Typhoid In Uppingham: Analysis of a Victorian Town and School in Crisis 1875-1877

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After the Public Heath Acts of 1872 and 1875, British local authorities bore statutory obligations to carry out sanitary improvements. Richardson explores public health strategy and central-local government relations during the mid-nineteenth-century, using the experience of Uppingham, England, as a micro-historical case study. Uppingham is a small (and unusually well-documented) market town which contains a boarding school. Despite legal changes enforcing sanitary reform, the town was hit three times by typhoid in 1875-6.Richardson examines the conduct of those involved in town and school, the economic dependence of the former on the latter, and the opposition to higher rates to pay for sanitary improvement by a local ratepayer 'shopocracy'. He compares the sanitary state of the community with others nearby, and Uppingham School with comparable schools of that era. Improvement was often determined by business considerations rather than medical judgments, and local personalities and events frequently drove national policy in practice. This study illuminates wider themes in Victorian public medicine, including the difficulty of diagnosing typhoid before breakthroughs in bacteriological research, the problems local officialdom faced in implementing reform, and the length of time it took London ideas and practice to filter into rural areas.

Author(s): Nigel Richardson
Series: Science and Culture in the Nineteenth Century
Publisher: Pickering & Chatto Ltd
Year: 2008

Language: English
Commentary: 36081
Pages: 289

Acknowledgements......Page 8
List of Figures and Tables......Page 12
List of Abbreviations......Page 14
Notes on the Text......Page 16
Who's Who in the Narrative......Page 18
Introduction......Page 22
1. Town and School, 1875......Page 42
2. Local Society and Local Government......Page 58
3. Local Medicine and Local Doctors......Page 76
4. Typhoid......Page 94
5. Winter 1875–6......Page 112
6. Spring 1876......Page 132
7. Summer 1876......Page 152
8. Autumn, Winter and Spring 1876–7......Page 172
Aftermath and Conclusion......Page 188
Appendix 1......Page 206
Appendix 2......Page 208
Notes......Page 214
Works Cited......Page 266
Index......Page 282