-their number: parting the area of the City into six, instead of
-four, Inspectors&#8217; districts; so that each Inspector shall give
-a certain proportion of time to the duties which he has to
-fulfil under your Surveyor&#8217;s direction, and another certain
-proportion to those in which he will be engaged under the
-direction of your Officer of Health. It is only some experience
-of this arrangement that can decide whether it will
-be the most effectual for your purpose; but in the mean
-time I have studied so to dispose the industry of your increased
-staff, under the arrangement you have ordered, as to
-obtain the most systematic and efficient discharge of those
-duties which you have desired me to superintend.</p>
-
-<p>Reckoning that each Inspector, if he fulfilled no other
-duty, could report on the condition of about fifty houses<span class="pagenum" id="Page247">[247]</span>
-<i>per diem</i>, I presume that henceforth, in each of your five
-more important districts, from one hundred to one hundred
-and twenty houses can be visited weekly by the Inspector,
-without encroaching on the time required for his other
-duties.</p>
-
-<p>The general plan, on which I would propose that this
-force should be disposed, is the following:&mdash;first, as heretofore,
-the weekly list would contain all places needing
-investigation on the ground of such deaths and illness as
-are usually associated with preventable causes, in order
-that any sanitary defects may at once be remedied in them;
-secondly, in each week there would fall due a certain number
-of sanitary works (relating to house-drainage, water-supply,
-and the like) for which you would have previously issued
-orders requiring them to be completed within a stated time,
-and on the satisfactory execution of these it will be the
-Inspectors duty to examine and certify; thirdly, in each
-district I would have a certain rota of visitation, according
-to the badness of the spot and its known liability to fall into
-filthy and unwholesome condition, requiring one set of
-houses to be seen weekly, another set fortnightly, another
-monthly, another quarterly, and so on&mdash;a rota, varying
-from time to time with the changing circumstances of each
-locality; and, out of this rota, each week would supply a
-stated number of cases for inquiry, to which I should occasionally
-add certain of those establishments in which
-offensive occupations are pursued. Thus, in the large
-number of weekly visits which I suppose the Inspector to
-make, there would be a certain proportion of that more
-elaborate kind which involves an examination of the entire
-house; another proportion, made for the sole purpose of<span class="pagenum" id="Page248">[248]</span>
-seeing that previous orders have been executed; another
-proportion, repeated at fixed intervals, simply to ascertain
-that houses, once cleansed and repaired, are not relapsing
-into filth, nor their works becoming inefficient.</p>
-
-<p>By utilising, on some such plan as this, the increased
-staff which you have appointed for the purpose, and by
-giving to its execution my continual superintendence, I
-trust to be able, from time to time, to certify you that the City
-becomes better and better capable of resisting epidemic
-invasion.<a id="FNanchor85"></a><a href="#Footnote85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a> From such statements as I have set before you,
-on the local affinities of disease&mdash;not of Cholera alone, but
-of typhus and its kindred, you will be prepared to expect
-increased sanitary advantage, from this more systematic
-suppression of the causes of death: and I believe you will
-not be disappointed. Whether the anticipated pestilence
-rage in our metropolis or not, you will be combating, day
-by day, the influence of other malignant diseases. Whenever
-it may be in my power to tell you generally of the
-City, that the dwellings of the poor are no longer crowded
-and stifling; nor their walls mouldy; nor their yards and
-cellars unpaved and sodden; nor their water-supply defective;
-nor their drainage stinking; nor their atmosphere
-hurt by neighbouring nuisances; then, gentlemen, whether
-Cholera test your success or not, surely you will have
-contributed much to conquer more habitual enemies. For
-whatever there may be specific and exceptional in the production
-of Cholera, at least it touches no healthy spot: the<span class="pagenum" id="Page249">[249]</span>
-local conditions which welcome its occasional presence are,
-in its absence, hour by hour, the workers of other death;
-and in rendering a locality secure against the one, you will
-also have made it less vulnerable by the others.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote85"><a href="#FNanchor85"><span class="label">[85]</span></a> I may take this opportunity of mentioning that, during the
-last few months, the increased sanitary staff has been worked with
-very great advantage.&mdash;J. S., May, 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>As a last suggestion in this part of my subject, there are
-two steps which I would recommend to your Hon. Court,
-as likely to assist the labours of your officers, and to bring
-a large quantity of important information before you:&mdash;first
-(according to a plan adopted here in the last epidemic) that
-printed notices should be posted in every back-street, court
-and alley of the City, and should be renewed once a month,
-advising the careful maintenance of cleanliness in all houses,
-and inviting all persons who are aggrieved by any nuisance,
-or by any neglect of scavengers and dustmen, or by any
-defect of water-supply, forthwith to make complaint at your
-Office, or to the Inspector of the district, whose name and
-address might be subjoined; secondly, that a circular letter
-should be written to all persons in parochial authority, also
-to other clergy, to heads of visiting societies and the like,
-begging them to communicate with your officers on every
-occasion when any local uncleanliness or nuisance may
-come within their knowledge.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">3. Finally, gentlemen&mdash;in the probable anticipation that
-next year Cholera will prevail in London with at least its
-former severity, it may be claimed of my office, that I should
-say something with respect to personal precautions for
-avoidance of the disease. While most willing to place at
-your disposal any useful results of my practical experience
-in the matter, I cannot but feel the great difficulty of making
-general suggestions in a form really capable of particular
-application.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page250">[250]</span></p>
-
-<p>From the eminently local prevalence of the poison, it may
-be inferred that, for all whose circumstances allow an option
-in the matter, the first and most important precaution would
-consist in avoiding those localities where the epidemic is
-active. Our knowledge of the subject enables us confidently
-to say that, if in one spot the chance of being attacked by
-Cholera is as 1 to 100, in another it becomes 1 to 50, in a
-third 1 to 5, in a fourth almost an equal chance whether to
-be attacked or not. Nothing is gained towards security by
-the mere act of leaving our metropolitan area, if one resorts
-to some other place where the system of drainage is equally
-vicious, or where&mdash;as at our nearest bathing-place, the beach
-is made almost as offensive by sewage as here the river-banks.<a id="FNanchor86"></a><a href="#Footnote86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a>
-From earlier statements in my Report, it will be
-obvious to you that the eligible sites of residence are those
-which stand high and dry, with clean effectual drainage of
-their soils and houses, conveying all organic refuse beyond
-range of the local atmosphere.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote86"><a href="#FNanchor86"><span class="label">[86]</span></a> Unless the sanitary improvement of Brighton be soon set about
-in earnest, the reputation for healthiness, which established its
-prosperity, will undergo a very sensible reverse. The natural advantages
-of the place are now almost neutralised by the evil adverted
-to in the text, and by other filthinesses of the kind.&mdash;J. S.,
-1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>I will not pass this part of the subject without admitting
-that the course here suggested might involve a considerable
-desertion of particular localities, and a transient injury to
-their commerce. This unavoidable result of proclaiming the
-laws of the disease, I must regret in regard of its personal
-bearings. But the facts of the case are all-important for
-the public; and sanitary improvement will perhaps move<span class="pagenum" id="Page251">[251]</span>
-more quickly in the country, when it is known that the
-pecuniary prosperity of places may suffer from their reputation
-for endemic disease.</p>
-
-<p>In case of Cholera prevailing with severity in spots containing
-a dense poor population, great assistance would be
-given to medical and sanitary measures, if a number of
-empty unlet houses, healthily situated, were at the disposal of
-the authorities; into which, under proper regulations, they
-might induce certain of the poorest families to migrate for
-a time, as to places of refuge, till the disease should have
-subsided about their original dwellings.</p>
-
-<p>For persons, whose circumstances or duties retain them
-unavoidably in the midst of those suffering districts where
-the poison is most active, the best counsel I can offer&mdash;even
-if at first hearing it seem vague&mdash;is, that they should be
-vigilant as to preserving the greatest possible soundness and
-vigour of general health; keeping the body, so far as may be,
-undisturbed by extremes of heat and cold, undepressed by
-long confinement, unfluttered by violent passions, unexhausted
-by physical or mental fatigue, untried by any excess
-or any privation; taking for diet a sufficiency of fit and
-nutritive food, rather in generous measure than otherwise,
-but far from the confines of intemperance; and giving
-meanwhile a prompt attention and cure to whatever accidental
-ailments may arise.</p>
-
-<p>Such, in general language, are our best fortifications
-against the poison. It may be well, however, to add that
-in our metropolitan climate&mdash;perhaps everywhere else&mdash;the
-human frame tends to require some periodical aid from
-medicine. It may be the excitement and labour of London;
-it may be its atmosphere; it may be native peculiarity: but<span class="pagenum" id="Page252">[252]</span>
-thus the fact stands&mdash;that there are few persons who do not
-at intervals require the re-establishing effects of what is
-called <i>tonic</i> treatment. Probably three-fourths of the prescriptions
-we write are aimed at this mere tendency to depression
-in the human body, as manifested in one form or
-another. Now, as a man, going on some distant voyage of
-exploration, submits his chronometer to a last intelligent
-scrutiny, before he exposes it to the ordeal of other climates,
-so, in this matter of frequenting infected districts, men will
-do prudently, before they pass into perils which may test
-their powers of resistance, to see that they carry about with
-them no enfeeblement or disrepair which a short submission
-to medical discipline could effectually remove. For with
-epidemic poisons generally, and in a marked degree with
-Asiatic Cholera, it seems that all states of languor, depression,
-and debility enhance the risk of infection.<a id="FNanchor87"></a><a href="#Footnote87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote87"><a href="#FNanchor87"><span class="label">[87]</span></a> For my medical readers, I may suggest that perhaps the daily
-use of <i>sulphate of quinine</i>, in small doses, during the height of the
-epidemic, would seem to deserve trial as a prophylactic; subject, of
-course, to what each practitioner is best able to estimate&mdash;of personal
-peculiarity in the patient, forbidding the use of this drug.&mdash;J.
-S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Beyond these general cautions, there is yet one which requires
-very particular mention.</p>
-
-<p>In respect of the commencement and predispositions of
-the disease, it is now well known&mdash;first, that in this country
-it habitually begins with diarrh&#339;a of a painless and apparently
-trivial character; secondly, that diarrh&#339;a, however
-produced, is, of all known personal conditions, the one
-most likely to invite an attack of Cholera at times when that
-disease is epidemic; thirdly, that during the prevalence of<span class="pagenum" id="Page253">[253]</span>
-Cholera, side by side with it in a district, there is always a
-vast amount of epidemic diarrh&#339;a, apparently constituting
-slighter degrees or earlier stages of the same disease; that
-this condition is just as amenable to treatment as the confirmed
-collapse of Cholera is utterly the opposite; and&mdash;since
-we can never say how incurable a few hours may
-render this insidious symptom, that its immediate arrest is
-a consideration of vital importance.</p>
-
-<p>Precautions against causing diarrh&#339;a to oneself by errors
-of diet will vary somewhat with different individuals. Every
-person of ordinary discretion knows the habits of his own
-body, and can be tolerably confident, within certain limits
-of food, that he gives himself no occasion of sickness. He
-remembers articles of diet, which his neighbour perhaps
-may innocently indulge in, but which to himself are the occasion
-of inward disorder&mdash;of purging or vomiting, &#8216;bilious
-attack&#8217; or nettle rash, headache, nightmare, or some other
-inconvenience. This knowledge fixes the limits which it
-primarily behoves him to regard; taking such food only
-into his body as experience has shown best to agree with
-it; and adhering to this course, without panic as to particular
-accustomed articles, and without abrupt discontinuance
-of old harmless habits. Apart from personal peculiarities,
-the chief dangers of diet appear to lie as follows:
-first, in those excesses of meat and drink, which (especially
-under circumstances of fatigue) occasion sickness to the
-stomach, or an increased labour of digestion; secondly, in
-taking food, solid or fluid, which is midway in some process
-of chemical transition&mdash;half-fermented beer and wine, water
-containing organic matters, meat and game and venison no
-longer fresh and not completely cooked, fish and shell-fish,<span class="pagenum" id="Page254">[254]</span>
-in any state but the most perfect freshness, fruit or
-vegetables long-gathered or badly kept, and the like;
-thirdly, in a profusion of cold sour drink; fourthly, in partaking
-largely of those articles of diet which habitually, or
-by reason of imperfect cooking, pass unchanged through
-the intestinal canal; and fifthly, in the indiscreet use of
-purgative medicines, or in taking any article of diet which
-is likely to produce the same effect.</p>
-
-<p>In short, if care be taken under all these heads to
-avoid occasions of intestinal disturbance; if the diet, while
-generous, be simple and strictly temperate; if regular hours
-be given to sleep, to meals, to industry, to recreation; if a
-fair proportion of out-door exercise be taken; if damp and
-extremes of temperature be guarded against; and all practical
-pains be given to avoid the sources of bodily and
-mental depression; the danger will certainly be reduced
-to its <i>minimum</i>; and whatever effects the epidemic may
-happen to produce can be readily recognised and boldly
-encountered.</p>
-
-<p>Should these effects arise in their customary form of
-diarrh&#339;a, it is of absolute urgent necessity that immediate
-medical treatment be resorted to: and so important for the
-safety of life is the recognition of this symptom in the
-earliest stage of its occurrence, that no unwonted action of
-the bowels should pass unobserved.</p>
-
-<p>The public constantly asks to be informed of some drug,
-or combination of drugs, to which under these circumstances
-they may have immediate recourse. But after very
-careful consideration of this subject, after hearing arguments
-on both sides, and reading those prescriptions which
-have been recommended for adoption, I venture to express<span class="pagenum" id="Page255">[255]</span>
-my opinion that the safest course for the public, in regard
-of this threatened disease, will be to follow the same principle
-as guides them in their ordinary seizures of illness,
-and to obtain as quickly as possible the aid of their customary
-medical advisers. There is an invincible aptitude
-in the public to misapply all precautionary medicines within
-their reach; often superstitiously to treat them as charms,
-under the protection of which they may neglect temperance
-of diet and all other solicitude for health; often ignorantly
-to employ them in cases for which their use is forbidden;
-often, at the instigation of panic, to abuse them by preposterous
-and hurtful excess. Nervous and uneducated
-persons, instead of employing their astringent dose simply
-to stop any undue action from the bowels, would be apt, as
-the danger neared them, to make it an habitual dram in
-order to anticipate any such action; and the frequent after-necessity
-for purgative medicine, thus created, would constitute
-the very danger they desire to avoid. Recognising,
-therefore, at its full value, the importance of immediately
-treating, in every case, the first phenomena of epidemic
-diarrh&#339;a, I must yet doubt whether the conditions of
-medical science and general education are such as to justify
-the promulgation of general formul&aelig; so liable to extensive
-abuse.</p>
-
-<p>I speak of course with particular reference to the
-metropolis. In remote rural districts it may often be desirable
-that discreet and intelligent persons&mdash;the Clergy, for
-instance, should obtain from their medical neighbours some
-astringent preparation to which&mdash;in the very rare event of
-real emergency, temporary recourse might be had: but&mdash;for
-so hazardous a condition of disease, I must repeat as a<span class="pagenum" id="Page256">[256]</span>
-general rule, that no nostrum, even in the best-intentioned
-hands of ignorance, can supply the place of medical discrimination.</p>
-
-<p>During the acute prevalence of the epidemic in any particular
-locality, it becomes of great importance to bring
-the uneducated classes of society, as far as possible, under
-systematic medical care; in the absence of which they are
-likely to neglect all premonitions of the disease, and thus
-to incur much unnecessary danger. To fulfil this object
-as regards the poor, express provision has been made by
-the Law: and it might be well for other classes, under
-similar exposure to attack, to consider how far they could
-arrange for their households a similar plan of protection.</p>
-
-<p>Under any Order in Council which brings into action
-the extraordinary powers of the Nuisances Removal Act,
-the General Board of Health has authority to enjoin on all
-Boards of Guardians throughout the country, that they
-provide, for &#8216;persons afflicted by or threatened with&#8217; the
-disease, such medical aid as may be required: and the
-actual working of this has been that, on all occasions of
-epidemic Cholera prevailing in particular localities, the
-General Board of Health has called on the local Boards of
-Guardians to establish systematic house-to-house visitation,
-for discovering and treating among the poor all premonitory
-symptoms of the disease.</p>
-
-<p>In the too probable event of its becoming necessary
-next year to establish this system of medical organisation
-in parts of the metropolis, I have no reason to doubt that a
-requisition to the above effect will be addressed to the
-Guardians of the City poor; and, in this anticipation,
-I think it desirable to bring, in conclusion, one more<span class="pagenum" id="Page257">[257]</span>
-point under notice of your Hon. Court. During the
-former invasion, the Guardians within the City of London
-resisted the requisitions of the General Board of Health;
-and the first fourteen weeks of the epidemic consequently
-passed without the establishment of any visitational system
-for arresting its progress. In the fifteenth week, however,
-the Corporation of the City undertook the unperformed
-duty, not legally devolving on them, and requested me to
-make arrangements for the purpose of its execution. With
-the assistance of the several Medical Officers of the City
-Unions, I immediately organised the requisite staff, and
-from that moment to the close of the epidemic there
-continued under my superintendence a systematic visitation
-of the poor, with beneficial, though tardy and imperfect,
-results.</p>
-
-<p>Recalling these incidents to the recollection of your
-Hon. Court, I would beg to observe that no similar
-endeavour can fully succeed, except as a system&mdash;well considered
-beforehand, and adjusted to the various circumstances
-which may require its application. Uncertainties of
-responsibility and conflicts of jurisdiction would inevitably
-occasion a sacrifice of life; and therefore, before the time
-when Cholera is likely to become epidemic, it should be
-definitively settled who is to undertake this organisation.
