“Ten six-roomed houses occupied by 84 families, 277 persons, houses very dilapidated, many unfit for human habitation. Orders for sanitary work are continually being sent out by the Vestry to the owner of this wretched property.
“A rental of £10 per annum would be an extravagant sum to pay for either of these miserable dwellings, yet more than three times that sum is expected from the destitute and indigent people who inhabit them.”
Read by the light of the knowledge that insanitary property meant disease, and disablement, and death to a very high percentage of its occupiers, the proper compulsion to have applied to “owners” such as these would have been proceedings before a Coroner’s jury for culpable homicide if not for actually deliberate murder.
The community has a right to be protected from the evil results of the miserable housing of the poor.
Mr. George Godwin said in 1862, at the meeting of the National Association for Promoting Social Science:—
“It should be no answer to the requirement of a certain cubical space for each occupier, that the financial resources of the parties will not admit of it.
“A man is not permitted to poison with prussic acid those who are dependent on him because he is poor; neither should he be allowed on that ground to kill them with bad air and set up a fever-still for the benefit of his neighbours.”
Parliament, under the pressure of a slowly-developing public opinion, and in view of the ever accumulating evidence and proof of the almost incredible insanitary condition in which great masses of the people of London were living, was beginning to show less reluctance to discuss and deal with some of the multifarious matters affecting the public health.
In 1860 it passed an Act which, however well intentioned, was not of much effect. It was an effort to secure more wholesome articles of food and drink for the public by preventing their adulteration.
The past history of such legislation was rather interesting.[98] In 1731 an Act has been passed prescribing a penalty for “sophisticating tea.”