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Medicine and the Industrial Revolution - AQAHealth and the Industrial Revolution

Urban populations increased rapidly in the 19th century. Diseases such as cholera, typhus and typhoid spread due to poor public health conditions. The work of Edwin Chadwick, John Snow and Charles Booth led to significant improvements.

Part of HistoryBritain: health and the people, c.1000 to the present day

Health and the Industrial Revolution

In the 19th century, urban populations grew rapidly. conditions were poor and this contributed to the spread of diseases such as cholera, typhus and typhoid.

Watch animated summary of medical progress in the 19th century.

Industrialisation

From 1750, there was a movement of people from rural to urban areas due to the Goods were being made in factories powered by steam, instead of in peoples鈥 homes. People needed to move to where there was work, and this was in the new factories in urban areas. This led to towns and cities growing quickly in size. The table below shows the rapid increase in the size of some cities between 1801 and 1901.

CityPopulation in 1801Population in 1901
London1,090,0785,567,591
Greater Manchester334,0132,125,441
Birmingham60,882245,216
Glasgow46,779571,615
CityLondon
Population in 18011,090,078
Population in 19015,567,591
CityGreater Manchester
Population in 1801334,013
Population in 19012,125,441
CityBirmingham
Population in 180160,882
Population in 1901245,216
CityGlasgow
Population in 180146,779
Population in 1901571,615

Housing and sanitation

Factory owners often built cheap houses for their workers. terraced housing was common, with families living in a single room. There was a lack of clean running water, proper sanitation and Toilets were normally shared between several houses.

Water came from pumps in the street with water supplied from a river that was often heavily polluted. Cracked pipes could also lead to contamination of the water with human waste from If there was an outbreak of a disease, it would spread rapidly due to overcrowding and poor sanitation.

People using a shared water pump. Underground its cracked pipes are near a leaking cesspit containing human waste
Figure caption,
Shared water pumps could easily become contaminated

Air pollution

Huge amounts of coal were being burned to power new factories and mills in towns and cities. Air pollution caused significant damage to health, as a thick hung over towns and cities where people had moved to in order to live and work. It caused breathing difficulties and led to many deaths as it damaged people鈥檚 lungs.

Disease

Overcrowding and the lack of an effective public health system led to the outbreak and spread of several diseases. These included the following:

  • Cholera first arrived in England in 1831 and caused an outbreak that killed around 50,000 people. It was spread by contaminated water or food. It caused diarrhoea and vomiting, which often led to severe dehydration and death. There were further cholera epidemics in 1848, 1854 and 1866.
  • Typhoid was also spread by contaminated food or water. It caused a high temperature and fatigue, and could also be fatal.