-Your Commission can have no jurisdiction in the matter;
-and the interference of the Corporation would be only at its
-own option. The legal responsibility rests solely with the
-Boards of Guardians: and it seems to me indispensable
-that, before the time for action arrives, the Corporation
-should determine its intentions; in order that the Boards
-of Guardians, if again called upon to organise arrangements<span class="pagenum" id="Page258">[258]</span>
-of the kind in question, may know distinctly&mdash;either that the
-Corporation has relieved them of their task, or that there
-rests on them the undivided obligation of providing for the
-crisis.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">III. Gentlemen, in concluding this report, I will not
-attempt to disguise from you that it has been written under
-feelings of considerable apprehension; and I am fully conscious
-that, in thus expressing myself, I am liable to the
-imputation of raising unnecessary alarm.</p>
-
-<p>If the possible mischief to be wrought by epidemic
-Cholera lay in some fixed inflexible fate, whatever opinion
-or knowledge I might hold on the subject of its return,
-silence would be better than speech; and I could gladly
-refrain from vexing the public ear by gloomy forebodings of
-an inevitable future.</p>
-
-<p>But from this supposition the case differs diametrically:
-and the people of England are not like timid cattle, capable,
-only when blindfold, of confronting danger. It belongs to
-their race&mdash;it belongs to their dignity of manhood, to
-take deliberate cognisance of their foes, and not lightly to
-cede the victory. A people that has fought the greatest
-battles&mdash;not of arms alone, but of genius and skilful toil, is
-little likely to be scared at the necessity of meeting large
-danger by appropriate devices of science. A people that
-has inaugurated railways&mdash;that has spanned the Menai
-Strait and reared the Crystal Palace, can hardly fear the
-enterprise of draining poison from its infected towns. A
-people that has freed its foreign slaves at twenty millions&#8217;
-ransom, will never let its home population perish, for cheapness
-sake, in the ignominious ferment of their filth.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page259">[259]</span></p>
-
-<p>Therefore, gentlemen, advisedly I state the danger as it
-seems to me. England has again become subject to a
-plague, the recurrence of which&mdash;or the duration&mdash;or the
-malignity, no human being can predict.</p>
-
-<p>But, if I state the danger, so likewise, to the best of my
-belief, I state the remedy and defence. Colossal statistics
-concur with the results of detailed inspection, to refer this
-disease, in common with many others that scourge our
-population, distinctly and infallibly, to the working of
-local causes&mdash;of causes susceptible of removal&mdash;of causes
-which it devolves on our Legislature to remove.</p>
-
-<p>The exemption we seek is worth a heavy purchase. My
-thoughts turn involuntarily to the epidemics of former
-centuries, to their frequent returns and immense fatality.
-I reflect on the Plague, and how it influenced the average
-death-rate of London; how in 1593 it doubled it, in 1603
-trebled it, in 1625 quadrupled it: and how (after a less
-considerable visitation in 1636) it actually multiplied the
-mortality sevenfold in the tremendous epidemic of &#8216;65. The
-ravages of that pestilence are best appreciated in the fact,
-that we esteem the Great Fire of London a cheap equivalent
-for their arrest; looking to that eventful conflagration
-of the metropolis with gratitude, rather than horror, because
-of the mightier evils that were extinguished with its flames.</p>
-
-<p>To so frightful a development as this, Cholera, by many
-degrees, has not attained; but, ignorant as we are of its
-laws and resources, we dare not surmise, at any renewed
-invasion, what increment of severity it may have won. In
-the simple fact, that our country has again become subject
-to pestilential epidemics, there lies an amount of threat
-only to be measured by those who are conversant, by<span class="pagenum" id="Page260">[260]</span>
-history or experience, with the possible developments of
-such disease.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, gentlemen, having the deepest assurance that
-these unexplored possibilities of evil may be foreclosed by
-appropriate means, I should ill deserve your confidence if I
-shrank from setting before you&mdash;however ungracious the
-task&mdash;my deliberate estimate of the peril.</p>
-
-<p>It pertains to my local office to tell you of local cures;
-and this I have sought to do. I have suggested that, by
-active superintendence of all houses within your jurisdiction,
-there may be suppressed in detail those several
-causes of the disease which arise in individual neglect; that,
-by elaborate care as to the cleanliness of pavements,
-markets, docks, and sewers, something may be done towards
-the mitigation of more general causes; that, by a well-organised
-system of medical visitation, very much may be
-effected towards encountering attacks of the disease, while
-still amenable to treatment:&mdash;that these, with similar precautions,
-are therefore to be recommended.</p>
-
-<p>And not for a moment would I seem to depreciate such
-measures, palliative only, and partial though they be. By
-their judicious application, from Aldgate to the Temple, life
-may possibly be saved to some hundreds; to children
-that are fondly loved, to parents that are the stay of
-numbers.</p>
-
-<p>But against the full significance of any epidemic, I am
-bound to tell you that these are but poor substitutes for
-protection. To render them effectual, even in their narrow
-sphere of operation, there must be great vigilance and great
-expenditure; a weary vigilance and a disproportionate expenditure,
-because chiefly given to defeat in detail what<span class="pagenum" id="Page261">[261]</span>
-should have been prevented in principle. And be done
-what may, in this palliative spirit, the sources of the disease
-are substantially unstayed: for the faults, to which its
-metropolitan prevalence is due, consist not simply in a
-number of individual mismanagements, but include a
-common and radical mal-construction as their chief.</p>
-
-<p>No city, so far as Science may be trusted, can deserve
-immunity from epidemic disease, except by making absolute
-cleanliness the first law of its existence; such cleanliness, I
-mean, as consists in the perfect adaptation of drainage,
-water-supply, scavenage, and ventilation, to the purposes
-they should respectively fulfil; such cleanliness, as consists
-in carrying away by these means, inoffensively, all refuse
-materials of life&mdash;gaseous, solid, or fluid, from the person,
-the house, the factory, or the thoroughfare, so soon as
-possible after their formation, and with as near an approach,
-as their several natures allow, to one continuous current of
-removal.</p>
-
-<p>To realise for London this conception of how a city
-should cleanse itself may involve, no doubt, the perfection
-of numberless details. Yet, most of all, it would pre-suppose
-a comprehensive organisation of plan and method:
-not alone for that intramural unity of system which is
-needful for all the works, as most for those of drainage
-and water-supply; but, equally, to harmonise these works
-with other extramural arrangements for utilising to the
-country the boundless wealth of metropolitan refuse&mdash;for
-distributing to the uses of agriculture what is then rescued
-from the character of filth&mdash;for requiting to the fields in
-gifts for vegetation, what they have rendered to the town in
-food for man.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page262">[262]</span></p>
-
-<p>How far the construction of London has proceeded on
-the recognition of such objects, or how far the advantages
-of such a plan have been realised, it could only be a
-mockery to ask. Our metropolis, by successive accretions,
-has covered mile after mile of land. Each new addition
-has been made with scarcely more reference to the legitimate
-necessities of life, than if it had clustered there by crystallisation.
-With no scientific forecast to plan the whole, with
-little but chance and cheapness to shape the parts, our
-desultory architecture has eclipsed the conditions of health.
-Draining up-hill or down-hill, as the case might be, and
-running their aqueducts at random from chalk-quarries or
-river-mud; or ponding sewage in their cellars, and digging
-beside it for water; blocking-up the inlets of freshness and,
-equally, the outlets of nuisance; constructing sewers to
-struggle with the Thames&mdash;now to pollute its ebb, now to be
-obstructed by its flow; the builders of many generations have
-accumulated sanitary errors in so intricate a system, that
-their apprehension and their cure seem equally remote.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore&mdash;by reason of causes, ramified through the
-whole metropolis and deep-rooted in its soil, which bind
-all parts together in one common endurance of their effects&mdash;therefore
-cannot epidemic disease be conquered by any
-exertions or by any amelioration, short of the complete and
-comprehensive cure. Against the danger we dread, no
-shelter is to be found in petty reforms and patchwork
-legislation. Not to inspectorships of nuisances, but to the
-large mind of State-Policy, one must look for a real emancipation
-from this threatening plague.</p>
-
-<p>A child&#8217;s intellect can appreciate the wild absurdity of
-seeking at Peru what here runs to waste beneath our pavements,&mdash;of<span class="pagenum" id="Page263">[263]</span>
-ripening only epidemic disease with what might
-augment the food of the people&mdash;of waiting, like our ancestors,
-to expiate the neglected divinity of water in some bitter
-purgation by fire.</p>
-
-<p>But it needs the grasp of political mastership, not uninformed
-by Science, to convert to practical application these
-obvious elements of knowledge; to recognise a national
-object irrelevant to the interests of party; to lift an
-universal requirement from the sphere of professional
-jealousies, and to found in immutable principles the sanitary
-legislation of a people.</p>
-
-<div class="reportsig">
-
-<p class="center highline2">I have the honour to remain,<br />
-&amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div><!--reportsig-->
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page264">[264]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="highline"><span class="fsize110">APPENDIX OF TABLES</span><br />
-<span class="fsize80">ILLUSTRATING THE</span><br />
-<span class="fsize90">SANITARY CONDITION OF THE CITY OF LONDON.</span></h2>
-
-<table class="appendices" summary="appendices">
-
-<tr>
-<td class="appno"><a href="#App01">I.</a></td>
-<td class="appname">Area and Population of the several Districts and Sub-districts
-of the City.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="appno"><a href="#App02">II.</a></td>
-<td class="appname">Quinquennial Synopsis of City Mortality, from Michaelmas
-1848 to Michaelmas 1853; with Death-Rates calculated for
-this period, on the Population enumerated in 1851, for each
-District and Sub-District of the City.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="appno"><a href="#App03">III.</a></td>
-<td class="appname">First annual enumeration of Deaths, relating to the fifty-two
-weeks dating from October 1st, 1848, to September
-29th, 1849.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="appno"><a href="#App04">IV.</a></td>
-<td class="appname">Second annual enumeration of Deaths, relating to the fifty-two
-weeks, dating from September 30th, 1840, to September
-28th, 1850.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="appno"><a href="#App05">V.</a></td>
-<td class="appname">Third annual enumeration of Deaths, relating to the fifty-two
-weeks, dating from September 29th, 1850, to September
-27th, 1851.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="appno"><a href="#App06">VI.</a></td>
-<td class="appname">Fourth annual enumeration of Deaths, relating to the fifty-two
-weeks, dating from September 28th, 1851, to September
-25th, 1852.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="appno"><a href="#App07">VII.</a></td>
-<td class="appname">Fifth annual enumeration of Deaths, relating to the fifty-two
-weeks, dating from September 26th, 1852, to September
-24th, 1853.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="appno"><a href="#App08">VIII.</a></td>
-<td class="appname">Quinquennial Mortality, classified by Age; first, for the
-entire City; next, for the Three Unions severally.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="appno"><a href="#App09">IX.</a></td>
-<td class="appname">Number of Deaths occasioned, during the last five years, by
-certain Acute Diseases, chiefly epidemic, infectious, and
-endemic.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="appno"><a href="#App10">X.</a></td>
-<td class="appname">Comparative Mortality in different seasons of the year:
-namely, in the Autumn-Quarters (October, November,
-December), in the Winter-Quarters (January, February,
-March), in the Spring-Quarters (April, May, June), and in
-the Summer-Quarters (July, August, September), of the
-five years from Michaelmas 1848 to Michaelmas 1853.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="appno"><a href="#App11">XI.</a></td>
-<td class="appname">Autumn Mortality.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="appno"><a href="#App12">XII.</a></td>
-<td class="appname">Winter Mortality.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="appno"><a href="#App13">XIII.</a></td>
-<td class="appname">Spring Mortality.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="appno"><a href="#App14">XIV.</a></td>
-<td class="appname">Summer Mortality.</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table><!--appendices-->
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page265">[265]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="app" id="App01">No. I. <i>Area and Population of the several Districts and
-Sub-districts of the City of London.</i></h3>
-
-<table class="app01" summary="population">
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<th colspan="4" class="bl br">Sub-district.</th>
-<th class="br">Census<br />of 1841.</th>
-<th class="br">Census<br />of 1851.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">Decennial<br />increase<br />(+) or<br />decrease.<br />(-)</th>
-<th class="br">Area<br />of<br />Land<br />in<br />Acres.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="4" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="4" class="district">East<br />London.</td>
-<td rowspan="4" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="4" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="subdistrict">St. Botolph</td>
-<td class="census">20,197</td>
-<td class="census">23,435</td>
-<td class="change1">+</td>
-<td class="change2">3238</td>
-<td class="area">85</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="subdistrict">Cripplegate</td>
-<td class="census">19,161</td>
-<td class="census">20,582</td>
-<td class="change1">+</td>
-<td class="change2">1421</td>
-<td class="area">68</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="subdistrict">Workhouses<a id="FNanchor88"></a><a href="#Footnote88" class="fnanchor">[88]</a></td>
-<td class="census bb">454</td>
-<td class="census bb">576</td>
-<td class="change1 bb">+</td>
-<td class="change2 bb">122</td>
-<td class="area bb">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="subdistrict"><span class="padl3">Total</span></td>
-<td class="census">39,812</td>
-<td class="census">44,593</td>
-<td class="change1">+</td>
-<td class="change2">4781</td>
-<td class="area">153</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td colspan="4" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="4" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="4" class="district">West<br />London.</td>
-<td rowspan="4" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="4" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="subdistrict">North</td>
-<td class="census">12,138</td>
-<td class="census">12,350</td>
-<td class="change1">+</td>
-<td class="change2">212</td>
-<td class="area">47</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="subdistrict">South</td>
-<td class="census">16,460</td>
-<td class="census">15,844</td>
-<td class="change1">-</td>
-<td class="change2">616</td>
-<td class="area">77</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="subdistrict">Workhouse<a id="FNanchor89"></a><a href="#Footnote89" class="fnanchor">[89]</a></td>
-<td class="census bb">387</td>
-<td class="census bb">409</td>
-<td class="change1 bb">+</td>
-<td class="change2 bb">22</td>
-<td class="area bb">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="subdistrict"><span class="padl3">Total</span></td>
-<td class="census">28,985</td>
-<td class="census">28,603</td>
-<td class="change1">-</td>
-<td class="change2">382</td>
-<td class="area">124</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td colspan="4" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="4" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="7" class="district">City<br />of<br />London.</td>
-<td rowspan="7" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="7" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="subdistrict">South-West</td>
-<td class="census">8839</td>
-<td class="census">9204</td>
-<td class="change1">+</td>
-<td class="change2">365</td>
-<td class="area">49</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="subdistrict">North-West</td>
-<td class="census">12,427</td>
-<td class="census">11,847</td>
-<td class="change1">-</td>
-<td class="change2">580</td>
-<td class="area">72</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="subdistrict">South</td>
-<td class="census">11,954</td>
-<td class="census">11,461</td>
-<td class="change1">-</td>
-<td class="change2">493</td>
-<td class="area">82</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="subdistrict">South-East</td>
-<td class="census">10,597</td>
-<td class="census">10,594</td>
-<td class="change1">-</td>
-<td class="change2">3</td>
-<td class="area">84</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="subdistrict">North-East</td>
-<td class="census">12,103</td>
-<td class="census">12,826</td>
-<td class="change1">+</td>
-<td class="change2">723</td>
-<td class="area">92</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="subdistrict">Workhouse<a id="FNanchor90"></a><a href="#Footnote90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a></td>
-<td class="census bb">920</td>
-<td class="census bb">794</td>
-<td class="change1 bb">-</td>
-<td class="change2 bb">126</td>
-<td class="area bb">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="subdistrict"><span class="padl3">Total</span></td>
-<td class="census">56,840</td>
-<td class="census">56,726</td>
-<td class="change1">-</td>
-<td class="change2">114</td>
-<td class="area">379</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td colspan="4" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="4" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="4" class="subdistrict bl">Entire Population of the City of London</td>
-<td class="census">125,637</td>
-<td class="census">129,922</td>
-<td class="change1">+</td>
-<td class="change2">4285</td>
-<td class="area">656</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td colspan="4" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table><!--population-->
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote88"><a href="#FNanchor88"><span class="label">[88]</span></a>
-One of these workhouses is situated in the North sub-district of the West
-London Union. In 1841 it contained 157 inmates; in 1851, 187 inmates.
-The other workhouse is situated in the St. Botolph sub-district: in 1841 it contained
-297, in 1851, 389 persons.</p>
-
-<p id="Footnote89"><a href="#FNanchor89"><span class="label">[89]</span></a>
-This workhouse is situated in the North sub-district of the Union.</p>
-
-<p id="Footnote90"><a href="#FNanchor90"><span class="label">[90]</span></a>
-In 1841, the 920 paupers of this Union were received, partly at Marlborough
-House, Peckham; partly in Deacon&#8217;s Farm-house, Stepney Green.
