Page 3 - The Health OF Redditch
P. 3

The Health Of Reditch





                INTRODUCTION


                Public Health is concerned with promoting and protecting health and well-being, preventing
                ill-health and prolonging life through the organised efforts of society.  This concern of some
                people was apparent in the 1830s after the spread of cholera in Britain.  The Times on 13
                February 1832 stated that the real causes of the cholera disease were•‘poverty,•bad•living,
                insufficient• clothing,• dirty• streets• and• dwellings,• united• with• occasional• excess’.   On
                receiving the Report to the Leeds Board of Health the Leeds Board of Health came to the
                same conclusion in January 1833:


                       We are of the opinion that the streets in which malignant cholera prevailed most severely were
                        those in which the drainage was most imperfect; and that the state of the general health of the
                        inhabitants would be greatly improved, and the probability of a future visitation from such
                        malignant epidemics diminished, by a general and efficient system of drainage, sewerage and
                        paving, and the enforcement of better regulations as to the cleanliness of the streets. 1


                The findings of the Leeds report were also included in Edwin• Chadwick’s Report on the Sanitary
                Conditions of the Labouring Population of Great Britain, published in 1842. He had surveyed
                different areas around the country and calculated the average life expectancy of people from
                different classes and areas.  He included figures to show that in 1839 for every person who died
                of old age or violence, eight died of specific diseases. This helps explain why during the second
                and third decades of the nineteenth century nearly one infant in three in England failed to reach
                              2
                the age of five.


                Chadwick claimed that people living in the countryside lived far longer than people in towns.
                He compared Rutland, a rural county with no large towns, with the new industrial cities of the
                north. 3


                         Average life expectancy   Professional trades   Tradesmen   Labourers
                         in years
                                Rutland                 52              41          38

                                Leeds                   44              27          19

                                Liverpool               35              22          15

                                Manchester              38              20           17

                                Bolton                  34              23           18

                                             Chadwick’s•findings•published•in•1842





                1
                 Available at http://www.bl.uk/learning/histcitizen/21cc/publichealth/sources/source11/leeds3.html
                [Accessed 26 March 2013]
                2
                 Haley, B. (1978) The Healthy Body and Victorian Culture. Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Press.
                3
                 Available at http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/education/victorianbritain/pdf/healthy.pdf  [Accessed 26
                March 2013]
                Land, N. (1985) The History of Redditch and the Locality. Studley, K. A. F. Brewin Books.



        Angela Webster                                                                             Page:  3  of  26
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