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1937 Croydon typhoid outbreak

The Croydon typhoid outbreak of 1937, also known as the Croydon epidemic of typhoid fever,[1] was an outbreak of typhoid fever in Croydon, Surrey, now part of London, in 1937. It resulted in 341 cases of typhoid (43 fatal), and it caused considerable local discontent leading to a media campaign and a public inquiry.

Croydon typhoid outbreak of 1937
Addington Well Pumping Station
DateOctober 1937 (October 1937)–December 1937 (December 1937)
LocationCroydon
CauseTyphoid fever
Outcome341 cases
Deaths43
LitigationRead v. Croydon Corporation (1938)

The source of the illness remained a mystery until the cases were mapped out using epidemiological method. The origin was found to be the polluted chalk water well at Addington, London, which supplied water to up to one-fifth of the area that is now the London Borough of Croydon. Coupled with issues around the co-operation between the medical officers and the administrators of the Borough, three coincidental events were blamed; changes to the well structure by repair work, the employment of a new workman who was an unwitting carrier of typhoid, and failure to chlorinate the water.

Background Edit

The Public Health Act 1848 gave local boards of health powers to improve the sanitary condition of towns and populous places in England and Wales by supervising the cleaning of streets, collection of refuse, disposal of sewage and supplying clean water. Subsequently, an integrated water supply and sewage disposal system was installed at Croydon, twelve miles south of London, one of the first towns to have one, when its population was around 20,000. Although the system was supposedly a sanitary pioneer, the death rate in the town rose after installation and typhoid outbreaks occurred in 1853 and 1875, possibly as a result of the new system permitting the disease to spread more efficiently.[2][3][4]

Addington well Edit

By 1937, when Croydon's population was around 250,000,[5][6][1] around 40,000 people, or between one-sixth and one-fifth of Croydon received its water supply from the Addington well sunk into chalk ground in 1885 at Addington.[5][7] The Addington well, 250 feet (76 m) deep and 10 feet (3.0 m) wide,[1] was one of five wells that supplied Croydon,[5] and it collected water from the surrounding ground, some of which housed cesspools and a pig farm.[8]

Along with the Stroud Green well, the Addington well fed the Addington Well Pumping Station. The water was then filtered, chlorinated and filtered again before being pumped into the Addington reservoir and fed through what was termed a "high level system".[8][9] As the water was already at high risk from contamination, the Croydon Corporation installed a number of methods to filter and clean the water, in 1908, 1928, and 1936. These included an ozone plant, rapid pressure filters, a chlorinating plant and an ammoniating plant.[8]

However, the filters and chlorinator worked together and it was not possible to operate them separately. This point would later cause problems when the filters required repairs.[7] Worrying levels of the bacteria E. coli in the Addington well water resulted in regular chlorination from 20 July 1936, but without any continuous record of its use. Both the reservoir and well waters were supposedly tested monthly, until the end of April 1937, when for no explainable reason except by "mere oversight", it stopped.[1][8]

Sequence of events Edit

September - October 1937 Edit

From mid-September to 15 October 1937, unfiltered and unchlorinated water was pumped to waste, while repair work went on at the Addington well.[1] From 16 October 1937, unknown to either the Borough engineer, Charles Boast, or Croydon's medical officer of health, Oscar Holden, this raw untreated water began to be pumped into the public supply.[1][7][8][10] A man later found to be a carrier of typhoid, was employed at the well from 28 September to 26 October 1937.[1]

The origin of the illness was initially thought to be infected shellfish from the European mainland, as the earliest case in 1937 presented mid-October with a history of travel to France.[5][11] Later, when the number of cases increased and an inquiry was held, the Ministry of Health appointed lawyer Harold Murphy, KC, recorded that the first case of the Croydon typhoid outbreak was not the one with a travel history to France, but one notified on 27 October 1937. He recorded that a second was notified on 28 October and two further cases on 30 October.[5] Historian Anne Hardy later refers to the first case as the shellfish-related incident on 16 October and gives subsequent dates as the second case on 25 October and another four on the 29th.[11]