-The present workhouse, erected since 1841, is at Bow.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page266">[266]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="app" id="App02">No. II.&mdash;<i>Quinquennial Synopsis of City Mortality, with Death-rates calculated per Thousand on the
-Population of 1851.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<table class="app02to07" summary="death rates">
-
-<tr class="bt">
-<th colspan="7" class="bl br">Population, according<br />to the Census of 1851.</th>
-<th colspan="3" class="brd"><span class="smcap">East London Union</span>,<br />44,593.</th>
-<th colspan="3" class="brd"><span class="smcap">West London Union</span>,<br />28,603.</th>
-<th colspan="6" class="br"><span class="smcap">City of London Union</span>,<br />56,726.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<th colspan="7" class="bl br">Entire City of<br />London,</th>
-<th class="br">Saint<br />Botolph,</th>
-<th class="br">Cripple-<br />gate,</th>
-<th class="brd">Work-<br />houses,</th>
-<th class="br">North,</th>
-<th class="br">South,</th>
-<th class="brd">Work-<br />house,</th>
-<th class="br">S. W.</th>
-<th class="br">N. W.</th>
-<th class="br">South,</th>
-<th class="br">S. E.</th>
-<th class="br">N. E.</th>
-<th class="br">Work-<br />house,</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<th colspan="7" class="bl br">129,922.</th>
-<th class="br">23,435.</th>
-<th class="br">20,582.</th>
-<th class="brd">576.</th>
-<th class="br">12,350.</th>
-<th class="br">15,844.</th>
-<th class="brd">409.</th>
-<th class="br">9,204.</th>
-<th class="br">11,847.</th>
-<th class="br">11,461.</th>
-<th class="br">10,594.</th>
-<th class="br">12,826.</th>
-<th class="br">794.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="7" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="7" class="col1legend">Mortality<br />of five<br />years from<br />Michael-<br />mas 1848<br />to<br />Michael-<br />mas
-1853.</td>
-<td rowspan="7" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="7" class="brace bt bl bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="col1year">1848-9</td>
-<td rowspan="7" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="col1deaths"><span class="fat">3763</span></td>
-<td class="deaths br">519</td>
-<td class="deaths br">574</td>
-<td class="deaths brd">179</td>
-<td class="deaths br">372</td>
-<td class="deaths br">598</td>
-<td class="deaths brd">126</td>
-<td class="deaths br">293</td>
-<td class="deaths br">245</td>
-<td class="deaths br">263</td>
-<td class="deaths br">214</td>
-<td class="deaths br">262</td>
-<td class="deaths br">103</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1year">1849-50</td>
-<td class="col1deaths"><span class="fat">2752</span></td>
-<td class="deaths br">296</td>
-<td class="deaths br">444</td>
-<td class="deaths brd">125</td>
-<td class="deaths br">324</td>
-<td class="deaths br">290</td>
-<td class="deaths brd">108</td>
-<td class="deaths br">176</td>
-<td class="deaths br">168</td>
-<td class="deaths br">218</td>
-<td class="deaths br">183</td>
-<td class="deaths br">219</td>
-<td class="deaths br">101</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1year">1850-1</td>
-<td class="col1deaths"><span class="fat">2978</span></td>
-<td class="deaths br">493</td>
-<td class="deaths br">471</td>
-<td class="deaths brd">167</td>
-<td class="deaths br">317</td>
-<td class="deaths br">313</td>
-<td class="deaths brd">68</td>
-<td class="deaths br">191</td>
-<td class="deaths br">169</td>
-<td class="deaths br">258</td>
-<td class="deaths br">217</td>
-<td class="deaths br">213</td>
-<td class="deaths br">101</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1year">1851-2</td>
-<td class="col1deaths"><span class="fat">3064</span></td>
-<td class="deaths br">534</td>
-<td class="deaths br">460</td>
-<td class="deaths brd">176</td>
-<td class="deaths br">266</td>
-<td class="deaths br">379</td>
-<td class="deaths brd">129</td>
-<td class="deaths br">196</td>
-<td class="deaths br">198</td>
-<td class="deaths br">203</td>
-<td class="deaths br">171</td>
-<td class="deaths br">235</td>
-<td class="deaths br">117</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1year">1852-3</td>
-<td class="col1deaths"><span class="fat">3040</span></td>
-<td class="deaths br bb">516</td>
-<td class="deaths br bb">534</td>
-<td class="deaths brd bb">155</td>
-<td class="deaths br bb">289</td>
-<td class="deaths br bb">309</td>
-<td class="deaths brd bb">164</td>
-<td class="deaths br bb">170</td>
-<td class="deaths br bb">188</td>
-<td class="deaths br bb">223</td>
-<td class="deaths br bb">164</td>
-<td class="deaths br bb">224</td>
-<td class="deaths br bb">104</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1year">&mdash;&mdash;</td>
-<td class="center br"><span class="fat"><span class="asterism"><sup>*</sup><sub>*</sub><sup>*</sup></span></span></td>
-<td class="deaths br">2458</td>
-<td class="deaths br">2483</td>
-<td class="deaths brd">802</td>
-<td class="deaths br">1568</td>
-<td class="deaths br">1889</td>
-<td class="deaths brd">595</td>
-<td class="deaths br">1026</td>
-<td class="deaths br">968</td>
-<td class="deaths br">1165</td>
-<td class="deaths br">949</td>
-<td class="deaths br">1153</td>
-<td class="deaths br">526</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1year"><span class="padl1">Total</span></td>
-<td class="col1deaths"><span class="fat">15,597</span></td>
-<td colspan="3" class="center brd"><span class="fat">5743</span></td>
-<td colspan="3" class="center brd"><span class="fat">4052</span></td>
-<td colspan="6" class="center br"><span class="fat">5787</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td colspan="7" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="7" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" colspan="4" class="col1legend">Yearly Death-rate <i>per</i><br />thousand of the living<br />Population.</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="col1deaths"><span class="fat">24.00</span></td>
-<td colspan="3" class="center brd"><span class="fat">25.75</span></td>
-<td colspan="3" class="center brd"><span class="fat">28.33</span></td>
-<td colspan="6" class="center br"><span class="fat">20.40</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="deaths br"><span class="fat">24.30</span></td>
-<td class="deaths br"><span class="fat">27.41</span></td>
-<td class="deaths brd"><span class="fat">*</span></td>
-<td class="deaths br"><span class="fat">29.19</span></td>
-<td class="deaths br"><span class="fat">27.66</span></td>
-<td class="deaths brd"><span class="fat">*</span></td>
-<td class="deaths br"><span class="fat">23.83</span></td>
-<td class="deaths br"><span class="fat">17.96</span></td>
-<td class="deaths br"><span class="fat">21.90</span></td>
-<td class="deaths br"><span class="fat">19.52</span></td>
-<td class="deaths br"><span class="fat">19.58</span></td>
-<td class="deaths br"><span class="fat">*</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td colspan="7" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td colspan="19" class="center bl br">N.B. The first year&#8217;s total (3763) includes 15 deaths, which, by reason of
-their imperfect registration, it has been impossible to refer correctly<br />to the Unions where they occurred.</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo306.png" alt="table" width="600" height="250" />
-</div>
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page267">[267]</span></p>
-
-<h4 class="app">NOTE TO TABLE No. II.</h4>
-
-<p class="fsize90">In calculating the Death-Rates given in the last lines of this
-Table, I have proceeded as <span class="nowrap">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p class="fsize90">First, I have counted all <i>Workhouse-Population</i> and <i>Workhouse-Deaths</i>
-as forming part of the aggregate population and aggregate
-mortality of that Union to which the particular workhouse legally
-belongs.</p>
-
-<p class="fsize90">Next, I have distributed among the several sub-districts the
-population and the mortality of their Union Workhouses, in the
-ratio of the general sub-district population; so as to prevent the
-high Workhouse-Mortality from telling unjustly against that sub-district
-in which the Workhouse happens to have been erected.</p>
-
-<p class="fsize90">Thus, for instance, the East London Union has its male Workhouse
-placed in the territory of the West London Union; but I have
-reckoned it as belonging to the East London Union, in respect both
-of its population and its deaths. Similarly, the City of London
-Union has its Workhouse situate at Bow; but, not the less, I have
-considered its 794 inmates and 526 deaths as belonging to the population
-and the mortality of our central Union.</p>
-
-<p class="fsize90">Thus again for the sub-district death-rates&mdash;for instance, in the
-two sub-districts of the East London Union: reckoning the Workhouse-Population
-not as exclusively due either to Cripplegate or to
-St. Botolph, but as furnished by these sub-districts jointly, in the
-ratio of their populations, I have distributed 576 between them in
-the proportion, 23,435&nbsp;: 20,582. The Workhouse-Deaths of the period
-(802) have been similarly distributed; and the rates, given in the
-last line of the table, are finally deduced from a comparison of these
-sums, <span class="nowrap">viz:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p class="fsize90">23,435 + 306.66&nbsp;: 2458 + 426.991&nbsp;:: 1000&nbsp;: 121.515, which divided
-by 5 (to show an annual, instead of a quinquennial, result) gives
-24.30 as the annual death-rate for St. Botolph; and, in like manner,
-20,582 + 269.33&nbsp;: 2483 + 375.008 gives 137.065 as the quinquennial,
-and 27.41 as the annual death-rate <i>per</i> thousand for the sub-district
-of Cripplegate.</p>
-
-<p class="fsize90"><i>Hospital Deaths</i> have been distributed, as far as possible, according
-to the previous residence of the patients. Thus the north sub-district
-of the West London Union, in which St. Bartholomew&#8217;s
-Hospital is situated, is made to retain only its just proportion of
-deaths. On the same principle I have reckoned to the death-lists of
-other sub-districts those cases in which I could ascertain that the
-residents of such sub-districts had gone to die either in St. Bartholomew&#8217;s,
-or in other Metropolitan Hospitals.</p>
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page268">[268]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="app" id="App03">No. III.&mdash;<i>First Annual Enumeration of Deaths, relating to the Fifty-two
-Weeks dating from October 1st, 1848, to September 29th, 1849.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<table class="app02to07" summary="death rates">
-
-<tr class="bt">
-<td colspan="8" rowspan="3" class="col1hanging bl br"><span class="smcap">Deaths</span> in the four quarterly periods,
-terminating as <span class="nowrap">follows:&mdash;</span></td>
-<th colspan="6" class="brd"><span class="smcap">East London Union.</span></th>
-<th colspan="6" class="brd"><span class="smcap">West London Union.</span></th>
-<th colspan="12" class="br"><span class="smcap">City of London Union.</span></th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">Saint<br />Botolph.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">Cripple-<br />gate.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="brd">Work-<br />houses.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">North.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">South.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="brd">Work-<br />house.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">S. W.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">N. W.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">South.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">S. E.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">N. E.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">Work-<br />house.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="brd bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="brd bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="romnum bl">I.</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="col1hanging top">In the quarter ending Dec. 30th</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="right"><span class="fat">766</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="thincol br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">63</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">64</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">69</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">59</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">10</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">21</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">44</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">30</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">55</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">48</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">14</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">15</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">25</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">15</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">27</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">23</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">36</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">23</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">25</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">15</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">31</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">31</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">1</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">22</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">127</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">128</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">31</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">74</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">103</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">29</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">40</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">50</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">59</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">40</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">62</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">23</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="romnum bl">II.</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="col1hanging top">In the quarter ending March 31st</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="right"><span class="fat">822</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="thincol br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">70</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">66</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">60</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">57</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">17</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">19</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">39</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">34</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">50</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">40</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">20</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">10</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">20</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">32</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">32</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">31</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">28</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">32</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">29</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">23</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">40</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">37</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">14</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">22</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">136</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">117</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">36</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">73</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">90</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">30</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">52</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">63</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">60</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">52</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">77</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">36</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="romnum bl">III.</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="col1hanging top">In the quarter ending June 30th</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="right"><span class="fat">765</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="thincol br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">40</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">45</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">62</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">68</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">16</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">23</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">46</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">31</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">61</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">49</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">13</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">21</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">35</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">21</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">31</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">24</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">37</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">21</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">24</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">21</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">22</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">28</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">12</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">14</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">85</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">130</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">39</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">77</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">110</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">34</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">56</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">55</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">58</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">45</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">50</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">26</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="romnum bl">IV.</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="col1hanging top">In the quarter ending Sept. 29th</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="right"><span class="fat">1395</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="thincol br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">88</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">83</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">104</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">95</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">17</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">56</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">75</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">73</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">116</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">179</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">15</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">18</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">62</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">83</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">37</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">40</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">48</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">38</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">45</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">32</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">40</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">33</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">5</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">13</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">171</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">199</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">73</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">148</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">295</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">53</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">145</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">77</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">86</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">77</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">73</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">18</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" colspan="4" class="col1hanging bl">Sum of the four quarters</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="right"><span class="fat">3748</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="thincol br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">261</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">258</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">295</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">279</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">60</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">119</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">204</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">168</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">282</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">316</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">62</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">64</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">142</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">151</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">127</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">118</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">149</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">114</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">123</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">91</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">133</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">129</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">32</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">71</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">519</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">574</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">179</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">372</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">598</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">126</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">293</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">245</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">263</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">214</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">262</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">103</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="4" class="col1hanging bl">Unclassified</td>
-<td class="right"><span class="fat">15</span></td>
-<td colspan="3" class="br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="6" class="center brd"><span class="fat">1272</span></td>
-<td colspan="6" class="center brd"><span class="fat">1096</span></td>
-<td colspan="12" class="center br"><span class="fat">1380</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td colspan="4" class="col1hanging bl highline"><span class="smcap">Total&nbsp;for&nbsp;the&nbsp;Year</span></td>
-<td colspan="28" class="center br highline"><span class="fat">3763</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo308.png" alt="table" width="600" height="254" />
-</div>
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page269">[269]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="app" id="App04">No. IV.&mdash;<i>Second Annual Enumeration of Deaths, relating to the Fifty-two Weeks dating from September
-30th, 1849, to September 28th, 1850.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<table class="app02to07" summary="death rates">
-
-<tr class="bt">
-<td colspan="8" rowspan="3" class="col1hanging bl br"><span class="smcap">Deaths</span> in the four quarterly periods,
-terminating as <span class="nowrap">follows:&mdash;</span></td>
-<th colspan="6" class="brd"><span class="smcap">East London Union.</span></th>
-<th colspan="6" class="brd"><span class="smcap">West London Union.</span></th>
-<th colspan="12" class="br"><span class="smcap">City of London Union.</span></th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">Saint<br />Botolph.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">Cripple-<br />gate.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="brd">Work-<br />houses.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">North.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">South.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="brd">Work-<br />house.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">S. W.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">N. W.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">South.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">S. E.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">N. E.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">Work-<br />house.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="brd bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="brd bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="romnum bl">I.</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="col1hanging top">In the quarter ending Dec. 29th</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="right"><span class="fat">765</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="thincol br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">62</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">56</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">72</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">65</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">22</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">22</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">42</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">43</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">30</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">40</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">10</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">13</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">35</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">22</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">26</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">19</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">27</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">28</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">30</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">21</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">22</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">30</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">9</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">19</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">118</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">137</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">44</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">85</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">70</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">23</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">57</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">45</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">55</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">51</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">52</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">28</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="romnum bl">II.</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="col1hanging top">In the quarter ending March 30th</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="right"><span class="fat">803</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="thincol br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">49</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">47</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">68</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">56</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">21</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">15</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">50</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">41</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">42</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">42</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">21</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">19</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">23</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">23</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">16</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">29</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">48</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">32</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">22</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">36</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">45</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">29</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">15</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">14</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">96</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">124</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">36</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">91</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">84</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">40</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">46</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">45</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">80</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">58</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">74</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">29</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="romnum bl">III.</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="col1hanging top">In the quarter ending June 29th</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="right"><span class="fat">589</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="thincol br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">39</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">41</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">42</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">48</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">6</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">13</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">39</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">35</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">45</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">26</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">5</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">22</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">13</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">21</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">14</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">25</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">25</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">15</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">23</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">20</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">21</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">29</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">9</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">13</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">80</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">90</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">19</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">74</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">71</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">27</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">34</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">39</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">40</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">43</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">50</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">22</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="romnum bl">IV.</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="col1hanging top">In the quarter ending Sept. 28th</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="right"><span class="fat">595</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="thincol br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">57</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">45</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">57</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">36</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">12</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">14</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">35</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">39</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">26</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">39</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">5</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">13</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">20</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">19</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">18</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">21</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">22</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">21</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">16</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">15</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">15</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">28</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">12</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">10</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">102</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">93</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">26</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">74</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">65</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">18</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">39</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">39</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">43</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">31</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">43</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">22</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" colspan="4" class="col1hanging bl">Sum of the four quarters</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="right"><span class="fat">2752</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="thincol br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">207</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">189</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">239</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">205</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">61</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">64</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">166</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">158</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">143</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">147</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">41</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">67</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">91</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">85</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">74</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">94</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">122</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">96</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">91</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">92</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">103</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">116</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">45</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">56</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">396</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">444</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">125</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">324</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">290</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">108</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">176</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">168</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">218</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">183</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">219</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">101</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="6" class="center brd"><span class="fat">965</span></td>
-<td colspan="6" class="center brd"><span class="fat">722</span></td>
-<td colspan="12" class="center br"><span class="fat">1065</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td colspan="4" class="col1hanging bl highline"><span class="smcap">Total&nbsp;for&nbsp;the&nbsp;Year</span></td>
-<td colspan="28" class="center br highline"><span class="fat">2752</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo309.png" alt="table" width="600" height="266" />
-</div>
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page270">[270]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="app" id="App05">No. V.&mdash;<i>Third Annual Enumeration of Deaths, relating to the Fifty-two Weeks dating from September
-29th, 1850, to September 27th, 1851.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<table class="app02to07" summary="death rates">
-
-<tr class="bt">
-<td colspan="8" rowspan="3" class="col1hanging bl br"><span class="smcap">Deaths</span> in the four quarterly periods,
-terminating as <span class="nowrap">follows:&mdash;</span></td>
-<th colspan="6" class="brd"><span class="smcap">East London Union.</span></th>
-<th colspan="6" class="brd"><span class="smcap">West London Union.</span></th>
