Public Health in Nineteenth-Century Britain (original) (raw)
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Health and Nutrition Victorian Attitudes towards Health The Creation of Boards of Health The Physical Deterioration of the Textile Workers Health & Victorian Criticism Women & Children Maternity Infant and Child Mortality in Late-Victorian Leeds The Economic Implications of Britain’s Malnourished Workers Eneas Dallas's leading article on the report of the Scottish Lunacy Commission Death of Children and the Victorian Novel The Working Classes Cosmetics What Victorians Ate What the Victorians Ate What the Poor Ate Contaminated Milk in Victorian Britain Food and Famine in Victorian Literature “Adulteration, and its Remedy” — an article in the 1860 Cornhill Magaizne Come Buy, Come Buy — Food Adulteration and "Goblin Market" Sanitation and the Environment The Victorian Environment: An Overview How Filthy Was London? Kingsley, Millar, Chadwick on Poverty, Environment, and Epidemics Stained Glass and Gaslight — Darkness, Smog, and a Little Light in Victorian Cities Health and Hygiene From Inconvenience to Pollution — Redefining Sewage in The Victorian Age Sanitation and Its Absence Chadwick's Report on Sanitary Conditions London Nightmen (cesspool-sewermen) Good Intentions, Unexpected Consequences: Thames Pollution and The Great Stink of 1858 Punch on Thames Pollution (1859) Poisoned Wallpaper The Navvy and Sanitation Reform Technological Solutions The Metropolitan Main Drainage (Processing Sewage) Bathhouses and Washhouses |
Substance Abuse Addiction Alcoholism Narcotics Disease Sitemap Bacteriology & the Germ Theory of Disease Health, Hygiene, and Contagious Diseases Cholera Puerperal Fever Tuberculosis (Consumption) Typhus Medicine and Medical Care Medicine and Medical Care (sitemap) Victorian Medical Education Victorian Hospitals Medical Care Medical Developments Pregnancy and Childbirth in the Age of Victoria Medicine and Public Health in Victorian Literature and the Arts Amateur Doctors and Patent Medicines Disability and Disability Studies "Language Is Our Rubicon": A Review of Jennifer Esmail's Reading Victorian Deafness Dangerous Occupations Robbed of “twenty-five years of existence” — Sheffield’s cutlery damages worker's health Murderous Majolica: The Human Cost of Bringing Art and Design to the Masses “Possibly the most murderous mining conditions in the world” — Cornish copper & tin mines Coal Mining: Suffocation, Fire, and Explosions Related material Victorian Turkish Baths: their origin, development, and gradual decline The Wells and Camden Wash Houses and Baths. 1888. Hampstead, London, NW3 |
Last modified 9 February 2024