Page 9 - The Health OF Redditch
P. 9

The Health Of Reditch




               had sent an order constituting a Board of Health for Tardebigge.  The Minutes of the Tardebigge
               Board revealed that, despite the opposition of the earlier public meeting the Earl of Plymouth
               had written to the Privy Council on 16 September and the Central Board of Health had replied
               with the order on 21 September.


               People mentioned in the Tardebigg Minutes of the Local Board of Health in 1832.

               Local  Boards  of  Health  were  meant  to  include  medical  practitioners,  local  magistrates,
                                                 14
               clergymen and leading inhabitants.
               Some members of the Board of Health


               The Earl of Plymouth was Other Archer. The Rev. Lord Aston (1769-1845) was the Vicar of
               Tardebigge. He succeeded his father as Lord Aston of Forfar in 1805.  William Balden was a
               miller at Redditch Mill in 1828 and 1835.  The Rev. John Clayton was based in Redditch in
               1828  and  1835.  Thomas Fowkes was  a  maltster  and  a  retailer  of  beer  in  1842.  William
               Hemming was a magistrate at Foxlydiate House, Tardebigge, and described as gentry in 1842.
               In  1835  Edward Perks  (also  1828)  and  Joseph Reading were  needle  and/or  fish  hook
               manufacturers.  William Field and Henry Milward were needle manufacturers in 1828 and
               1835, as were Charles and Thomas Moore Bartleet in 1839.  By 1842 Thomas Turner was a
               needle maker. Joseph Cresswell was a solicitor in 1828; both he and Edward Browning were
               solicitors in 1835.  William Hollington was a fishing tackle maker in 1828 and 1835, but there
               was also William Hollington, the draper, in 1835.  Richard Rickards was a tin-plate worker in
               1835.  John Osborne, the secretary, was a copper-plate printer, bookseller and stationer and a
               National School master in 1835. Charles Swann was a Redditch factor (agent or dealer) in 1842,
               presumably not to be confused with Charles Swan who was listed in 1828 and 1835 as a needle
               and/or fish hook manufacturer.  John Vincent was a tailor and pawnbroker in 1835.  Alexander
               Pratt, Christopher Royston and Hugh and John Taylor were Redditch surgeons (doctors).    15
               Rob Cordell was the Churchwarden and John Higgs was the Overseer, both for the Warwickshire
               part of the parish of Tardebigg.


               Nurses


               During the first half of the century, anybody could call themselves a nurse or say what they
               did was nursing. Caring for the sick mainly consisted of helping people with daily activities
               which they were not able to do themselves.  Before the introduction of modern techniques of
               diagnosis, this would have been the main way of defining someone as ill, that they were







               14
                  Lancaster B. (1999) The First Croydon Board of Health: 1831-1832, Bull Croydon Nat Hist Sci Soc, 108: 4-6.
               Available at http://www.greig51.freeserve.co.uk/cnhss/bull108c.htm  [Accessed 28 March 2013]
               15
                  Pigot•and•Co.’s•National•Commercial Directory Worcestershire, 1828, 1835; Pigot’s•Directory•of
               Worcestershire, 1842; Repertory of patent inventions and other discoveries 1841, vol. 16, p. 308 (Available at
               books.google.co.uk); Wikipedia.  Those listed in the 1842 directory may not be those mentioned in the 1832
               Minutes as their names were not included in the 1835 directory.




        Angela Webster                                                                             Page:  9  of  26
   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14