REPORT ON THE CHOLERA OUTBREAK IN THE PARISH OF ST. JAMES, WESTMINSTER, T ft 7 •ฆ DUMNG THE AUTUMN OF 1854. ฆ -? ซri ฆ "... , if. ฆv 0 y PRESENTED TO THE VESTRY liV ฎ]k CJHrlmt |ttqxtirjr (fcammxtttt JULY 1855. : J. CHURCHILL, NEW BURLINGTON STREET. 1855. CONTENTS. Armey VJC V\J53^C INTRODUCTION. GENEBAL EEPOET. DR. SNOW'S REPORT. THE REV. 11. WHITEHEAD'S REPORT. MR. YORK'S REPORT. ; APPENDIX. DESCRIPTION OF MAP. This Map is the same as that which illustrates the Report of Messrs. Fraser, Ludlow and Hughes on the Cholera outbreak in this district. It is founded on the Map published in Mr. Cooper's Report to the Commissioners of Sewers ; but St. Anne's Court and the neighbourhood have been added to it, and the fatal attacks which occurred in the district throughout the whole epidemic have been inserted in their respective localities where these could be accurately determined. Further explanations are given on the Map. INTRODUCTION. " +ฆ ฆ" " The Cholera Inquiry Committee appointed by the Vestry of St. James's, Westminster, upon the motion of Dr. Lankester, seconded by Mr. Joseph Brown, " for the purpose of " investigating the causes, arising out of the " sanitary condition of the Parish, of the late " outbreak of Cholera in the districts of Golden " Square and Berwick Street," entered upon its duties on November 25th, 1854; and, having held altogether fourteen meetings, completed its labours on July 25th, 1855, by adopting the accompanying Report. Including certain members added at different times to its original number, the Committee finally consisted of the following Gentlemen :—: — Messrs. Crane and Rice, the Churchwardens. *Rev. T. Beames. *Dr. King. Mr. Bidgood. Mr. Brown. *Mr. French. Mr. Geesin. Mr. Harrison. *Mr. James. Dr. Lankester. *Mr. Marshall. *Mr. Sandford. *Dr. Snow. Mr. Watkins. *Rev. H.Whitehead. * Subsequently added to tho Committee as originally appointed. 4 Mr. York was requested to undertake the duties of Secretary. For the purposes of this inquiry the Committee availed itself of the following sources of information. 1. — The Report of the Committee of Health and Sanitary Improvement appointed by the Vestry of St. James's in 1848. 2.— A Report by Mr. E. Cooper to the Metropolitan Commissioners of Sewers on the state of the Drainage in the localities affected by Cholera, containing a map of the Sewers, &c, September 1854. 3. — The Rev. Henry Whitehcad's narrative, entitled " The Cholera in Berwick Street/ 1854. 4.— Report on the Well Waters of the Parish of St. James, by Dr. Lankester, 1854. s.— Dr. Sutherland's Report on Epidemic Cholera in the Metropolis in 1854, published in January 1855. G. — Various Returns issued under the authority of the Registrar-G eneral. Besides consulting these published documents, the Committee obtained from the office of the Registrar-General a Return of the House-pojmlation in the districts of Golden Square and Berwick Street, according to the Census of 1851 ; and from the local Registers, through Mr. Buzzard the Vestry Clerk, y as well as from various Hospitals, documents to aid in forming an estimate of the extent and severity of the epidemic. An early application was also made to Sir B. Hall, the President of the General Board of Health, for such information as might he at his disposal, relating to the Cholera outhreak in this Parish, but, principally on the ground that investigations of this kind were more valuable when independent, the President did not comply with this request. More recently, in conjunction with Messrs. Fraser and Ludlow, two of the local Inspectors appointed by the Board, a deputation from the Committee endeavoured to construct as correct a chart of the deaths in the affected districts as could be made. By permission of the Board, the Committee has been enabled to obtain from the Lithographers some impressions of this map to illustrate the present Report. The first attempt of the Committee to collect local information in the Cholera districts was by means of a printed Inquiry Return distributed to each house, with a request that it might be filled up by the occupier. This measure did not produce the anticipated results, At the desire of the Committee, Dr. Snow, 6 on December 12th, 1854, laid before it a Report, containing an account of his researches already made on the supposed influence of the well water from the public pump in Broad Street, in producing the Cholera outbreak in its neighbourhood. The Committee have considered this document sufficiently important to be added at length to its Report. A subsequent attempt to obtain local information, by a house to house visitation, was more successful. By the assistance of a printed form, or " Visitors' Inquiry List," prepared by Drs. King, Lankester, and Snow, the following streets were visited by the undermentioned members of the Committee : — The Rev. Thomas Beames, Mr. James, Dr. King, Dr. Lankester, Mr. Marshall, Mr. Sandford, Dr. Snow, and the Rev. H. Whitehead, viz. : — Broad Street, Marshall Street, Bentinck Street, part of Berwick Street, Kemp's Court, Peter Street, Green's Court, Husband Street, Hopkins Street, New Street, Pulteney Court, Cambridge Street, and part of Silver Street, containing in all 3 1 6 houses. This " Visitors' Inquiry List," a copy of which will be found in the Appendix, contained twenty-two heads or subjects of investigation, on each of which exact information 7 was desired. The lateness of the inquiry, — the departure of many families from the neighbourhood, — the imperfect recollection of some, — the reluctance to reply on the part of others, — and the impossibility of underground research, — are circumstances which all interfered with the completeness of this local investigation. Its results, which may serve as a guide in any subsequent inspection, have been tabulated by the Secretary, in a form corresponding with that adopted by the Committee of Health and Sanitary Improvement in 1848. In the hands of one member of the Committee, the Rev. H. Whitehead, whose previous knowledge of the district both before and during the epidemic, owing to his position as Curate of St. Luke's, Berwick Street, gave him unusual advantages, the Visitors' Inquiry elaborated itself into a most minute and painstaking investigation of a principal street, situated in the very heart of the locality affected. His special Report upon Broad Street the Committee have thought it necessary to append at length. In consequence of facts ascertained by Mr. Whitehead, instructions were given to t Secretary, Mr. York, — whose practical rience entitles his evidence to complete 8 acceptance, — to inspect the cesspool and drains of the house, No. 40, in Broad Street, close to which the public pump is situated, and also to open and examine the well itself and the soil intervening between it and the drains and cesspool. Mr. York's statement, accompanied by a plan and section, is also annexed to this Report. The analysis of six specimens of surface well water, the composition of which it was desirable to ascertain, was conducted in the Birkbeck Laboratory, at University College, by Messrs. Powell, Ormsby, Smith, and Worsley, at the request of Professor Williamson. Lastly, many of the facts and statements in the following pages depend on the authority of individual members of the Committee. The drawing up of the Report was entrusted to Mr. Marshall. It is arranged under the four following heads :—l.: — 1. History of the outbreak. 2. Circumstances attending the outbreak. 3. Hypotheses concerning the outbreak. 4. Recommendations of the Committee to the Parochial Authorities. 9 GENERAL REPORT. HISTOKY OF THE OUTBEEAK. The Parish of St. James, Westminster, occupies an area of 164 statute acres. At the census of 1831, it contained 37,053 inhabitants; in 1841, 37,457; and in 1851, 36,406. Its population may therefore be said to be nearly stationary; the small diminution since 1841 being probably owing to public improvements, especially to those made in connection with the building of the Museum of Economic Geology in Jermyn Street. For the purposes of Registration, the Parish is divided into three sub-districts, viz. St. James's Square sub-district, occupying 85 acres, with a population of 11,469; Golden Square sub-district, extending over 54 acres, and numbering 14,139 inhabitants ; and Berwick Street sub-district, having an extent of 25 acres, and a population of 10,798. Since 1841, the population of St. James's Square sub-district has decreased, whilst that of the other two districts shews a slight increase. The parish is immediately surrounded by the following registration sub-districts : — May Fair and Hanover Square, in St. George's Parish, on the West; All-Souls, Marylebone, on the North; St. 10 Anne's, Soho, oh the East ; and Charing Cross, in St. Martin's-in-the-Fields, on the East and South. 1832. In the first visitation of Cholera in 1832, the parish of St. James, then numbering 600 more inhabitants than in 1851, suffered in only a moderate degree in comparison with many others, and on the whole somewhat later in point of time. The earliest deaths in the parish took place in March, and then the epidemic, subsiding until July, reappeared and continued during August, September and October. The total number of deaths occasioned by it cannot now be determined. About 90 cases fell under the observation of the parochial medical officers, of which number half proved fatal. To these would have to be added the deaths occurring in private practice. On the authority of Messrs. Braine and French, who at that time had medical charge of the Cholera Hospital, it may be stated that among the localities attacked were Peter Street, Hopkins Street, Maidenhead Passage, Pulteney Court, Berwick Street, Wardour Street, Broad Street and Carnaby Street, together with the courts and yards leading out of Great Windmill Street, the neighbourhood of St. James's Market, and also Angel Court and Crown Court, Pall Mall. At this period the general sanitary condition of the parish was doubtless defective ; for attention was not then so strongly directed to questions concerning the public health. At the commencement of 1848, the Committee of Health and Sanitary Improvement 11 detected and exposed, by their house to house visitation, numerous deficiencies in local cleanliness, especially in the public sewerage. In consequence of these inquiries a decided amelioration of such defects was accomplished; and it was a subject of congratulation amongst those who were interested in the health of the parish, that the epidemic of 1848-9, which so speedily followed, was even less severely felt by the inhabitants than the visitation of 1832. 1848-9. During the autumn of 1848 only three deaths from Cholera occurred in St. James's, viz. one each in Berwick Street, Poland Street, and Rupert Street. In the first four months of 1849 no fatal case occurred in the parish, although, from the middle of January to the middle of February, the effects of Cholera were plainly manifested all over London. On the 26th of May, one fatal case happened in Golden Square. In July, five deaths were registered, and the disease, continuing through August and September, proved fatal altogether to 56 persons, viz. 19 belonging to Berwick Street district, 19 to Golden Square district, and 18 to St. James's Square district. Seventeen additional deaths were registered from Diarrhoea. Thus the mortality from Cholera in the whole parish in 58 weeks of 1848-9 was about 15 in 10,000 persons living, whilst the corresponding rate in all London t75, and in the immediately surrounding districts t 46. In St. Anne's, Soho, the relative mortality 12 was 30 to 10,000 persons living; and of 48 deaths which occurred in that parish, to a population of 16,480, only five took place in St. Anne's Court, then containing about 500 inhabitants. This visitation of 1848-9 commenced about the same period in St. James's as in the adjoining parishes, shewing itself earliest in the Golden Square district, next in the Berwick Street, and last in that of St. James's Square, but reaching its height in all three about the same period, and causing its greatest mortality in the weeks ending the Ist and Bth of September, corresponding in this respect with the general result throughout the metropolis. The streets which suffered most were the following :—ln: — In the Berwick Street district, Peter Street (four deaths), Archer Street (two), and Pultcney Place (two); in the Golden Square district, the Workhouse (five inmates), Regent Street (two), South Row (two), and Little Windmill Street (two); in the St. James's Square district, Angel Court (six), Jermyn Street (three), Little St. James's Street (two), Great Windmill Street (two), and Queen's Head Court (two). The rest of the mortality consisted of single deaths in various streets. No fatal case occurred in Broad Street in 1848-9, although a man died of Diarrhoea at No. 0. 1850. Four fatal cases of Cholera are recorded during this year in the following localities : — Silver Street, Carnaby Street, Marshall Street, and Oxford Street. 13 1851. In this year one case is registered in Rupert Street. 1852. A single death is returned at 5, Marshall Street. 1853. During the last four months of 1853, when Cholera for the third time invaded the metropolis, ultimately to become epidemic, several fatal attacks occurred in St. James's parish, as follows : — In August, one case occurred in Great Windmill Street, and another in Bentinck Street. The next death, on October 2nd, was in Poland Street. After a short interval, five cases followed in one week, viz. three in the Workhouse on October 26th and 30th, and November Ist; two in Marlborough Court, October 30th; one in King Street, on the 31st October ; and one in Great Marlborough Street on the Ist November. On the 4th November another fatal attack happened in the Workhouse ; and the last death for the year 1853 was in Blenheim Street, on November 15th. It is important to remember these successive visitations of Cholera in St. James's parish, and especially the presence of the disease during the autumn of 1853 ; for they serve to establish its liability to the inroads of that epidemic, although they entirely failed to prepare its inhabitants for the impending calamity of 1854. 1854. At the commencement of this year, there were but five deaths from Cholera registered throughout the whole of the metropolis dining 14 the month of January; in February, only two, the last being on February 4th. For the eight succeeding weeks no fatal case was registered in London. During the month of April four deaths occurred. Three weeks passed without a death from Cholera, and then four happened in the latter part of May. In the first three weeks of June three deaths occurred, in the fourth week no death. In the first week of July one death was registered, in the second week 5 deaths, in the third 26, in the fourth 133, in the fifth 399 ; and so the numbers kept increasing weekly up to 2,050 in the week ending September 9th, and then diminished again, as shewn in the subjoined table. The mortality from Cholera, in all London, was reduced to 8 in the week terminating the Bth of November. Now, according to the Registrar-General's returns, no death from Cholera took place during last year in St. James's parish until the week ending the sth August, when one fatal case was returned. From this date the Cholera mortality in the parish rose and fell as shewn in the annexed table, in which the corresponding mortality in all I London, and that in London exclusive of St. James's, is also shewn. JulvAug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Sep. Sep. Sep. Sep. Sep. Oct. Oct. 29. 5. 12. 19. 20. 2. 9. 10. 211. .30. 7. 14. London. . . . 133 :i99 044 729 847 1287 2050 1549 1284 754 411 249 London, exelml- > 13y flBg ?17 Sil 12 09 1703 1482 1205 747 410 249 ing St. James sj St. James's. . . 0 1 5 12 0 78 287 07 19 7 1 0 15 Adding to this list one more death which was recorded in the St. James's Square district in the week ending October 21st, the total number of deaths from Cholera registered in St. James's, in the 17 weeks ending November 4th, was 484. But this number gives a very inadequate idea of the entire loss inflicted by the epidemic. Thus the House List of deaths by Cholera, furnished to the committee by Mr. Buzzard, the vestry clerk, from the local registers, gives a total of 501 deaths recorded between July Ist and September 30th. Besides these, it is estimated that about 150 of the inhabitants died during the same period in the Middlesex, University College, Royal Free, St. George's, and King's College Hospitals, out of the parish, whose deaths would therefore be registered elsewhere. It would appear, indeed, from the investigations of Messrs. Fraser, Hughes, Ludlow and Whitehead, that some deaths must have escaped registration altogether, and that possibly more than 40 non-resident persons, who came to work or visit in the parish, also died. Hence the fatal attacks in St. James's parish were probably not less than 700. So great a number would imply a relative mortality, during the above defined 17 weeks, of 220 to every 10,000 persons living in the parish, instead of 152 as estimated upon the data furnished to the Regisฃs Office. The highest relative mortality in metropolitan parish not containing a hospital, 16 during the same period, was in Bermondsey, viz. 158. St. Olave's alone, which includes St. Thomas's Hospital, exceeded it, its ratio being 162. In the adjoining sub-district of Hanover Square, the ratio was 9 ; in All-Souls, Marylebone (including a hospital), 28 ; in St. Anne's, Soho, 37 ; and in the Charing Cross district of St. Martin's-in-the- Fields (including a hospital) 33. It should also be borne in mind that the mortality from Cholera in St. James's parish in 1848-9 was, as already stated, only 15 in 10,000 inhabitants It is well known, however, that the epidemic did not act equally within all parts of the parish ; the St. James's Square sub-district experiencing, according to the Registrar, a relative mortality of only 16 to every 10,000 persons living, whilst the ratio in the Berwick Street district was 212, and in the Golden Square district 217. But, as before stated, the actual rate beyond the registration returns, in the two last named districts, was considerably greater than this. Moreover, it must now be remembered that it was only in a certain singularly well defined portion of them that the influence of the great outbreak was felt. The " Cholera area" as it may be called, of St. James's parish, may be variously described. Reference to the map prefixed to this Report will render the description easily understood. Spreading out from the north-east angle of Golden Square, which is altogether excluded from it, it extends 17 westward to King Street, north as far as Great Marlborough Street and Noel Street, east to the line of Wardour Street, and south to Little Pulteney Street, from the west end of which its limits are expressed by a line crossing over Great Pulteney Street and Bridle Lane, returning to the northeast angle of Golden Square. Beyond Wardour Street, to the east, lies St. Anne's Court, Soho, with its dependencies, which, though out of St. James's parish, must be included in the Cholera area. It has been shewn by Mr. Whitehead that the limits of the Cholera district are also very accurately defined within an irregular four-sided figure, the north and south angles of which are placed respectively near the middle of Poland Street and at the south end of Little Windmill Street, whilst the west and east points are at the north-west corner of King Street and the east end of St. Anne's Court. The included space is rather longer from east to west than from north to south. The centre of this figure falls at the junction of Cambridge Street with Broad Street, and it has been remarked by Mr. Whitehead, as may be shewn with compasses upon the map, that a circle, having a radius of 210 yards, struck from the north-west angle of Cambridge Street includes almost the entire area, except St. Anne's Court. Two notches vacant of mortality require, however, to be taken out of this circle ; one corresponding with a part of Great Marlborough Street, the other with one half of Golden Square and the southern part of Bridle Lane. As i? 18 thus defined, and henceforth in this Report intended to be understood, the " Cholera area," including St. Anne's Court, and excluding the vacant spaces just mentioned, covers nearly 30 acres of