Court opposite to Cambridge Road. One privy to several houses, and mosses growing on the damp brick of the houses to the height of 4 or 5 feet from the ground.
Nova Scotia Gardens. Several feet below the road in many parts, the drainage of which it receives. (Here lived the burkers of the Italian boy.)
Virginia Row, York Street, and the streets to the east. Undrained, having stagnant water in them.
Rose Court. Most wretched hovels.
Typen Street. (Where the child was burnt.)
Satchwell Rents. The privies form part of the ground-floor of these houses. Lord Ashley inspected the first house; no yards.
Mount Street. Level of the houses very uneven; many below the level of the road. The undrained portion of this street suffered from fever to an awful extent, while the high and drained part had scarcely a case.
Courts out of Mount Street. Dung-heap in one. Lord Ashley saw the landlord of another and spoke to him.
Collingwood Street. Houses on one side much lower than on the other; very badly drained, and not a healthy-looking person or child in the street.