Abstract
In September 1841, before he was at all acquainted with ragged school operations, Lord Ashley was taken on a tour of some of London’s worst slums by Southwood Smith, the great advocate of sanitary reform. ‘What a perambulation have I taken to-day in company with Dr Southwood Smith!’ he wrote in his diary; ‘What scenes of filth, discomfort, disease! … No pen nor paint-brush could describe the thing as it is. One whiff of Cowyard, Blue Anchor, or Baker’s Court, outweighs ten pages of letter-press.’ 1 Ashley had reason to be appalled; and his subsequent experience with ragged schools only deepened his revulsion at the terrible and unsanitary state in which the very poor were compelled to live. As he put it in 1853,
it is to no purpose to send out the schoolmaster, it is to no purpose to employ the missionary, it is to no purpose to preach from the pulpit, it is to little or no purpose to visit from house to house, and carry with you the precepts and the lessons of the Gospel, so long as you leave the people in this squalid, obscene, filthy, disgusting, and overcrowded state.2
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Notes
Henry Austin, ‘Metropolitan Improvements’, Westminster Review, xxxvi (1841) pp. 404–35.Cf. M. W. Flinn, loc. cit.
Thomas Hatton and Arthur H. Cleaver, A Bibliography of the Periodical Works of Charles Dickens (1933)pp. 244–5.
Cf. E. P. Hennock, ‘Finance and Politics in Urban Local Government in England, 1835— 1900’, Historical Journal vi 2 (1963) pp. 214–17, etc.
Henry Roberts, The Dwellings of the Labouring Classes [1853] P. 3.
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© 1978 Norris Francis Pope
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Pope, N. (1978). Health and Housing. In: Dickens and Charity. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-03434-5_6
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