Page 4 - The Health OF Redditch
P. 4
The Health Of Reditch
Industrialisation meant more people moved to the rapidly expanding cities and towns, with badly
built houses and inadequate facilities. This state of affairs was evident in Redditch. In the 1840s
the population of Redditch quickly increased when the new large mills were powered by steam
and not water. In 1859 the railway line was extended from Barnt Green to Redditch, so that
deliveries to and from the town were made easier. The developing expertise and fame of the
Redditch firms attracted workers from the West Midlands, and this contributed to the expansion
of the town. In 1801 the population of Redditch was estimated at just over a thousand, but by
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1841 it had grown to 3,314, by 1871 it was 6,737, and by 1901 13,493.
In 1832 many of the local Boards of Health seem to have examined the cleanliness of their
parishes, and cleared•‘nuisances’•off•the•streets.•‘Nuisance’ was a euphemism for human and
animal effluent, rubbish, dead animals, household waste, rotting vegetables and all other noxious
substances which were to be found in the streets. The Public Health Act of 1875
defined•‘nuisances’•as•those•things•that•were•‘injurious•to•health’•that•should•be•removed.
Nuisances included foul pools, ditch, gutters, watercourses, privies, cesspools, and drains, as
well as overcrowded houses, and dirty, unventilated workplaces. Despite this legislation, in
1891 one• of• the• local• newspapers• described• how• Redditch• was• still• ‘insanitary•Redditch’.
The following pages show how Redditch coped with various diseases and lack of appropriate
sanitation in the nineteenth century. They also include the development of the Redditch
District Nursing Association, the Smallwood Hospital in Redditch, and the Bromsgrove,
Droitwich and Redditch Hospital, an isolation hospital in Bromsgrove.
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Land, N. (1985) The History of Redditch and the Locality. Studley, K. A. F. Brewin Books.
Page: 4 of 26 Angela Webster

