Development of public health administration in Glasgow, 1842-1872
dc.contributor.author
Blackden, Stephanie
en
dc.date.accessioned
2016-10-31T16:52:27Z
dc.date.available
2016-10-31T16:52:27Z
dc.date.issued
1976
dc.description.abstract
en
dc.description.abstract
This thesis outlines the course of public health
improvement in Glasgow between l842 and 1872, through the
medium of local government administration. After an
Introduction in which the general sanitary condition of
the city in the middle years of the nineteenth century is
described, the thesis examines four main areas of public
health - administration, cleansing, the control of epidem
diseases and improvement of working class housing.
Section I examines the reform of administration.
Chapter 2 outlines the changing pattern of administration
throughout the period. Chapters 3 to 6 describe the
various local government bodies which existed prior to
l846 and their relationships, the extension of the city
over the suburbs in 1846 which provided the essential
administrative basis for reform, and the subsequent
evolution of municipal and parochial public health
administration. Section II deals with the cleansing of the city in
its widest sense. After an opening chapter, Chapter 7,
which looks briefly at the problems of cleansing throughout the period and the methods adopted for tackling them,
the various local authorities responsible for general
sanitation are examined, the evolution of cleansing
methods and the effectiveness of these in practice. Two
final chapters in this section, Chapters 13 and 14, look
at the related problems of sewage disposal and smoke
control and the local authority's response to these, andfinally the successful introduction of a water supply.
Section III deals with the local authority's role
in the control and prevention of epidemic disease.
Chapter 15 looks at the whole spectrum of morbidity and
mortality in Glasgow with regard to communicable diseases.
Chapters 16 and 18 look at two different periods of
exceptional epidemic disease and the varying successes
of the local authorities in each period in coping with
the emergency. Chapter 17, which links them, shows the
gradual change of emphasis in local authority attitudes
towards responsibility for epidemic disease and the
changing role of municipality and parochial boards in
this field.The final section, Section IV, looks at the problem
of housing the working classes in Glasgow. Chapter 19
outlines the build-up of the city from a comparatively
small size in 1800 to a major conurbation by 1872, with
inevitable divisions into rich and poor areas, and shows
the changing pattern of working class housing throughout
the period with a parallel change in middle-class attitudes
towards the way in which the poor lived. Chapter 20 outlines the attempts by the local authority to solve the most
pressing problems in housing, including overcrowding in
small homes, the lack of any building regulations, the
proliferation of common lodging houses and the increasing
need for slum clearance. A final Chapter, Chapter 21,
looks back over the whole period and attempts to assess the
part played by local authorities in bringing about an improvement in the health of the city.
It is hoped that this thesis will show not only how
one city, a major industrial centre and a city with an
unenviable reputation for dirt and disease in the midnineteenth
century, attempted to put its house in order
with regard to public health, but also the varying
factors at work which made change possible. These
included the development of national and local statute
law to persuade and then compel public health improvement,
the influence of major sanitarians with a national
reputation and of dedicated individuals within the council
and among the municipal employees in Glasgow itself, and
finally the development of scientific theories which
linked dirt and disease together. These factors were to
assist in bringing about a change from general indifference
to public health on the part of the general public, to an
awareness of the need for improvement and so to a final
acceptance of the reforms outlined in this thesis.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/17241
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
en
dc.relation.ispartof
Annexe Thesis Digitisation Project 2016 Block 4
en
dc.relation.isreferencedby
Already catalogued
en
dc.title
Development of public health administration in Glasgow, 1842-1872
en
dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
en
dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
en
dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en
This item appears in the following Collection(s)