One of the cases diagnosed at the end of October 1937 was that of Richard Rimington, who later died.[12] His father Charles Rimington, who worked for the Bank of England, conducted his own investigations, and by visiting and questioning those that he personally knew and that were affected, he deduced that the source of the outbreak must be the water supply. He subsequently informed Boast, and presented his findings to Holden.[10] Rimington wrote:

My son has just been taken to the Isolation Hospital suffering from typhoid. The maid from No. 66 in the same road has recently developed typhoid and a little girl from No. 64 is suspected of having the same disease. The milk supply in all these cases is not the same, shell fish and watercress have not been partaken of, the only common thing appears to be water. Some operations in connection with the water supply have recently been carried out in this road.[6]

On 31 October 1937, 40 local residents, including Rimington, met up and invited Boast and Holden. Holden was however, distracted by the recent Bournemouth typhoid outbreak and its origins in milk.[10] One resident, Ronald Moss, having been aware of the relationship between the spread of typhoid via water from his experiences in India, was "amazed" that Holden felt it "inconceivable" that Croydon's troubles with typhoid stemmed from its water supply.[6] According to Holden, the water was tested regularly.[6] Unlike previous epidemics, the typhoid outbreak was recognised not by officials, but by a local resident.[6][10]

November 1937 Edit

Dissatisfied with Holden's explanations, the residents formed the South Croydon Typhoid Outbreak Committee (SCTOC), chaired by Charles Rimington. Over the subsequent month, they met daily.[10] The Ministry of Health was notified by Holden on 1 November 1937. Chlorination resumed that same day and Holden wrote to all the registered medical practitioners in the Borough. However, in the interim, another six people were confirmed. The source of the illness remained a mystery until 3 November 1937, the day after Holden requested the aid of Ernest T. Conybeare, the Ministry of Health's expert on typhoid, who mapped out the cases and matched them with the water supply using traditional epidemiological methods. The origin was found to be the polluted well at Addington.[3][6][11][12]

The outbreak caused considerable local discontent and representatives of the SCTOC acted to lead a media campaign and initiate a public inquiry.[3][12][13] On 17 November 1937, the SCTOC wrote to the Ministry of Health, demanding such an inquiry.[10]

December 1937 Edit

By the time the inquiry began on 6 December 1937, there were 80 cases in hospital.[6] Professor Louis Napoleon George Filon died from typhoid in Croydon at the end of December 1937.[14] By the end of the year, the outbreak would lead to 43 deaths and a total of 341 cases.[7][15] As a result, Holden later received much criticism for not confirming the origin of the typhoid more speedily.[13]

Inquiry Edit

On 22 November 1937, Harold Gourley, an eminent civil engineer, and Sir Humphry Rolleston, who was previously physician-in-ordinary to King George V, became expert assessors, with Harold Murphy leading the inquiry.[5][6][16] The inquiry began on 6 December 1937 during the outbreak, with the Croydon Corporation represented by Sir Walter Monckton. Its transcript filled more than 1,000 pages.[5][6] Murphy later replied to the Minister of Health;

The immediate cause of the outbreak was a portion of the public water supply becoming infected by the typhoid bacillus. The infected portion was that derived from a chalk well at Addington. How that well became infected is a question that cannot be answered with absolute certainty, but all the circumstances and probabilities point so strongly in one direction that I feel justified in coming to a definite conclusion on the subject. That conclusion is that the well was infected by the fact that at the end of September and during October, 1937, men, one of whom was an active carrier of typhoid, were working in the well and that during large parts of such period water from the well, unfiltered and unchlorinated, was being pumped to supply.[6]