-<th colspan="12" class="br"><span class="smcap">City of London Union.</span></th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">Saint<br />Botolph.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">Cripple-<br />gate.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="brd">Work-<br />houses.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">North.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">South.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="brd">Work-<br />house.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">S. W.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">N. W.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">South.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">S. E.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">N. E.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">Work-<br />house.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="brd bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="brd bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="romnum bl">I.</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="col1hanging top">In the quarter ending Dec. 28th</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="right"><span class="fat">672</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="thincol br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">47</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">54</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">68</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">57</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">7</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">25</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">29</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">33</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">35</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">37</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">8</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">6</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">27</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">21</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">24</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">20</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">25</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">24</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">24</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">31</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">19</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">29</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">16</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">101</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">125</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">32</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">62</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">72</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">14</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">48</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">44</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">49</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">55</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">48</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">22</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="romnum bl">II.</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="col1hanging top">In the quarter ending March 29th</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="right"><span class="fat">876</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="thincol br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">87</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">67</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">77</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">63</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">19</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">30</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">51</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">36</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">46</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">43</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">11</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">11</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">28</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">31</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">22</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">26</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">39</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">42</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">27</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">29</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">35</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">32</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">12</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">12</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">154</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">140</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">49</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">87</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">89</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">22</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">59</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">48</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">81</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">56</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">67</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">24</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="romnum bl">III.</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="col1hanging top">In the quarter ending June 28th</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="right"><span class="fat">767</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="thincol br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">72</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">43</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">58</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">43</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">26</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">22</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">45</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">47</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">38</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">41</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">11</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">10</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">26</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">18</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">22</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">16</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">40</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">35</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">35</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">35</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">31</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">25</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">15</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">13</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">115</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">101</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">48</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">92</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">79</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">21</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">44</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">38</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">75</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">70</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">56</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">28</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="romnum bl">IV.</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="col1hanging top">In the quarter ending Sept. 27th</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="right"><span class="fat">663</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="thincol br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">63</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">60</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">62</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">43</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">13</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">25</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">53</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">23</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">38</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">35</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">9</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">2</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">24</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">16</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">21</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">18</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">29</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">24</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">23</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">13</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">17</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">25</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">14</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">13</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">123</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">105</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">38</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">76</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">73</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">11</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">40</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">39</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">53</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">36</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">42</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">27</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" colspan="4" class="col1hanging bl">Sum of the four quarters</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="right"><span class="fat">2978</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="thincol br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">269</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">224</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">265</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">206</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">65</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">102</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">178</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">139</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">157</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">156</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">39</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">29</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">105</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">86</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">89</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">80</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">133</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">125</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">109</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">108</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">102</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">111</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">57</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">44</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">493</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">471</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">167</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">317</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">313</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">68</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">191</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">169</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">258</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">217</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">213</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">101</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="6" class="center brd"><span class="fat">1131</span></td>
-<td colspan="6" class="center brd"><span class="fat">698</span></td>
-<td colspan="12" class="center br"><span class="fat">1149</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td colspan="4" class="col1hanging bl highline"><span class="smcap">Total&nbsp;for&nbsp;the&nbsp;Year</span></td>
-<td colspan="28" class="center br highline"><span class="fat">2978</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo310.png" alt="table" width="600" height="257" />
-</div>
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page271">[271]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="app" id="App06">No. VI.&mdash;<i>Fourth Annual Enumeration of Deaths, relating to the Fifty-two Weeks dating from September
-28th, 1851, to September 25th, 1852.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<table class="app02to07" summary="death rates">
-
-<tr class="bt">
-<td colspan="8" rowspan="3" class="col1hanging bl br"><span class="smcap">Deaths</span> in the four quarterly periods,
-terminating as <span class="nowrap">follows:&mdash;</span></td>
-<th colspan="6" class="brd"><span class="smcap">East London Union.</span></th>
-<th colspan="6" class="brd"><span class="smcap">West London Union.</span></th>
-<th colspan="12" class="br"><span class="smcap">City of London Union.</span></th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">Saint<br />Botolph.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">Cripple-<br />gate.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="brd">Work-<br />houses.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">North.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">South.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="brd">Work-<br />house.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">S. W.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">N. W.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">South.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">S. E.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">N. E.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">Work-<br />house.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="brd bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="brd bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="romnum bl">I.</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="col1hanging top">In the quarter ending Dec. 27th</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="right"><span class="fat">800</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="thincol br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">73</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">67</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">59</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">58</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">32</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">32</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">40</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">28</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">37</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">43</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">18</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">12</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">33</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">30</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">29</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">25</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">26</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">26</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">23</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">25</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">32</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">23</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">9</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">20</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">140</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">117</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">64</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">68</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">80</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">30</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">63</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">54</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">52</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">48</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">55</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">29</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="romnum bl">II.</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="col1hanging top">In the quarter ending March 27th</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="right"><span class="fat">773</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="thincol br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">62</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">62</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">50</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">46</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">18</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">30</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">30</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">24</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">58</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">43</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">25</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">12</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">20</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">22</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">33</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">28</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">33</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">28</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">31</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">19</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">27</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">40</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">17</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">15</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">124</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">96</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">48</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">54</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">101</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">37</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">42</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">61</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">61</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">50</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">67</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">32</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="romnum bl">III.</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="col1hanging top">In the quarter ending June 26th</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="right"><span class="fat">774</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="thincol br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">54</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">56</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">78</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">53</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">21</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">17</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">39</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">31</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">65</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">56</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">23</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">8</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">24</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">33</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">29</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">22</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">22</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">19</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">30</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">17</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">33</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">26</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">17</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">11</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">110</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">131</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">38</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">70</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">121</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">31</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">47</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">51</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">41</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">47</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">59</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">28</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="romnum bl">IV.</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="col1hanging top">In the quarter ending Sept. 27th</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="right"><span class="fat">717</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="thincol br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">77</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">83</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">54</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">62</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">6</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">20</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">35</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">39</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">41</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">36</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">17</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">14</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">26</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">18</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">15</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">17</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">29</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">20</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">15</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">11</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">31</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">23</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">12</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">16</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">160</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">116</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">26</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">74</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">77</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">31</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">44</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">32</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">49</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">26</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">54</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">28</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" colspan="4" class="col1hanging bl">Sum of the four quarters</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="right"><span class="fat">3064</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="thincol br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">266</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">268</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">241</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">219</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">77</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">99</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">144</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">122</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">201</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">178</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">83</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">46</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">103</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">93</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">106</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">92</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">110</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">93</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">99</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">72</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">123</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">112</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">55</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">62</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">534</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">460</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">176</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">266</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">379</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">129</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">196</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">198</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">203</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">171</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">235</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">117</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="6" class="center brd"><span class="fat">1170</span></td>
-<td colspan="6" class="center brd"><span class="fat">774</span></td>
-<td colspan="12" class="center br"><span class="fat">1120</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td colspan="4" class="col1hanging bl highline"><span class="smcap">Total&nbsp;for&nbsp;the&nbsp;Year</span></td>
-<td colspan="28" class="center br highline"><span class="fat">3064</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo311.png" alt="table" width="600" height="263" />
-</div>
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page272">[272]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="app" id="App07">No. VII.&mdash;<i>Fifth Annual Enumeration of Deaths, relating to the Fifty-two Weeks dating from September
-26th, 1852, to September 24th, 1853.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<table class="app02to07" summary="death rates">
-
-<tr class="bt">
-<td colspan="8" rowspan="3" class="col1hanging bl br"><span class="smcap">Deaths</span> in the four quarterly periods,
-terminating as <span class="nowrap">follows:&mdash;</span></td>
-<th colspan="6" class="brd"><span class="smcap">East London Union.</span></th>
-<th colspan="6" class="brd"><span class="smcap">West London Union.</span></th>
-<th colspan="12" class="br"><span class="smcap">City of London Union.</span></th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">Saint<br />Botolph.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">Cripple-<br />gate.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="brd">Work-<br />houses.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">North.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">South.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="brd">Work-<br />house.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">S. W.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">N. W.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">South.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">S. E.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">N. E.</th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">Work-<br />house.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="brd bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="brd bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-<th class="br bb">M.</th>
-<th class="br bb">F.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="romnum bl">I.</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="col1hanging top">In the quarter ending Dec. 25th</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="right"><span class="fat">675</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="thincol br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">72</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">58</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">46</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">60</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">10</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">20</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">35</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">33</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">35</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">32</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">14</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">19</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">23</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">14</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">21</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">22</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">31</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">26</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">18</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">15</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">25</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">29</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">10</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">130</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">106</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">30</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">68</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">67</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">33</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">37</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">43</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">57</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">33</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">54</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">17</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="romnum bl">II.</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="col1hanging top">In the quarter ending March 26th</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="right"><span class="fat">878</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="thincol br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">67</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">64</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">80</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">66</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">32</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">22</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">35</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">31</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">45</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">55</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">34</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">20</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">19</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">30</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">38</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">19</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">32</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">33</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">29</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">20</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">40</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">35</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">15</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">17</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">131</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">146</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">54</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">66</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">100</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">54</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">49</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">57</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">65</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">49</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">75</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">32</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="romnum bl">III.</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="col1hanging top">In the quarter ending June 25th</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="right"><span class="fat">817</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="thincol br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">69</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">60</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">69</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">62</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">24</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">27</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">53</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">36</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">46</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">44</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">25</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">21</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">20</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">25</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">27</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">20</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">30</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">29</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">24</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">26</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">27</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">20</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">19</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">14</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">129</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">131</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">51</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">89</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">90</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">46</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">45</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">47</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">59</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">50</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">47</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">33</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="romnum bl">IV.</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="col1hanging top">In the quarter ending Sept. 24th</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="right"><span class="fat">670</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="thincol br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">70</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">56</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">84</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">67</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">8</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">12</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">32</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">34</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">25</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">27</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">18</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">13</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">16</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">23</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">18</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">23</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">25</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">17</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">18</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">14</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">28</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">20</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">10</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">12</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">126</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">151</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">20</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">66</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">52</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">31</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">39</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">41</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">42</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">32</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">48</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">22</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br bb">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="thinline bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" colspan="4" class="col1hanging bl">Sum of the four quarters</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="right"><span class="fat">3040</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="thincol br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">278</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">238</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">279</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">255</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">74</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">81</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">155</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">134</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">151</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">158</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">91</td>