ground, containing, besides streets, courts, and mews, 825 dwellings, . St. Luke's Church, Craven Chapel, the Workhouse, a block of model lodging houses (unfinished in 1854), a brewery, and various factories and workshops. In round numbers, its population, in the autumn of 1854, as well as can be estimated, was nearly 14,000 inhabitants (inclusive of 500 in the Workhouse). This would be about 460 persons to an acre. Now the ascertained deaths of residents within this ' Cholera area' are 618, being at the rate of 440 to 10,000 persons living. The deaths of non-residents, so far as these are known, viz., 45, are also indicated on the map. The ascertained deaths and per centage of mortality in the several streets within the Cholera area are tabulated in the Appendix, whilst the distribution of the deaths is represented in the map. No street in the Cholera area was without death, but the mortality was greatest towards the centre of the area, and diminished towards its borders. There are exceptions, depending mostly on an extreme mortality in some one house in a small street, as in Cross Street on the west, Bentinck Street on the north, and Peter Street on the southeast. In Hopkins Street, then containing only three houses, the mortality was 18 per cent. In 19 Broad Street, the very heart of the area, the deaths were rather more than. 10 per cent., or 1,000 to every 10,000 persons living. In Cambridge Street, Pulteney Court, and Kemp's Court, the population was also decimated. In Marshall Street, South Row, Marlborough Row, Silver Street, Great Pulteney Street, Little Windmill Street, the southern portions of Wardour, Berwick and Poland Streets, the mortality diminished, varying from Bto 5 per cent. ; and, taking a still wider sweep from the centre, in the remoter parts of all these longer streets, as a rule, it gradually ceased. It will also be seen, on consulting the map, that in the centre of the Cholera area but few houses escaped the invasion of the disease. Of 45 contiguous houses belonging to Pulteney Court, New Street, Husband Street, Hopkins Street, and the south side of Broad Street, only seven escaped without a death ; and in 3of these seven, one a factory, 18 non-residents were fatally seized. In Broad Street, containing 49 houses, only 12 houses escaped without a death. So also the proportion of houses fatally attacked, just as we have seen in regard to the per centage of deaths, became less in passing from the centre of the Cholera area. In the whole area, including houses where non-residents were seized, this proportion was 38*8 per cent. Of the 825 houses in this area, fatal attacks of residents occurred in 313. There were 159 houses Sving single deaths ; 85 with 2 deaths ; 34 with 15 with 4; 12 with 5; 3 with 6; 4 with 8; 20 and 1 with 12. Five inmates also died in the Workhouse. " There were," says Mr. Whitehead, speaking of only a part of the area, " no less than ' k 2l instances of husband and wife dying within " a few days of each other. In one case, besides " both parents, 4 children also died. In another " both parents, and 3of their 4 children. In " another a widow and 3of her 4 children. At " an average distance of 15 yards from St. Luke's " Church stand 4 houses which collectively lost 33 " persons." Such being the locality of this serious visitation, and such its general results, we may in the next place attempt to trace, within the limits of the Parish, its commencement, progress and cessation, from day to day, and from place to place. For this purpose, it is obvious that, owing to the variable duration of the illness, the death statistics would lead to erroneous conclusions ; and it is much to be regretted that no complete data can be obtained for fixing the hour of attack. By deducting the period assigned to the duration of the disease from the day of death, where such information is recorded either in the registrar's or hospital documents, a rude approximation to the period of attack may be obtained. In regard especially to Cholera, this method may give tolerably fair results ; but when we remember the difficulty of obtaining correct information and the importance of a few hours more or less, too great reliance must not be placed upon such results, nor too great use be 21 made of them, as the foundation of particular views. In the Table placed in the Appendix, 576 fatal cases in St. James's and St. Anne's are arranged to shew the streets in which they took place and the days on which the deceased are presumed to have been attacked. This tabular view of daily attacks is of course incomplete, and would differ widely from one of daily deaths. It is confessedly a partial view or an imperfect journal of the progress of the epidemic ; but in its general aspect it may approach the truth. For convenience of reference, the streets are classified in four zones, or belts, running east and west across the parish, beginning with the northern zone from west to east, and then proceeding with the next one to the south, and so on. Only the two middle zones pass through the Cholera area. The earlier deaths from Cholera in the metropolis last summer were scattered very widely about, in the extreme south, east, west and north, — the central districts escaping for a brief period. The first fatal attack in St. James's parish occurred on July 26th, in St. James's Market, Jermyn Street. It terminated fatally on the 29th, by which date 81 deaths had been registered in the south, 48 in the east, 1 1 in the west, 11 in the north, and 13 in the central metropolitan districts. It may therefore be said that the Cholera in the summer of 1854, as well as of 1849, shewed itself in this parish later than in most parts of the metropolis ; and in reference to the immediately adjoining districts it must be added, that 22 St. Martin's-in-the-Fields, St. Anne's Soho, and All-Souls Marylebone, were attacked before, and St. George's Hanover Square after, St. James's. Referring now to the Table, it will be seen that shortly after the first case already spoken of as happening on July 26th in the south of the parish, viz. in St. James's Market, two fatal attacks occurred in the west and centre, viz. in South Row on the 3rd August, and in Silver Street on the sth. By the time these three attacks had occurred many more deaths had been recorded in the various districts of the metropolis, as follows : — south districts 371, east 108, west 33, north 23, and central 27. The fourth fatal seizure in St. James's was on the 7th, in the south, in Great Windmill Street; the fifth and sixth, both on the 11th, were in the west, viz. in King Street and Marlborough Row. On the following day, three persons were fatally attacked, two in the south and south-east of the parish, viz. in Piccadilly and Great Windmill Street, and one in the very centre of the district to be presently rendered so memorable, viz. in Broad Street, at No. 31. On the 14th, one seizure occurred in the west, in Heddon Court ; and on the same day two near the centre, viz. in Silver Street and Marshall Street. On the 16th, two persons were attacked in Berwick Street, and one in Swallow Street ; on the 17th, one in Marlborough Street; on the 18th and 19th, two persons in Marshall Street; on the 18th a man in Piccadilly, and on the 19th a man in Berin 23 one house (the first being introduced from the Borough), and two of those in Berwick Street were also in one dwelling. During this week Diarrhoea was very prevalent all through the Berwick Street district and the adjacent part of the Golden Square district; but in the eleven following days, until the 30th August, Diarrhoea had disappeared, and very few fatal attacks of Cholera occurred; these were either in the south or west, but chiefly, towards the centre of the yet future Cholera area, viz. in Carnaby Street, Silver Street, Marshall Street and Broad Street. It appears, therefore, that the disease manifested its fatal effects first on the south-east, west, and east quarters, and afterwards towards the centre of the Cholera area. Up to this date (August 30th) 38 cases only had occurred throughout the entire parish: but in the afternoon of the 31st August, 31 fatal attacks can be traced. On the Ist September, 131, and on the 2nd, 125. On the 3rd, 4th, and sth, the numbers are respectively 58, 52, and 26 ; and on the 6th, 7th, and Bth, 28, 22, and 14. After that attacks occurred as follows, 6, 2, 3, 1, 3, 0, 1, 3, 4; and subsequently throughout the rest of September either 1, 2, or 0 per diem. In Dr. Snow's report, the number of daily attacks is also fully and carefully reckoned, as his inquiry took place immediately after the eruption of the disease. We have here a record of what has so forcibly struck the attention of those who have studied this 24 memorable eruption of Cholera, viz. the ordinary gradual approach of the disease accompanied by no unusual manifestation of its effects, a lingering about certain localities, a lull in its operation, and then, on a sudden, a terrible outburst, overwhelming every one by surprise, outstripping the most prompt and energetic attempts to mitigate its effects, and then quickly declining by well marked though not quite such speedy steps. It is this startling suddenness of the outbreak that has given it a scientific interest, scarcely less momentous than its social importance ; and as few of us probably will ever witness its like again, it is most desirable that no pains should be spared in its thorough investigation. On consulting the Table in the Appendix, in •which the distribution of a great majority of the attacks in the several streets is indicated day by day, it will be seen that the suddenness of the principal outburst, as also its rapid subsidence, is chiefly marked in those streets and courts which are nearest to the centre of the Cholera area; whilst in the borders of this space, and beyond its limits, there is no such abrupt and extreme rise and fall in the number of the attacks. In Broad Street especially its commencement was sudden and its duration short ; but the disease continued somewhat later to attack a few persons in other localities. On the whole, however, the great explosion was 25 even in the remotest streets, it must ue remai'Keu. that, though the attacks were few, the period of greatest activity corresponded with that of the principal outburst, and indeed with that of the highest Cholera mortality throughout the rest of London (see Table, p. 14). There was, moreover, a small simultaneous outburst in Kotherhithe. There yet remain several characteristics of this visitation, which may here be noticed, as tending either to associate it with or distinguish it from other less severe and sudden outbreaks of the disease. In the first place it may be remarked, that in 1854, though the epidemic visited the same streets as in 1832 and 1848-9, it did not limit itself so precisely to its old localities as is often observed. A coincidence in the localities affected is perhaps more marked in regard to the straggling cases on the outskirts of and beyond the Cholera area than in the heart of that district. We are informed by. Dr. Fraser that in the whole parish identical houses were visited in only 11 instances, out of about a total, as we estimate, of 350 in which fatal attacks occurred. On the contrary, entire streets in the centre of the affected area, as Broad Street, Silver Street, Cambridge Street, Pulteney Court and New Street, in which no deaths from Cholera occurred in 1848-9, suffered the most severely in 1854. Certain apparent eccentricities or preferences of localization, such as are very common in Cholera visitations, displayed themselves here also. For 26 example, one side of a street would suffer more than the other. In streets running north and south, the dwelling-houses being about equal on the two sides, the east side sometimes suffered most; in streets running east and west, the south side was generally most affected. Cambridge Street and Little Windmill Street are exceptions to the former, and Silver Street to the latter statement. The order in which houses were attacked followed 'no definite rule. Some narrow streets and courts suffered severely ; others nearly or quite escaped, as Tyler's, Great Crown and Walker's Courts ; whilst wide streets, as Broad Street itself, were heavily visited. In St. Anne's Court, the middle houses suffered most; in some culs de sac, as Bentinck Street and Peter Street, those near the dead end. The south-eastern half of the Cholera area is a few feet lower than the north-western half; but the mortality was not attached to any particular level. A want of cleanliness in streets or houses was by no means a constant accompaniment of the disease. Some houses in the midst of others affected escaped, without any favourable sanitary condition. The map shews that, of houses in the Cholera area directly opposite untrapped sewer-grates, 40*2 per cent, had fatal attacks in them, thus barely exceeding the general percentage throughout the area, viz., 38 8. Of two adjacent and equally well ordered factories, one lost seven workmen, the other none. Of nearly 200 workmen and women employed in another large factory, none living in the neighbourhood, the 27 females numbering about 160, the males about 30, sixteen of the former and two of the latter were fatally seized, whilst in the Workhouse, not 150 yards away, which had at the same time about 500 residents, only five inmates died. Of 35 men working in the open air on the unfinished lodginghouses, seven died. Corner houses sometimes escaped, the 6 for instance on the north side of Broad Street, in one of which however there were 3 severe though not fatal attacks. Of corner houses in the Cholera area, about 30 per cent, had fatal attacks in them. Public-houses, so often situated at the corners of streets, were singularly lightly visited. As a general condition, remoteness from the centre of the Cholera area seems most to have been associated with exceptional suffering, and proximity to it by exceptional immunity, from the disease. Towards the centre of the area, in Broad Street, the number of deaths appears to have been nearly equal on each floor, if we reckon the ground floors and kitchens together. In reference to the population, however, the ground floors suffered most ; next, in diminishing proportion, the first floors, third floors and kitchens, and least of all the second floors. Yet throughout the neighbourhood generally, including Broad Street, the deaths on the second floors were the most numerous of all. In the streets furthest removed north and south from the centre, the residents in the upper floors suffered somewhat more in proportion. 28 A calculation embracing the principal streets and courts shews that the number of deaths was rather greater in the front than in the back rooms of the houses. The attacks in any given house were seldom quite simultaneous, commonly in quick succession, and more rarely at long intervals. Tolerably true on the whole was this singular malady to its ordinary characteristics in the selection of its victims, whether we regard their occupations, general condition in life, sex, or age. Of 636 registered deaths belonging to the parish, 298 were of males, and 338 of females, which is rather more females in proportion than usual. The ages of these deceased persons (with the exception of 6 unknown) were as follows : — Ageป . . o—lo. 10— 20. ] 20— 80. 30—40. 40—50. 50— 80. ' 60— 70. 70—80. 80—90.11 0—90.1 Males , 7!J 32 48 50 47 10 19 4 2 207 I Females 50 33 40 51 01 51 30 10 II 333 I Total . 135 05 jBB 101 JOS 07 49 14 3 030 It appears therefore that, as usual with Cholera, the smallest number of deaths happened in the second decade of life. The fewest deaths in any one year of age (viz. two,) were between 14 and 15. The inmates dying in the Workhouse, were aged persons. The occupations of 454 persons dying (247 male and 207 female) are indicated in the subjoined Table, constructed from the Registrar-General's returns. 29 Males. Females. Occupations. |" j | Total. | a S.tง | Postmaster (retired), . . . . 1 . . . . . . 1 Government Clerk, . . ฆ • 1 •• .. .. 1 Police, 2 .. .. 1 3 Fireman, . . 1 1 Chelsea Pensioner, . . . . 1 . . . . . . 1 Solicitor, 1 1 .. 2 Surgeon, . . . . • • 1 . . . . . . 1 Dentist, . . . . . . 1 . . . . . . 1 Druggist, . • . . . ... 1 . . . . 1 Artist, 1 .. 1 .. 2 Schoolmaster, . . . . ... . . 1 . . 1 Governess, . . • . . ... . . 1 . . 1 Lodging House Keeper, . . ... .. 2 .. 2 Eating and Cofl'ee House Keeper, 1 .. .. 1 2 Domestic Servants, .... 2 28 2 32 Coachmen, 1 11 .1 4 Charwomen, . . . . . ... 1 4 .. ft Nurse, . . . . . . ... . . 1 . . 1 Laundress, . . . . . .... .. 1 .. 1 Hairdresser, ...... 1 1 1 5 Hatter, 1 1 Tailor, 40 12 17 9 78 Shoemaker, 28 8 8 3 47 Undertaker, 11 1 . . 3 Dressmakers, including Stayrnakers and Waistcoat Makers, . . 15 . . 15 Straw Hat Maker, . . 1 . . 1 Commercial Traveller, . . 1 . . 1 Pawnbroker, . . . . . . 2 .. .. .. 2 Marine Store Dealer, . . 1 . . 1 Livery Stable Keeper, . . . . 2 .. .. .. 2 Carman, 2 .. 1 .. 3 Warehouseman, . . . ... .1 . ; .. 1 Shopman and Shopworn an, ... 1 .. 1 .. 2 Messengers and Porters, ... 15 G 2 5 28 Errand Boy, • . . . . ... 1 .. .. 1 Printer, 2 1 .. .. 3 Compositor, . . . . . . 1 . . . . . . 1 Bookbinder 2 . . . . . . 2 Stationer, . . . . . . 2 . . . . . . 2 Piano-forte Maker, ....... 8 1 1 5 Picture Dealer, . . 1 . . 1 Engravers and Chasers, ... 4 '. . 1 . . 5 Artificial Flower Makers, . . 2 . . 2 Feather Manufacturers, ..... . . 1 2 3 Dyer, 1 1 Draper, . . 1 . . 1 Mattress Maker, .. 1 2 3 Brush Maker, . . 1 . . 1 Carried forward, . . .119 3G 99 30 284 30 Males. Females. Occupations. E M - | Total. to -ฃ af [S ซS! ? 3 111 g 3 ฃ ฃฃฃ ft Brought forward, . . .119 30 99 30 284 Carpet Planner, 1 . . . . ฆ • 1 Coach Trimmers, 2 Engineer, ...... 1 . . 1 1 Carpenter, 4 2 5 13 Painter and Plumber, .... 8 1 • • II French Polisher, 3 1 4 Timber Seller, 1 . . • • 1 Cabinet Maker, 4 3 Upholsterer, ......2 .. .. 1 3 Japanner, Curiosity Dealer, . . . . ... .. .. 1 ' Toy Maker, 1 1 Box and Gun Case Maker, ... 3 .. 1 .. 4 Wine Cooper, 1 . . 1 Frame Maker, • . . . ... . . 1 • • 1 Basket Maker, . . . . . 1 . . . . • • 1 Glass Cutter, .. 1 1 Jeweller, 3 . . ft Gold Beater 1 . . . . . . 1 Gilder, . 1 1 Smiths, — Copper, Tin, Iron, Gun, Brass, 3 5 2 3 18 Steel Manufacturer, . . . ... .. 1 •• 1 Ironmonger, . . . . . ... . . 3 . . 3 Coal Vendor, ......1 1 .. .. 2 Scavenger, 1 . . . . . . 1 Labourers general, including Bricklayers, Paviors, and Masons, ... 8 5 10 6 35 Milkwoman, . . . . . ... .. 1 .. 1 Cheesemonger, ?...3 1 .. .. 4 Butcher, 0 1 1 8 Fishmonger, . . . . . ... .. .. 1 1 Greengrocer, . . . . . . 3 .. .. .. 3 Baker 5 1 2 2 10 Confectioner, .. 1 .. 1 Publican 1 .. 1 .. 2 Waiter at Public House, ... 1 2 . . . . 3 Wive Merchant, . . . . . 1 . . . . . . 1 Grocer, 2 .. 2 Tobacconist, . . . . . ... . . 1 . . 1 Gentlemen, ...... 0 . . 1 . . 7 Alms (Workhouse), .... 2 .. 3 .. 5 Totals, .... 188 59 153 54 454 Occupations not Registered, . 41 10 91 40 182 General Totals, . . . 229 09 244 94 030 298 ' 338 036 Males. Females. Total. 