The inquiry lasted 16 days,[10] and its report was published as a white paper on 14 February 1938.[5] Murphy reported that the origin of the typhoid came from a workman, known as "Case A", who had become unwell with typhoid fever during the First World War, but hadn't realised he was a carrier.[5][13] He was employed in building works on the Addington well between 28 September and 26 October 1937.[5][1]

Holden was however, unaware of the cessation of chlorination while works were being carried out,[6] and he was accused of not notifying local doctors earlier. The journal Medical Officer was both critical of Holden and of higher medical authorities.[13] Murphy pointed out that a number of practitioners would not be familiar with cases of typhoid, and may not have realised that the water was a risk. In addition, some practitioners from surrounding boroughs may not have been aware of the outbreak.[5][6] A combination of factors were concluded to have caused the incident, including the repair works on the well, the worker who was a carrier of typhoid and the water supply not being chlorinated. Management was criticised for not effectively managing the water supply and for not adequately communicating with each other. It was noted that the medical officer of health (Holden) and Borough engineer (Boast) had little or no contact with each other.[1] Holden was also noted to have been "ignorant of the fact that water was the most common cause of transmission".[10]

Aftermath and responses Edit

Subsequently, legal claims began to be issued to the corporation from spring 1938.[10] Around 230 claims were made against Croydon Corporation. Hence, it was decided that one case should be used as a test case,[17][10] one where the father of one of the survivors was successful in arguing that the water undertaker was liable.[18] In December 1938, this test case, Read v. Croydon Corporation, took place in the High Court. It concluded with compensation for medical expenses and "pain and suffering and general inconvenience caused by [the plaintiff's] illness".[10]

The cases attracted national media attention, as was reflected in the number of scrapbooks of newspaper articles contained in 17 volumes collected by Walter Monckton and the Croydon Corporation. According to the Daily Sketch, Croydon in 1937 was "a dangerous and frightening place".[10] By the late 1930s, with 75% of the British population now possessing a wireless, the BBC was used to publicise news on the outbreak.[10] One reaction was that workers from Croydon were stigmatised by their London colleagues.[19] A detailed review of the outbreak also appeared in The American Journal of Public Health.[1][20]