-<td class="deaths2 brd">73</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">78</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">92</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">104</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">84</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">118</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">105</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">89</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">75</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">120</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">104</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">54</td>
-<td class="deaths2 br">50</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">516</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">534</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">155</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">289</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">309</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center brd">164</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">170</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">188</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">223</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">164</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">224</td>
-<td colspan="2" class="center br">104</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8" class="bl br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="6" class="center brd"><span class="fat">1205</span></td>
-<td colspan="6" class="center brd"><span class="fat">762</span></td>
-<td colspan="12" class="center br"><span class="fat">1073</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td colspan="4" class="col1hanging bl highline"><span class="smcap">Total&nbsp;for&nbsp;the&nbsp;Year</span></td>
-<td colspan="28" class="center br highline"><span class="fat">3040</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo312.png" alt="table" width="600" height="263" />
-</div>
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page273">[273]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="app" id="App08">No. VIII.&mdash;<i>Quinquennial Mortality, classified by Age, first for the entire City, next for
-the three Unions severally.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<table class="app08" summary="death rates">
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<th colspan="4" class="center bl brd">Deaths in the Population of<br />the City of London.</th>
-<th class="br">Under<br />5<br />Years<br />of<br />Age.</th>
-<th class="br">From<br />5<br />to<br />10.</th>
-<th class="br">From<br />10<br />to<br />15.</th>
-<th class="br">From<br />15<br />to<br />20.</th>
-<th class="br">From<br />20<br />to<br />30.</th>
-<th class="br">From<br />30<br />to<br />40.</th>
-<th class="br">From<br />40<br />to<br />50.</th>
-<th class="br">From<br />50<br />to<br />60.</th>
-<th class="br">From<br />60<br />to<br />70.</th>
-<th class="br">From<br />70<br />up-<br />wards.</th>
-<th class="br">Age<br />not<br />re-<br />ported.</th>
-<th class="br">Total.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="4" class="thinline bl brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="5" class="center padl1 padr1 bl fsize80">Year<br />by<br />year<br />dating<br />from<br />Michael-<br />mas to<br />Michael-
-<br />mas.</td>
-<td rowspan="5" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="5" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="col2">1848-49</td>
-<td class="data">1243</td>
-<td class="data">202</td>
-<td class="data">92</td>
-<td class="data">90</td>
-<td class="data">292</td>
-<td class="data">345</td>
-<td class="data">396</td>
-<td class="data">355</td>
-<td class="data">366</td>
-<td class="data">367</td>
-<td class="data">15</td>
-<td class="data">3763</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col2">1849-50</td>
-<td class="data">1032</td>
-<td class="data">83</td>
-<td class="data">44</td>
-<td class="data">70</td>
-<td class="data">166</td>
-<td class="data">200</td>
-<td class="data">251</td>
-<td class="data">254</td>
-<td class="data">318</td>
-<td class="data">334</td>
-<td class="data">0</td>
-<td class="data">2752</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col2">1850-51</td>
-<td class="data">1194</td>
-<td class="data">124</td>
-<td class="data">48</td>
-<td class="data">60</td>
-<td class="data">169</td>
-<td class="data">227</td>
-<td class="data">248</td>
-<td class="data">261</td>
-<td class="data">303</td>
-<td class="data">342</td>
-<td class="data">2</td>
-<td class="data">2978</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col2">1851-52</td>
-<td class="data">1197</td>
-<td class="data">113</td>
-<td class="data">57</td>
-<td class="data">84</td>
-<td class="data">196</td>
-<td class="data">253</td>
-<td class="data">267</td>
-<td class="data">260</td>
-<td class="data">287</td>
-<td class="data">350</td>
-<td class="data">0</td>
-<td class="data">3064</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col2">1852-53</td>
-<td class="data">1135</td>
-<td class="data">94</td>
-<td class="data">37</td>
-<td class="data">59</td>
-<td class="data">179</td>
-<td class="data">258</td>
-<td class="data">268</td>
-<td class="data">297</td>
-<td class="data">320</td>
-<td class="data">393</td>
-<td class="data">0</td>
-<td class="data">3040</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="4" class="thinline bl brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<td colspan="4" class="left padl1 padr1 bl brd">Sum of five year&#8217;s deaths</td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">5801</span></td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">616</span></td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">278</span></td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">363</span></td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">1002</span></td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">1283</span></td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">1430</span></td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">1427</span></td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">1594</span></td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">1786</span></td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">17</span></td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">15597</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="4" class="thinline bl brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="4" class="center padl1 padr1 bl fsize80">Deaths<br />of<br />five<br />years<br />in<br />their<br />Local<br />Distri-
-<br />bution.</td>
-<td rowspan="4" class="brace">-</td>
-<td rowspan="4" class="brace bt bb bl">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="col2">East London Union</td>
-<td class="data">2471</td>
-<td class="data">215</td>
-<td class="data">80</td>
-<td class="data">105</td>
-<td class="data">338</td>
-<td class="data">432</td>
-<td class="data">488</td>
-<td class="data">444</td>
-<td class="data">551</td>
-<td class="data">619</td>
-<td class="data">0</td>
-<td class="data">5743</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col2">West London Union</td>
-<td class="data">1416</td>
-<td class="data">141</td>
-<td class="data">75</td>
-<td class="data">122</td>
-<td class="data">305</td>
-<td class="data">376</td>
-<td class="data">405</td>
-<td class="data">393</td>
-<td class="data">420</td>
-<td class="data">398</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">4052</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col2">City of London Union</td>
-<td class="data">1914</td>
-<td class="data">260</td>
-<td class="data">123</td>
-<td class="data">136</td>
-<td class="data">359</td>
-<td class="data">475</td>
-<td class="data">537</td>
-<td class="data">590</td>
-<td class="data">623</td>
-<td class="data">769</td>
-<td class="data">1</td>
-<td class="data">5787</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col2">Uncertain Address</td>
-<td class="data">*</td>
-<td class="data">*</td>
-<td class="data">*</td>
-<td class="data">*</td>
-<td class="data">*</td>
-<td class="data">*</td>
-<td class="data">*</td>
-<td class="data">*</td>
-<td class="data">*</td>
-<td class="data">*</td>
-<td class="data">15</td>
-<td class="data">15</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td colspan="4" class="thinline bl brd">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="thinline br">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo313.png" alt="table" width="600" height="331" />
-</div>
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page274">[274]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="app" id="App09">No. IX.&mdash;<i>Number of Deaths occasioned, during the last Five Years, by certain Acute Diseases,
-chiefly Epidemic, Infectious, and Endemic.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<table class="app09" summary="deaths">
-
-<tr class="bt">
-<th colspan="2" class="col1hind bot bl">In the successive years terminating severally as <span class="nowrap">follows:&mdash;</span></th>
-<th class="bb">Fever.</th>
-<th class="bb">Acute<br />Diarrh&#339;a<br />(not of<br />infants),<br />Dysentery,<br />and<br />Cholera.</th>
-<th class="bb">Scarlet-<br />Fever<br />and<br />Cynanche<br />maligna.</th>
-<th class="bb">Small-Pox.</th>
-<th class="bb">Erysipelas,<br />Py&aelig;mia,<br />and<br />Puerperal<br />Fever.</th>
-<th class="bb">Diarrh&#339;a,<br />Bronchitis<br />and<br />Pneumonia<br />of<br />Infants<br />under<br />3 years<br />of age.</th>
-<th class="bb">Measles,<br />Hooping-<br />cough<br />and<br />Croup.</th>
-<th class="bb">Hydro-<br />cephalus<br />and<br />Convul-<br />sions of<br />Infancy.</th>
-<th class="bb">Total<br />of<br />pre-<br />ceding<br />columns.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">At Michaelmas,</td>
-<td class="year">1849</td>
-<td class="data">166</td>
-<td class="data">825</td>
-<td class="data">135</td>
-<td class="data">17</td>
-<td class="data">44</td>
-<td class="data">285</td>
-<td class="data">196</td>
-<td class="data">264</td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">1932</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1"><span class="padl1">&#8222;</span><span class="padl2 padr2">&nbsp;</span>&#8222;</td>
-<td class="year">1850</td>
-<td class="data">118</td>
-<td class="data">54</td>
-<td class="data">32</td>
-<td class="data">33</td>
-<td class="data">40</td>
-<td class="data">243</td>
-<td class="data">124</td>
-<td class="data">219</td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">863</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1"><span class="padl1">&#8222;</span><span class="padl2 padr2">&nbsp;</span>&#8222;</td>
-<td class="year">1851</td>
-<td class="data">107</td>
-<td class="data">23</td>
-<td class="data">46</td>
-<td class="data">41</td>
-<td class="data">17</td>
-<td class="data">340</td>
-<td class="data">272</td>
-<td class="data">282</td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">1128</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1"><span class="padl1">&#8222;</span><span class="padl2 padr2">&nbsp;</span>&#8222;</td>
-<td class="year">1852</td>
-<td class="data">165</td>
-<td class="data">37</td>
-<td class="data">86</td>
-<td class="data">96</td>
-<td class="data">24</td>
-<td class="data">330</td>
-<td class="data">132</td>
-<td class="data">308</td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">1178</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1"><span class="padl1">&#8222;</span><span class="padl2 padr2">&nbsp;</span>&#8222;</td>
-<td class="year">1853</td>
-<td class="data">145</td>
-<td class="data">43</td>
-<td class="data">85</td>
-<td class="data">15</td>
-<td class="data">26</td>
-<td class="data">304</td>
-<td class="data">190</td>
-<td class="data">289</td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">1097</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<td colspan="2" class="col1hind fsize90 bl br">Total number of such Deaths in the Five Years 1848-53.</td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">701</span></td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">982</span></td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">384</span></td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">202</span></td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">151</span></td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">1502</span></td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">914</span></td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">1362</span></td>
-<td class="data"><span class="fat">6198</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo314.png" alt="table" width="600" height="276" />
-</div>
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page275">[275]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="app10" id="App10">No. X.&mdash;<i>Comparative Mortality in different seasons of the Year; namely, in the Autumn Quarters (Oct.,
-Nov., Dec.) in the Winter Quarters (Jan., Feb., March,) in the Spring Quarters (April, May, June)
-and in the Summer Quarters (July, Aug., Sept.) of the Five Years from Michaelmas, 1848, to
-Michaelmas, 1853.</i></h3>
-
-<p class="center highline2">SYNOPSIS.</p>
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<table class="app10" summary="deaths">
-
-<tr class="bt">
-<th rowspan="2" class="col1hind"><span class="smcap">Deaths</span> in the different<br />seasons of five years,<br />as
-<span class="nowrap">follows:&mdash;</span></th>
-<th colspan="3" class="brd"><span class="smcap"> East London Union.</span></th>
-<th colspan="3" class="brd"><span class="smcap">West London Union.</span></th>
-<th colspan="6" class="brd"><span class="smcap">City of London Union.</span></th>
-<th rowspan="2" class="br bb">Total<br />for<br />entire<br />City.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<th class="bb br">Saint<br />Botolph.</th>
-<th class="bb br">Cripple-<br />gate.</th>
-<th class="bb brd">Work-<br />houses.</th>
-<th class="bb br">North.</th>
-<th class="bb br">South.</th>
-<th class="bb brd">Work-<br />house.</th>
-<th class="bb br">S. W.</th>
-<th class="bb br">N. W.</th>
-<th class="bb br">South.</th>
-<th class="bb br">S. E.</th>
-<th class="bb br">N. E.</th>
-<th class="bb brd">Work-<br />house.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="season">In five Autumn Quarters</td>
-<td class="data br">616</td>
-<td class="data br">613</td>
-<td class="data brd">201</td>
-<td class="data br">357</td>
-<td class="data br">392</td>
-<td class="data brd">129</td>
-<td class="data br">245</td>
-<td class="data br">236</td>
-<td class="data br">272</td>
-<td class="data br">227</td>
-<td class="data br">271</td>
-<td class="data brd">119</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="data bb br"><span class="fat">3678</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3" class="data1 brd"><span class="fat">1430</span></td>
-<td colspan="3" class="data1 brd"><span class="fat">878</span></td>
-<td colspan="6" class="data1 brd"><span class="fat">1370</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="season">In five Winter Quarters</td>
-<td class="data br">641</td>
-<td class="data br">623</td>
-<td class="data brd">223</td>
-<td class="data br">371</td>
-<td class="data br">464</td>
-<td class="data brd">183</td>
-<td class="data br">248</td>
-<td class="data br">274</td>
-<td class="data br">347</td>
-<td class="data br">265</td>
-<td class="data br">360</td>
-<td class="data brd">153</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="data bb br"><span class="fat">4152</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3" class="data1 brd"><span class="fat">1487</span></td>
-<td colspan="3" class="data1 brd"><span class="fat">1018</span></td>
-<td colspan="6" class="data1 brd"><span class="fat">1647</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="season">In five Spring Quarters</td>
-<td class="data br">519</td>
-<td class="data br">583</td>
-<td class="data brd">195</td>
-<td class="data br">402</td>
-<td class="data br">471</td>
-<td class="data brd">159</td>
-<td class="data br">226</td>
-<td class="data br">230</td>
-<td class="data br">273</td>
-<td class="data br">255</td>
-<td class="data br">262</td>
-<td class="data brd">137</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="data bb br"><span class="fat">3712</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3" class="data1 brd"><span class="fat">1297</span></td>
-<td colspan="3" class="data1 brd"><span class="fat">1032</span></td>
-<td colspan="6" class="data1 brd"><span class="fat">1383</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="season bb">In five Summer Quarters</td>
-<td class="data br">682</td>
-<td class="data br">664</td>
-<td class="data brd">183</td>
-<td class="data br">438</td>
-<td class="data br">562</td>
-<td class="data brd">124</td>
-<td class="data br">307</td>
-<td class="data br">228</td>
-<td class="data br">273</td>
-<td class="data br">202</td>
-<td class="data br">260</td>
-<td class="data brd">117</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="data bb br"><span class="fat">4040</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3" class="data1 brd"><span class="fat">1529</span></td>
-<td colspan="3" class="data1 brd"><span class="fat">1124</span></td>
-<td colspan="6" class="data1 brd"><span class="fat">1387</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo315.png" alt="table" width="600" height="191" />
-</div>
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page276">[276]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="app" id="App11">No. XI.&mdash;<i>Comparative Mortality in Different Seasons of the Year.</i></h3>
-
-<p class="center highline2">AUTUMN QUARTERS.</p>
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<table class="app11to14" summary="deaths">
-
-<tr class="bt">
-<th rowspan="2" colspan="2" class="col1hind bot bl br"><span class="smcap">Deaths</span> in five Autumn Quarters as
-<span class="nowrap">follows:&mdash;</span></th>
-<th colspan="3" class="brd"><span class="smcap">East London Union.</span></th>
-<th colspan="3" class="brd"><span class="smcap">West London Union.</span></th>
-<th colspan="6" class="brd"><span class="smcap">City of London Union.</span></th>
-<th rowspan="2" class="br bb">Totals<br />for<br />entire<br />City.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<th class="br bb">Saint<br />Botolph.</th>
-<th class="br bb">Cripple-<br />gate.</th>
-<th class="brd bb">Work-<br />houses.</th>
-<th class="br bb">North.</th>
-<th class="br bb">South.</th>
-<th class="brd bb">Work-<br />house.</th>
-<th class="br bb">S.W.</th>
-<th class="br bb">N.W.</th>
-<th class="br bb">South.</th>
-<th class="br bb">S.E.</th>
-<th class="br bb">N.E.</th>
-<th class="brd bb">Work-<br />house.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">Oct., Nov., Dec.,</td>
-<td class="center padl1 padr1 br">1848</td>
-<td class="data br">127</td>
-<td class="data br">128</td>
-<td class="data brd">31</td>
-<td class="data br">74</td>
-<td class="data br">103</td>
-<td class="data brd">29</td>
-<td class="data br">40</td>
-<td class="data br">50</td>
-<td class="data br">59</td>
-<td class="data br">40</td>
-<td class="data br">62</td>
-<td class="data brd">23</td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">766</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1"><span class="padl1">&#8222;</span><span class="padl4 padr4">&#8222;</span><span class="padr1">&#8222;</span></td>
-<td class="center padl1 padr1 br">1849</td>
-<td class="data br">118</td>
-<td class="data br">137</td>
-<td class="data brd">44</td>
-<td class="data br">85</td>
-<td class="data br">70</td>
-<td class="data brd">23</td>
-<td class="data br">57</td>
-<td class="data br">45</td>
-<td class="data br">55</td>
-<td class="data br">51</td>
-<td class="data br">52</td>
-<td class="data brd">28</td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">765</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1"><span class="padl1">&#8222;</span><span class="padl4 padr4">&#8222;</span><span class="padr1">&#8222;</span></td>
-<td class="center padl1 padr1 br">1850</td>
-<td class="data br">101</td>
-<td class="data br">125</td>
-<td class="data brd">32</td>
-<td class="data br">62</td>
-<td class="data br">72</td>
-<td class="data brd">14</td>
-<td class="data br">48</td>
-<td class="data br">44</td>
-<td class="data br">49</td>
-<td class="data br">55</td>
-<td class="data br">48</td>
-<td class="data brd">22</td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">672</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1"><span class="padl1">&#8222;</span><span class="padl4 padr4">&#8222;</span><span class="padr1">&#8222;</span></td>
-<td class="center padl1 padr1 br">1851</td>
-<td class="data br">140</td>
-<td class="data br">117</td>
-<td class="data brd">64</td>
-<td class="data br">68</td>
-<td class="data br">80</td>
-<td class="data brd">30</td>
-<td class="data br">63</td>
-<td class="data br">54</td>
-<td class="data br">52</td>
-<td class="data br">48</td>
-<td class="data br">55</td>
-<td class="data brd">29</td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">800</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1"><span class="padl1">&#8222;</span><span class="padl4 padr4">&#8222;</span><span class="padr1">&#8222;</span></td>
-<td class="center padl1 padr1 br">1852</td>
-<td class="data br">130</td>
-<td class="data br">106</td>
-<td class="data brd">30</td>
-<td class="data br">68</td>
-<td class="data br">67</td>
-<td class="data brd">33</td>
-<td class="data br">37</td>
-<td class="data br">43</td>
-<td class="data br">57</td>
-<td class="data br">33</td>
-<td class="data br">54</td>
-<td class="data brd">17</td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">675</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<td colspan="2" class="left padl1 bl br">Total of five Seasons</td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">616</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">613</span></td>
-<td class="data brd"><span class="fat">201</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">357</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">392</span></td>
-<td class="data brd"><span class="fat">129</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">245</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">236</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">272</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">227</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">271</span></td>
-<td class="data brd"><span class="fat">119</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">3678</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo316.png" alt="table" width="600" height="148" />
-</div>
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page277">[277]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="app" id="App12">No. XII.&mdash;<i>Comparative Mortality in Different Seasons of the Year.</i></h3>
-
-<p class="center highline2">WINTER QUARTERS.</p>
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<table class="app11to14" summary="deaths">
-
-<tr class="bt">
-<th rowspan="2" colspan="2" class="col1hind bot bl br"><span class="smcap">Deaths</span> in five Winter Quarters as
-<span class="nowrap">follows:&mdash;</span></th>
-<th colspan="3" class="brd"><span class="smcap">East London Union.</span></th>
-<th colspan="3" class="brd"><span class="smcap">West London Union.</span></th>
-<th colspan="6" class="brd"><span class="smcap">City of London Union.</span></th>
-<th rowspan="2" class="br bb">Totals<br />for<br />entire<br />City.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<th class="br bb">Saint<br />Botolph.</th>
-<th class="br bb">Cripple-<br />gate.</th>
-<th class="brd bb">Work-<br />houses.</th>
-<th class="br bb">North.</th>
-<th class="br bb">South.</th>
-<th class="brd bb">Work-<br />house.</th>
-<th class="br bb">S.W.</th>
-<th class="br bb">N.W.</th>
-<th class="br bb">South.</th>
-<th class="br bb">S.E.</th>
-<th class="br bb">N.E.</th>
-<th class="brd bb">Work-<br />house.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">Jan., Feb., Mar.,</td>
-<td class="center padl1 padr1 br">1849</td>
-<td class="data br">136</td>
-<td class="data br">117</td>
-<td class="data brd">36</td>
-<td class="data br">73</td>
-<td class="data br">90</td>
-<td class="data brd">30</td>
-<td class="data br">52</td>
-<td class="data br">63</td>
-<td class="data br">60</td>
-<td class="data br">52</td>
-<td class="data br">77</td>
-<td class="data brd">36</td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">822</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1"><span class="padl1">&#8222;</span><span class="padl4 padr4">&#8222;</span><span class="padr1">&#8222;</span></td>
-<td class="center padl1 padr1 br">1850</td>
-<td class="data br">96</td>
-<td class="data br">124</td>
-<td class="data brd">36</td>
-<td class="data br">91</td>
-<td class="data br">84</td>
-<td class="data brd">40</td>
-<td class="data br">46</td>
-<td class="data br">45</td>
-<td class="data br">80</td>
-<td class="data br">58</td>
-<td class="data br">74</td>
-<td class="data brd">29</td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">803</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1"><span class="padl1">&#8222;</span><span class="padl4 padr4">&#8222;</span><span class="padr1">&#8222;</span></td>
-<td class="center padl1 padr1 br">1851</td>
-<td class="data br">154</td>
-<td class="data br">140</td>
-<td class="data brd">49</td>
-<td class="data br">87</td>
-<td class="data br">89</td>
-<td class="data brd">22</td>
-<td class="data br">59</td>
-<td class="data br">48</td>
-<td class="data br">81</td>
-<td class="data br">56</td>
-<td class="data br">67</td>
-<td class="data brd">24</td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">876</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1"><span class="padl1">&#8222;</span><span class="padl4 padr4">&#8222;</span><span class="padr1">&#8222;</span></td>
-<td class="center padl1 padr1 br">1852</td>
-<td class="data br">124</td>
-<td class="data br">96</td>
-<td class="data brd">48</td>
-<td class="data br">54</td>
-<td class="data br">101</td>
-<td class="data brd">37</td>
-<td class="data br">42</td>
-<td class="data br">61</td>
-<td class="data br">61</td>
-<td class="data br">50</td>
-<td class="data br">67</td>
-<td class="data brd">32</td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">773</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1"><span class="padl1">&#8222;</span><span class="padl4 padr4">&#8222;</span><span class="padr1">&#8222;</span></td>
-<td class="center padl1 padr1 br">1853</td>
-<td class="data br">131</td>
-<td class="data br">146</td>
-<td class="data brd">54</td>
-<td class="data br">66</td>
-<td class="data br">100</td>
-<td class="data brd">54</td>
-<td class="data br">49</td>
-<td class="data br">57</td>
-<td class="data br">65</td>
-<td class="data br">49</td>
-<td class="data br">75</td>
-<td class="data brd">32</td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">878</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<td colspan="2" class="left padl1 bl br">Total of five Seasons</td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">641</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">623</span></td>
-<td class="data brd"><span class="fat">223</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">371</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">464</span></td>
-<td class="data brd"><span class="fat">183</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">248</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">274</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">347</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">265</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">360</span></td>
-<td class="data brd"><span class="fat">153</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">4152</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo317.png" alt="table" width="600" height="151" />
-</div>
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page278">[278]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="app" id="App13">No. XIII.&mdash;<i>Comparative Mortality in Different Seasons of the Year.</i></h3>
-
-<p class="center highline2">SPRING QUARTERS.</p>
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<table class="app11to14" summary="deaths">
-
-<tr class="bt">
-<th rowspan="2" colspan="2" class="col1hind bot bl br"><span class="smcap">Deaths</span> in five Spring Quarters as
-<span class="nowrap">follows:&mdash;</span></th>
-<th colspan="3" class="brd"><span class="smcap">East London Union.</span></th>
-<th colspan="3" class="brd"><span class="smcap">West London Union.</span></th>
-<th colspan="6" class="brd"><span class="smcap">City of London Union.</span></th>
-<th rowspan="2" class="br bb">Totals<br />for<br />entire<br />City.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<th class="br bb">Saint<br />Botolph.</th>
-<th class="br bb">Cripple-<br />gate.</th>
-<th class="brd bb">Work-<br />houses.</th>
-<th class="br bb">North.</th>
-<th class="br bb">South.</th>
-<th class="brd bb">Work-<br />house.</th>
-<th class="br bb">S.W.</th>
-<th class="br bb">N.W.</th>
-<th class="br bb">South.</th>
-<th class="br bb">S.E.</th>
-<th class="br bb">N.E.</th>
-<th class="brd bb">Work-<br />house.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">April, May, June,</td>
-<td class="center padl1 padr1 br">1849</td>
-<td class="data br">85</td>
-<td class="data br">130</td>
-<td class="data brd">39</td>
-<td class="data br">77</td>
-<td class="data br">110</td>
-<td class="data brd">34</td>
-<td class="data br">56</td>
-<td class="data br">55</td>
-<td class="data br">58</td>
-<td class="data br">45</td>
-<td class="data br">50</td>
-<td class="data brd">26</td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">765</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1"><span class="padl1">&#8222;</span><span class="padl4 padr4">&#8222;</span><span class="padr1">&#8222;</span></td>
-<td class="center padl1 padr1 br">1850</td>
-<td class="data br">80</td>
-<td class="data br">90</td>
-<td class="data brd">19</td>
-<td class="data br">74</td>
-<td class="data br">71</td>
-<td class="data brd">27</td>
-<td class="data br">34</td>
-<td class="data br">39</td>
-<td class="data br">40</td>
-<td class="data br">43</td>
-<td class="data br">50</td>
-<td class="data brd">22</td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">589</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1"><span class="padl1">&#8222;</span><span class="padl4 padr4">&#8222;</span><span class="padr1">&#8222;</span></td>
-<td class="center padl1 padr1 br">1851</td>
-<td class="data br">115</td>
-<td class="data br">101</td>
-<td class="data brd">48</td>
-<td class="data br">92</td>
-<td class="data br">79</td>
-<td class="data brd">21</td>
-<td class="data br">44</td>
-<td class="data br">38</td>
-<td class="data br">75</td>
-<td class="data br">70</td>
-<td class="data br">56</td>
-<td class="data brd">28</td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">767</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1"><span class="padl1">&#8222;</span><span class="padl4 padr4">&#8222;</span><span class="padr1">&#8222;</span></td>
-<td class="center padl1 padr1 br">1852</td>
-<td class="data br">110</td>
-<td class="data br">131</td>
-<td class="data brd">38</td>
-<td class="data br">70</td>
-<td class="data br">121</td>
-<td class="data brd">31</td>
-<td class="data br">47</td>
-<td class="data br">51</td>
-<td class="data br">41</td>
-<td class="data br">47</td>
-<td class="data br">59</td>
-<td class="data brd">28</td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">774</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1"><span class="padl1">&#8222;</span><span class="padl4 padr4">&#8222;</span><span class="padr1">&#8222;</span></td>
-<td class="center padl1 padr1 br">1853</td>
-<td class="data br">129</td>
-<td class="data br">131</td>
-<td class="data brd">51</td>
-<td class="data br">89</td>
-<td class="data br">90</td>
-<td class="data brd">46</td>
-<td class="data br">45</td>
-<td class="data br">47</td>
-<td class="data br">59</td>
-<td class="data br">50</td>
-<td class="data br">47</td>
-<td class="data brd">33</td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">817</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<td colspan="2" class="left padl1 bl br">Total of five Seasons</td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">519</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">583</span></td>
-<td class="data brd"><span class="fat">195</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">402</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">471</span></td>
-<td class="data brd"><span class="fat">159</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">226</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">230</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">273</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">255</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">262</span></td>
-<td class="data brd"><span class="fat">137</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">3712</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo318.png" alt="table" width="600" height="149" />
-</div>
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page279">[279]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="app" id="App14">No. XIV.&mdash;<i>Comparative Mortality in Different Seasons of the Year.</i></h3>
-
-<p class="center highline2">SUMMER QUARTERS.</p>
-
-<div class="scr">
-
-<table class="app11to14" summary="deaths">
-
-<tr class="bt">
-<th rowspan="2" colspan="2" class="col1hind bot bl br"><span class="smcap">Deaths</span> in five Summer Quarters as
-<span class="nowrap">follows:&mdash;</span></th>
-<th colspan="3" class="brd"><span class="smcap">East London Union.</span></th>
-<th colspan="3" class="brd"><span class="smcap">West London Union.</span></th>
-<th colspan="6" class="brd"><span class="smcap">City of London Union.</span></th>
-<th rowspan="2" class="br bb">Totals<br />for<br />entire<br />City.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<th class="br bb">Saint<br />Botolph.</th>
-<th class="br bb">Cripple-<br />gate.</th>
-<th class="brd bb">Work-<br />houses.</th>
-<th class="br bb">North.</th>
-<th class="br bb">South.</th>
-<th class="brd bb">Work-<br />house.</th>
-<th class="br bb">S.W.</th>
-<th class="br bb">N.W.</th>
-<th class="br bb">South.</th>
-<th class="br bb">S.E.</th>
-<th class="br bb">N.E.</th>
-<th class="brd bb">Work-<br />house.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1">July, Aug., Sep.,</td>
-<td class="center padl1 padr1 br">1849</td>
-<td class="data br">171</td>
-<td class="data br">199</td>
-<td class="data brd">73</td>
-<td class="data br">148</td>
-<td class="data br">295</td>
-<td class="data brd">33</td>
-<td class="data br">145</td>
-<td class="data br">77</td>
-<td class="data br">86</td>
-<td class="data br">77</td>
-<td class="data br">73</td>
-<td class="data brd">18</td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">1395</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1"><span class="padl1">&#8222;</span><span class="padl4 padr4">&#8222;</span><span class="padr1">&#8222;</span></td>
-<td class="center padl1 padr1 br">1850</td>
-<td class="data br">102</td>
-<td class="data br">93</td>
-<td class="data brd">26</td>
-<td class="data br">74</td>
-<td class="data br">65</td>
-<td class="data brd">18</td>
-<td class="data br">39</td>
-<td class="data br">39</td>
-<td class="data br">43</td>
-<td class="data br">31</td>
-<td class="data br">43</td>
-<td class="data brd">22</td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">595</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1"><span class="padl1">&#8222;</span><span class="padl4 padr4">&#8222;</span><span class="padr1">&#8222;</span></td>
-<td class="center padl1 padr1 br">1851</td>
-<td class="data br">123</td>
-<td class="data br">105</td>
-<td class="data brd">38</td>
-<td class="data br">76</td>
-<td class="data br">73</td>
-<td class="data brd">11</td>
-<td class="data br">40</td>
-<td class="data br">39</td>
-<td class="data br">53</td>
-<td class="data br">36</td>
-<td class="data br">42</td>
-<td class="data brd">27</td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">663</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1"><span class="padl1">&#8222;</span><span class="padl4 padr4">&#8222;</span><span class="padr1">&#8222;</span></td>
-<td class="center padl1 padr1 br">1852</td>
-<td class="data br">160</td>
-<td class="data br">116</td>
-<td class="data brd">26</td>
-<td class="data br">74</td>
-<td class="data br">77</td>
-<td class="data brd">31</td>
-<td class="data br">44</td>
-<td class="data br">32</td>
-<td class="data br">49</td>
-<td class="data br">26</td>
-<td class="data br">54</td>
-<td class="data brd">28</td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">717</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="col1"><span class="padl1">&#8222;</span><span class="padl4 padr4">&#8222;</span><span class="padr1">&#8222;</span></td>
-<td class="center padl1 padr1 br">1853</td>
-<td class="data br">126</td>
-<td class="data br">151</td>
-<td class="data brd">20</td>
-<td class="data br">66</td>
-<td class="data br">52</td>
-<td class="data brd">31</td>
-<td class="data br">39</td>
-<td class="data br">41</td>
-<td class="data br">42</td>
-<td class="data br">32</td>
-<td class="data br">48</td>
-<td class="data brd">22</td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">670</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<td colspan="2" class="left padl1 bl br">Total of five Seasons</td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">682</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">664</span></td>
-<td class="data brd"><span class="fat">183</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">438</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">562</span></td>
-<td class="data brd"><span class="fat">124</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">307</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">228</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">273</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">202</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">260</span></td>
-<td class="data brd"><span class="fat">117</span></td>
-<td class="data br"><span class="fat">4040</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-</div><!--scr-->
-
-<div class="hh">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/illo318.png" alt="table" width="600" height="149" />
-</div>
-
-</div><!--hh-->
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page280">[280]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="highline"><span class="fsize80">ON THE PRESENT</span><br />
-BURIAL-PLACES OF THE CITY.</h2>
-
-<p class="reportaddress">TO THE IMPROVEMENT COMMITTEE OF THE HON. THE
-COMMISSIONERS OF SEWERS OF THE CITY OF LONDON.</p>
-
-<p class="reportdate"><i>December 10th, 1852.</i></p>
-
-<p class="reportsalutation"><span class="smcap">Gentlemen</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="chapstart">I<span class="startword">n</span> order to an application of the Metropolitan Burials
-Act by the constituted authorities of the City, you have
-requested me to report how far, in my judgment, the
-existing burial-places within this jurisdiction are fit for
-further reception of the dead.</p>
-
-<p>I have little to add to the information which I have laid
-before the Commission in my successive annual reports&mdash;especially
-in <a href="#Page1">that of 1849</a>, and which long since induced me
-to express my conviction &#8216;that the City of London could
-no longer with safety or propriety be allowed to furnish intramural
-burial to its dead.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>It would, indeed, be ridiculous if I should pretend to you
-that this part of the subject requires any further inquiry.