31 The total number of persons of any given occupation in the district is not known, so that the ratio of mortality in each must remain uncertain. A few general conclusions are evident. The families of tailors shew the largest number of deaths ; next to these, shoemakers; then labourers, including bricklayers, masons, and paviors ; then domestic, especially female, servants; next messengers and porters ; then dressmakers ; next follow mechanics of various kinds, as carpenters, smiths, painters, cabinet makers, and so forth. Of persons dealing in articles of food, bakers suffered most, and then butchers ; whilst the families of greengrocers, publicans and fishmongers suffered less. General trades and the professions are also represented. It is necessary to observe that tailors and their families undeniably form a very large proportion of the working population of this district. On the whole it would appear that the disease did not limit its attack to any one class, nor yet to the very poor. It is remarked by Mr. Sibley, the Registrar of the Middlesex Hospital, that a large number of the persons brought there for treatment presented a very uncleanly appearance ; more so, indeed, than patients admitted into hospitals for ordinary disease. This may doubtless be explained, partly by the circumstance that the patients so admitted were probably the most destitute of those who were attacked, and partly by the fact of their beinsr suddenly 32 seized by the disorder whilst engaged in the usual occupations of their trade. I Finally, in this extraordinary outbreak, the sympms of the disease quite corresponded with those of lolera generally. The common occurrence of the tack within the fore part of the twenty-four hours, c extremely short duration of the early cases and c gradual amelioration observable in the later es, were all plainly noticeable ; and lastly, it is rtainly true that in the cases occurring at the mmencement of the great outburst, premonitory arrhcea was of short duration, or altogether llt will have been noticed that the preceding imate of the results of the Cholera outbreak in James's parish is founded entirely on the death statistics. The number of attacks followed by recovery is unknown ; nor can any certain information be collected as to the relative amount of diarrhoea prevailing. CIRCUMSTANCES ATTENDING THE OUTBREAK. The sudden, severe, and concentrated character 6 the particular outburst of Cholera which has s been depicted, and which constitutes the most 33 remarkable local visitation of that disease hitherto recorded in the metropolis, may at first create a hope that here at least the circumstances which principally determined the localisation of this singular epidemic would not escape a rigorous investigation. But the disadvantages attending a comparatively late inquiry, and the difficulties encountered in its prosecution were so great, that very decided conclusions must not be expected. From our ignorance of the real or specific cause of Cholera, all inquiries like the present are practically limited to a consideration of those conditions which may determine the action of that cause upon and within certain localities. Further, it must be remembered, that in this comparatively restricted field of investigation, the want of knowledge just alluded to constitutes a grave difficulty. For if the cause of Cholera were itself as well understood as electricity, arsenic, prussic acid, or morphia, means could be found by which to determine its presence, qualities and quantity, and thus to lay bare, on positive evidence, the conditions which influenced its action, or cessation of action, in given places. But since we do not know the cause of Cholera, the questions to be solved concerning its appearance and disappearance, its spreading and concentration, can only receive provisional answers, approximating to the truth according as we have advanced, in the obscurity of our research, towards accuracy of observation, c 34 correctness of deduction, and freedom from fallacy and error. In attempting to analyse the circumstances which may be supposed to have had more or less influence in directing the terrible energies of this unknown cause towards a particular portion of the metropolis, we shall first examine the probable effect of those general conditions which must have operated in very much the same manner and degree in every part of it ; such as the rainfall, the temperature and dryness and movement of the air. This will facilitate the subsequent examination of special or local conditions. General or Meteorological Conditions. It has been pointed out by the Registrar- General, speaking of the metropolis generally, that " in the thirty-sixth week of 1854, when Cholera " raged, and the deaths from all causes rose to their " maximum (3413), the average daily range of tern" perature was 30ฐ. 9, considerably the greatest in the " fifty-two weeks; the highest temperature of the " week was 81ฐ. 2, the lowest was 43ฐ. 1, therefore " the entire range was 38ฐ. 1 ; the horizontal " movement of the air was only 195 miles, far " less than in any other week ; there was no rain " in that or the previous week, and the mean " temperature of the previous week had risen to " 65ฐ. 1, the highest mean weekly temperature in 35 " the year." — (Summary of Births, Deaths, Bgc, in London, for fifteen years, 1850-1854.) This brief summary does not exhaust the interest attached to the general meteorological conditions prevailing in the metropolis during last summer and autumn, as especially applicable to our present inquiry. Bain. — From the 6th August, when Cholera had fairly established itself in London, to the 11th September, when it had begun to decline, — i.e., for a period of 37 days, — there were only 7 days on which rain fell; the total quantity during that time being under three-tenths of an inch, onethird of which, i.e., one-tenth of an inch, fell in one day, the 15th August. From the 25th August to the 11th September (18 days), there was no rain at all, and it was within that period that Cholera manifested its greatest virulence. Temperature of air. — From the middle to the end of July the temperature was excessive, and from thence to the end of September it was also decidedly above the average for that season of the year. Its maximum and mean daily value, and its daily range, stood very high on the 27th, 28th, 29th, and 30th of August, and on the 3rd, 4th, and 12th of September; the maximum temperature fluctuating from 80ฐ to 85ฐ in the shade, and from 99ฐ to 111 0 in the sun ; the three hottest days being t27th, 28th, and 30th August. On the 31st ust, and on the 2nd, sth, 6th and 7th September, 36 the temperature, though not so high, was from Jฐ to 4ฐ above the average calculated for 38 ievious years. On the Ist September the tempe:ure fell slightly, of a degree below the avere for that day, still however reaching to 72ฐ in 3 shade and 94ฐ in the sun. On the 27th, 28th d 29th August, there was more or less cloud and haze ; but from the 30th August to the 6th September the sky was almost continually cloudless. Temperature of water in the Thames. — During the months of July and August the mean temperature of the water at Greenwich was 64ฐ; in September Iฐ. In the two weeks ending September 2nd ranged from 60ฐ to 68ฐ. Hygrometric state of the air. — As tested by the dew point, the air was drier than usual in the months of August and September. Compared week by week, its mean dryness increased and diminished somewhat like the mortality from Cholera ; but examined daily during the latter part of August and the beginning of September extreme variations are recorded at Greenwich on any one day ; and from the 30th August to the 6th September the lower atmosphere was not far from complete saturation at some period of each twenty-four hours. Wind. — On the 26th August the wind, which for four weeks had been from S.W., W., or S., changed to N.W. On the next three days there was only occasionally a very gentle movement from the N. On the 30th, what wind there was, was N., and 37 then S.W. and W.S.W. On the 31st S.W., and then N.E. On the Ist September, N. On the 2nd, S.E. and E. From the 3rd to the 12th September, N.E., and after that S.W. again. Horizontal movement of the air. — The stillness of the air during the two weeks ending September 2nd and September 9th, in which the mortality from Cholera rose to its height, was very remarkable, — the total horizontal movement for those weeks being not more than 245 and 195 miles. Now, during the ten years from 1845 to 1854, the average weekly movement was 783 miles, and the average for the year 1 854 itself 687. Instead however of 1 00 miles a-day, the average daily rate in the two Cholera weeks, as they might be called, was but little more than 30 miles. But even this is not an adequate account of the unusual stillness of the air ; for during the 10 previous years, not 10 single weeks can be found in which the movement was less than 195 miles; and further, during the two weeks just indicated even the slight movement which did occur was not continuous, but interrupted by long intervals of calm. Thus, out of 16 days, from the 27th August to the 11th September, there were 11 days more or less calm; seven of these, viz. 27th, 28th and 29th August, and Ist, 4th, 10th and 11th of September, were calm throughout ; and four, viz. 30th August, and 2nd, 7th, and 9th September, were calm during one half of the 24 hours. 38 Barometer. — Coinciding with this dry, hot, and quiet state of the atmosphere, the barometric range was continuously high, as would be expected. Electricity and ozone. — The electricity, when observed, was positive and of moderate tension. The ozone action was defective or not manifested at all, a fact probably of serious import. General conclusions. — From the preceding account it is plain that the period of greatest mortality from Cholera in the metropolis last autumn was characterised by a previous long-continued absence of rain, and by a high state of the temperature both of the air and of the Thames, — conditions which would render the waters of that river more concentrated as to impurity, favour periodical evaporation from its surface, and explain the alternating (diurnal and nocturnal ?) extremes of dryness and saturation of the air. There was also an unusual stagnation of the lower strata of the atmosphere, highly favourable to its acquisition of impurity, to the operation of those partial currents which are caused by local variations of temperature, and to the more subtle movements dependent on the law of diffusion. Moreover, at the rise of the epidemic in London after the middle of July, it will also be found that somewhat similar conditions prevailed for many days ; whilst at its decline they were all more or less changed ; and although it is impossible to assert that the relations here pointed out were uniformly exact, or to fix the precise share which 39 each of the conditions enumerated might separately have in favouring the spread of Cholera, the whole history of that malady, as well as of the epidemic of 1854, and indeed of the plagues of past epochs, justifies the supposition that their combined operation, either by favouring a general impurity in the air, or in some other way, concurred in a decided manner during last summer and autumn to give temporary activity to the special cause of that disease. If this supposition be correct, it is obvious that the same general meteorological conditions would operate simultaneously in the limited locality to which the present inquiry is directed ; and here too we have found that the Cholera outbreak suddenly declared itself after the four hottest and calmest days of August, viz. the 27th, 28th, 29th and 30th. But, as previously shewn in the history of this local outbreak, the resulting mortality was so disproportioned to that in the rest of the metropolis, and more particularly to that in the immediately surrounding districts, that we must seek more narrowly and locally for some peculiar conditions which may help to explain this serious visitation. Special or Local Conditions. The considerations involved in this part of the inquiry may be discussed under the following heads : — Elevation of site ; soil and subsoil ; surface and ground plan ; streets and courts ; density of the 40 population; character of the population; internal economy of dwelling-houses, as regards light, ventilation, and general cleanliness ; cesspools, closets, and house-drains ; sewerage ; and water supply. Elevation of site. — As shewn in the Table at page 55, the mean elevation of St. James's parish above the Thames high water mark is 58 feet, whilst that of the Berwick Street and Golden Square districts respectively is 65 and 68 feet. The highest point in the parish, about 75 feet, is near the junction of South Row with Marshall Street, situated in the last named district. So far then from the unusual mortality from Cholera in those districts in 1854 being thus explained, it stands as the most remarkable exception to that very interesting general relation, which has been shewn by Mr. Farr to prevail throughout the metropolis, between lowness of level and a high mortality from Cholera. According to the prevalent rule, the annual mortality from that disease in St. James's parish would not be above 40 in 10,000 persons living, whereas in seventeen weeks of 1854 it reached a registered ratio of 152; or even by taking the mean of the low rate of 1849 and the higher rate of 1854, — a proceeding which, though it serves to equalize the mortality numerically, in no way diminishes or explains the exceptional character of that of 1854,— the ratio is still 84 to the 10,000 living persons. Indeed, as is clearly shewn in the Table, the actual mortality was greatest in the 41 highest quarter of the parish, largely exceeding that of immediately adjacent districts which have a nearly corresponding elevation, and reducing the Cholera area of St. James's to a level with Bermondsey which has a mean elevation corresponding with the high water mark. (Compare the Table, p. 55.) In the epidemic of 1849, similar exceptions to the general rule were instanced in St. Giles's (Holborn) and in Bethnal Green, but none of so extraordinary a character as that now under consideration; and, full allowance being made for the acknowledged irregularities in the local distribution of successive visitations of Cholera, this fact alone would suggest the existence of some special localizing condition. Soil and subsoil. — Beneath the artificial or made soil of from 8 to 12 feet thick, which, as is usual in districts long covered with houses, is composed principally of accumulated rubbish charged with various d&bris, the natural subsoil of the entire parish is gravel, forming part of the gravel bed which extends in a westward direction through Hyde Park. Towards and at the bottom of the gravel, which varies from 20 to 30 feet in depth, are veins or layers of sand resting upon the London clay and abundantly charged with water. This gravelly substratum insures a good natural drainage of the surface-soil and of the basements of houses, and is of course favourable to the salubrity of the district. It should here be mentioned that the ancient 42 pest-field used by the neighbouring parishes, in the time of the Great Plague, had its locality east of Regent Street and north of Golden Square. As considerable doubt and error still prevail in regard to the site of this field, a slight digression may be permitted, in order to settle a subject both of medical and topographical interest*. The history of this pest-field is associated with the name of William, the renowned Earl of Craven, the same who fought under Gustavus Adolphus, was married, it is said, to Elizabeth, daughter of James I. and Queen of Bohemia, and, having lived through troublous times, reluctantly surrendered, at the head of the Coldstream regiment, the protection of St. James's Palace to the Dutch Guards of the Prince of Orange. This remarkable man, who died in 1697, at the great age of 88, continued to reside at Craven House, Drury Lane, throughout the whole time of the plague in 1665-6. He first hired and then purchased a field on which pesthouses (said to be 36 in number) were built by him for persons afflicted with that disease, and in which a common burial ground was made for thousands who died of it. In 1687 the Earl gave this field and its houses in trust for the poor of St. Clement's Danes, St. Martin's-in-the-Fields, St. James's West- * The acknowledgments of the Committee are due to Mr. Wickens, solicitor to the Craven estate, to Mr. Goodwyn, to Mr. Crace, and to Mr. Farrant, for their assistance in regard to this 43 minster, and St. Paul's Covent Garden, to be used only in case of the plague re-appearing ; and the place came to be known as the Earl of Craven's Pest-field, the Pest-field, the Pest-house-field or Craven-field. In 1734, the surrounding district having become covered with houses and streets, a private Act, 7th George 11., c. 11, discharged this pest-house-field from its charitable trusts, transferring them without alteration to other land and messuages at and near Byard's Watering Place, (Bayswater) Paddington, now called Craven Hill. This Act refers to the original conveyance for a description of the abutments and boundaries of the field, states that it contains three acres, more or less, and mentions, as belonging to it, " one way " or passage of sixteene ffoot wide to and from " the premises by the Slaughter-house there lead" ing into Eyre Street." The original extent of the Craven Estate, so far as it corresponded with the site of the pest-field, is correctly shewn in the map prefixed to this report. Some additional property lying between West Street and Carnaby Street, purchased by Lord Craven in 1774, has nothing whatever to do with the ancient pest-field. Moreover a small portion of the northeast part of the field itself no longer belongs to the estate, having been first rented and subsequently purchased by St. James's parish as a burial ground. The present Public Baths and Wash-houses are built over the greater part of this portion. The width 44 of the pest-field, from the middle line of Marlborough Row and West Street to the west side of Dufour's Place, is about four chains ; its length from the top of Brown's Court, at the back of the premises in part of Great Marlborough Street, to the set-off against No. 4, Marshall Street, is rather less than eight chains ; so that, including the part sold to the parish, it contains three acres and a fraction, forming a tolerably exact parallelogram twice as long as it is wide. The short narrow piece of Marshall Street, next to Silver Street, (although now 18 feet wide,) undoubtedly corresponds with the way or passage mentioned in the Act, for in what appears to be the original trust deed now existing in the Craven office, this way is described as excepted out of the premises abutting the pest-field on the south, and the " Eyre Street" mentioned was probably an extension of Air Street running northwards to join Silver Street near the point in question, before Golden Square was built. In an early and perhaps unique impression of Blome's Map of St. James's parish (one of the series to illustrate Strype's edition of Stowe) which is now in the possession of Mr. Crace, the pest-field is shewn with a passage leading to it on the south from Silver Street, Golden Square being also laid down. The date of this map is probably 1680-90. The field itself is represented as if covered with grass, excepting a roadway which extends from the entrance-passage nearly to its northern boundary. On the east of 45 this roadway, about two-thirds of the distance up, the pest-houses are shewn, probably in a conventional manner, as a single block of buildings. In a later impression of this map, printed in 1720, the houses, grass and roadway are all scraped out. From this description and the plan it will be seen that at the present moment nearly the whole of Marshall Street, South Row and a part of Broad Street, traverse the old pest-field; whilst West Street and Marlborough Row occupy a strip of its western edge. Considerable doubt exists as to the precise part or parts of the field in which the burial pit or pits were dug. In quite recent times evidences have been met with in two spots, one the site of Craven Chapel, the other in the right hand lower corner of the former field, which would seem to indicate at least two places of burial. The latter position corresponds with Maitland's statement that "at the lower end of Marshall Street, con" tiguous to Silver Street, was a common ceme" tery, in which thousands of corpses were buried "in the time of the plague ;" whilst Craven Chapel stands on part of the open ground of the old Carnaby Market, a space which for some reason was long unoccupied by any building, though houses had been built on other portions of the field, and which open ground was styled the Pest-field up to the time of Craven Chapel being built. It has been often alleged that in some way or other the remains of decomposing animal matter, 46 or indeed of the plague matter itself, lying in the soil of this district, are chargeable with the great mortality from Cholera near it. Popular opinion has even gone so far as to maintain that the disease of last autumn was not Cholera, but a direful kind of black fever. But it is scarcely conceivable that any specific poisonous agent should remain undecomposed in the ground for 200 years ; and it is improbable that animal matters, generally, enclosed for so long a period in a gravelly soil should retain noxious qualities of any kind. Yet the possibility of this latter contingency cannot be absolutely denied. Supposing it to be so, such substances could only act by tainting the air directly, in consequence of the disturbance of the soil, or indirectly