Between 1937 and 1986, the UK witnessed over 11,794 cases of water‐borne disease over 34 outbreaks. At least six deaths were reported during this time.[21] In The Classical Quarterly in 1979, the typhoid outbreak of 1937 was described as the "most recent serious event of this kind to take place in this country",[22] typical of "when a large population draws its water supply from a central source".[22] In his book When Food Kills (2003), bacteriologist Hugh Pennington quotes the Croydon Public inquiry's conclusion that "there was both misunderstanding and lack of communication between the responsible officers" at Croydon, and in his opinion "this is a recurrent theme in the incubation periods of disasters".[7]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Ravenel, Mazÿk P. (May 1938). "The Croydon Epidemic of Typhoid Fever". American Journal of Public Health and the Nation's Health. 28 (5): 644–646. doi:10.2105/AJPH.28.5.644. PMC 1529192. PMID 18014847.
  2. ^ Goddard, Nicholas (2005). Chapter 8. Sanitate Crescamus: Water Supply, Sewage Disposal and Environmental Values in a Victorian Suburb. In Bill Luckin, Geneviève Massard-Guilbaud and Dieter Schott (Eds) Resources of the City: Contributions to an Environmental History of Modern Europe. London: Routledge (2005). doi:10.4324/9781315244358, ISBN 978-1-315-24435-8 (subscription required)
  3. ^ a b c Goddard, Nick (29 November 2005). "Croydon Typhoid Outbreak of 1937". www.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 28 January 2020.
  4. ^ Cambridge, Nicholas (2 March 2017). Sewage Treatment.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Murphy, H. L. (19 February 1938). "Croydon Typhoid Inquiry: Mr. Murphy's Report". British Medical Journal. 1 (4024): 404–407. ISSN 0007-1447. PMC 2085766. PMID 20781269.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Wall; Rosemary (2015). Bacteria in Britain, 1880–1939. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge. p. 149. ISBN 978-1-84893-427-6.
  7. ^ a b c d e Pennington, T. Hugh (2003). When Food Kills: BSE, E.coli and disaster science: BSE, E.coli and disaster science. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 29–31. ISBN 0-19-8525176.
  8. ^ a b c d e "Medico-Legal". British Medical Journal. 2 (4067): 1286–1289. 17 December 1938. doi:10.1136/bmj.2.4067.1286. ISSN 0007-1447. PMC 2211231.(subscription required)
  9. ^ Clark, R. Veitch (1919). "Croydon 1919: Report of the MoH". wellcomelibrary.org. p. 11. Retrieved 9 February 2020.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Wall, Rosemary (17 December 2014). "Complaining about typhoid in 1930s Britain". In Reinarz, J.; Wynter, R. (eds.). Complaints, Controversies and Grievances in Medicine: Historical and Social Science Perspectives. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge. p. 178. doi:10.4324/9781315758923-21. ISBN 978-1-138-79490-0. Retrieved 6 February 2020.
  11. ^ a b c Hardy, Anne (2015). Salmonella Infections, Networks of Knowledge, and Public Health in Britain, 1880-1975. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. p. 37. ISBN 978-0-19-870497-3.
  12. ^ a b c "Croydon Typhoid Inquiry: Closing Proceedings". The British Medical Journal. 1 (4019): 135–137. 1938. doi:10.1136/bmj.1.4019.135. ISSN 0007-1447. JSTOR 25368560. PMC 2085503. PMID 20781171.
  13. ^ a b c d David F. Smith; H. Lesley Diack; T. Hugh Pennington; Thomas Hugh Pennington; Elizabeth M. Russell (2005). Food Poisoning, Policy, and Politics: Corned Beef and Typhoid in Britain in the 1960s. The Boydell Press. p. 13. ISBN 1-84383-138-4.
  14. ^ Jeffery, G. B. (1939-01-31). "Louis Napoleon George Filon, 1875-1937". Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society. 2 (7): 501–509. doi:10.1098/rsbm.1939.0010. ISSN 1479-571X.
  15. ^ Holden, O. M. (October 1938). "The croydon typhoid outbreak (A Summary of the Chief Clinical Features)". Public Health. 52: 135–146. doi:10.1016/S0033-3506(38)80123-2. ISSN 0033-3506.
  16. ^ "Croydon Typhoid Inquiry: History Of The Outbreak". The British Medical Journal. 2 (4016): 1293–1295. 25 December 1937. ISSN 0007-1447. JSTOR 25368331.
  17. ^ "The Croydon Typhoid Case". Medicao-Legal and Criminological Review. 7 (1): 51–56. 1939-01-01. doi:10.1177/030216373900700107. ISSN 0302-1637. S2CID 208341635.
  18. ^ Miller, Chris (1998). Environmental Rights: Critical Perspectives. London and new York: Routledge. p. 112. ISBN 0-415-17064-8.
  19. ^ "Lost_Hospitals_of_London". ezitis.myzen.co.uk. Retrieved 7 February 2020.
  20. ^ "Council flogs off Addington Hills cooling station on the cheap". Inside Croydon. 23 February 2018. Retrieved 8 February 2020.
  21. ^ Galbraith, N. S.; Barrett, Nicola J.; Stanwell‐Smith, Rosalind (1987). "Water and Disease After Croydon: A Review of Water-borne and Water-associated Disease in the UK 1937–86". Water and Environment Journal. 1 (1): 7–21. doi:10.1111/j.1747-6593.1987.tb01184.x. ISSN 1747-6593.
  22. ^ a b Holladay, A. J.; Poole, J. C. F. (1979). "Thucydides and the Plague of Athens". The Classical Quarterly. 29 (2): 292. doi:10.1017/S0009838800035928. ISSN 0009-8388. JSTOR 638096. PMID 11619645. S2CID 5447979.

