nineteenth century pollution in the black country …compatibilitymode].pdf · •noise pollution...
TRANSCRIPT
:Nineteenth century pollution in the Black Country Town of Oldbury
Janet Sullivan, School of History and Cultures
The ProblemThe Effects
The Outcome
The Black Country was a cradle of the Industrial Revolution and
of great economic significance to the United Kingdom in the
nineteenth century. It supplied coal and iron to the industrial
centre of Birmingham, and items such as nails, locks and tools
to many parts of the globe.
The result of this productive industry was a massive amount of
pollution for small Black Country towns such as Oldbury.
www.bci-uk.com/clientImages/Black%20Country%20map%20450.jpg
‘a grimy town of smother amid smother’ Walter White, All
round the Wrekin (1860)
A farming community nestled at the foot of the Rowley Hills
Oldbury
Industrial
revolution
• Industrialisation was given priority over all other issues
in the early nineteenth century industrial town.
• The contamination of the environment by biological
and chemical agents took second place in people’s
thinking, even when it affected their health
• It was something which had to be tolerated or endured,
part and parcel of the industry which gave them a living.
• Noise pollution by industrial machinery
• Contamination of water sources
• Pollution of the landscape by industrial waste
• Contamination of the air by smoke and chemical gasses
• Health problems - asthma, breathing difficulties
• Conditions arising from lack of sunlight - rickets, stunted growth, pallid appearance
• Environmental problems - destruction of plant life
• Long distance pollution of forests and water sources
• Acid rain
• Hazardous piles of mining, metal working or chemical waste in a state of combustion
• Noxious fumes causing nausea, headaches and lethargy
• Physical instability of mounds leading to evacuation of homes
• Storage of waste chemicals in ‘lagoons’ or pits, hazardous to both people and wildlife
• Sewers with outlets directly into brook or canal
• Factory pollutants dumped in water sources
• Harmful effluents polluting watershed
• Sulphur liquors seeping from mound of waste alkali into water system
• Damage to ecosystem and animal life
• Lack of sleep due to ever present noise• School children unable to hear or be heard• Workers’ hearing problems, often leading to deafness• Intrinsic part of industrial life but received little attention at a government level
Harsh conditions
of industrial centres led to reform
Local action insufficient,
lacked funding and resources
Legislative controls –
inspectorate, monitoring, surveillance
New directions taken and standards
set
Acts of Parliament
enabling change
The improvement in health and
environmental controls we enjoy today is, to
a large extent, due to the price paid by
industrial towns in the nineteenth century.
1.
1. www,starchilde7.blogspot.com/2010/10smoke2
2. English Heritage (NMR) RAF Photography, ‘Blue Billy, 150,000 cubic yard mound of alkali waste in Oldbury‘
3. Sandwell Community History & Archives Service, ‘ view of Oldbury from Barnford Park’
4. A Nasmyth steam hammer
2.
3.
4.