through the leakage of gases or fluids into the sewers ; or they might otherwise act by contaminating the wellwaters of the neighbourhood. Deep cuttings made in laying down new sewei were carried through one part of the old pest-fiel in 1851 (as shewn by the blue colour), and throug other parts (as indicated by pink colour) in the win te of 1853-4, the last-named works being completec in February 1854 ; but no evidence exists of eithe line having passed directly through an ancien plague-pit; no serious nuisance occurred at the tim the ground was opened ; and no immediate ill conse quences ensued to the health of the surrounding inhabitants. It is well known that the whole of the pest-field was not used as a burial place; and, as 47 it happened, the cuttings for the new sewers passed through a fine gravelly soil. Moreover, an interval of at least seven months occurred between the period at which the earth was broken up and the outbreak of Cholera which was imagined to have been thus produced ; and, it may be added, the site of the pest-field comprises but a small part of the " Cholera area," and was not more severely visited than other quite distant parts of it. In reference to the opinion that the sewers themselves may have become channels of contamination by the passage into them of gases or fluids from the pest-field soil, it must be remarked that percolation of any kind would be very unlikely through sewers so newly constructed ; at all events, this would have taken place much more easily through the older and more decayed ones, and yet in 1832 and 1849, although Cholera penetrated the district, no unusual outburst took place ; moreover, as will be subsequently explained, the drainage from the pest-field flows in two definite directions, whilst the aggravated effects of Cholera were equally felt along other lines of sewers. As regards the possible contamination of the well water by the fluids of the pest-field, it must be remembered that, in the numerous excavations which have been made in its soil from time to time for the foundations of houses, in sinking wells, and in cuttings for sewers, drains, gas and water pipes, not only must much of the actual plague deposit 48 have been removed, but the soil has been so perforated and channeled that for many generations past, in addition to the natural drainage which is very perfect, it has been draining itself continually in these artificial ways and so ridding itself of its noxious contents. Hence the chances of the contamination of the well water by the pest-field fluids would become less and less every year, and would certainly be greater in 1832 and 1849 than in 1854. Even the older sewers have been known to rob the water supply from certain wells, and the new cuttings, being of greater depth, must act still more efficiently to relieve the soil of any impure fluids with which it may be charged. On the whole, the supposition of the injurious influence of the pest-field as a special cause of the Cholera outbreak in St. James's, is not supported by any important facts. Surface and Ground Plan. — With the exception of St. James's and Golden Squares, Burlington Gardens, part of the Church Yard and the Workhouse Green, every spot in St. James's Parish is either covered by buildings or more or less perfectly paved ; and it is hardly necessary to add that there are no open ditches, ponds or stagnant waters, and no pieces of habitually damp ground. The surface is least occupied by houses in the St. James's Square district ; more so in the Golden Square ; most of all in the Berwick Street district. Streets and Courts. — In the St. Jamps's Square 49 and Golden Square districts there are many long, direct and wide streets, but in the Berwick Street and contiguous parts of the Golden Square district most of the streets and courts are comparatively narrow, short and exceedingly intricate in their arrangement. Some of the streets even have a dead wall across one end ; whilst, of the greater number of those which have a thoroughfare both ways, the junctions with each other are at such irregular intervals that they appear to be obstructed, the view either way is exceedingly limited, and the neighbourhood is very perplexing to a stranger. Even so considerable a street as Broad Street presents no direct outlet at either end. Out-of-door ventilation along the streets is seriously impeded in such a neighbourhood. The heart of the district is much protected both on the east and on the west, — the quarters from which the prevalent winds of this country blow. In calm weather the stagnation of the street atmosphere must be almost complete. Indeed, during the hot still days at the end of last August, this was painfully felt and noted by many of the inhabitants. As a special instance, it may be mentioned that the persons residing in Pulteney Court and New Street complained of feeling suffocated by the temporary, closing of Cock Court, during the erection of the model lodging houses named Ingestre Buildings. Lastly, it must be noted, as touching this question of out-of-door ventilation, that in the district now under consideration, the yards to the houses are j) 50 generally very small, and all available spaces behind the dwellings are covered with factories, workshops or small tenements or cottages, — all offering further impediments to a proper circulation of air outside the houses. Density of Population, — From the close covering up of the surface which has just been described, it might be expected that this part of St. James's would be very densely peopled. The fact is so to a startling degree. The entire parish in 1851 had a population of 222 persons to an acre, standing in this respect within three of the top in the list of the 36 registration districts in the metropolis. The sub-district of St. James's Square had a density of 134 per acre; that of Golden Square 262; whilst the Berwick Street sub-district had a population of 432 persons to an acre, being actually the most densely crowded of the 135 sub-districts into which London and its suburbs are divided*. The removal of the block of houses between Hopkins' Street and New Street, for the erection of Ingestre Buildings, which were incomplete at the time of the Cholera outbreak, would somewhat reduce the population * See Table, p. 55. We may here point out an accidental but important error in the Registrar-General's weekly returns, commencing September 30th, 1854, by which the respective areas of St. James's Square and Golden Square sub-districts, — 85 and 54 acres, — are reversed. This has further vitiated the estimated population per acre in those sub-districts, in the table given in the weekly return for December 30th, p. 547, where the population is said to be 212 in St. James's Square, and 100 51 in the Berwick Street sub-district in 1854. The relatively smaller population in the Golden Square district is accounted for by its including Golden Square, the whole width of Regent Street, Great Marlboro' Street, the Earl of Aberdeen's, the Pantheon, and the Workhouse Yards ; but there are parts of it contiguous to the Berwick Street sub-district, and comprised within the Cholera area, which are quite as densely crowded as the latter; and, since all parts are not equally overcrowded in either, the high rate of the population per acre implies a much greater concentration of the evil in special localities. Character of the Population. — Confining our attention now to the district particularly affected by the Cholera, it may be stated, in general terms, that the great mass of the persons inhabiting the densely crowded parts is composed of the families of labourers, mechanics and journeymen (many of them tailors), of persons, in short, employed at fair wages and manifesting no peculiarity in moral characters, habits or occupation beyond those usual to their class*. The number of those who live other- * It was found, in the epidemic of 1 849, that through London generally there were fewer deaths from Cholera on Wednesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays, than on the other days of the week, — the fewest of all being on Fridays. The highest mortality took place on Mondays and Tuesdays. This difference was attributed in part to the indulgences often practised at the beginning and end of each week. In St. James's, however, the greatest number of attacks was on Friday, and the daily range of mortality does not justify any general inference unfavourable to the habits of those who were 52 wise than by industry is certainly small. Besides the residents in this crowded district there is a daily influx and efflux of probably 2000 persons engaged within it in various workshops and factories in none of which however are any specially injurious processes carried on. The larger and less crowded streets are occupied by tradespeople and the professional classes, in every way corresponding with those of similar neighbourhoods. Dwelling Houses, — internal economy as to space, light, ventilation, and general cleanliness. — For the most part the houses in this district are old, having been built about the years 1700 to 1740. As already stated, the yards are very small and much covered, but there are no houses built back to back. In some streets the houses are what are termed 3rd class houses, containing from 10 to 15 rooms. In the smaller streets they are 4th class houses. The rooms of course vary in size and height, and. as usual in dwellings constructed 150 years back, are not objectionable unless over-filled with inhabitants. Cellars and vaults are common; the front areas are narrow and much covered in. Of light there is, generally speaking, an abundance, as the numerous windows, constructed before the adoption of a Window Duty, have been re-opened since its abolition. The indoor ventilation is, on the whole, defective, the staircases and passages being seized, — a conclusion entirely in accordance with their varied position in society, and also with the assertions of those who 53 narrow, and the sashes, with some exceptions, being single-hung, so as to open only at the bottom, a serious defect which cannot be too strongly condemned. Probably not more than a dozen houses in the affected district are occupied by a single family, the sub-division of one dwelling among many families being the rule. The competition for rooms has been so great that a respectable workman can often only afford to have one for his whole family. The underground rooms or kitchens are frequently inhabited ; in Broad Street, for example, in nearly two out of five houses ; in many of the smaller streets, half of the kitchens are occupied as dwelling and sleeping rooms, sometimes by a numerous family ; but move commonly the number of persons in each kitchen is small. The ground floors of more than half the houses are occupied as shops. The population, taken generally throughout the district, is accumulated rather in the Ist, 2nd and f3rd floors, the 2nd floor being usually the most densely peopled. In Broad Street the average number of persons to a house is about 18, and to each floor s|. But the greatest differences prevail, for even in Broad street there are instances of 30 persons living in one house ; in one of the smaller streets 54 persons were crowded into one dwelling. The unusual overcrowding of certain houses follows from the general statistics already detailed. In the " Cholera area" the ratio is between 17 and 18 persons to each house. 54 densely packed dwellings, in the climax of overcrowding as compared with all London, in the character and occupations of the people and in the general economy of the houses, conditions are found which, with other necessarily attendant evils, might be supposed to neutralize the advantages arising from the nature and elevation of the soil. Such an explanation indeed has already been offered by Dr. Baly in regard to the comparatively high rates of mortality from Cholera observed in Bethnal Green and in St. Giles' Holborn. Within very straitened limits and with unfavourable external conditions, there is certainly to be found in the Cholera area of St. James's a large number of that very class of persons, — labourers, mechanics, artisans, journeymen, and tradespeople, — who usually supply the most victims to the disease. But that this circumstance, combined even with defective domestic arrangements, is adequate to explain the actual outbreak, appears doubtful ; or why was not the presence of the Cholera agent in this same district in 1832 and 1849, although then equally overcrowded, attended by the same lamentable consequences ; and why did not Cholera, which was present at the same time, under the same meteorological conditions and with closely corresponding local circumstances, in the adjoining districts, ravage them to the same extent % In All Souls Marylebone, in St. Anne's Soho (excluding St. Anne's Court), in St. Giles's, and in parts of St. Martin's-in-the-Fields, nearly similar spots could be pointed out ; yet, as 55 shewn by the annexed Table, the mortality in each was, compared with that of St. James's, very low. I wing the Mortality from Cholera in various parts of the Metropolis, with ovation, density of population, and general Mortality of the same :—: — Localities. "^ |ง35 งff|ง ฐS |Sg J, W ft" 1 O _S _< London, CO 45 30 30 210 i ฃ Bermondsey, . . W. 101 158 0 70 208 'S Holborn, . . . W. 35 5 53 238 240 ฃ St. James's, . . W. 10 152* 58 222 200 ill •g-g Ist. Giles. South, . W. 97 32 04 317 303 QJ m ง Mayfair, . . W. 15 23 50 95 181 o >-5 Hanover Square, ... 4 !) 04 45 103 "fij All Souls, \ H 25 29. 7G 258 290 •3 hr ( (Miirylebone) I ง.5 St. Anne's, Solio, . .. 27 37 04 327 203 s| Charing Cross, in . H.) 4g 33 1? 48 284 ง St. Martin's . . W.J E 3 | S St. James's Square. ... 13 10 40 134 133 •3 f J Berwick Street, . ... 18 212* 05 432 224 3- Golden Square . . W. 10 217* 08 202 257 ฃป{ Cholera Area of St. James's, . W. 17*5 440 00 400 (?) • Corrected by transferring certain Deaths from All Souls, Marylebone, in which Middlesex Hospital is situated, to the localities in which tho fatal attacks occurrcl. — 56 In certain instances within the Cholera area the mortality bore a direct relation to the density of the population. This is true chiefly of streets in the centre of the district, for towards its borders an overcrowded people, with defective external and internal ventilation, and a large amount of general uncleanliness, did not suffer in the same degree, as in the lower part of Wardour Street, in Peter Street from No. 20 to 32, in Walker's Court and in Little Pulteney Street. Individual instances of extreme uncleanliness in both streets and houses, as No. 7 Husband Street, were sometimes associated with comparative immunity from the disease ; whilst some of the wider streets and well-ordered and scantily filled residences were visited severely. It has already been mentioned that 7 workmen engaged in the open air, in the erection of Ingestre Buildings, died ; at least 30 other non-residents, visitors or workmen, besides about a dozen others who merely came to dine at chop or coffee-houses in the district, also died ; yet none of these persons slept in it, or could have been much influenced by its permanent conditions. Lastly, as bearing on this subject, it must be noted that the average annual mortality of the Berwick Street and Golden Square sub-districts from all causes of death, is by no means high (see previous Table), shewing that no serious results ordinarily ensue from the acknowledged sanitary defects just described. The elevation is probably the chief cause of this general healthiness. 57 the most densely crowded population within the circle of metropolitan registration do not offer a clear and decided explanation of the aggravated results of Cholera in this parish, we pass to such Ker local sanitary disadvantages as might or might accompany this overcrowding and so be obnoxious or otherwise to health, viz. the state of the cesspools, house-drains, sewers, and water supply. Dust-bins and accumulations in yards, cellars and areas. — At the time of the visitors' inquiry very careless arrangements were still found to exist in regard to these points, and at the period of the Cholera visitation there were undoubtedly many nuisances of the kind; but on the best authority it may be stated that Cholera was most impartially distributed between the comparatively dirty and comparatively cleaner spots. Cesspools, closets and house-drains. — The visitors' inquiry lists sufficiently prove the insuperable difficulty of arriving at true results as to the existence or absence of cesspools. There is every reason to believe that they exist in large numbers. Originally such receptacles would be sure to be provided, and, as an illustration of the abundance of these obnoxious pits in certain parts of the parish, it may be mentioned, on the authority of the late Sir H. de la Beche, that when Derby Court, Piccadilly, was pulled down to clear a site for the Museum of Economic Geology, no less than thirty-two cesspools had to be excavated. oiicn cesspools vi c ircQUGntiy situutcci m tiic 58 narrow front areas, kitchens or vaults, there being generally no space available for such conveniences in the back-yards. In the event of any obstruction or overflow the entire basement must therefore be filled with deleterious substances or gases. These cesspools are generally connected with the sewers by means of flat-bottomed brick drains, having, in some cases, the advantage of a bricklayer's watertrap in the area or vault. Of the faulty construction of these drains and traps, and of the defective state of repair and blocked-up condition of many of the cesspools, little doubt can exist after the discovery of all those defects in the inquiry conducted by Mr. York at No. 40 Broad Street. The housedrains themselves are also of considerable age and are probably in many cases in the decayed condition detected on the same premises. Equally impossible is it to ascertain, without additional powers of search, the mode in which these house-drains are connected with the sewers ; but it may safely be stated that for the most part it is by a simple outlet or drain-mouth, without other trapping than the water-trap in the area. Frequently, when the original sewers are replaced by new ones situated at a greater depth, this opening is made near the top of the sewer arch instead of towards the bottom. In some houses, but certainly in the minority, water-closets with pipe-drains and leaden air-tight flaps are substituted for the older arrangements. Slpwpw — Owincr tn uld have occurred at the same time, and at two joining spots, in two systems of pipes in which 3 supply is derived from such very different With respect to the pump wells, I found some impurities in the water of each of those which I examined in the first week of September, in the Golden Square district, except the one in Vigo Street. The water of the pumps in Broad Street, Warwick Street, and Bridle Lane, all contained impurities visible to the naked eye on close inspection, in the form of minute, whitish, flocculent particles. The water of the pump in Maiiborough Street contained a still larger quantity of organic impurities than the others, and most of the people in its neighbourhood avoided using the water, and sent to Broad Street. In my opinion, mere impurity in the water would not cause Cholera, unless it were of a special kind — unless, in fact, the impurity had proceeded from a Cholera patient. Dr. Lankester has, I believe, particularly examined 99 the water of the pump in Broad Street, which is situated in the centre of the area in which the mortality from Cholera occurred ; and he will, no doubt, inform the Committee of the result of his researches. Dr. Hassall was good enough to examine some of this water, at my request, with the microscope, and he informed me that the particles I have mentioned above had no organised structure, and that he thought they probably resulted from the decomposition of other matter. He found a great number of very minute, oval animalculae in the water, which are of no importance, except as an additional proof that the water contained organic matter on which they lived. I found that the water also contained a large quantity of chlorides — indicating, no doubt, the impure sources from which the spring is supplied. Mr. Eley, of 38, Broad Street, informed me that he had long noticed that the water became offensive, both to the smell and taste, after it had been kept about