Further reading Edit

  • "Croydon Typhoid Enquiry". The Lancet. 231 (5968): 165–171. 15 January 1938. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(00)93139-8.
  • "Croydon Typhoid Report". BMJ. 1 (4026): 530–531. 5 March 1938. doi:10.1136/bmj.1.4026.530. PMC 2085900. PMID 20781306.


1937, croydon, typhoid, outbreak, croydon, typhoid, outbreak, 1937, also, known, croydon, epidemic, typhoid, fever, outbreak, typhoid, fever, croydon, surrey, part, london, 1937, resulted, cases, typhoid, fatal, caused, considerable, local, discontent, leading. The Croydon typhoid outbreak of 1937 also known as the Croydon epidemic of typhoid fever 1 was an outbreak of typhoid fever in Croydon Surrey now part of London in 1937 It resulted in 341 cases of typhoid 43 fatal and it caused considerable local discontent leading to a media campaign and a public inquiry Croydon typhoid outbreak of 1937Addington Well Pumping StationDateOctober 1937 October 1937 December 1937 December 1937 LocationCroydonCauseTyphoid feverOutcome341 casesDeaths43LitigationRead v Croydon Corporation 1938 The source of the illness remained a mystery until the cases were mapped out using epidemiological method The origin was found to be the polluted chalk water well at Addington London which supplied water to up to one fifth of the area that is now the London Borough of Croydon Coupled with issues around the co operation between the medical officers and the administrators of the Borough three coincidental events were blamed changes to the well structure by repair work the employment of a new workman who was an unwitting carrier of typhoid and failure to chlorinate the water Contents 1 Background 2 Addington well 3 Sequence of events 3 1 September October 1937 3 2 November 1937 3 3 December 1937 4 Inquiry 5 Aftermath and responses 6 See also 7 References 8 Further readingBackground EditThe Public Health Act 1848 gave local boards of health powers to improve the sanitary condition of towns and populous places in England and Wales by supervising the cleaning of streets collection of refuse disposal of sewage and supplying clean water Subsequently an integrated water supply and sewage disposal system was installed at Croydon twelve miles south of London one of the first towns to have one when its population was around 20 000 Although the system was supposedly a sanitary pioneer the death rate in the town rose after installation and typhoid outbreaks occurred in 1853 and 1875 possibly as a result of the new system permitting the disease to spread more efficiently 2 3 4 Addington well EditBy 1937 when Croydon s population was around 250 000 5 6 1 around 40 000 people or between one sixth and one fifth of Croydon received its water supply from the Addington well sunk into chalk ground in 1885 at Addington 5 7 The Addington well 250 feet 76 m deep and 10 feet 3 0 m wide 1 was one of five wells that supplied Croydon 5 and it collected water from the surrounding ground some of which housed cesspools and a pig farm 8 Along with the Stroud Green well the Addington well fed the Addington Well Pumping Station The water was then filtered chlorinated and filtered again before being pumped into the Addington reservoir and fed through what was termed a high level system 8 9 As the water was already at high risk from contamination the Croydon Corporation installed a number of methods to filter and clean the water in 1908 1928 and 1936 These included an ozone plant rapid pressure filters a chlorinating plant and an ammoniating plant 8 However the filters and chlorinator worked together and it was not possible to operate them separately This point would later cause problems when the filters required repairs 7 Worrying levels of the bacteria E coli in the Addington well water resulted in regular chlorination from 20 July 1936 but without any continuous record of its use Both the reservoir and well waters were supposedly tested monthly until the end of April 1937 when for no explainable reason except by mere oversight it stopped 1 8 Sequence of events EditSeptember October 1937 Edit From mid September to 15 October 1937 unfiltered and unchlorinated water was pumped to waste while repair work went on at the Addington well 1 From 16 October 