-Putrefactive decomposition of one kind and another is the
-principal cause of town-unhealthiness. Against its occurrence
-round about our houses all your legislation is directed.
-The human body, once destitute of life, furnishes no exception<span class="pagenum" id="Page281">[281]</span>
-to the laws of organic decay: under the common laws
-of chemical change, it soon dissolves itself into products
-neither less offensive, nor less poisonous, than those of any
-brute&#8217;s decomposition. And you cannot take a juster view
-of the subject&mdash;you cannot arrive at stronger arguments
-for the immediate abolition of intramural interment, than
-by forcing yourselves to discard for a moment all memory
-of the fading human outline which masks this dreadful nuisance,
-and to conceive it as <i>a mere bulk of animal matter</i>,
-planted every year to undergo decomposition within the
-City, beneath our Churches, and before our thresholds.<a id="FNanchor91"></a><a href="#Footnote91" class="fnanchor">[91]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote91"><a href="#FNanchor91"><span class="label">[91]</span></a>
-The right of interment in the City may at present be claimed in
-respect probably of more than three thousand corpses <i>per</i> annum.
-The number actually interred of late years has, I believe, not
-exceeded an average of two thousand <i>per</i> annum.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Dead bodies thus buried contribute importantly in their
-neighbourhood to the vitiation of air and water. Those
-that lie shelved in vaults, eventually, if not at first, spread
-through the atmosphere every product of their decomposition.
-Those that are dug into the soil have their decay
-modified by its influence, mingle with its drainage the products
-of their transformation, and thus (as I have shown in
-my <a href="#Ref11">remarks</a> on the Bishopsgate pump water) find their
-issue in the nearest land-spring of the spot, polluting the
-drink of the population. Further, in all the more frequented
-burial-grounds, the soil seems to be saturated with
-animal matters only partially transformed; and at every
-new disturbance by the spade, a fresh quantity of this
-unctuous clay comes upmost, tainting the air with materials
-of f&#339;tid decomposition, often to the great distress of persons
-who dwell in the vicinity.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page282">[282]</span></p>
-
-<p>On such grounds as these, I cannot hesitate in renewing
-my report that the City of London is absolutely unfit to
-serve as a further burial-place for the dead; and this,
-whether by inhumation or in vaults, whether in parochial
-burying-grounds, or in those of other communities.</p>
-
-<p>Regard being had to the object of your reference, you
-would probably not desire me at present to enter on the
-ulterior questions of extramural interment.</p>
-
-<p>On such representations as I have made, the Court of
-Common Council (acting under the Metropolitan Act
-already referred to) has authority to determine in respect of
-the City of London, whether the existing places of burial,
-either from their insufficiency, or from their dangerousness
-to health, are so unfit for their purpose as to render it
-necessary that other burial-space be provided.</p>
-
-<p>Should they affirm this view, they can then &#8216;authorise
-and direct the Commissioners of Sewers of the City of
-London to exercise for the said City and Liberties all the
-powers and authorities vested in Burial-Boards under the
-Act.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>This course being taken, the Commission (subject to
-approval from the Secretary of State) will have authority to
-make all arrangements requisite for the final closure of
-burial-places within the City.</p>
-
-<p>In approaching the subject of extramural sepulture, with
-its innumerable details of inquiry, for site, for conveyance,
-and for burial&mdash;details which form the knowledge and
-experience of a special class of persons, the Commission
-may perhaps first consider whether works so foreign to
-their usual functions shall be undertaken by themselves
-directly, or shall be made matter of contract with existing<span class="pagenum" id="Page283">[283]</span>
-Cemetery Companies, or other associations or individuals.
-Till this decision is made, it seems impossible to conjecture
-what topics you may wish to entertain, or within what
-limits the industry of your officers may most usefully be
-exercised.</p>
-
-<p>There are many very important parts of the subject with
-which it may hereafter become my duty to deal; but till the
-preliminary questions are settled, it would be idle to detain
-you with sanitary considerations belonging to a later stage
-of your inquiry.</p>
-
-<p>As my <a href="#Page1">Report for 1849</a> had long been out of print, I subjoin
-an extract from it of so much as relates to the matter in
-hand.<a id="FNanchor92"></a><a href="#Footnote92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote92"><a href="#FNanchor92"><span class="label">[92]</span></a> The passages here referred to form a separate section of the
-<a href="#Page1">First Annual Report</a>; and therefore need not be reprinted in this
-part of the present volume.&mdash;J. S., 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page284">[284]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center highline2">NOTE.</p>
-
-<p><i>On considering the above Report, the Improvement Committee of
-the Commissioners (to whom the subject had been specially referred)
-at once resolved to report to the General Court that, in their &#8216;judgment,
-steps should be taken for closing the several burial-places within
-the City;&#8217; and at the same time they desired that the Officer of
-Health would prepare for them his opinion on those ulterior arrangements
-which such closure might render necessary.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>The following Report was written accordingly.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="sec" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page285">[285]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="highline"><span class="fsize90">INTRODUCTORY REPORT</span><br />
-<span class="fsize60">SUGGESTING THE</span><br />
-<span class="fsize80">OUTLINE OF A SCHEME</span><br />
-<span class="fsize60">FOR</span><br />
-EXTRAMURAL INTERMENT.</h2>
-
-<p class="reportaddress highline15">TO THE IMPROVEMENT COMMITTEE<br />
-<span class="fsize80">OF THE</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Hon. the Commissioners of Sewers of the City of
-London.</span></p>
-
-<p class="reportsalutation"><span class="smcap">Gentlemen</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="chapstart">U<span class="startword">nder</span> the several clauses of the Metropolitan Burials
-Act, and under certain clauses of the City Sewers
-Act 1848, the Commissioners of Sewers, acting as a Burial-Board
-for the City of London, will be subject to the following
-responsibilities&mdash;viz.:</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15"><i>First</i>,&mdash;That a sufficient extramural burial-place be provided
-for those classes of persons who have heretofore
-had right of interment within the City;</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15"><i>Secondly</i>,&mdash;That the facilities of transit and conveyance to
-such burial-place be commensurate with the purposes
-for which it is established;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page286">[286]</span></p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore15"><i>Thirdly</i>,&mdash;That evil no longer accrue to the health of the
-City from unnecessary delays of interment, or from
-the keeping of dead bodies in the dwelling-rooms of
-the poor.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">I. To measure the sufficiency of a burial-place, one must
-know for what numbers of population it is intended to suffice.</p>
-
-<p>Burial-Boards under the new Act are obliged to provide
-accommodation for all <i>parishioners</i> or <i>inhabitants</i> of the
-several parishes within their jurisdiction.</p>
-
-<p>Under the term &#8216;parishioners&#8217; as relating to the City,
-there may be included, I am told, an indefinite number of
-non-resident rate-payers: and although, at first, interment
-might not be claimed under the latter head to any considerable
-extent, yet, with the completion and success of
-your Cemetery, the applications might year by year become
-more numerous. From the nature of the case, such
-claimants would in most instances be of the wealthier classes,
-and might consequently be expected to apply for special
-allotments of ground. It seems therefore desirable that you
-should have some knowledge of the number for whom you
-may thus be required to provide.</p>
-
-<p>I would accordingly suggest as expedient, that a legal
-opinion should be obtained on your exact liabilities under
-the law referred to; and especially as to whether the
-right of burial possessed by non-resident rate-payers does
-likewise extend to the non-resident households of such rate-payers.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime I will leave this set of claimants out of
-my argument; assuming that, whenever you have reckoned<span class="pagenum" id="Page287">[287]</span>
-their number, you will be able, on their account, to add to
-your general estimate, according to a fixed proportion, the
-assessment of whatever additional accommodation they may
-legally require.</p>
-
-<p>The number of deaths belonging to the &#8216;inhabitants&#8217; of
-the City of London may be more precisely given. It would
-probably lie, as an average, within 3200 per annum.</p>
-
-<p>In attempting to fix the extent of ground required for
-your purpose in respect of this mortality, I must bring
-before you some preliminary considerations.</p>
-
-<p>First,&mdash;as regards the <i>minimum accommodation</i> to be
-given in your Cemetery; I assume that every person buried
-there, however humble his previous station in life, may in
-death claim a grave to himself. It has been the opprobrium
-of our previous system that, in the poorer classes of interments,
-many bodies have been huddled together into a
-single pit. Probably you will think, as regards your future
-burial-place, that no consideration of cheapness can justify
-this indecency: probably you will be unwilling that, in a
-presence which confounds all social comparisons, there
-should be drawn, with your sanction, between rich and poor
-any so disrespectful distinction. But at all events, on
-sanitary grounds, I feel bound to assure you that these
-multiple burials are quite inadmissible. With such concentration
-of organic remains in very narrow compass, the soil
-grows utterly f&#339;tid; and it becomes impossible to guard
-against nuisance arising to the public, or against danger
-to those who are occupied in digging and tending the
-ground. These evils, indeed, are so glaring, and the indecorum
-of crowded interment has long been so notorious,
-that nothing could have given them continuance except the<span class="pagenum" id="Page288">[288]</span>
-necessities of our narrow accommodation under the system
-of intramural burial: and it would of course be without excuse
-to perpetuate them under the changed circumstances
-of extramural Cemeteries, where space can so readily be
-obtained for all legitimate requirements of the public. So
-far as the experience of other countries may help to determine
-your judgment in this matter, I may inform you that,
-in every foreign interment system which can deserve to be
-considered an establishment of public authority, the right
-of single burial is universally recognised.</p>
-
-<p>Next&mdash;as regards the <i>succession of interments</i>; according
-to the burial-usages of modern times, no public Cemetery
-with fixed limits can be permanently useful, except on a
-full recognition of the fact that it is a decaying place for
-the dead, not a place for their embalmment or mummification.
-For hence it follows, that ground once used for burial
-becomes equally fitted for a second use, whenever by gradual
-decomposition the bodies first interred there have thoroughly
-vanished from the soil.</p>
-
-<p>This principle has given the common rule of burial; and
-for obvious reasons. Under any other plan, the entire area
-allotted for interment would presently be in holding. No
-portion, however remote the date of its first occupation,
-could be resumed for a second series of interments; and the
-provision of a new Cemetery would be indispensable.
-Pushed to its extreme consequences, such a system must
-eventually convert the entire country into its burial-ground.</p>
-
-<p>Under the practice of intramural interments&mdash;that practice
-which the new law supersedes, the principle of temporary
-tenure has been made to cover all manner of brutal<span class="pagenum" id="Page289">[289]</span>
-abuses. Graves have been disturbed&mdash;within metropolitan
-churchyards and other burying-grounds, in which the
-transformations of decay had not half accomplished themselves;
-and public decency has been outraged&mdash;here, in the
-centre of civilisation, by the spectacle of human remains
-being tossed about like offal. It is one chief advantage of
-extramural sepulture, that, while the inevitable decay of the
-dead will be removed from the vicinity of the living, and
-the latter will no longer have their atmosphere tainted by
-this hideous contamination; so likewise for the dead&mdash;however
-humble, that in this new resting-place, room will be
-allotted them with no indecent stint; that the dwellings
-and market-places of the living will no longer hem them in,
-grudging their narrow requirements; that their return to
-dust will be respected, as beseems the last phase of mortal
-existence; and that, against any desecration of their repose,
-there will be given every security which piety and affection
-can demand.</p>
-
-<p>There may be difference of opinion as to the precise time
-when a grave can with truth and decency be thought to
-have become distenanted. The rapidity of decay varies in
-so extraordinary a degree according to soil, that some inhumations
-are almost equivalent to embalming; while, in
-other cases, the process is comparatively rapid. Only experience
-of a particular soil will enable you to know with
-precision, what length of tenure is needed there for the
-purposes of interment to accomplish themselves; but on
-general principles one can approximate pretty nearly to the
-truth. Assuming the site of your Cemetery to have been
-selected with due regard to those qualities of soil which
-determine the differences adverted to, I think it unlikely<span class="pagenum" id="Page290">[290]</span>
-that any adult grave can properly be re-opened within
-twenty years<a id="FNanchor93"></a><a href="#Footnote93" class="fnanchor">[93]</a> of the time when interment shall last have
-occurred in it. Very long within this time, however, all
-soft textures of the body would have completed their decay.
-Remains of the coffin and of the skeleton&mdash;materials insusceptible
-of putrefaction, would alone occupy the grave, and
-with gradual crumbling blend themselves in the soil. Not
-till this final disintegration of the skeleton is complete&mdash;not
-till the identity of its different elements is destroyed,
-can the first occupant of a grave be fairly deemed to have
-abdicated his tenure. From this time only, can his interest
-in it be held as having reverted to the public, for whoever
-next may claim a similar usufruct of the ground.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote93"><a href="#FNanchor93"><span class="label">[93]</span></a> Twenty years would probably represent at least four times the
-average period during which the bodies of the poor have been left at
-rest in many grave-yards of the metropolis. Yet I would willingly
-advocate a longer term of years as the personal tenure of a grave, if
-public opinion would sanction the heavier expense which must thus
-be entailed on the living.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Taken for granted that, as regards the general public,
-your Cemetery will be established on the principle of a temporary
-tenure of graves, it remains for you to determine to
-what extent you will permit wealthier applicants to purchase
-exemption from this rule, and obtain a freehold
-interest in particular portions of your ground. I have little
-to say on this point, because it is of no sanitary importance,
-provided that privileges so purchased do not in any
-degree interfere with the general economy of your plan.