two days. A person, at 6, Poland Street, also informed me that he had noticed, for months, that a film formed on the surface of the water after it had been kept a few hours. These are characters of water which is contaminated with sewage. I inquired of many persons whether they had observed any change in the character of the water about the time of the outbreak of Cholera, and was eered in the negative. I afterwards, however, with the following important information on 100 this point : — Mr. Gould, the eminent ornithologist, lives near the pump in Broad Street, and was in the habit of drinking the water. He was out of town at the commencement of the outbreak of Cholera, but came home on Saturday morning, the 2nd of September, and sent for some of the water almost immediately, when he was much surprised to find that it had an offensive smell, although perfectly transparent, and fresh from the pump, lie drank scarcely any of it. Mr. Gould's assistant, Mr. Prince, had his attention directed to the water, and perceived its offensive smell. Whether the impurities of the water were derived from the sewers, the drains, or the cesspools, of which latter there are, I believe, a number in the neighbourhood, I cannot tell. I have been informed, by an eminent engineer, that whilst a cesspool in a clay soil requires to be emptied every six or eight months, one sunk in the gravel will often go for twenty years without being emptied, owing to the soluble matters passing away into the land-springs by percolation. I requested permission, on the sth of September, to take a list, at the General Register Office, of the deaths from Cholera registered during the week ending the 2nd of September, in the sub-districts of Golden Square and Berwick Street, St. James's, and St. Anne's, Soho, which was kindly granted. Eighty-nine deaths from Cholera were registered during the week, in the three sub-districts. Of 101 these only six occurred on the first four days of the week; four occurred on Thursday the 31st of August; and the remaining 79 on Friday and Saturday. I considered, therefore, that the outbreak commenced on the Thursday; and I made inquiry in detail respecting the 83 deaths registered as having taken place during the last three days of the week. On proceeding to the spot, I found that nearly all the deaths had taken place within a short distance of the pump in Broad Street. There were only ten deaths in houses situated decidedly nearer to another street-pump. In five of these cases, the families of the deceased persons told me that they always sent to the pump in Broad Street, as they preferred the water to that of the pump which was nearer. In three other cases, the deceased were children who went to school near the pump in Broad Street. Two of them were known to have drunk the water, and the parents of the third think it probable that it did so. The other two deaths, beyond the district which this pump supplies, represent only the amount of mortality from Cholera that was occurring before the eruption took place. With regard to the 73 deaths occurring in the locality belonging as it were to the pump, there were 61 instances in w r hich I was informed that t deceased persons used to drink the water from pump in Broad Street, either constantly or 102 occasionally. In six instances I could get no information, owing to the death or departure of every one connected with the deceased individuals ; and in six cases I was informed that the deceased persons did not drink the pump water before their illness. The result of the inquiry consequently was, that there had been no particular outbreak or increase of Cholera, in this part of London, except among the persons who were in the habit of drinking the water of the above-mentioned pump well. I had an interview with the Board of Guardians of St. James's parish on the evening of Thursday, 7th September, and represented the above circumstances to them. In consequence of what I said, the handle of the pump was removed on the following day. Besides the 83 deaths mentioned above, as occurring on the three last days of the week ending September 2nd, and being registered during that week in the sub-districts in which , the attacks occurred, there was a number of persons who died in the Middlesex and other hospitals, and a great number of deaths which took place in the locality during the two last days of the week, were not registered till the week following. The deaths altogether on the Ist and 2nd of September, which have been ascertained to belong to this outbreak of Cholera, were 197, and many persons who were attacked about the same time as these, 103 died afterwards. I should have been glad to inquire respecting the use of the water from Broad Street pump in all these instances ; but I was engaged at the time in an inquiry in the south districts of London ; and when I began to make fresh inquiries in the neighbourhood of Golden Square, after two or three weeks had elapsed, I found that there had been such a distribution of the remaining population, that it would be impossible to arrive at a complete account of the circumstances. There is no reason to suppose, however, that a more extended inquiry would have yielded a different result from that which was obtained respecting the 83 deaths which happened to be registered within the district of the outbreak, before the end of the week in which it commenced. The additional facts that I have been able to ascertain, are in accordance with those above related ; and as regards the small number of those attacked, who were believed not to have drunk the water from Broad Street pump, it must be obvious that there are various ways in which the deceased persons may have taken it without the knowledge of their friends. The water was used for mixing with spirits in some of the public houses around. It was used, likewise, at dining rooms and coffee shops. The keeper of a coffee shop which was frequented by mechanics, and where the pump water was supplied at dinner time, informed me on the 6th of September, that she was already aware 104 of nine of her customers who were dead! The water of this pump was also sold in various little shops with a tea-spoonful of effervescing powder in it, under the name of sherbet, and it may have been distributed in various other ways with which I am unacquainted. The pump was frequented much more than is usual, even for a London pump in a populous neighbourhood. There are certain circumstances bearing on the question which deserve to be mentioned. The workhouse in Poland Street is more than threefourths surrounded by houses in which deaths from Cholera occurred; yet, out of 535 inmates, only five died of Cholera — the other deaths which took place being those of persons admitted after they were attacked. The workhouse has a pump on the premises in addition to the supply from the Grand Junction Water Works, and the inmates never sent to Broad Street for water. If the mortality in the workhouse had been equal to that in the streets immediately surrounding it on three sides, upwards of 50 inmates would have died. There is a brewery in Broad Street near to the pump, and on perceiving that no brewer's men were registered as being dead of Cholera, I called on Mr. Huggins the proprietor. He informed me that there were above 70 workmen employed in the brewery, and that none of them had suffered from Cholera, at least in a severe form, only two having been indisposed, and that not seriously, 105 at the time the disease prevailed. The men are allowed a certain quantity of malt liquor, and Mr. luggins believes they do not drink water at all, d he is quite certain that they never obtained iter from the pump in the street. There is a ep well in the brewery in addition to the New ver water. lAt the wire cartridge and percussion cap manu:tory, 38, Broad Street, where I understand about 200 work people were employed, two tubs were kept on the premises always supplied with water from the pump in the street for those to drink who wished, and 18 of those work people died of Cholera at their own houses — sixteen women and two men. Mr. Peter Marshall, surgeon, No. 53, Greek Street, was kind enough to inquire respecting seven workmen, who had been employed in the manufacture of dentists' materials at Nos. 8 and 9, Broad Street, and who died at their own homes. He learned that they were all in the habit of drinking water from the pump, generally drinking about half a pint once or twice a day, while two persons who reside constantly on the premises, but do not drink the pump water, had only diarrhoea. Mr. P. Marshall also informed me of the case of an officer in the army who lived at St. John's Wood but came to dine in Wardour Street, where he drank the water from Broad Street pump at dinner. He was attacked with Cholera and died in a few hours. 106 Dr. Fraser of Oakley Square, St. Pancras, kindly informed me of the following circumstance: — A gentleman in delicate health was sent for from Brighton to see his brother at No. 6, Poland Street, who was attacked with Cholera and died in twelve hours on the Ist of September. The gentleman arrived after his brother's death and did not see the body. He only staid about twenty minutes in the house, where he took a hasty and scanty luncheon of rump steak, taking with it a small tumbler of cold brandy and water, the water being from Broad Street pump. He went to Pentonville, and was attacked with Cholera on the evening of the following day, September the 2nd, and died the next evening. The deaths of Mrs. E and her niece, who drank the water from Broad Street at West End, Hampstcad, deserve especially to be noticed. I was informed by Mrs. E 's son that his mother had not been in the neighbourhood of Broad Street for many months. A cart went from Broad Street to West End every day, and it was the custom to take out a large bottle of the water from the pump in Broad Street as she preferred it. The water was taken out on Thursday the 31st of August, and she drank of it in the evening, and also on Friday. She was seized with Cholera on the evening of the latter day, and died on Saturday. A niece who was on a visit to this lady also drank of the water : she returned to her residence, a Inch 107 and healthy part of Islington, was attacked with Cholera and died also. There was no Cholera at the time, either at West End or in the neighbourhood where the niece died. Besides these two persons only one servant partook of the water at West End, Hampstead, and she did not suffer, or, at least, not severely. She had diarrhoea. There were some persons who drank the water from Broad Street pump about the time of the outbreak without being attacked with Cholera, but this does not diminish the evidence respecting the influence of the water, for various reasons. The deaths which occurred during the fatal outbreak of Cholera are indicated in the accompanying map, as far as I could ascertain them. There are necessarily some deficiencies, for in a few of the instances of persons who died in the hospitals after their removal from the neighbourhood of Broad Street, the numbers of the houses from which they had been removed were not registered. The address of those who died after their removal to St. James's Workhouse was not registered, and I was only able to obtain it in a part of the cases, on application at the Master's office, for many of the persons were too ill when admitted to give any account of themselves. In the case also of some of the work people and others who contracted the cholera in this neighbourhood, and died in different parts of London, the precise house from which they removed is not 108 latcd in the return of deaths. I have heard of me persons who died in the country shortly after moving from the neighbourhood of Broad Street, Ld there must no doubt be several cases of this kind at I have not heard of. The deficiencies I have entioned, however, do not detract from the correct!ss of the map, as a diagram of the topography of c outbreak ; for, if the locality of the additional ses could be ascertained, they would probably be stributed over the district of the outbreak in the me proportion as the large number which are KThe outer dotted line on the map surrounds the substricts of Golden Square and Berwick Street, St. James's, together with the adjoining portion of the sub-district of St. Anne's, Soho, extending from Wardour Street to Dean Street, and a small part of the sub-district of St. James's Square, enclosed by Marylebone Street, Tichborne Street, Great Windmill Street, and Brewer Street. All the deaths from Cholera which were registered in the six weeks from August the 19th to September the 30th within this locality, as well as those of persons removed into Middlesex Hospital, are shewn by black lines in the situation of the houses in which they occurred, or in which the fatal attacks were contracted. In addition to these the deaths of persons removed to University College, St. George's, Charing Cross, and other hospitals, and to various parts of London, are 109 ticated in the map where the exact address was en in the " Weekly Return of Deaths," or en I could learn it by private inquiry. I The pump in Broad Street is indicated on the ip, as well as all the surrounding pumps to which 3 public had access at the time of the outbreak of tolera. It requires to be stated that the water of d pump in Marlborough Street, at the end of rnaby Street, was so impure that many persons oided using it ; and I found that the persons who 3d near this pump, in the beginning of September, d water from the Broad Street pump. The inner tted line on the map shews the various points lich have been found by careful measurement to be at an equal distance by the nearest road from the pump in Broad Street and the surrounding pumps ; and, if allowance be made for the circumstance just mentioned respecting the pump in Marlborough Street, it will be observed that the deaths either very much diminish, or cease altogether, at every point where it becomes decidedly nearer to send to another pump than to the one in Broad Street. At these points I ascertained that the people did generally send to the pump which was nearer. It may be noticed that the deaths are most numerous near to the pump in Broad Street, where the water could be more readily obtained. The wide open street in which the pump is situated suffered most, and next the streets branching from it, especially those parts of them which are nearest to Broad Street. If there 110 have been fewer deaths in the south half of Poland Ireet than in some other streets leading from Broad reet, it is no doubt because this street is less nsely inhabited. II have made a distinct inquiry respecting the eater number of fatal cases of Cholera that curred, at the time of the outbreak, within the iter boundary marked on the map, but in a situion very decidedly nearer to another public pump an to that in Broad Street, and the following are tOn the 4th of September, a female, aged 42, ;d at 32, Great Marlborough Street. I learned m the persons with whom she lived that she habitually drank pump water, but did not get it |)m the pump opposite. She had it principally im Broad Street, but occasionally from Vigo feet. There were three deaths at 7, Great Marlrough Street, on the 2nd, 3rd, and sth of September. This house is rather nearer to two other pumps than to the one in Broad Street, but water had been fetched from the latter pump, and had been drank at dinner for a fortnight previous to the attacks of Cholera. KOn the Ist of September, a girl, aged 8 years, id at 29, Carnaby Street. On calling a few days afterwards I was informed by other members of the family that they were in the habit of having water from Broad Street, and that deceased drank of it on the days preceding her illness. On the same day, 111 a female, aged 34, died at 31, Carnaby Street. I was informed, on making inquiry, that she used to send to Broad Street two or three times a-day for water to drink. On the Ist also, a female, aged 35, died at 40, Carnaby Street. I was informed that she sent nearly always to Broad Street for drinking tThe houses in which the above three cases curred are in that part of Carnaby Street which near to the pump in Marlborough Street; and lcr Street, in which the following cases occurred also very near to the same pump. KTwo widows who lived in the kitchen at No. 9, ler Street, were attacked with Cholera on the 2nd of September, and were taken to Middlesex Hospital, Avhere they both died. The daughter of one of the deceased women, a girl aged 15, told me that she used to fetch water from Broad Street pump, as her mother did not like the water in Marlborough Street. Both the deceased persons used to drink the water up to the time of their illness. My informant also drank of it ; she had a Diarrhoea, but was not seriously ill. On the 2nd of September, a man and his wife died of Cholera at 8, Tyler Street. The landlord of the house made an inquiry of the grown-up children of the deceased persons for me, and I learned that they used to have water from the pump in Broad Street, as they considered the water in Marlborough Street not fit to drink. On the Ist of September, a tailor, aged 50, and 112 his son, aged 12, died of Cholera, at 10, Cross Street, and within three days afterwards four more of his children died, two of them being grown up. This family were great drinkers of pump water, and used to send for it every day, but more especially to drink during the night, as they were thirsty in the warm weather, owing to the great number sleeping in one room. The children fetched the water from various pumps, but frequently from Broad Street. On the 2nd of September, a boy, Ked 7 years, died at 4, Cross Street. This family it frequently for pump water, both to Broad feet and Warwick Street. BOn the 2nd of September, a carpenter, aged 30, ;d at 7, Upper John Street, Golden Square. He was a foreigner, and used to drink wine and water to his dinner. The water was procured by the people who kept the house, and they got it from Broad Street pump, as they thought the water better than that in Warwick Street, which is much nearer. Two other persons, who also drank the water, were taken ill at the same time as deceased, but recovered. One was the servant of the house, and the other was a young man in the family. My informants were the widow of the deceased man and the sister of the young man who recovered. It is w 7 orthy of notice, that the servant had an attack of Cholera a fortnight previous to the last one. A girl, aged 5 years, died at 42, Ham Yard, on the Bth of September, having been attacked with 113 Cholera on September the 2nd. Deceased went to school in Dufour's Place, and a brother, a little older than herself, told me in the presence of his mother that he had seen his sister drink the water from the ladle at the pump in Broad Street. A girl, aged 7 years, at 3, Angel Court, Great Windmill Street, was attacked with Cholera on the Ist of September, and died on the Bth. She also went to school in Dufour's Place, and her parents think it probable that she drank the water of Broad Street pump. A Iy, aged 9 years, died on the 2nd of September, 9, Great Crown Court. He went to school near c pump in Broad Street, and was in the habit of drinking a good deal of the water. At 13, W ardour Street, near to Oxford Street, the wife of a tradesman died on the 2nd of September. Her husband informed me that they used to have pump water which deceased used to drink. The boy was always directed to fetch it from Broad Street. The son of a chemist at 115, Ward our Street, which is about a dozen doors from Oxford Street, was attacked with Cholera, and went to Willesden, where he died on the 2nd or 3rd of September. He dined on the days preceding his attack at some dining-rooms in Wardour Street, where the water from Broad Street pump always stood on the table. He drank malt liquor with his dinner, but frequently took some water with the pastry or sweet pudding with which he concluded it. His father was my informant. H 114 The wife of a tailor at 2, Great Chapel Street, Soho, was attacked with Cholera on the 4th, and died on the Bth of September. I was informed by the person with whom she lodged, that she was a great drinker of pump water, and that she used to drink a good deal of cold water at the Baths and AVash-houses in Dufour's Place, where she had been at work on the days preceding her illness. On going to the Wash-houses I learned that some persons drank the water of the cistern there, and others that of the Broad Street pump. The child of this woman was attacked on the 7th, and died on the 11th of September. There were three deaths at 14, Noel Street ; two on the Ist of September, after a few hours' illness, and one on the 6th, after an illness of four days. Pump water was constantly drunk in this house. I saw the boy who fetched it in the presence of the family. He generally got it from Berner's Street, or Newman Street, but had occasionally obtained it from Broad Street, and had done so about two months before my inquiry, which was made at the end of October, but he could not remember the day or week when he last obtained it from Broad Street. A young woman died at 39, Rupert Street, on the sth of September, but she was taken ill in St. Anne's Court, where three other members of her family died. She was about to call in Rupert Street, but dropped down at the door; she was carried into the house, where she expired. 