Page 12 - The Health OF Redditch
P. 12

The Health Of Reditch




               Those who survived cholera in 1832    Those in 1841 census


                      rs
               11   M  Hughes child 10ms  John Hughes b. 1831 Red Lion Street
               16   Warner’s•child      Richard•&•Mary•Warner’s•children•are•Maria•b.•1821,•Mary•b.•1826,•and
                                        Joseph b. 1829 Red Lion Street
                      m
               17   W Bennett           b. 1830 Pool Place
                        s
               18   Tho James’s         Ellen•James•if•married•when•16,•b.•1816 Pool Place
                    Wife

                      rs
               19   M  Hughes            Sarah Hughes b. 1806 (Same household as John Hughes) Red Lion Street
               32   Aston’s•daughter     Ann•Aston•b.•1824 Pool Place
                             8yrs  b. 1824



               The Big Pool


               There were also memories of the Big Pool.

                      THE CHOLERA VISITATION OF 1832


                       It broke out suddenly and never at any time extended to any of the surrounding villages nearer
                       than Alcester, with the exception of one solitary case at Sambourne.

                      It must be remembered that the sanitary condition of the town was very different in those days ...
                       there were no local boards then ... [There were] the difficulties an energetic and
                       conscientious doctor would meet with in stirring up the authorities, whose duties it was to attend
                       to those matters, to aid them in their efforts to remove nuisances.
                                  23
                       The Big Pool  as it was called was in a very bad estate, and was the receptacle for all the dead
                       dogs and cats and all the filth of the surrounding houses, and even the sewage of the cottages
                       called•Poley’s•(Paoli’s)•Row•and•other•cottages•in•Red•Lion•Street•was•discharged into it.  Dr.
                       Gaunt considered it to be the cause of all the fevers and other serious diseases that broke out in
                       the little town, and tried hard to get it drained, indeed he said to one old lady, who is yet living,
                       that he would never let the matter drop until this was done.  Next to the Big Pool the worst
                       locality was the neighbourhood of the Round House and the Front Hill, or New End,
                       as it was then called, and it was in that district where there were some of the earliest cases. ... 24

               William Avery also gave a detailed account of the Big Pool, but it was not until 1843 that the
               Big Pool was drained. 25


                       One of the first steps towards the sanitary improvement of the town was commenced on the10 th
                       April, 1843, when the pool opposite the house of Mr. A. G. Baylis was let dry.  This pond was
                       doubtless of great antiquity and had, in its brighter days, served to feed the moat which formerly
                       surrounded the half-timbered•buildings•now•known•as•Salter’s•Yard,•but•which

               23
                  The Big Pool was in the area that was later called Pool Place.
               24
                  Local notes and queries No. 318, Redditch Indicator in Herbert Page (Ed.) (1899) ‘In•memoriam•William
               Avery’; available at Redditch Library.
               25
                  Avery, W. (Ed. A. Bradford) (1999) OLD REDDITCH being an early history of the town (1800-1850).
               Redditch, Hunt End Books.




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