-Barring any risk of this kind, it comes before you simply
-as a question of finance.</p>
-
-<p>A precaution, however, which I would suggest, is, that,<span class="pagenum" id="Page291">[291]</span>
-first of all, you should provide a cemeterial space sufficient
-for the interment purposes of your population, on the principle
-of temporary tenure; that no portion of this space
-should, under any circumstances, be alienated from its
-public destination; that the whole of it should remain in
-perpetuity the common burying-ground of the City of
-London. This prime necessity of your plan being secured,
-it will be competent for you to include in your purchase a
-certain redundant number of acres; and out of these you
-can allot, at your discretion, such quantities of ground as
-may be desired in freehold, either for the purposes of family
-interment, generation after generation, or for the fiction of
-perpetual tenure by some single occupant.<a id="FNanchor94"></a><a href="#Footnote94" class="fnanchor">[94]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote94"><a href="#FNanchor94"><span class="label">[94]</span></a>
-In regard of these exceptional burials, it will be requisite to fix
-certain regulations; especially for the construction of family graves,
-wherein it will be desired that many who during life have been
-united, shall after death have their ashes mingled together in the
-soil. A frequent custom in private Cemeteries for fulfilling this
-purpose has been, for graves to be dug to a considerable depth&mdash;sometimes
-such that twelve coffins could be piled there, one on the
-other; and these deep pits have commonly been provided with brick
-walls. Now, for the same reason as determined my opinion against
-the multiple burial of the poor, I would argue against this arrangement,
-as one which might occasion excessive accumulation in single
-spots of your Cemetery, and as being in principle bad. In preference,
-I would venture to recommend the endeavour to introduce an interment-custom,
-which is prevalent abroad, of <i>family plots of ground
-instead of family pits</i>. Under ordinary circumstances, all the accommodation
-heretofore sought in the one arrangement would be found
-superiorly in the other; and in a well-projected suburban Cemetery
-the larger superficial extent could probably be afforded at much less
-cost than is usually paid for the pit. Persons familiar with the
-details of Cemetery-burial would easily devise an arrangement of
-such plots, whereby they should be separate and secluded, admitting
-of appropriate decoration, and altogether likely to prove more acceptable
-to public opinion than many existing arrangements. In regard
-of such plots, too, there might be conceded a privilege which I
-believe has not been allowed in private Cemeteries; namely, an
-hereditary right to refill the ground for any successive number of
-times, subject only to such restrictions as will determine the succession
-of interments in other parts of the Cemetery.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>In thus selling portions of your land for private and
-privileged employment, you would be satisfying what has
-become a habit, and may be considered a legitimate claim
-of the wealthier classes. Beyond this, it is also evident,
-that you would virtually be competing with the ordinary
-Cemetery-companies of the metropolis, in the most lucrative<span class="pagenum" id="Page292">[292]</span>
-department of their trade. It would probably be easy for
-you, by varying your fees according to circumstances, either
-on the one hand to diminish, and almost prohibit, the frequency
-of applications for exceptional interments; or, on
-the other hand, to attract such applications. Even, if you
-thought it desirable, you might admit purchasers from other
-classes than those having right of burial in your municipal
-Cemetery;&mdash;in short, you might manage it commercially,
-with a view to profit, looking to its proceeds for covering
-many expenses of the general establishment.</p>
-
-<p>With respect to the ordinary arrangement of your ground
-for public purposes, and the distribution of burials therein,
-you may estimate that, taking one grave with another, and
-allowing for the marginal spaces of each, the average size
-of a grave will be twenty-eight square feet. For illustration&#8217;s
-sake, I will suppose the ground to be laid out in
-plots&mdash;say the third of an acre in extent. Each such plot
-would contain four hundred single graves, mixed adult
-and young, with what foot-paths might be requisite for<span class="pagenum" id="Page293">[293]</span>
-approaching them. The City mortality of twenty years
-(assuming this period to be the ordinary leasehold of a
-grave) might be reckoned at sixty-four thousand deaths;
-for the accommodation of which number there would be
-wanted one hundred and sixty plots of the above-mentioned
-size&mdash;say fifty-four acres of ground. I would propose that
-throughout each line of every such space, adult and infant
-graves should, as far as possible, lie alternately; and that,
-instead of filling all the graves together at stated periods
-(say every twenty years) half of them, taken alternately,
-should be filled at each semi-period&mdash;say every ten years.
-By this arrangement, half the complement of burials would
-take place in each plot, at a time when the decomposition
-of the preceding half-complement had finished itself, so far
-as putrefaction is concerned; and whatever contamination
-of air might be liable to occur under the best-considered
-sanitary arrangement, would certainly be reduced to the
-lowest conceivable amount. Or, as an alternative equal to
-this arrangement for the purposes of health, you might
-adopt the plan of filling in immediate succession all the
-burial-spaces of a plot; provided the surface could then at
-once be devoted to the growth of appropriate vegetation.</p>
-
-<p>Fifty-four acres being then the quantity of ground which
-would suffice, on sound principles, for the ordinary interment
-of your entire annual mortality during a period of
-twenty years; at the expiration of which time (assuming
-your soil to be appropriate) one may reasonably expect that
-the ground will admit of a second similar occupation; and
-so forth in perpetuity: it will be requisite to add a considerable
-allowance of space for other accessory purposes.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, room would be required for the various buildings<span class="pagenum" id="Page294">[294]</span>
-that belong to the institution of a Cemetery: partly for the
-dwelling of such officers as you may require to be there
-resident, partly for the temporary accommodation of persons
-resorting thither for the burial of their friends, partly for the
-religious services of different congregations.<a id="FNanchor95"></a><a href="#Footnote95" class="fnanchor">[95]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote95"><a href="#FNanchor95"><span class="label">[95]</span></a>
-The distinction of the ground into a consecrated and an unconsecrated
-portion, as required by the Act of Parliament, will require
-no addition to its total area; and therefore the proportion which
-these parts should bear to one another need not now be discussed.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Something likewise must be added for such mainways as
-will be wanted along various lines of the burial-ground, for
-the carriage traffic which belongs to funeral ceremonies
-among the richer classes of society, and for other like
-purposes.</p>
-
-<p>Further, I dare say you would think it inexpedient that
-your Cemetery should be entirely without decoration and
-elegance. Fifty-four acres of head-and-foot stones, or the
-same extent of bare mounds, might vulgarise even the aspect
-of death. By the judicious introduction of trees and turf
-and shrubs, of bends and undulations, you would probably
-seek to interrupt the long perspective of so many tombs,
-and, by these artificial resources of planning and planting,
-to enhance the native solemnity of the spot. Amid such
-ornamental portions of your ground might be scattered
-irregularly the various sites of exceptional interment,&mdash;family
-graves, personal graves in perpetuity, long leasehold graves,
-and the like; and the interposition of these large portions
-of comparatively un-occupied soil, with as much appropriate
-vegetation as could conveniently be introduced, might not
-only allow much tasteful decoration of the ground, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page295">[295]</span>
-would likewise conduce to the healthful accomplishment of
-those purposes for which the Cemetery is established.</p>
-
-<p>In respect of these and many other details of your plan,
-you will doubtless be guided by the direct and responsible
-advice of men specially skilled in the subject. I have,
-therefore, confined myself to the mention of those points
-which may determine your judgment merely as to the quantity
-of land required for your purpose.</p>
-
-<p>Without offering any opinion as to the possible claims of
-non-resident parishioners, on which liability I would again
-suggest your obtaining a legal opinion; and without pretending
-to advise what allowance should be made for purely
-decorative purposes; I may yet conclude from such information
-as I have collected, that, with a hundred acres of
-suitable soil at your disposal, you would be amply able to
-meet all legitimate burial-requirements of your population in
-perpetuity, and would likewise (for many years at least) have
-a considerable excess which might be applied to the uses of
-ornamental arrangement.</p>
-
-<p>From what I have said on the influence of soil, in determining
-the period after which burying-grounds may be
-resumed for a second series of interments, it will be obvious
-to you that this condition is an important element in deciding
-the sufficiency of any area for given burial purposes.
-And the site of your Cemetery might be such as somewhat
-to lessen, or greatly to increase, the suggested extent of
-your estimate. It would be fruitless, however, now to detain
-you with any endeavour to trace the several influences
-which different soils exert over animal decay. Such remarks,
-at the present time, could only be addressed to hypothetical
-cases, or stated in the most general form. Therefore, instead<span class="pagenum" id="Page296">[296]</span>
-of attempting this anticipative argument on the subject, I
-hold myself ready to report to you, specifically, on the suitableness
-of whatever soil may be proposed to you for the
-purposes of your Cemetery.<a id="FNanchor96"></a><a href="#Footnote96" class="fnanchor">[96]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote96"><a href="#FNanchor96"><span class="label">[96]</span></a>
-For similar reasons, I defer any discussion of the depth at which
-bodies may most properly be deposited in the ground. The thickness
-of superjacent soil, which will deodorise, before their escape,
-the gaseous products of any given decomposing mass, or which will
-retain these gases more or less permanently in combination, varies
-most importantly with certain chemical and mechanical qualities of
-the soil: and on these it would be useless to dwell by anticipation.
-For accurate results, it may be necessary, after the selection of a
-site and during its preparation, to institute experiments on the
-subject.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>There is yet one other consideration which may affect the
-extent of your purchase. The law restricts you from approaching
-within 200 yards of any dwelling-house, without
-the previous written consent of its owner, lessee, and occupier.
-But there is no law restricting the nearness within
-which any builder may approach your wall with his design
-for new habitations; and it might easily occur to you, within
-a short time of establishing your Cemetery, to find a new
-town growing in close proximity around it. If there be any
-meaning and value in the clause, which forbids your undue
-approach to inhabited houses&mdash;if it truly represent that this
-approach would be a sanitary evil, then obviously the law is
-deficient in the respect adverted to. It would be in your
-power to guarantee the continuance of a belt of unoccupied
-ground, as an immediate circuit to your Cemetery, in either
-of two ways:&mdash;either, namely, you might purchase a considerable
-extent of ground beyond the actual requirements
-of your Cemetery, might devote its central hundred acres to<span class="pagenum" id="Page297">[297]</span>
-interment, and might let its remaining circumference for
-agricultural purposes; or, if you were fortunate enough to
-be treating for the central portion of some considerable
-estate, you might stipulate, as a condition of purchase, that
-no building should be reared within such distance of the
-wall of your Cemetery, as you, on due consideration, may
-deem fit.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">II. In the provision of a Cemetery, it is required by the
-Act of Parliament, that &#8216;the Burial-Board shall have
-reference to the convenience of access thereto from the
-Parish or Parishes for which the same is provided;&#8217; and
-it is legalised, that &#8216;any Burial-Board may make such
-arrangements as they may from time to time think fit, for
-facilitating the conveyance of the Bodies of the Dead from
-the Parish, or the place of Death, to the Burial-ground
-which shall be provided.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>It cannot but be obvious to you, that the choice of a site
-for your Cemetery might be such as to interpose very
-serious obstacles in the way of interment, even for the
-richest classes; and under the most favorable circumstances,
-the removal of the dead to a distance of some miles from
-their previous residence, cannot but threaten serious difficulty
-to the poor. Assuming&mdash;what various conditions of
-the Act of Parliament render almost inevitable, that your
-Cemetery must be distant at least six miles from the centre
-of the City, the present funeral charges can hardly be
-maintained without increase, if the traffic is to be conducted
-on the same principles as heretofore. The price for which<span class="pagenum" id="Page298">[298]</span>
-an artisan could procure a decent funeral for his wife or
-child, within a stone&#8217;s throw of his door, will unavoidably
-be augmented by every mile you add to the distance, if the
-conveyance is still to depend on the old means and arrangements.</p>
-
-<p>When I consider the classes of persons likely, as inhabitants
-of the City, to claim interment in your Cemetery&mdash;classes,
-among which the predominance of narrow, if not
-necessitous, circumstances will be frequent; when, for
-instance, in a year&#8217;s official returns, I see that artisans and
-paupers make more than two-thirds of your entire classified
-mortality; I cannot but think this aspect of the matter a
-very important one. From some years&#8217; experience of your
-death-register, I should say that, of City funerals, there
-would not be one in ten where the friends could afford to
-disregard an additional expenditure of half a guinea;
-and, in the majority of instances, I am persuaded that a
-smaller addition would be enough to cause inconvenience
-and distress. It therefore seems to me certain, that your
-plan for extramural sepulture, however perfect at all
-other points, might either entirely fail of its purpose,
-or become cruelly oppressive to the poor, by the simple
-expensiveness of approaching the burial-place. And I
-suppose it was in anticipation of the difficulties here
-adverted to, that the framers of the Metropolitan Burials
-Act introduced the permissive clause, which I just quoted,
-empowering Burial-Boards &#8216;to facilitate the conveyance&#8217;
-of the dead, and thus virtually rendering them responsible,
-so far as the poorer classes are concerned, for the cheapness
-and efficiency of such conveyance.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page299">[299]</span></p>
-
-<p>I would therefore submit, that in your decision as to the
-site of your Cemetery, so soon as the indispensable conditions
-of appropriate soil are given, the first point to
-examine is accessibility; that the spot to be chosen should
-have, in addition to its carriage roads, the utmost facility
-of railway approach; and that, for those with whom small
-differences of price are an important consideration, you
-should be able to guarantee a rate of transport for coffin
-and mourners, not in excess of existing charges.</p>
-
-<p>From observation of arrangements which have lately
-been made with Railway-Companies by the Directors of
-Cemeteries, and from inquiry of persons engaged in such
-undertakings, I entertain little doubt that you might make
-a contract to the following effect with the authorities of
-any line convenient for your purpose&mdash;viz., that every
-day, at a fixed hour, there should be a train, or some portion
-of a train, exclusively adapted to the funeral purposes
-of the poorer classes; that for this train there should be
-issued funeral tickets, franking the conveyance of a coffin
-with some stated number of mourners, who should also be
-entitled to return; that the introduction of funeral traffic
-should be by a special entrance, and its exit at a special
-terminus.</p>
-
-<p>Such contract supposed,&mdash;in connexion with this funeral
-train, you might further arrange to maintain public
-hearses; which, at the option of persons concerned, and
-on due requisition being made, should convey any coffin
-from its former home to the railway terminus; and which
-again, if necessary, at the distal station, should complete
-its conveyance to the grave. This facility might even be
-extended, if the distances were considerable, to the similar<span class="pagenum" id="Page300">[300]</span>
-conveyance of a certain number of mourners, with the
-undertaker in charge of their procession.</p>
-
-<p>Also, if desirable, it could no doubt be arranged, with a
-view to economy, that the undertaker&#8217;s responsibility for a
-funeral should terminate at the railway terminus, up to
-which he would have conducted it; and that its reception
-at the distal station should be entrusted to servants of your
-Cemetery, who would then fulfil all remaining duties in
-respect of it.</p>
-
-<p>Arrangements to the above effect would be much simplified
-in working, and their general adoption much promoted,
-if all disbursements for funeral tickets, and for such other
-facilitations of conveyance as I have adverted to, were made
-by your Burial-Board,&mdash;their cost to be included in an uniform
-Cemetery fee; so that the friends of the deceased, after
-paying for his grave, should, without further payment, be
-entitled, if they desired it, to claim conveyance for his
-coffin from home to the Cemetery, and for themselves (in
-stated number) by a funeral ticket, at least for the railway
-portion of their transit. Thus to have one single and inclusive
-price for all that belongs to the new system&mdash;for the
-extramural grave, namely, and for conveyance thereto,
-would enable your Burial-Board to maintain its total cost
-at a level within reach of the poorer classes, and probably
-below that of existing prices.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to what I have here suggested, there are
-many other steps which might be taken, if unforeseen circumstances
-should render them necessary, to diminish
-the pressure of new burial-charges on the poor. Time will
-develop, better than one can foretell, the exact operation of
-our reformed system; and for such inconveniences as it<span class="pagenum" id="Page301">[301]</span>
-may bring, you will have no difficulty, I think, in finding
-appropriate cures. Nor could it be otherwise than easy, if
-you thought it desirable, to extend to the comparatively few
-funerals of wealthier classes which occur from within the
-City of London, those same arrangements for facilitating
-conveyance, which I have here deemed it requisite to
-consider only in their relation to the poor.</p>
-
-<p>For the latter, it has seemed indispensable that your
-scheme should provide assistance, equivalent at least to the
-difficulty which its adoption must occasion them. Beyond
-this, I believe you would wish to disturb as little as possible
-the ordinary routine of interment; and I have aimed, therefore,
-at suggesting assistance only in such kind, and in such
-degree, as may least interfere with any interests of trade,
-least derange any established habits, least offend any prejudices
-of the people.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">III. There is no part of the subject which I have considered
-with more anxiety than that which relates to delays of
-interment, and to the prolonged keeping of dead bodies in
-the rooms of their living kindred.</p>
-
-<p>Evils arising in this source are unknown to the rich.
-Soldered in its leaden coffin, on tressels in some separate
-and spacious room, a corpse may await the convenience of
-survivors with little detriment to their atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p>Not so in the poor man&#8217;s dwelling. The sides of a
-wooden coffin, often imperfectly joined, are at best all that
-divide the decomposition of the dead from the respiration of
-the living. A room, tenanted night and day by the family<span class="pagenum" id="Page302">[302]</span>
-of mourners, likewise contains the remains of the dead.
-For some days the coffin is unclosed. The bare corpse lies
-there amid the living; beside them in their sleep; before
-them at their meals.</p>
-
-<p>The death perhaps has occurred on a Wednesday or
-Thursday; the next Sunday is thought too early for the
-funeral; the body remains unburied till the Sunday week.