115 On the 10th of September, a girl, aged eight years, died of Cholera after an illness of three days, at 7, Naylor's Yard, Silver Street ; she went to the National School facing the end of Broad Street, and used to drink the water. There were four fatal attacks of Cholera at No. 1, Brewer Street, in the beginning of September. One of the deceased persons was the master of the house, who used to send constantly to Broad Street for drinking water, and the others who were attacked, were also in the habit of drinking it. A cabinet-maker, who was removed from Philips' Court, Noel Street, to Middlesex Hospital, worked in Broad Street. A boy also who died in Noel Street went to the National School at the end of Broad Street, and having to pass the pump probably drank of the water. A tailor who died at 6, Heddon Court, Regent Street, spent most of his time in Broad Street. A woman removed to the hospital from 10, Heddon Court, had been nursing a person who died of Cholera in Marshall Street. There were eight fatal attacks at a considerable distance from the pump in Broad Street, but within the external boundary marked on the map, respecting which, I did not, on inquiry, trace any connection with the water of that pump. Of the above 48 persons, it will be observed that 28 were ascertained to have drunk the water of Broad Street pump shortly before they were attacked, 116 whilst there is a greater or less probability that 10 of the others also drank it, and 2 more had been exposed to the malady, by residing in the Ime room with a patient who died of it. As rerds the 8 cases in which I could trace no nnection with the water of the pump in Broad reet, it may be observed that they form but a ght mortality for the large area in which they ppened ; a mortality not greater than was occurring in surrounding parishes, and probably not greater than would have taken place in this district if the great outbreak had not occurred. I ought to mention, that in all the cases I have alluded to throughout the Report, the water from Broad Street was drunk cold, without having been boiled. It is the custom in this district, as elsewhere, always to use the cistern water for making tea, and other purposes where heat is employed, and to send for pump water only for the purpose of drinking it cold*. The following Table exhibits the chronological features of this terrible outbreak of Cholera : — * I should like to mention here, a fact that I met with in making a part of the house-to-house inquiry, which the Committee undertook in the winter. Out of the 14 houses in Cambridge Street, there were four in which I was distinctly told that none of the inmates ever sent to Broad Street for water, and that they did not do so in August last. There was no case of Cholera in any of these houses. In the other 10 houses, the water from the pump in Broad Street was more or less used by the inmates last August, and there was Cholera in all of them but one, and in that house there was Diarrhoea. — J. S., June 14, 1855. 117 Date. No. of Fatal Attacks. Deaths. September 1 143 ... 70 Date unknown 45 0 Total ... 616 016 118 The deaths in the above Table are compiled from the sources mentioned in describing the map ; but some deaths which were omitted from the map, on account of the numbers of the houses not being known, are included in the Table. As regards the date of attack, I was able to obtain it with great precision, through the kindness of Mr. Sibley, in upwards of 80 deaths which occurred in Middlesex Hospital ; for the hour of admission was entered in the hospital books, as well as the previous duration of the illness. In a few other cases also I had exact information of the hour of attack; and in the remainder I have calculated the date of attack by subtracting the duration of the illness from the date of death. There are 45 cases in which the duration of the illness was not certified to the registrars, and where I had no means of ascertaining it. The time of attack in these cases is consequently unknown. These persons nearly all died on the first days of September, in the height of the calamity ; and it is almost certain that they were cut off very quickly, like the others who died at this time. It will be observed that the daily number of fatal attacks was already much diminished by September the Bth, the day when the handle of the pump in Broad Street was removed ; and it is not improbable that the water had, from some cause or other, ceased to contain the cholera poison. At all events, the few attacks which took place after 119 September the 10th or 12th must have been occasioned in the usual manner, and not through the medium of the water. I wish it to be understood that I do not attribute lery case of Cholera to the use of polluted water, is my opinion that every case is caused by allowing the peculiar poison or morbid matter of Cholera, which has proceeded from a previous patient sick of the same malady ; but this morbid matter need not be in water, and there are facilities for its being accidentally swallowed, and propagating the disease, without the aid of water. This is more especially the case in the crowded dwellings of the poor, where a number of persons live, sleep, cook, and eat in one room. I do not, therefore, attribute every case of Cholera in the parish to the water of the pump well in Broad Street, but certainly those which constitute the great outbreak which took place at the end of August, and which suddenly raised the mortality of this disease from about five in a week to nearly 500. The reason why the water of this pump producec the great outbreak is, 1 feel confident, that the eva cuations of one or more Cholera patients foum their way, by some means, into the well. Ther were fatal cases of Cholera, a few days before th great outbreak, not far from the well, and ther may have been other cases, not fatal, which are not recorded. I published several instances, in 1849, of sudden 120 Id severe outbreaks of Cholera arising from the llution of tanks, wells, and other local supplies water, by the contents of cesspools and houseains. In the outbreak at Albion Terrace, Wands>rth Eoad, in that year, the night soil was from c to nine inches deep at the bottom of the tanks at were examined. In some instances, in Horsfdown and Rotherhithe, the contamination of 2 water was equally well proved. In these stances, the dejections of a patient ill of Cholera tered the water before the great outbreak. II have been making inquiries during the autumn st passed, in the South districts of London, which ew that the dejections of Cholera can reproduce 3 disease after passing down the sewers into the lames, and being afterwards distributed through me miles of the pipes of a water company, ider these circumstances, the cases of Cholera are scattered over the whole of the districts supplied by the company ; and become gradually more numerous, as each set of cases, the dejections of which pass into the river, produces new ones. In the instances, on the other hand, in which a pump well, or some other local supply of water is thus contaminated, the outbreak is always sudden and violent. JOHN SNOW, M.D. MR. WHITEHEAD'S REPORT. OF HIS SPECIAL INVESTIGATION OF BROAD STREET. Eh is investigation has been attended with some culty, for two reasons. 1. Because of the shifting of the population. II have reason to believe that at one time since c pestilence the street did not contain one half, •ssibly little more than a third, of its usual imber of inhabitants. At least it is certain that only twelve of its families in which deaths from Cholera occurred now reside where they did at the beginning of September 1854, no less than seven of the twelve being detained there as householders or shopkeepers. It is not a little strange that very many who have thus migrated have not deemed it necessary to remove out of the infected district, in some instances selecting for their new abodes houses as severely visited as those whence they 122 came. I find however that a feeling of uneasy apprehension respecting the approach of summer is beginning to prevail even among those who have hitherto stood firm. Whenever the Cholera shall reappear in the country I have no doubt that this neighbourhood will be deserted by all who can conveniently depart, unless there shall previously have been given a satisfactory account of the causes of the late calamity and a reasonable prospect held out of comparative immunity for the future. With regard to those who have moved away, I have in many cases traced them out and personally visited them, sometimes following them to a considerable distance. 2. The other difficulty has arisen out of the very nature of the investigation. It has grown upon me as I proceeded. I have often had to return as many as four or five times to the same families to put questions which I did not at first see the necessity of asking. Indeed, throughout the whole street I have gone over the same ground again and again, in order to bring each portion of the evidence up to the proper standard of accuracy and reliability. The statistics which I shall lay before the Committee are the result of personal inquiry. 123 ! No. of Houses (exclusive of the Brewery) 49. I Resident Householders (August 1854) ... 35. i Resident Deaths of i Floor. Population. Residents. ; (Aug. 1854.) (Cholera.) I 4th Floor . .(In 2 Houses only) 6 0 3rd „ (2 Houses have no 3rd) 224 22 2nd 235 18 Ist „ 212 23 Ground (33 occupied as Dwellings) ... 138 17 Kitchens (19 inhabited) 68 6 Cottages (5 in number) 13 4 t896 90 North South North South 470 426 39 51 Besides the 90 deaths here mentioned, there were 28 among persons employed in the factories and workshops of this street, but residing elsewhere. Twelve houses only were free from death (of residents or non-resident workpeople) — i. c. eleven on the North side (in two of which however there were recoveries from collapse) and one on the South side. The next Table gives the number of fatal cases, with date of attack. 124 Date of Attack. p Jfj*^ August 12th ... 1 September Ist ... 26 The 28 non-residents were all seized during the first two or three days of the outburst. The factories and workshops which suffered were all closed for a time after Saturday evening, Sept. 2nd. The Committee are well aware that these libles are compiled from papers containing the tails of individual cases, which circumstance I ly mention for the satisfaction of others into lose hands the Report may fall. ฆI am acquainted with the name, and have certained, as far as possible, the age, of each deceased person, together with the alleged precise lur of attack, position of the room occupied, and neral sanitary condition of the house. El now confine myself mainly to one point, because I have been compelled by the evidence icognise its primary importance. 125 Among the questions which the Committee decided should be asked throughout the district was one relating to the use of drinking-water by the inhabitants. I soon found that the Grand Junction and New River Companies divide Broad Street, and indeed the whole district, in such a way as utterly to preclude the notion of either of them being at all accountable for the outburst. It took place simultaneously in both their districts. Moreover, a careful examination has fully satisfied me that, as a matter of fact, they must be held free from suspicion on this particular point. The only other water used for drinking to any extent by the people of the infected streets was that of the parish pump in Broad Street. I should have much preferred not to anticipate the conclusion to which my evidence points, but for the sake of clearness I find it necessary to state my conviction, slowly and I may add reluctantly adopted, that the use of this water was connected with the commencement and continuance of the outburst in a very remarkable way. No one actively engaged on the spot during the pestilence will or can mistake what I mean by the outburst. There was Cholera in the district before it began. There was Cholera in the same district after it was over. And yet its limits both of time and place are so marked, that any one resolved to carry out an inquiry on strictly inductive principles may feel himself no way perplexed, or even concerned, with 126 hypotheses either connecting or disconnecting it with previous cases. If such questions should ultimately come to be discussed by the Committee, it must at least be distinctly understood that my investigation has been conducted without any reference to them whatever. In all cases, unless the contrary be expressly stated, it must be borne in mind that the use of cold water is meant. Indeed, it may almost be taken as a rule that the water used for boiling was the Company's, or, as I shall generally term it, the Cistern water. I shall first deal with the 90 above-mentioned fatal cases. With respect to the first case, which commenced on the 12th of August and lasted 35 hours, I can learn nothing concerning the use of water. The next (August 28th) was the case of an infant, whose mother emphatically denies that it ever tasted of the pump water, assigning as a reason a decided objection to this water on the part of her husband, who was himself fatally seized with Cholera on the Bth of September, being almost the last person who was attacked, either fatally or not, in this street. He of course was no drinker of the pump water. And I may here add that a like positive denial upon this point is given, by persons competent to decide, both in the other case marked September Bth and in that of September 9th. 127 Irhe third fatal attack in Broad Street, that of Lgust 30th, was the case of a lad who went to yswater on Saturday August 26th, returning mday the 28th. The family with whom he ided in Broad Street are positive in their asserq that he never drank of the pump water. The jcise hour of his attack was 5 a.m. At noon, 5 same day, he was sent back to Bayswater. It worthy of notice that his mother and sister (at yswater) were also seized the following evening d died before the end of the week. I There remain then to be considered the cases of ose who were fatally seized on and after Thursday August 31st down to September 6th (inclusive). Of these there are 15 concerning whom I cannot learn anything bearing upon the point in question, cither because the deceased were isolated persons of whose habit in this matter no one can speak with certainty, or because surviving friends and relations who might testify are now out of reach, or in some few instances, and I am happy to say very few, because those who could settle the point refuse to give any information. Respecting 8 others of the cases now under consideration the evidence is more or less strong against the probability of the deceased having drunk of the pump water previous to illness. I have marked 6 more as doubtful, who, according to the testimony of surviving relatives, may, or may not, have drunk of this water. Next I have set down 10 cases of persons who, 128 liere is every reason to believe from all I can ither, did use it, but whom, inasmuch as it is not matter of absolute certainty, I have distinguished om the remaining 45, who, I could prove to jmonstration, did drink of it between the after>on of Wednesday (August 30th) and the hour For facility of reference, these figures are set side by side in the following Table : — | Whether drank the Pump I I Water shortly hefore illness. I Date of Attack. a" I 9 Total. I So ฃ o o o I J Q Ph ฃ Q X ! Before August 3 1st 1 ... |2 3 I August 31st (Noon) "\ \ I September G (inclusive) ) I After September Oth f3 3 One fact relative to the above details is noticeable, viz. — that of the 56 fatal attacks assigned to the first three days of the outburst (August 31st, September Ist, and 2nd) it is only affirmed Kpecting two, with any semblance of certainty, ,t they did not use the pump water. I do not mean that all the other 54 did ; but that only 2, according to positive testimony, did not. Of the 28 deaths of non-resident workpeople, 24 were of persons employed at two factories, where, as I am informed by the proprietors, the water from the pump was in constant use for 129 drinking. All the 24 were seized during the first three days. Concerning three of the other four I know nothing more than that they were taken ill during the same period. The other was a young man who drank this water daily. He went home as usual on Friday evening, September Ist, and was attacked the next day. The landlady of the house where he worked affirms that he was the only person in the house who drank this water, and the only one who was at all ill. Whilst prosecuting these inquiries I soon perceived the desirableness, and indeed the necessity, of closely examining those who had recovered from attacks, whether of Cholera or Diarrhoea. I shall not pretend to distinguish between Cholera and Diarrhoea. I can at least assert that the great majority of those to which I shall refer were very serious cases. I find then that of 50 residents who thus recovered, 4 are now beyond the reach of inquiry. 2 give uncertain accounts of themselves. •j-7 affirm that they did not drink the pump water. 2 probably did drink it. *35 certainly did drink it between August 30th — and their attack. 50 i 130 In addition to which number a family of 8, who told me that they habitually used the pump water, suffered a good deal of illness, all being more or less severely, but in no case fatally, attacked with Diarrhoea. Of these 50 persons, 34 were seized during the first three days of the pestilence. The last attack of these cases, apparently connected with the pump, was on September 6th. It seems that there was little even of Diarrhoea in this street after that In the meantime I had advanced a step further in my views as to what constituted a proper inquiry into such a subject, having come to the conclusion that I must likewise examine, upon this matter, as many as possible of those who, being resident in Broad Street at the beginning of September, did not suffer at all cither from Cholera or Diarrhoea. The brief and summary aspect of the following Tables will convey but an inadequate idea of the pains taken to elicit and test the information they contain :—: — Residents who did not drink the rump Water in the last week of August, or the iirst week of September, and were not ill. As affirmed by themselves, or by members of their respective families 243 As affirmed by others who claim to have full knowledge of their habit in this respect 30 i 279 131 I have a record of the names and abodes of all these persons. I also made diligent search for those residents who, at the time alluded to, drank the water with impunity. I give the result of this inquiry without attempting, as in several instances I might, to lessen its force by any qualifying statements: — Daily According to usual custom 28 j From August 30th, noon. ) t n -. - : to September 2nd, p.m. } In most eases occasionally 1 5 September 3rd, a.m., and j^ v 57 Uncertain and contradictory accounts given by (no illness) 9 Drank it once boiled . . (no illness) 1 Sometimes used it, but often went weeks without any . . (no illness) 2 Drank a good deal of it, when ill from another cause than Cholera 1 I have thus inquired, or at least attempted to inquire, concerning 497 of 896 persons resident in Broad Street at the time of the pestilence. I need scarcely insist upon the peculiarly advantageous circumstances under which the inves- 132 I Ration has been conducted. Long before the tiolera came upon us I was well acquainted with c street and its inhabitants. It so happened at during the outburst I was more in this street an in any other, visiting very many of the milies which suffered. Soon afterwards I colcted, of my own accord, full statistical inforation throughout the whole of St. Luke's district irish. So that when the Committee desired me examine more particularly into Broad Street, had but to inquire again respecting a matter with which I was already tolerably familiar. The ordinary course of my duties taking me almost daily into the street, I was under no necessity to be cither hasty or intrusive, but asked the needful questions just when and where opportunity occurred, making a point of letting scarcely a day pass without acquiring some information, and not caring how often I had to verify it in quarters where I could rely upon a willingness to converse upon the subject. It appears then that, among the drinkers of the pump water, the ratio of those attacked to those who escaped is at least 80 to 57, whilst the corresponding ratio among non-drinkers of that water is but as 20 to 279. Or, to state the case in another way, among those attacked the ratio of pump water drinkers to nondrinkers of the same water is 80 to 20, whilst 133 among those who escaped the corresponding ratio is but 57 to 279. I The latter ratio (57 to 279) is at once apparent the reader from the two Tables immediately preying. The other (80 to 20) is reckoned from osc figures to which * or f were prefixed. II apprehend that these figures afford a reasonle ground for believing that the pump, in some way or other, was instrumental, to say the very least, in aggravating the disease. I The following circumstances strengthen this lief.