1937 unknown to either the Borough engineer Charles Boast or Croydon s medical officer of health Oscar Holden this raw untreated water began to be pumped into the public supply 1 7 8 10 A man later found to be a carrier of typhoid was employed at the well from 28 September to 26 October 1937 1 The origin of the illness was initially thought to be infected shellfish from the European mainland as the earliest case in 1937 presented mid October with a history of travel to France 5 11 Later when the number of cases increased and an inquiry was held the Ministry of Health appointed lawyer Harold Murphy KC recorded that the first case of the Croydon typhoid outbreak was not the one with a travel history to France but one notified on 27 October 1937 He recorded that a second was notified on 28 October and two further cases on 30 October 5 Historian Anne Hardy later refers to the first case as the shellfish related incident on 16 October and gives subsequent dates as the second case on 25 October and another four on the 29th 11 One of the cases diagnosed at the end of October 1937 was that of Richard Rimington who later died 12 His father Charles Rimington who worked for the Bank of England conducted his own investigations and by visiting and questioning those that he personally knew and that were affected he deduced that the source of the outbreak must be the water supply He subsequently informed Boast and presented his findings to Holden 10 Rimington wrote My son has just been taken to the Isolation Hospital suffering from typhoid The maid from No 66 in the same road has recently developed typhoid and a little girl from No 64 is suspected of having the same disease The milk supply in all these cases is not the same shell fish and watercress have not been partaken of the only common thing appears to be water Some operations in connection with the water supply have recently been carried out in this road 6 On 31 October 1937 40 local residents including Rimington met up and invited Boast and Holden Holden was however distracted by the recent Bournemouth typhoid outbreak and its origins in milk 10 One resident Ronald Moss having been aware of the relationship between the spread of typhoid via water from his experiences in India was amazed that Holden felt it inconceivable that Croydon s troubles with typhoid stemmed from its water supply 6 According to Holden the water was tested regularly 6 Unlike previous epidemics the typhoid outbreak was recognised not by officials but by a local resident 6 10 November 1937 Edit Dissatisfied with Holden s explanations the residents formed the South Croydon Typhoid Outbreak Committee SCTOC chaired by Charles Rimington Over the subsequent month they met daily 10 The Ministry of Health was notified by Holden on 1 November 1937 Chlorination resumed that same day and Holden wrote to all the registered medical practitioners in the Borough However in the interim another six people were confirmed The source of the illness remained a mystery until 3 November 1937 the day after Holden requested the aid of Ernest T Conybeare the Ministry of Health s expert on typhoid who mapped out the cases and matched them with the water supply using traditional epidemiological methods The origin was found to be the polluted well at Addington 3 6 11 12 The outbreak caused considerable local discontent and representatives of the SCTOC acted to lead a media campaign and initiate a public inquiry 3 12 13 On 17 November 1937 the SCTOC wrote to the Ministry of Health demanding such an inquiry 10 December 1937 Edit By the time the inquiry began on 6 December 1937 there were 80 cases in hospital 6 Professor Louis Napoleon George Filon died from typhoid in Croydon at the end of December 1937 14 By the end of the year the outbreak would lead to 43 deaths and a total of 341 cases 7 15 As a result Holden later received much criticism for not confirming the origin of the typhoid more speedily 13 Inquiry EditOn 22 November 1937 Harold Gourley an eminent civil engineer and Sir Humphry Rolleston who was previously physician in ordinary to King George V became expert assessors with Harold Murphy leading the inquiry 5 6 16 The inquiry began on 6 December 1937 during the outbreak with the