Sanderson's Gardens. Houses on each side below the level of the pathway, which has a gutter in the middle. (Lord Ashley spoke to one of the inhabitants of this place.)
Pitt Street, Bethnal Green Road. A narrow street with only surface drainage. (Fever was very prevalent here.)
Cambden Gardens. Houses built on the soil, many of them not being larger than an 8-feet cube, are inhabited.
Lamb's Fields. An acre at least of complete marsh and three open ditches—one on the north, another in the middle, and the third to the eastern side close to the backs of the houses in North Street.
London Street. Undrained.
Rupia Lane. Two open ditches.
Ann's Place. Open sewer in front of some of the houses.
Houses at the back of Ann's Place. The open sewer from Ann's Place passes beneath one of the houses and then is again open to the houses at the back, but is boarded in so that Lord Ashley had to mount a boundary stone to obtain the view of it.
A group of streets to the north of Slacky Road. All the houses stained with damp to a height varying from 1 to 2 or more feet.
Warmer Place. An open sewer in front of the houses giving off bubbles of gas very freely.