— 11 . On the north side of the street stand two estashments next door to each other, each employing m 30 to 40 persons in workshops at the rear. From the one there were seven deaths by Cholera. From the other none. To the former a supply of liter from the pump was fetched daily for such might desire to drink it. At the latter no iter but the Company's was ever drunk. An ditional contrast to the rate of mortality at the •mer is presented by the fact of its proprietor, th his family and servants (10 persons in all), tircly escaping the disease, though they resided the house which forms the front of the premises, c assures me that none of the inhabitants of this iuse used the pump water. 2. On the south side of the street, at no great distance from one another, stand two larger establishments, 134 a factory and a brewery. From the former, where water from the pump, which is close at hand, stood constantly ready for the casual drinking of the workpeople, 18 out of 200 were fatally attacked in rapid succession. Of 70 men employed at the brewery not one died and only two were at all ill. Not many of these men drink water at all. At least it is certain that they never sent from the brewery to the street pump. Here again a double contrast may be perceived by comparing the brewery, not only with the factory, but with the then unfinished block of model-houses now known as Ingestre Buildings. A narrow court separates these buildings from the brewery. Several of the men employed on the buildings were fatally seized in such quick succession that the works had to be stopped. The works having been completed and the men dispersed by the time I was desirous of inquiring more particularly concerning the deceased workmen, I caused a paper of questions to be forwarded to the foreman, who sent me word in writing, that seven of his thirty-five men died from Cholera, that the first was attacked September Ist, that the works were discontinued during Monday September 4th, that those who died had drunk of the pump water, and that he had not heard any of the others say whether or no they drank it with impunity. Ingestre Buildings do not belong to Broad Street, and I should not have referred to them but for their proximity to 135 the brewery and their marked contrast to it in the matter alluded to. 3. The subjoined Table may also throw some light upon this question. I have denoted the houses by letters of the alphabet, rather than by their respective numbers. Should any one, however, who is scientifically and experimentally interested in the investigation desire to examine into the authenticity and correctness of my statements, I shall be most happy to submit to his inspection all the documents which I have prepared for my own guidance. Houses in which no one was attacked. How many used, or did not use, the Pump Water, Popula- August 30th to September Bth. EXO U.S66* . ________ . tion. No. Yes. Remarks on the Use of the Water. A ... 11 11 B ... 9 4 5 Sept. 4th, for the first time. C ... 10 10 D ... 13 13 E ... 21 19 2 Sept. 2nd and then not much. F ... 5 3 2 Cold with Brandy. G ... 6 0 i H... 13 13 | I ... 0 5 1 Doubtful. j J ... 3 3 | 10 9T 87 10 | In No. F, the landlord and his wife used to draw the water from a filter, which would sometimes stand several days without replenishing. Mrs. tells me they began to have it straight from the pump 136 as soon as they perceived the Cholera got bad, which, at the earliest, could have been but September Ist. 4. One house, in which a very remarkable recovery from collapse took place, contained at that time but two permanent residents, t. c. two only who slept there throughout the pestilence. They were the two servants of a gentleman who was absent during the greater part of the time. One of these servants was seized badly September Ist, 8 a.m. She soon became completely collapsed, but ultimately rallied and passed safely through a most dangerous fever, being carefully nursed throughout by her fellow servant. I visited her daily, and can myself testify to the fact which, so far from keeping in the back ground, I am anxious to state plainly and unequivocally, that she drank the pump water incessantly and abundantly during her illness. I could mention many other instances to the same effect. One lad who recovered from a serious attack drank 10 quarts of it on Sunday, September 3rd — whilst a girl whose recovery from collapse seemed little less than miraculous drank 17 quarts of it the same day, September 3rd. I take this opportunity of recording that the pump water was very generally, indeed almost universally, administered, during the period of illness, both to those who recovered and to those who died. With respect to the servant above-mentioned, it is certain that she was in the habit of drinking a 137 great deal of the water every day previous to, and down to the very day of, her being seized. Her fellow servant, who escaped entirely, only commenced to drink it September 2nd, and then in no great quantity, and with brandy (cold). Their master drank a very little of it September 2nd, but says that he thought it very offensive. 5. In another house, in which no one died, there were, to a population of 26, three recoveries from collapse, two being in the same family. This family, seven in number, used the pump water every day at dinner, three pints to the seven persons, of whom five were not attacked. The two lads attacked were seized, one August 31st, 2 p.m., the other September 6th, 8 a.m. The third case in this house was of a foreigner, seized September Ist, 10 a.m., who also was a drinker of the pump water. I made inquiries of the other residents in the house, and found only one other person who drank this water either at that or any other time. He drank it with impunity. I found that 14 of the .rest neither used to, nor did at that time, drink it. They none of them suffered. Of the remaining three 1 could learn nothing. Among the 14 was a family, six in number, who a few years back were in the habit of using it, but the father having once looked down the well, when it was opened for some purpose or other, perceiving how near the water was to the surface, concluded that its sources 138 of supply could be none of the purest, and so forbade any further use of it. I may here mention, by way of illustrating the imperative need of care and discrimination in investigations of this kind, that my first inquiries led me to record that the pump water was in general use throughout both these houses. It was only when I had gradually become impressed with the necessity of subjecting both individuals and families to a more particular examination, that I elicited the facts as I have now given them. I know that I have used the utmost impartiality in these examinations, sometimes convicting, if I may use the expression, persons of having drunk the pump water with impunity. But I must say that, in the very great majority of instances, additional evidence reveals facts tending to implicate the pump. Indeed, nothing has more conduced to the decided opinion I now hold upon the subject than the gradual disclosure of important testimony, often directly opposed to that which was first given. Lest, however, any should imagine that I have from the first been concerned only to establish a preconceived notion, I think it right to make known that when I first heard of the outbreak being attributed to the pump, I stated to a medical friend, in a conversation which he well remembers, t belief that a careful investigation would ovc that theory, basing my idea of its inaccuracy 139 upon the fact already mentioned, and of well known to me, of several recoveries from complete collapse taking place, at least in spite of, if not actually by reason of, its constant use. Moreover, in a letter to the propounder of this theory, acknowledging the receipt of a copy of his book on Cholera, whilst admitting that his hypothesis afforded an ingenious and plausible explanation of the phenomena, I started an objection to his views on the propagation of the disease so far as they applied to this particular outburst. I shall presently refer to this objection, with intent to invest it with all the force to which it is entitled from the facts which have come under my notice. In the meantime I resume the detail of circumstances which tend to strengthen the suspicion against the pump. 6. A gentleman, who, with his two brothers, is brought daily by his business into Broad Street, informs me that his mother, who resided at Hampstead (West End), being very partial to this particular water, was in the habit of drinking it daily, having it fetched in a bottle by a cart that went every day from Broad Street to Hampstead. She was seized with Cholera on Friday (September Ist) and died the next day. A lady staying with her at the time also drank of it and died. A servant drank the water and had a slight attack of Diarrhoea. The accuracy of this statement 140 has been called in question. A lady, who, having herself drunk the water without ill effect, was disposed to doubt its connection with Cholera, told me that she had heard that the person whose duty it was to take this daily supply to Hampstead, had in fact been in the habit of fetching it from some locality in Hampstead, in order to save himself trouble. I therefore returned to the son of the deceased lady, and stated this to him, reminding him of the extreme importance of accuracy in such a matter. He most positively repeated his assertion that the water was actually taken from this pump, and that as far as trouble was concerned, it was less trouble to take this water than it would have been to procure any other, as the daily starting-place of the cart is situated not twenty yards from the pump. He further informed me that one of his brothers who was in the habit of drinking this water suffered from Diarrhoea, whilst he himself and his other brother did not drink it and were not ill. 7. In a house, where I am well known, circumstances enabled me to collect together in one room several mothers of families, with whom I held conversation at some length relative to the habit of the inmates in respect of the water used for drinking. This method possessed the obvious advantage of their assisting and correcting each other's evidence. In this house there were, to a population of 32, the three following deaths from Cholera. 141 Deceased persons. Age. Date of Attack. Date of Death. Mr. ... 38 31st Aug., noon Ist Sept., 1 a.m. Mr. ... 35 2nd Sept., 8 a.m. 15th Sept. (fever). A boy 8ง 2nd Sept., 9 a.m. 3rd Sep., 4.30 a.m. In the first two of these cases the drinking of the pump water previous to illness is beyond a doubt. I have set them, down rather conspicuously, as I wish to call attention to a circumstance which, whilst it testifies to the reality of my own gradually-formed convictions concerning the pump, adds considerable weight to the reasons upon which they are based. By some mistake I had at first assigned a wrong date of attack to the two first of these cases, vis. — September sth to the first, and September Bth to the second. The two widows having removed, I was led astray by a miscalculation on the part of a person still in the house. Neither did I detect the error by my own recollection, not having visited the house during the outburst. As my informant seemed positive in asserting that both the deceased were habitual drinkers of the pump water, I made a note (which I can produce) of the second case as being " a difficulty of the pump " theory, for why, if indeed deceased regularly " used its water, and was plainly susceptible of " Cholera, had he not been attacked earlier?" 142 When however I came, in due course, to seek out the widows, I at once discovered my mistake. With reference to the first case, the widow told me that her husband invariably drank the pump water before going to bed, sometimes to the amount of a quart, and that he certainly did drink it Wednesday evening, August 30th. She thinks that she herself did drink a little of it the same day (August 30th) but is sure she drank none afterwards. A surviving child of hers, age 11, told me that he drank about half a pint from the ladle (attached to the pump) August 31st, 8 p.m. and was none the worse for it. Another boy (the third fatal case above mentioned) is very likely to have done so. She sent her children out of the district September Ist, 8 a.m. The other widow used to drink beer for dinner whereas her husband drank the pump water. Respecting the other inmates of the house, the family of eight to whom I have before alluded were among the number; of the rest I ascertained, during the above-mentioned conversation, that 14 persons who were not attacked never used the pump water. About the four others I know nothing. 8. In another house where I had a similar opportunity of examining the remaining inmates collectively, I found that 20 out of 30 who resided there at the beginning of September never used the pump water, most of them giving their reasons for not doing so. None of these 20 suffered. 143 Concerning six others I could learn nothing, as they were gone away. Of the other four, two died of Cholera who were plainly shewn to have drunk this water shortly previous to being attacked. The remaining two (father and daughter) recovered from Diarrhoea. The mother at first told me that none of her family ever had water from the pump. On her mentioning my question afterwards to her daughter, the latter recollected that she did drink it and gave a reason for having done so. The father says he did not drink it. 9. There is a family, twelve in number, in this street, of whom two only were attacked, — two boys, who recovered. The parents informed me that they never used the pump water, and that they had forbidden their children to drink it from the ladle. On my questioning the children as to their obedience in this matter, it turned out that the two who were ill had drunk it in this way within forty-eight hours of being seized, and that none of the others had. It was fetched for them during their illness, and their mother began drinking it Sunday evening, September 3rd, without ill effect. I have throughout been careful to bear in mind this general use of the pump water during the period of illness, always asking the surviving relatives whether it was not likely that they themselves took this opportunity of drinking it, and especially taking pains to distinguish between its 144 use by the sufferers before and after the hour of attack. 10. In the next house to that in which this family lived, resided a young couple of which the husband was seized, Ist September, 9 a.m., and died the same day at 12 p.m. His wife, though she nursed him, escaped. She at first told me that he never drank water from the pump, but afterwards recollected that, quite contrary to his usual custom, he desired her to fetch some for dinner on Wednesday, August 30th, of which she was sure that she did not partake. This case is interesting as shewing, if indeed the pump were in fault, that the interval between the drinking of the water and the attack was in one instance about forty-four hours. 11. Just opposite to the pump, on the North side of the street, lived a family of five persons, four of whom (mother, father, and two grown-up daughters) were, with distressing rapidity, swept away by the pestilence. They were all drinkers of the pump water, including the one survivor, a lad, who certainly drank some, though but a little, August 31st, but was away the greater part of the following days. 12. In a family of four, the father was fatally seized Ist September, 11 a.m. ; a son, not fatally, 2nd September, s a.m. ; another son, fatally, 6th September, 8 a.m. The mother alone was not attacked. She is sure she never drank the pump water. She is equally sure that her husband and the son who 145 was first seized did drink it. She is not so sure about the other son. 13. Two sons, from a family of seven, are known to have drunk the pump water from the ladle. One was fatally seized, the next day, with Cholera. The other had a not fatal attack of Diarrhoea. No other member of the family either drank this water or was ill. 14. In another family, a son, age six, was seized 2nd September, 6.30 p.m., and died 4th September, 11.15 a.m. The father was seized sth September, 7.30 p.m., and died 6th September, 10.15 p.m. The mother and a female child escaped. The mother never drank the pump water. Her husband often did. She knows he did between September Ist and his illness. She thinks it likely the boy did drink it, because it was his practice to do so. The girl may, or may not, have drunk it. 15. The last instances of this kind of evidence which I shall adduce are the result of a series of investigations respecting the inmates of a single house. They are especially worthy of notice, not only as adding a striking confirmation of all that has been previously recorded, but as being a fair illustration of the manner in which the whole inquiry has been conducted, and as shewing very remarkably the utter worthlessness of hastily collected facts. A father, mother, and grown-up daughter occupied the ground floor. The daughter was k 146 attacked 2nd September, and died the same day. The mother assured me that they drank but little water, and that from the cistern. I then questioned her more particularly as to what they actually did drink on the Ist of September, when she said that she believed her husband and daughter had some gin and water after she was gone to bed, but added that the water was doubtless from the cistern. The husband was in the room during the conversation, but being very deaf could not hear it. I raised my voice and asked him whether he remembered having this gin and water % He did. Did he know where the water came from 1 From the pump. How did they take the water ? He took it hot, and his daughter took it cold. Was he ill afterwards ? I next went to the top of the house where lived a family consisting of father, mother, a little girl about ten years old, and an infant. They had moved out of the district September 4th, but had recently returned. I asked whether any of them had been attacked with Cholera or Diarrhoea ? No. Were they in the habit of using the pump water 1 Yes. Who fetched it 1 The little girl. Was she not afraid (I then asked the child), going through the streets to see the shutters all up and so many hearses about ? Did'nt go through the E' 3. Why not ? Was ill in bed with a cold, ed the mother whether that was the case. 147 She then called to mind that it was so. Who fetched the water when the child was unable to go for it? Why then they got it from the cistern. The adjoining rooms had been occupied at the time by a young couple, with infant child, and