Croydon Corporation represented by Sir Walter Monckton Its transcript filled more than 1 000 pages 5 6 Murphy later replied to the Minister of Health The immediate cause of the outbreak was a portion of the public water supply becoming infected by the typhoid bacillus The infected portion was that derived from a chalk well at Addington How that well became infected is a question that cannot be answered with absolute certainty but all the circumstances and probabilities point so strongly in one direction that I feel justified in coming to a definite conclusion on the subject That conclusion is that the well was infected by the fact that at the end of September and during October 1937 men one of whom was an active carrier of typhoid were working in the well and that during large parts of such period water from the well unfiltered and unchlorinated was being pumped to supply 6 The inquiry lasted 16 days 10 and its report was published as a white paper on 14 February 1938 5 Murphy reported that the origin of the typhoid came from a workman known as Case A who had become unwell with typhoid fever during the First World War but hadn t realised he was a carrier 5 13 He was employed in building works on the Addington well between 28 September and 26 October 1937 5 1 Holden was however unaware of the cessation of chlorination while works were being carried out 6 and he was accused of not notifying local doctors earlier The journal Medical Officer was both critical of Holden and of higher medical authorities 13 Murphy pointed out that a number of practitioners would not be familiar with cases of typhoid and may not have realised that the water was a risk In addition some practitioners from surrounding boroughs may not have been aware of the outbreak 5 6 A combination of factors were concluded to have caused the incident including the repair works on the well the worker who was a carrier of typhoid and the water supply not being chlorinated Management was criticised for not effectively managing the water supply and for not adequately communicating with each other It was noted that the medical officer of health Holden and Borough engineer Boast had little or no contact with each other 1 Holden was also noted to have been ignorant of the fact that water was the most common cause of transmission 10 Aftermath and responses EditSubsequently legal claims began to be issued to the corporation from spring 1938 10 Around 230 claims were made against Croydon Corporation Hence it was decided that one case should be used as a test case 17 10 one where the father of one of the survivors was successful in arguing that the water undertaker was liable 18 In December 1938 this test case Read v Croydon Corporation took place in the High Court It concluded with compensation for medical expenses and pain and suffering and general inconvenience caused by the plaintiff s illness 10 The cases attracted national media attention as was reflected in the number of scrapbooks of newspaper articles contained in 17 volumes collected by Walter Monckton and the Croydon Corporation According to the Daily Sketch Croydon in 1937 was a dangerous and frightening place 10 By the late 1930s with 75 of the British population now possessing a wireless the BBC was used to publicise news on the outbreak 10 One reaction was that workers from Croydon were stigmatised by their London colleagues 19 A detailed review of the outbreak also appeared in The American Journal of Public Health 1 20 Between 1937 and 1986 the UK witnessed over 11 794 cases of water borne disease over 34 outbreaks At least six deaths were reported during this time 21 In The Classical Quarterly in 1979 the typhoid outbreak of 1937 was described as the most recent serious event of this kind to take place in this country 22 typical of when a large population draws its water supply from a central source 22 In his book When Food Kills 2003 bacteriologist Hugh Pennington quotes the Croydon Public inquiry s conclusion that there was both misunderstanding and lack of communication between the responsible officers at Croydon and in his opinion this is a recurrent theme in the incubation periods of disasters 7 See also EditList of epidemicsReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i