-Summer or winter makes little difference to this detention:
-nor is there sufficient knowledge on the subject, among the
-poorer population, for alarm to be excited even by the concurrence
-of infectious disease in a room so hurtfully
-occupied.</p>
-
-<p>I have no means of telling you, with statistical precision,
-in how many of your annual deaths the corpse is detained in
-dangerous proximity to the living. But I have already
-quoted an official classification of deaths, by which it would
-appear that more than two-thirds of your deaths are of the
-artisan class or below it. Among them at least, it would be
-exceptional for the corpse to have a room to itself. On an
-average, then, there would probably be lying within the City
-at any moment, from thirty to forty dead bodies in rooms
-tenanted by living persons.</p>
-
-<p>This very serious evil is well known to all persons who
-have taken an interest in the sanitary advancement of the
-poor; and ineffectual endeavours have been made for its
-diminution. The law does indeed empower your Officer of
-Health, under certain circumstances, to order the removal
-of a corpse from any inhabited room. And, under the
-Nuisances Removal Act, the General Board of Health may
-be authorised, during times of epidemic disease, to issue
-directions and regulations for the speedy interment of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page303">[303]</span>
-dead. Both laws have remained inoperative, and are likely
-to remain so.</p>
-
-<p>If one were starting anew&mdash;legislating for a people
-with unformed habits, nothing might be easier than to
-devise regulations of a perfect kind with regard to the sanitary
-management of the dead. But our case is widely different.
-The evils against which we have to contend are
-among the deepliest-rooted habits of the country. In
-defence of what exists there are many stupid and ignorant
-prejudices: but, interwoven with these are feelings of tenderness
-and affection, to which all consideration and reverence
-are due;&mdash;feelings which would be shocked and outraged by
-any abrupt endeavour to reduce the care of the dead to a
-system of fixed regulations.</p>
-
-<p>For myself, having the deepest sense of the evil in question,
-and having officially the power to order the removal of
-the dead, I may repeat that I have never yet exercised my
-authority. Practically speaking, I can hardly conceive an
-instance in which I should attempt to do so. It would
-require the strongest case that could be shown of actual
-mischief in progress&mdash;of disease and death multiplied day
-by day through the presence of some particular dead body,
-to justify interference even in that single instance.
-Nothing like the operation of a general law would be tolerated;&mdash;nothing
-like including the dead in a compulsory
-plan of hygienic police.</p>
-
-<p>After very careful consideration of the subject, I may
-confess myself even more impressed with its difficulties
-than when I first began to give it my attention; and in the
-few suggestions which follow I cannot pretend to do more
-than intimate where, in my opinion, a beginning may usefully<span class="pagenum" id="Page304">[304]</span>
-be made towards an improvement which it will take
-many years to accomplish.</p>
-
-<p>Legislative remedies, proposed for the evils which I am
-bringing under your notice, have been of two kinds&mdash;viz.,
-<i>first</i>, to restrict the time during which it should be lawful
-to keep a body unburied; <i>secondly</i>, to promote the use of
-reception-houses (as they have been called) whither bodies
-might be removed from within all dwelling-places, and be
-kept under certain regulations during the days preceding
-their interment.</p>
-
-<p>As regards the first point;&mdash;there are many foreign
-countries (and even some parts of the United Kingdom)
-where either law or custom has made it imperative to bury
-within two, three, or four days of death. Our habit, unfortunately,
-is to keep the corpse unburied for twice as
-long. A week may probably be considered our medium
-interval between death and interment; and with this
-delay, I need hardly tell you, the body becomes putrid&mdash;sometimes
-intensely so, before the time for its removal
-arrives.</p>
-
-<p>Among the wealthier classes, as I have said, this delay is
-practically unimportant; except in so far as every repetition
-maintains the pernicious custom. Scarcely on account of
-any risk arising to themselves in emanations from the dead,
-but mainly for the sake of influence and example, would
-one wish the educated classes of the community to adopt
-the usage of earlier burial. Our present practice is upheld
-by no law of necessity; nor for the most part does it represent
-any extravagance of grief, or fond reluctance of separation.
-Chiefly it subsists by our indolent acquiescence in a<span class="pagenum" id="Page305">[305]</span>
-habit, which former prejudices and former exigencies
-established. Fears of premature interment, which had
-much to do with it, are now seldom spoken of but with a
-smile. The longer interval, once rightly insisted on as
-necessary for the gathering of distant friends, has now, in
-the progress of events, become absurdly excessive: in a
-vast majority of cases, all whose presence is needed, live
-within a narrow circle; and the more distant mourner, who,
-fifty years ago, would have spent several days in coming
-from Paris or Edinburgh, can now finish his journey in
-twelve hours. It is much to be wished that, under these
-changed circumstances, an altered practice might ensue in
-the upper classes of society, fixing their time of burial
-within three or four days of death. Such example of
-wealthier neighbours, aided by greater enlightenment and
-education among themselves, would greatly tend to detach
-the poor from many observances and delays, in relation to
-the dead, which, in their narrow dwellings cannot continue
-with impunity.</p>
-
-<p>But, as regards these poorer classes, cannot anything be
-done in connexion with your new arrangements, to abridge
-the period of delay? As for any positive regulation, limiting
-the time during which it should be allowed to retain
-dead bodies in certain dwelling-houses,&mdash;such could only
-be enforced by an extensive organisation of sanitary police,
-which you would have to call into existence for the purpose,
-and which, in the present state of public opinion,
-would encounter insurmountable difficulties on every occasion
-of its authoritative interference.</p>
-
-<p>It is by indirect means and inducements alone, that I can
-hope at present to effect the desired alteration; and by<span class="pagenum" id="Page306">[306]</span>
-them, I think, something can be ensured toward shortening
-the delays of interment.</p>
-
-<p>First, I believe that everything which cheapens the cost
-of burial, will conduce to such a result; for, among the
-poor, one considerable cause of procrastination must often
-be the immediate absence of money. The plan of conveyance
-and payment which I have suggested, would at least
-ensure you against any increase of this difficulty, and might
-readily be applied to diminish it. For, under such a system
-of single payment for grave and conveyance, it would
-be practicable, and, I think, most advantageous, to fix two
-prices, with a difference of at least five shillings between
-them; to charge the lower fee whenever the funeral should
-occur within eighty hours of death, the higher whenever
-this period should be exceeded. If, by the general adoption
-of the former alternative, the Cemetery receipts should
-be diminished in respect of artisan funerals, even to the
-utmost extent&mdash;say five or six hundred pounds per annum&mdash;this
-money, or much more, would have been advantageously
-expended in purchasing so great a reform. If, on the contrary,
-the immediate option of the working classes should
-be in favour of continuing a system so injurious to themselves
-and to their neighbours, there would be no injustice
-in leaving them the incumbrance of a cost, from which it
-would require only their own will to escape. The difference
-of price would soon be recognised as a municipal tax on
-delays of interment;&mdash;a tax, rendered legitimate by the public
-evil which it is designed to correct, and guarded against
-remonstrance, because any man may avoid it who will.
-And since the delays in question often arise in a passive
-habit of the people, founded on no deliberate intention or
-reason, I cannot but believe that a well-marked difference<span class="pagenum" id="Page307">[307]</span>
-of fee would, as it were, startle the poor into considering
-the question, which would come to be of daily argument in
-their houses:&mdash;&#8216;Is it worth while that our funeral cost
-should be increased by the amount of one or two days
-wages, in order that we may retain within our dwelling-rooms
-four days longer, that which every one tells us is
-hurtful to ourselves and to others?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>It has been suggested to me, that many delays occur
-owing to Sunday being considered specially as a funeral
-day among the labouring classes; that an equal distribution
-of burials over the week would be preferable to this
-waiting for a particular day; and that the closure of your
-Cemetery on Sundays might accordingly be beneficial for the
-purposes under consideration. Many arguments will doubtless
-occur to you, both for and against the desirability of
-Sunday interments; but this probably may be regarded as
-a point of detail, more fitly to be considered when your
-scheme is complete, or even when it has actually given
-you some experience of its operation.</p>
-
-<p>As regards the second point adverted to&mdash;the establishment
-of special reception-houses for the dead, I do not
-hesitate to say that, if they could be brought into general
-use, their institution would confer great advantages on the
-poor. But against this event, at least as an immediate
-one, I grieve to see strong probabilities.</p>
-
-<p>A first proposal made to some mourning household, that
-they should trust to strangers&#8217; hands the custody of their
-unburied dead, would in most instances greatly and suddenly
-clash with their customs, and prejudices, and affections.
-Whatever success you might have in conquering
-this difficulty would of necessity be slow: and my practical
-familiarity with the poorer classes makes me so little hopeful<span class="pagenum" id="Page308">[308]</span>
-of their immediate acquiescence in the plan, that I
-should hardly feel justified in urging you to incur any very
-large expense, or to embarrass yourselves at starting with
-any elaborate machinery, for the sake of so scanty an
-expectation.</p>
-
-<p>The reception-houses of Germany, as you probably
-know, are founded with a double intention; partly for
-the purpose which I am here chiefly considering&mdash;that the
-dead may be removed from an injurious contiguity to the
-living; partly also, that the bodies may be vigilantly
-observed, in case of suspended animation. With the latter
-view, many of them are specially furnished and specially
-officered. In that at Frankfort, for instance, each body is
-placed in a separate, warmed and ventilated cell; cords are
-attached to the fingers in such manner that the slightest
-movement occasions the ringing of an alarum; night and
-day watch is kept in a central apartment which looks into
-each cell, and has the several alarum-bells hung round it;
-adjacent is a room designed for acts of resuscitation, with
-bath, galvanic apparatus and the like, always in readiness
-for instant use; and, so long as any corpse lies within the
-reception-house, the medical superintendent of the establishment
-never goes beyond its walls. Dr. Sutherland,
-whose report to the General Board of Health is full of
-interesting information on the burial-institutions of the
-Continent, praises the completeness and ingenuity of these
-contrivances; adding, however, that &#8216;after careful inquiry
-at all the cities where he found them to exist, he could not
-learn that any case of resuscitation had as yet occurred.&#8217;
-I may add, too, as regards my own personal experience in
-this country, that, with extensive opportunities, it has
-never happened to me, either to see any case of suspended<span class="pagenum" id="Page309">[309]</span>
-animation where doubts of death and question of interment
-could arise, nor to hear in professional circles of any such
-occurrence, I therefore think it quite unnecessary to recommend
-any arrangement of reception-houses, with reference
-to the resuscitation of persons apparently dead.</p>
-
-<p>The object for which I would desire their institution, is
-exclusively that of receiving dead bodies out of the houses
-of the poor, in order to mitigate those evils which arise in
-prolonged retention of the corpse. That this object is in
-itself very desirable, and that under the prevalence of
-epidemic disease its accomplishment might be of urgent
-necessity, you will not doubt: and the responsibility for
-fulfilling it&mdash;or at least for giving all facilities to its fulfilment,
-is so distinctly imposed on you by the letter and
-spirit of the law, that you will probably wish to take measures
-accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>The extent, then, to which my information on the subject
-would lead me to recommend provision to be made, is this:
-I would advise that accommodation of an appropriate character
-(savouring in style rather of an ecclesiastical construction,
-than of the workhouse or dissecting-room) be arranged
-for the reception of fifty coffins. Tor this purpose I would
-suggest&mdash;not the building of several separate reception-houses
-within the City of London, in order to their being
-respectively adjacent to the portions of population which
-might use them,&mdash;but rather the establishment of one only,
-and that on the site of your Cemetery. Thus the conveyance
-of bodies which would take place under your auspices,
-might be made with greater economy, since it could work
-into the plan I have already suggested. The advantage of
-having only a single edifice (especially since its use is
-likely to be limited) and of including its superintendence in<span class="pagenum" id="Page310">[310]</span>
-the general organisation of your Cemetery, cannot be
-questioned. And it seems to me, likewise, that a building
-designed for the reception of many dead bodies, cannot
-conveniently be established in the heart of the City.</p>
-
-<p>I would of course recommend that the use of this building
-should be entirely optional with the poor, and that its
-advantages should be allowed gratuitously to persons burying
-in your ground: so that any one who, in respect of his
-cemetery-fee, would be entitled to have a corpse conveyed
-thither for funeral purposes, might claim this conveyance
-as soon as he chose after the occurrence of death, and
-might have the coffin kept with all proper formalities in
-the reception-house, till the moment fixed for its interment.</p>
-
-<p>On further particulars connected with this part of your
-arrangements, I do not think it requisite at present to
-dwell; especially because, while I regard the establishment
-of a reception-house to be quite indispensable to the complete
-fulfilment of your new responsibilities, I still look
-upon it as an institution to be gradually developed in the
-course of years, and according to circumstances yet undetermined,
-rather than as something which ought at once to
-assume its permanent character and proportions.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">Here, too, in concluding this introductory report, I may
-observe that I have endeavoured as far as possible to avoid
-encumbering it with detail. For myself, in its construction,
-I have thought it indispensable to pursue the subject
-into minuter ramifications, to consider a vast number of
-circumstances here scarcely mentioned, to make myself
-acquainted with the burial customs of other countries, to<span class="pagenum" id="Page311">[311]</span>
-review a great variety of opinions and arguments which
-have been advanced on the several matters alluded to, and
-to consult with persons practically versed in them. But to
-have brought all this material before you, would have prolonged
-my report to an inconvenient extent with no proportionate
-utility.</p>
-
-<p>Further, as regards these details of the subject, there are
-many parts on which I cannot address you with the confidence
-that belongs to personal knowledge. The general
-principles which I have set before you, do indeed lie within
-range of my official and professional observation. But the
-next stage of your inquiry relates to matters of special
-pursuit with which I am only indirectly conversant: and
-whatever information I may have compiled for myself from
-other sources, you will probably best obtain at first hand.
-Practical experience in the construction and working of
-Cemeteries has now for many years been the growing knowledge
-of persons connected with their administration by ties
-of business, or by official appointment. In many instances
-it has been dearly purchased, and notorious failures have
-arisen from its absence. Regard being had to the magnitude
-of your undertaking&mdash;hitherto unprecedented in the
-country, and to the immense interests involved in your success,
-I cannot but earnestly hope that such experience may
-be made available for your information.</p>
-
-<p>At an early period you will have to determine what
-appointments will be requisite, with a view to the architectural
-and other designs of your cemetery, to its economical
-planning and decorations, to the superintendence of its
-daily working, to its financial management, to the conveyance
-of bodies, and to all intramural organisation connected
-therewith. Minute details will be best considered when<span class="pagenum" id="Page312">[312]</span>
-these appointments are made, and when you will naturally
-have the benefit of such practical experience as may best
-assist your deliberations.</p>
-
-<p>For the task on which you are engaged extends, I need
-hardly say, far beyond the purchase of certain acres for your
-burial-ground. It implies for its completion, that you shall
-possess an adequate plan on which the interment of your
-population may be managed during many succeeding generations;
-a plan constructed, first of all, with entire regard
-to the general good of the public, and next, with as little
-violence as may be to those habits, prejudices, and interests,
-which are involved in the present system of interment.</p>
-
-<p>The construction of such a plan constitutes a very large
-question of municipal policy;&mdash;one which, because of its
-solemn subject, and because of the degree in which human
-feelings and affections are involved in it, requires to be
-handled with peculiar discretion and delicacy; but which
-not the less requires to be contemplated in a large and comprehensive
-manner.</p>
-
-<p>I have therefore thought I should best fulfil the object of
-your reference, by bringing before you those general principles
-which lie at the root of all minute considerations: in
-order that, having first determined on them, and having taken
-one collective view of the subject, you may better know at
-what time, and in what order, and to what extent, you would
-wish the minor details to be developed for your information.</p>
-
-<div class="reportsig">
-
-<p class="center highline3">I have the honour,<br />
-<span class="padl6">&amp;c. &amp;c.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center highline3 fsize90">THE END.</p>
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-</p>
-
-</div><!--booklist-->
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="tnbot" id="TN">
-
-<h2>Transcriber&#8217;s Notes</h2>
-
-<p>Inconsistencies in spelling, lay-out, hyphenation, etc. (including the use of &middot; and . as decimal points), and unusual spelling
-have been retained, except as mentioned below.</p>
-
-<p>In some places, the numbering of paragraphs (Roman or Arabic numbers) is incomplete: some numbers are missing. This has been
-retained.</p>
-
-<p>References to the tables are not always correct: for this collection,
-the author has combined some of the tables originally contained in the
-individual reports in the Appendices. Where possible, hyperlinks have
-been provided to the combined tables.</p>
-
-<p>Depending on the hard- and software used and their settings, not all elements may display as intended. The larger
-tables are best viewed in a wide browser window.</p>
-
-<p>Page 80, footnote [32]: the hyperlink points to the relevant footnote [34] rather than to the indicated page 84.</p>
-
-<p>Page 87/88 ff. and footnote [35]: the author appears to refer variously to the summary table in Appendix No. IX.
-(cf. the years covered) and to the detailed table on page 167 (cf. the column numbers); where possible, appropriate
-hyperlinks have been added.</p>
-
-<p>Page 184, pur-ventilation: as printed in the original work.</p>
-
-<p class="highline15"><b>Changes made:</b></p>
-
-<p>Some missing punctuation has been added silently; some obvious typographical errors have been corrected silently.</p>
-
-<div class="hh">
-<p>Some of the larger tables have been included as images.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Footnotes have been moved to under the paragraph or table where they are referenced.</p>
-
-<p>Page 5, Table of Contents: Entry &#8220;Appendix of Tables ...&#8221; inserted.</p>
-
-<p>Page 22: of about five tf ings per week changed to of about five shillings per week.</p>
-
-<p>Page 65: &#8217; added after ... Court may establish.</p>
-
-<p>Page 140: ... in steam-vessels.&#8221; changed to ... in steam-vessels.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Page 167: some ellipses added where they were lacking; sub-total 483 added (last column, bottom row).</p>
-
-<p>Page 207: py&#339;mia changed to py&aelig;mia.</p>
-
-<p>Page 270, second column Saint Botolph, row Sum of the four quarters: 22 changed to 224; last column, row quarter II,
-totals: 42 changed to 24.</p>
-
-<p>Page 271, last column West London Union Workhouse, row quarter III: 9 changed to 8.</p>
-
-<p>Page 277, bottom row, column West London Union Workhouse: 123 changed to 183.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
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