a female lodger. They were now gone away ; but, as I knew that one or more of them had been attacked, I went after them, and found that the husband and lodger had both been seriously ill (collapse), but had recovered in different hospitals. The latter was the first attacked, Ist September, 1 p.m. The former was seized on the 2nd, but not collapsed till the sth. His brother, who had spent the day (Ist September) with him, was taken ill at his own home and died. Had they been in the habit, I asked, of drinking the pump water ? No. When the young woman was attacked, what did the doctor recommend ? Spring water. Where was it obtained ? From the pump. When this water was in the house, did he drink of it? He then remembered that he did. Was it likely that his brother drank it? Very likely. Had the young woman taken any previous to her illness? He thought not ; but as she was now in a situation in the suburbs he could not say. I then wrote the question with great distinctness on paper and desired him to put it to her the first opportunity. Some time afterwards I met him in Broad Street, when he told me he had put the question, and she 148 replied that she did drink it August 31st. I subsequently went again to their present lodgings, in order to inquire particularly of the wife, who had escaped entirely, whether she also might not have drunk the water at the same time. She very positively affirmed that neither she nor her child, which likewise escaped, drank any of it. She added that it is, and has long been, her practice to drink no water, without first boiling it. Two women also died in the same house. One was attacked 3rd September, 9 a.m. ; the other, 6th September, 4 p.m. Concerning the former and her habit as to drinking of water, no one could speak. The latter was described to me as a person not likely to have drunk water at all, a description which, however paradoxical it may seem, has in not a few instances supplied the clue which has led to clear discovery of the actual use of the pump water. I ascertained that she nursed the other woman and washed her things on the day previous to being herself seized. With respect to the evidence of persons at that time drinking the pump water with impunity, I have already set it forth quite as strongly as I could. I have also mentioned instances of deaths from Cholera of persons who did not appear to have drunk this water previous to illness. Among the most noticeable of these is the case of a gentleman who was taken ill Ist September, at noon, and 149 died 17 hours afterwards. His daughter informed me that he never drank the pump water, whilst she herself and the shopman, being the only other inmates of the house, drank it daily. Neither must I omit to state that I have found four families, amongst whom the pump water was in constant use, more of whose members seem to have taken it with impunity than with ill effect, the proportion in each case being 3 to 1, 3 to 1, 5 to 2, and sto 1. I have not mot with any family, of magnitude worth mentioning, who drank it throughout without ill effect to one or more of its members. There may be such instances. I only say I have not met with them. I have left nearly 400 of the then inhabitants of Broad Street unaccounted for. Possibly if I could have examined them all I might have discovered some striking exceptions. They may even yet be heard of. And I hope they will, if indeed there are such to be found, for there is nothing like sifting a matter of this sort to the very bottom. It is far too important a subject to be sacrificed to the symmetry of a theory. I know a family of six who all drank it without injury at dinner, 3rd September, 3 p.m. The lad, a neighbour's son, who fetched it for them, was fatally seized that same evening, but he had drunk some the previous day. Another family of five had it for dinner on the 4th and no harm followed. 150 It will probably be expected that I should state something about the sanitary condition of the houses. I feel bound to say that, as far as Broad Street is concerned, there is this connection between defective sanitary arrangements and the Cholera, that a house ill regulated in other respects is but little likely to have its receptacles for the Company's water well attended to. Without pointing, as I could, to individual instances of sad and culpable neglect, I shall content myself with saying that I well know that many of the unfortunate deceased were literally driven to resort to the pump through mistrust of the cistern. A constant supply from the main, with total abolition of cisterns, is an imperative necessity. Here let me invite attention to the fact, apparent from the statistical table, that the population of the houses which escaped was decidedly below the average house population throughout the street. Upon which fact I have this remark to make, that the houses containing few persons are precisely those which, being for the most part the best regulated in all respects, are consequently the best regulated in respect of the cisterns. There is therefore the less, or rather no, need for the inmates to resort elsewhere for water. To which must be added that scantiness of population in particular houses is owing to the absence, often to the absolute exclusion, of children, whom I have found to be the general carriers of the pump 151 water, i.e., wherever it is habitually used. And here I imagine is a reasonable account of the comparative immunity from Cholera, in this neighbourhood, of old, infirm and isolated persons ; — they had no one to send for the pump water. The subject of defective drainage ought perhaps not to be handled by any but practical men. As there is little need however of a special or technical education to render one sensible of grievously offensive stench, I may at least venture upon the assertion that I have long been aware from painful experience that many of the house drains in Broad Street are in a condition peremptorily demanding the attention of gentlemen professionally acquainted with such matters. And yet there does not seem to be any strong ground for believing that exhalations from house drains had overmuch to do with Cholera in Broad Street. I suppose it might reasonably be expected that, if such had been the case, the disease should have found an undue proportion of at least its earliest victims among the inhabitants of kitchens, or, as they might truly be termed, cellars. I have already shewn that the kitchen population of Broad Street was not quite decimated, whereas the population of the whole street was just more than decimated. But the manner in which the date of attack in each case bears upon the point is noticeable enough to deserve a full setting forth. 152 It will be observed that three women who died of Cholera in kitchens had recently washed Cholera linen, a fact to which I merely call attention, leaving it to others to connect it with the attack, or not, as they please. I Kitchen Population 68. Deaths 0. I _? - ... . Drank the , lime of Attack. ,-, ,, T , Remarks. Pump Water. I A Child .2nd Sept. (slightly) . Doubtful ... Got worse Sept. 4th A 80y... 4th „ 9 a.m "...Yes. Mrs. -4th ? 1 p.m. ...No j Hadreoently washed ( Cholera Linen. \r Li.i (Not ascer- Mrs. -4th „ 4 p.m. ... | Mrs. — Oth „ 4p.m. ...No Ditto. I Mrs. — 9th „ Noon ... Xo Ditto. j Moreover, a child, living in a kitchen, was very severely attacked 2nd September, 7 a.m. , but recovered. It is not certain, though by no means unlikely, that she drank of the pump water. — In another kitchen, a father and daughter were simultaneously seized, September sth, and recovered. The daughter had used the pump water, the father not. — In another, a family who used the pump water suffered a good deal from Diarrhoea. I don't know the dates of attack. Thus it appears that I only know of two attacks in kitchens in Broad Street during the first four days of the outburst, and of not one during the first two days. 153 There are questions relating to the duration of the pestilence and its probable connection with the pump which I must not omit to notice, though I do not find myself in a position to answer them satisfactorily. Upon hypothesis of this connection being made out, How long did the pump water continue to exert a deleterious influence 1 Had it gradually become thus noxious ? Did it gradually cease to be so 1 I confess to considerable hesitation in attempting to answer these questions. Neither would I venture upon the subject at all but that I feel, if the hypothesis indeed be true, that it is a step in the right direction to make the attempt. I perceive that I am not in possession of sufficient data, which I regret the more as I also seem to perceive that if I had known from the first the right way to discharge the duty of a collector of facts these questions might have been well nigh settled. Some facts, however, may be stated. The pump handle was taken off on Friday, September Bth. But by that time the epidemic had evidently subsided. Neither, as I have already stated, have I been able to trace any connection between the pump and the few attacks subsequent to Wednesday, 6th September, 8 a.m. It is rather strange that I have had to record that same date and hour of attack both in the last fatal case and also the last not-fatal case in which such connection is made out. There were but five fatal attacks in Broad 154 Street after that hour. I know of only two attacks not fatal in this street after that same hour ; but as I have unavoidably left nearly 400 of the then inhabitants of the street unexamined, I cannot but admit that my records of Diarrhoea (not fatal) must be incomplete, as also the records of the use of pump water with impunity. Whether then had the pump water become innocuous, or had it already swept off the majority of its drinkers, leaving unscathed just those of them who were not susceptible of its evil influence "? I must here for once transgress the rule I have observed of confining myself to Broad Street, and avail myself of a table, relating to duration of illness during the first five days, which I constructed several months ago from the Registrar's Returns for the account which I then wrote of the 376 deaths from Cholera which took place throughout St. Luke's district parish. This Table, however, is not complete, the duration of illness being in some cases omitted in the returns, and no returns for the first nine days of September appearing from one, at least, of the hospitals to which several of the patients were conveyed. The amount of incompleteness may be reckoned if I state that during the first five days of September the number of deaths in that district — a number, however, itself incomplete — were, on the Ist September 42, 2nd September 63, 3rd Soptember 155 41, 4th September 43, sth September 23. It must be noticed that the dates given below are of deaths anc 3 not of attacks. TABLE OF DURATION OF ILLNESS. ISept. Ist. I 5 Sept. 2nd.| ฃ Sept. 3rd.ง | Sept. 4th.f ง Sept. sth.| 33 OB OS OS OS Q 10&under..l0 ]o&unA^*> ปฆ-ซ - - ป ปT77"Sซ^ P P ฐ P "'" U ฐ"' 3l tssr S "-- — ซ* . . 24 43 502 7-2 T2 ill _ฆ. a TT t ป:::::::":: : : :: :: :::;ฆ; : :: ::::::: :::::::::::::::::::::::•;:: :: :: ;; : :: :: •• - ! 5 | * " ?_tt-2r '—-)• :: :: :: :: :: :: :: ::::::::: : : : :: ฆ' :: :: :: ซjjj ] rj :: : :: : :: : ::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :: :: :: : :: :: ;: ; j j J J ฃ2=S2= •ฆ ฆ' • 3 T '• 2 7 5 602 lJ ao 7 Great Marlborough Street. :::::: ฆ• ฆ :: : •ฆ •••ฆ :::: ฆ::::::,::::: i: :.: :: ::::;:: : , • • , ฆฆ:::::: :: :. :: :: :: :: :: :: :•: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: j ซ ; " HszSr™ •—ฆ'>: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: ::. :: :: : ฆ •ฆ "": - 1 ....-.: :::: :: :: :: ;: ฆฆ ฆฆ ฆฆ :: :; :: :; :: . i ฃ . 3 -ggiSS. ฐ 0 2 . . 3 1 1 1 i i <> J 5o 8-6 ft 4 Portland Mpwซ : : : : : : :: :: :: :: :: ป• :::::: : •'ฆฆ': : :: •ฆ i :: i S 2 i ::.".. :: :: :: - :::::::::::::: •• ::::[ :: - " :: :: " :: 1 1 B R ?! Sฃซ :: : :: :: :: :: :; :: : • j•• •• ป•• • :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: •_ :: :: :; ;: :: i ฆ 2 i 22 *™ *j 04 12 pSI^ t- •ฆ• •::::::::::::::: :: :: :: : \1ฆฆ%••:'i'ป::::::::::::: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: 13 7 j jjj fซ 0 ; SS^pfi- 111 "^ •• :: : :: :: :: :; : J 2 2 •• :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: •• ;; •• l t 7 ;s \* ฐj wซdonr street (S onth). ::::::; :: •• ] I**i>:: . :: 4 -, i 1 :•• •• 1 1 50 "? I I gsysi, : :: :: :: ;• ;; ; I•;-•:•••• j •• .. 1 ::: .: . :: :: ;: 2 t t fi ?2 ml 3 ? 4 Biwiokst™et(Boui__). • .. ฐ A 8 J ? ? 1 "' ฐ /O 102 7 4 iromn'c Pnnป* ฆฆ•••• oil* ฆ•••*•• .... r, -in ?-. _ „ _ • Jvenip s uoiirt. I! ? I J J •• 1 •• 1 1 : •• J -Jฐ 3, 8 Hopkins Street. } fi ซ ? ? •• J . .. 1! 1? J™ SI 5 3 Husband Street. I I o ] I'• •ฆ J " it }? ?rS ,?"5 U 8 New Street. .. ; o ! 2 •• !' ?3 S ?5J fj 52 23 Marshall Street. 1 " " J 'ฆ "A 2 3 l 2 •• 1 , [ ] d n \t HI II 7 6 South Bow. .. 1 .. 3 4 1 1 .. 1 '• ;; 1 JO f 828 3-6 18 7 West Street. .. • •• " ' X l 2 f n I'l 11 8 Marlborough Row. .. • ! ! 1 ~ 2 J? -fj 0 1 Tyler Court. : ; .. ;: i :: ;; : 2 •• •• :: :: :: :: ;; :: :: I i \\ b * ? 2 Marlborough court. •• •• .. i ? o .. if 1ซ orr fo 4 2 Cross Court. •• 2 'i 'a •• ฆ• X '• •• -^-^1,-ifr. .. .. 14 ™ 965 1-8 58 13 Carnaby Street. j ...6121 .. .. 1 6 ป 137 3-0 io 8 Tyler Street. 1 .... •• 1 ; i I 'A 7 •• •• " " 3 5J f-0 U 5 C^ossStreet. •• . 2 3 6 11 1 .. 1 J J 58 -7 4 1 George Place. 1 ' 1 .. .. ฆ \ 2 f 5 ซI *-0 48 18 Silver Street. .. 1 ฆ• 1 •• •• 1 I l . " 6-6 3 1 Nayloi-s Yard. .. 1 .. ฆ f f JOOO 03 63 3 King Street. .. •• 1 i ' •; 1 .. .. \ WJJ 0-1 127 1 Regent Street. X X 1 .. .. \ \ ซซ 0-2 18 ] Heddou Street. •• J • .. .. 4 f JBB 1-7 12 3 HeddonCourt .. 1 ; 1 •ฆ - I }ซ 0-4= 24 1 Leicester Street. . 2 •• } •' •• 1 .. .. I % Jซ J-8 10 9 Upper John Street. : : : : ::::::::::::: :: :: :: ;• : :"::::::::::::::::"e'i I I : s : :: •• :: :: :: •• " "•• :: •• •• :.: " •'•' :: ง ! ll o8 1 i I BEST" 5* 5 * :: " :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: : :: "i '• ? :: :: : i :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: " •• •• ••" S BTKr— : ; :: :: :: ; " J •_ป JoJ *o ฆ; •_ I I ?no J'J 39 ฐ Liuie puiteue y street - . 2 J 2 2 1 3 .. 2 2 I I 100 1-8 12 2 William and Mary Yard 1 ? 1 1 16 20 650 3-0 2!) 7 Peter Street. I! •' ฆ ฆ _ฃ J -P24P 24 2ซ 11 4 (Green's Court and i T 'ฆTn ~ n - ~ \ Pulteney Place. : : : : x •: •• •• : :: - i jj jj 12 1 waiker-scw. : L " ฆ: •• •• I : 348 ฐf 25 2 Great Crown Court. 2 1 i 1 .. 1 * J J 81 1-2 8 1 George Court. i i •• 1 ; .. I \ \ SIO 0-a 0 3 2 Bupert Street. • ' .. ' ? ? b^V ,„ 51 4 Great Windmill Street. .* . .. .'. ! \\ \\ i *• •• !. .. 1 ' ฆ 0 lit lo ฐ X Queen's Head Court. 1 1 .. .. X 2 ? 2 JOl 1-2 13 2 Ham Yard. : ; 1 1 :: :: :: : :: :: 1 \ ?oo o-s 8 1 Ang ei court. . . ' ' i • i % 151 1-3 18 2 Swallow Street. ...,/. ..' .'." " • 11 .1 11 11 11 11 I o "" "" — 2 Piccadilly. .. 11 11 ' ? ,'! ? 11 11 11 ,1 , ! ~ ~~ — 2 Jermyu Street. 1 t 1 fa 2" 7 26 1 St. James's Market - L-ll: " '• •• •• 1 26 38 3 1 Eagle Place. , , __..... i~t: — ,—,, — , - , . .___, I•• , __, -_ i•• _;; |_^_ •; .","1",;"1•;[ •• 1 •• 1 " , " j ;^. } I 318 ฐ" 3 -=ป _i jiA^i SS cu mam^ m^^^^ m WP^ AuQUST September [ooi Number of Fatal Cas " s - I I J ™ AuGUST , I Mortality Xumber Nu ™ ber W Name op Street, Court, &c. L fl L 48< 8 _ 7 „ B< m 1L 12 . 13 . 14 . W . ]6 . 17. 18. 19. 20. 81. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. ป7. 28. 20. 30. 81. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. C. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30 1. ฐ f k A n ? w c n k . U asJruhLd. Population, '"hou^." **ฃ[ B St. Anne's Court and Place, and Ship Yard " " " '' " [[ .. jj [[ " " ]\ \\ ][ " \' " " _ , ' ฃj* 32 j 'ฆ r Oxford Street (part of) " [' " " " ]' \\ [\ " \\ '[ '[ " " x J 4 JJ J.* 57 } ฆ _ . I Marlborougli Mews " , , „„ ฐ i ฆ ZoNE L 1 Marlborough Street * ' i i 'i 'i i 1 J 7 _!$ J * J J ฆ L Great Ma.lborough Street " " " " " 2 2 1 1 .. 1 .'." '.'. '.'. '.'. '.'. '.', '.'. " 7 9 602 14 fio 7 I fWardour Street (North of Edward Street) .. • •• •• •ฆ •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• " ~'• "•' '• ".. 3 1 .. ? ? .. 4 4 444 J 9 27 2 I Phillip's conn !.'!!!!!".!! " '.'. '.'. '.'. '.'. •• 'ฆ'. -. 'ฆ'• •• •• •ฆ ฆ• •'ฆ •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •'• •• "* * * l * 'ฆ •• * •'•' •• ฆฆ •• '• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• ••' •• •• •• •• • • •• • • ~o 10 i'o 33 7 I HSs?ei'6 18 7 1 Marlborough Row 1 * " t} 4 J 1 .. 1 12 16 223 71 H 8 J TylerCourt \ '{ ", — ' fi o 33 6 j M Marlborough Court "A • &* 6"5 3 2 \J Cross Court ' 5 t .* .* 38 52 4 2 1 Camaby Street l } \ I i , 18 965 I# B 58 13 _| Tyler Street ' : 8 'i 'fl "i " "l ,5 ,5, 5 137 30 10 ป l| Cross Street ...6121 .. .. 1 .. H 15 367 v fi ฆ George Place ; • o 'a "a "i i i 'i ,„ „, 58 1-7 4 1 (J Silver Street 1 1 1 2 3 6 11 1 .. 1 18 2 4 587 4-0 48 18 si Naylor'sYard j " '\ \ A ! ' 15 6-6 3 1 iJ King Street (Regent Street) 1 " " " '' 4 4 1005 0 3 63 3 X [_ Regent Street (part of ) " " " x l ' 1092 0-1 127 1 B f Heddon Street .. . • "i : ' l 410 02 18 ] j Heddon Court l l 1 4 4 233 1-7 12 3 E Leicester Street ' " " * ' ' ," — l 245 04 24 1 I Upper John Street j •; ' " 106 1-8 10 2 I Upper James Street | "' " 3 3 105 2-8 7 3D Bridle Lane i " „ l 'C " 'ฆ 5 68 7-3 10 4 B Great Pulteney Street I S } ซ 1 1 " "i " 'o 22 22 62S 4>l 13 G Zone 3. J Little Windmill Street x g ' d J x l " z 19 26 620 4-1 35 14 L Brewer Street " " " '\ 'ซ f ' 4 4 530 07 57 1 fi Little Pulteney Street x 11 " " 7 7 623 I'l 39 6 L William and Mary Yard o "o 9 '2 "1 "q " 'o 'v 2 ซ2ซ 2 109 I2 9 3 Edward Street. ฆ>' Ji.il warn oiiet- \.) ..•••• j^ ...... ?, „ Qt^,it ฆ ti 1 .... A -* J v lL ฐ 7 o Duck Lane. ฆ 1 .. X 1 50 1-7 4 1 Tylers Court. ฆ ?...! " 1 5 # 5 1 2 .. 3 .. 1 1 1 .... 1 .... 1 .. 1 24 28 535 5-2 35 14 Berwick Street (South). ฆf Broad' Street) . " ] 3 1 .... 1 r > 8 78 10 3 7 4 Kemp's Court. V 3 13 1 .. .. 1 ฐ 13 70 18 5 3. 3 Hopkin's Street, ฆ'' ' ' " " "2" 2 1 1 1 .. 1 .. 1 .. .. 1 8 8 120 6-6 5' 3 Husband Street. ฆ ' . . 1 4 3 2 3 .. 1 14 15 23 ฐ 6 " 5 H 8 New Street. ฆ ' . . 1 0 5 1 1 .. .. 1 .. .. ]3 17 150 11>3 7 ฐ Pulteney Court. ฆ . . . '. 3 4 3 1 2 1 .. 1 • 15 17 179 9 " 4 14 7 Cambridge Street. ฆ ... ; "i G 20 24 9 8 0 5 .. 2 1 90 90 80 ฐ 10 "ฐ 49 35 Broad Street. ฆ " . . 1 • ; t 2 7 6 3 13 3 1.. 33 49 951 s> l 52 23 Marshall Street. ฆ• ' ' 1 11l .. .. 1 X ฆ' ' 1 3 5 1 2 18 14 1 76 7 9 7 6 Southfiow. " 1 . ..2312.. 1 1 10 12 325 3<6 I 8 7 West Street. * i 3 4 1 .. .. 1 .. 1 12 10 223 7-1 11 8 Marlborough Eow. ' " 1 " — 2 60 33 6 1 Tyler Court. . . . 1 1 l 3 3 54 5-5 3 2 Marlborough Court. .. 2 .. 2 2 38 5-2 4 2 Cross Court. ' '58 14 18 965 1-8 58 13 Carnaby Street. x i 1 2 . ..1 ฆ-' 5 5 137 3 ฐ 30 8" Tyler Street. ) ) ' .... 0 1 2 1 .... 1 .. n 15 367 4-0 14 5 Cross Street. 1 1 1 58 1-7 4 1 George Place. • 2 3 0 11 1 •• 1 18 24 587 4>o 48 18 Silver Street. .... 1 1 l ? 1 1 1 15 6-0 3 1 Naylor's Yard. 1 . l . . . . 1 4 4 1005 03 63 3 King Street. eet) 1 " 1 ! X 1092 01 127 1 Regent Street. 1 1 1 410 02 18 ] Heddou Street. '\ 1 .. 1 .. .. 4 4 233 1-7 12 3 Heddon Court. ! . . — 1 245 0-4 24 1 Leicester Street. i " .. .. l 2 : 106 1-8 10 2 Upper John Street. " 1 1 .. .. 1 3 3 105 2-8 7 3 Upper James Street. ' 1 2 3 5 08 7-3 10 4 Bridle Lane. ? 6 4 6 1 1 3 1 22 528 4-1 41 13 Great Pulteney Street. 1 3 7 3 1 1 1 .. 2 19 20 620 4-1 35 14 Little Windmill Street. " 2 . . . . 2 4 4 530 0-7 57 1 Brewer Street. ' 'i .. l 3 1 .. .. 1 7 7 023 1-1 39 6 Little Pulteney Street. ' 1 1 2 2 109 1-8 12 2 William and Mary Yard 1 " " .. 2 2 2 2 1 3 .. 2 2 16 20 650 3-0 29 7 Peter Street. " " 'ฆ t> .. .. 1 ? 1 1 3 5 j 224 26 11 4 f Green's Court and — 1 \— — — — "I Pulteney Place. " — 1 76 1-3 12 1 Walker's Court. " " .. 1 1 2 348 05 25 2 Great Crown Court. .. .. 1 1 1 81 1-2 8 1 George Court. 1 .. 1 2 2 810 02 63 2 Rupert Street. . " "1 ' 1 4 5 610 0-8 51 4 Great Windmill Street. ! X [ " 1 1 94 10 6 1 Queen's Head Court. .1 1 2 2 161 12 13 2 Ham Yard. '" " " 1 - 1 ! 200 05 8 1 Angel Court. . . • • • " 2 2 151 1-3 18 2 Swallow Street. l " " •• •• l f ] || 2 2 _ _ _ 2 Piccadilly. ! "" 1 1 2 — — — 2 Jermyu Street. " 1 1 130 0-7 26 1 St. James's Market. 1 1 1 1 26 38 3 1 Eagle Place. 1 , 1 1 318 03 45 1 Duke Street. || " 'I || "" " ". ? I I 2 163 12 19 I Crown Court. ฆ r : : — — " 7~ r~V~^ i I ~~l 1 i T,T ~T 34 142 128 02 55 20 28 22 v 0 2 3 j 3 .. 1 3 4.. 1 .. .. 2 .. 1 .. 1 .. 2 .. .. 1 576 703 ttacks .... 1 1 . . 1 1 2 8 . . ฆฆป