j Ravenel Mazyk P May 1938 The Croydon Epidemic of Typhoid Fever American Journal of Public Health and the Nation s Health 28 5 644 646 doi 10 2105 AJPH 28 5 644 PMC 1529192 PMID 18014847 Goddard Nicholas 2005 Chapter 8 Sanitate Crescamus Water Supply Sewage Disposal and Environmental Values in a Victorian Suburb In Bill Luckin Genevieve Massard Guilbaud and Dieter Schott Eds Resources of the City Contributions to an Environmental History of Modern Europe London Routledge 2005 doi 10 4324 9781315244358 ISBN 978 1 315 24435 8 subscription required a b c Goddard Nick 29 November 2005 Croydon Typhoid Outbreak of 1937 www bbc co uk Retrieved 28 January 2020 Cambridge Nicholas 2 March 2017 Sewage Treatment a b c d e f g h i j k Murphy H L 19 February 1938 Croydon Typhoid Inquiry Mr Murphy s Report British Medical Journal 1 4024 404 407 ISSN 0007 1447 PMC 2085766 PMID 20781269 a b c d e f g h i j k l Wall Rosemary 2015 Bacteria in Britain 1880 1939 Abingdon Oxon Routledge p 149 ISBN 978 1 84893 427 6 a b c d e Pennington T Hugh 2003 When Food Kills BSE E coli and disaster science BSE E coli and disaster science Oxford Oxford University Press pp 29 31 ISBN 0 19 8525176 a b c d e Medico Legal British Medical Journal 2 4067 1286 1289 17 December 1938 doi 10 1136 bmj 2 4067 1286 ISSN 0007 1447 PMC 2211231 subscription required Clark R Veitch 1919 Croydon 1919 Report of the MoH wellcomelibrary org p 11 Retrieved 9 February 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Wall Rosemary 17 December 2014 Complaining about typhoid in 1930s Britain In Reinarz J Wynter R eds Complaints Controversies and Grievances in Medicine Historical and Social Science Perspectives Abingdon Oxon Routledge p 178 doi 10 4324 9781315758923 21 ISBN 978 1 138 79490 0 Retrieved 6 February 2020 a b c Hardy Anne 2015 Salmonella Infections Networks of Knowledge and Public Health in Britain 1880 1975 Oxford UK Oxford University Press p 37 ISBN 978 0 19 870497 3 a b c Croydon Typhoid Inquiry Closing Proceedings The British Medical Journal 1 4019 135 137 1938 doi 10 1136 bmj 1 4019 135 ISSN 0007 1447 JSTOR 25368560 PMC 2085503 PMID 20781171 a b c d David F Smith H Lesley Diack T Hugh Pennington Thomas Hugh Pennington Elizabeth M Russell 2005 Food Poisoning Policy and Politics Corned Beef and Typhoid in Britain in the 1960s The Boydell Press p 13 ISBN 1 84383 138 4 Jeffery G B 1939 01 31 Louis Napoleon George Filon 1875 1937 Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society 2 7 501 509 doi 10 1098 rsbm 1939 0010 ISSN 1479 571X Holden O M October 1938 The croydon typhoid outbreak A Summary of the Chief Clinical Features Public Health 52 135 146 doi 10 1016 S0033 3506 38 80123 2 ISSN 0033 3506 Croydon Typhoid Inquiry History Of The Outbreak The British Medical Journal 2 4016 1293 1295 25 December 1937 ISSN 0007 1447 JSTOR 25368331 The Croydon Typhoid Case Medicao Legal and Criminological Review 7 1 51 56 1939 01 01 doi 10 1177 030216373900700107 ISSN 0302 1637 S2CID 208341635 Miller Chris 1998 Environmental Rights Critical Perspectives London and new York Routledge p 112 ISBN 0 415 17064 8 Lost Hospitals of London ezitis myzen co uk Retrieved 7 February 2020 Council flogs off Addington Hills cooling station on the cheap Inside Croydon 23 February 2018 Retrieved 8 February 2020 Galbraith N S Barrett Nicola J Stanwell Smith Rosalind 1987 Water and Disease After Croydon A Review of Water borne and Water associated Disease in the UK 1937 86 Water and Environment Journal 1 1 7 21 doi 10 1111 j 1747 6593 1987 tb01184 x ISSN 1747 6593 a b Holladay A J Poole J C F 1979 Thucydides and the Plague of Athens The Classical Quarterly 29 2 292 doi 10 1017 S0009838800035928 ISSN 0009 8388 JSTOR 638096 PMID 11619645 S2CID 5447979 Further reading Edit Croydon Typhoid Enquiry The Lancet 231 5968 165 171 15 January 1938 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 00 93139 8 Croydon Typhoid Report BMJ 1 4026 530 531 5 March 1938 doi 10 1136 bmj 1 4026 530 PMC 2085900 PMID 20781306 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1937 Croydon typhoid outbreak amp oldid 1177154098, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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