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24 September 2014
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July 2003
19th century Nottingham
Old Market Square c.1904
Old Market Square c.1904
Overcrowding, no sanitation, riots and political disturbances...

Local historical enthusiast, Bernard W Beilby tells us more about Nottingham in the 19th century.
SEE ALSO
Features:
The history of Old Market Square

Nottingham's Pride - Old Market Square from the lion's point of view

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Old Market Square
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FACTS

Old Market Square is nicknamed 'slab square'

Old Market Square is the biggest market square in England at 5.5 acres

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After the Norman conquest Nottingham was bounded by a ditch and later a wall running from the Castle, down Park Row and along Upper and Lower Parliament Street to Plumptre Square, and then followed the line of the cliff back to the castle.

The growth of Nottingham
Before the 16th century the population probably never exceeded 3000 people. Then it started to increase - by 1750 it was about 10,000 in the first census of 1801 it was almost 29,000 and by 1841 it was over 50,000, packed into almost the same area that of the medieval town.

Nottingham was surrounded by its open fields and could not expand to any extent until the Enclosure Award of 1865.

Overcrowding
This overcrowding led to the appalling yards and alleys containing 6000 back-to-back houses in the town. The Government
in 1844 appointed a Commission to look into the state of great towns. Thomas Hawkesley, Borough Water Engineer, testified to the Commission that he considered Nottingham to be the worst town in England.

The worst areas were the Marsh; Narrow Marsh with its yards such as Lees, Knob, Byron and Foundry and many others, and the Rookery, the area between Parliament Street and Long Row. The worst was probably Kingston Court, now under Debenham's shop. In this yard fever was endemic but in 1854 the Corporation installed the first water closet in Nottingham (communal, of course) and the fever subsided.

In the Marsh in 1883 the density of population was 300 to the acre, compared with 19.4 overall in Nottingham.

In the middle of the century half the children born in the Marsh died before they were five, and officially the death rate was 34 per thousand, though it was probably much higher for the births and deaths of many children were never recorded.

Lack of sanitation
Apart from the overcrowding in the yards, the greatest problems were water supply, originally from polluted wells, and sanitation. We did not have an entirely pure water supply until 1880 when Zion Hill Water Works on the Ropewalk finally closed.

It had been supplying 960,000 gallons of water per day; analysis of its water in 1873 showed that it contained 31.5 grains of solid effluent per gallon.

We were also taking water out of the Trent (unfiltered) after it had collected the sewage from Birmingham, Burton on Trent, Derby and Beeston; this water contained 44.57 grains of solid effluent per gallon.

By 1850 most yards had a standpipe tap for use by the entire yard and in hot weather the Fire Brigade was used to hose down the worst enclosed yards.
Although water closets had been invented in the 16th century the idea never took hold and garderobes continued to be used; there is a very good example of a four-seater in the Bishop of Southwell's garden!

In the towns ash pit privies, usually three or four per yard for as many as 250 people, were the norm. If you were lucky you might even get them emptied every ten years! The principle was that you mixed the ashes in the pit with the effluent. Often the pits overflowed, ran down the yards and into the living rooms of the houses. Intermingled with the houses were the slaughter houses, knackers yards and manure yards.

In the Marsh lived a number of men who were milk producers/ retailers. They kept two cows in tiny yards adjacent to the living rooms and lived on the sale of milk which was almost certainly infected with brucillosis.

Nottingham did not have a Sanitary Department until 1867. When this was started the Corporation began replacing the ash pit privies with the tub closet system.

They first bought up a quantity of old paraffin barrels, cut them in half and fitted lids and handles. Then the tub carts took the empty ones out each day and collected the full ones. These were emptied into barges at the Canal Street depot and the sewage then taken to Gamston Bridge where it was sold to farmers for manuring the fields.

Two houses in Sussex Street demolished about 1930 were so alive with vermin that the demolition men walked off the site until they had been fumigated.

Improvements started under the Sanitation and Nuisance Removal Acts of 1844, 1846, 1848, 1855 etc., but above all with the work of our great Borough Engineer, Marriott Ogle Tarbotton who held office from 1859 to 1880.

Slum clearances
Work continued with the slum clearances of the 1920s and 1930s and after WWII.

Nottingham has lost more than its fair share of fine old buildings which were worthy of preservation. The Old Guildhall, Weekday Cross in 1895; The Friary, Friar Lane in 1923: The Exchange and Shambles in 1926; King John's Palace, two timber-framed houses/shops in Bridlesmith Gate of about 1450 in c. 1946; Collin's Almshouses, Friar Lane in 1956 and the Oriental Cafe, Wheeler Gate, c.1958.

Nottingham's first hospital

In the late 18th century it was felt that something should be done to relieve some of the suffering from disease in the town. A number of wealthy men provided the money and the General Hospital was built. Treatment was very primitive and until the late 1840s - operations were carried out without anaesthetics.

Unrest
The town saw its share of riots and political disturbances. Luddite frame smashing of the early 19th century, the Reform Bill riot of 1831 when the Castle was burned down and the battles in the Old Market Square of the Nottingham Lambs who fought for their respective political parties. The last great riot in the Square was in 1898 when a man was killed in a police baton charge.

Expansion
Gradually the town expanded. In 1845 the Enclosure Act was passed to enclose the open fields surrounding the town. The award was made 20 years later allowing the Meadows, Sand and Clay Fields to be used for building. In 1877 the surrounding villages were taken into the town under the Borough Extension Act and further enlargements were made this century. The wealthy moved out of the old town, mainly from the area now called the Lace Market, into Nottingham Park and Mapperley Park areas.

Nottingham became a city in 1897 by charter of Queen Victoria and we were granted a Lord Mayor in 1928.

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