“Pools of filthy water from obstructions at the street corners, and accumulated along the gutters, would quickly disappear, when the people would be convinced of the deleterious effect upon the public health. It will be well for the inhabitants of New York City, and especially for those of this section, when there shall be laws not only to compel them to keep their houses and surroundings clean and free from the effluvia resulting from vegetable and animal decomposition, but to prevent the overcrowding of tenant-houses, where fatal diseases are generated, and where death walks around.”
The tenant-house population is susceptible of
infinite improvement, when once rescued
from the reign of filth, and restored to a
pure atmosphere and clean homes. The poor
live in these wretched tenements because they
are compelled to, and not
How to Improve
the People
from choice. They universally
complain that they
cannot escape from domestic
and street filth. It surrounds and pervades
their habitations, always accumulating, and
never diminishing. The most tidy house-wife,
compelled to live in the midst of this ocean of
rubbish, with all its degrading associations, soon
finds the same level, and from this she can be
rescued only by giving her again a clean and
well-ordered home. And such a home every
municipal government is bound to secure to the
poorest and humblest citizen.
Let the landlord be compelled to keep his house in good repair, supply it with an abundance of pure water, connect the privy with the sewer, open free ventilation, afford means for removal of garbage, and then keep a careful oversight of his tenants, enforcing cleanliness. If this were done, the tenant-house people would immediately improve, and the death-rate, if we may judge from other cities, would fall one-fourth.
Again, the cellar population can be removed from their subterranean abodes, and placed in better homes. Liverpool has solved this problem for us.
In 1847 that city had a cellar population of 20,000; an ordinance was passed forbidding the occupation of underground rooms as residences, with certain restrictions, and within three years the great mass of people in these subterranean haunts were removed to better tenements, with a great reduction of the mortality of the city.
That city, formerly the most unhealthy in England, has continued the reforms thus inaugurated by compelling landlords to improve their tenant-houses, and the result is that it has become one of the healthiest towns of Europe. London has recently taken similar action in regard to cellar tenements. What these cities have done, New York can and ought to do for her public health.
What the diseases which prevail with such
fatality in the uncleaned tenant-houses are
for the most part preventable, we have the
most undoubted evidence. That smallpox is
preventable is known to every school-boy, and
yet that loathsome disease to-day
A Town That
Was Immune
prevails throughout all the
tenant-house districts of New
York, without the slightest restraint
on the part of our local authorities. Typhus
is to-day ravaging the homes of the poor
without “let or hindrance,” and yet cleanliness
and pure air are sure preventives. Of this truth
these reports furnish many examples.
The fever-nest—West Thirty-third Street—is one of a row of tenant-houses five stories high, and contains 16 families. It was in a filthy condition, without Croton water, waste-pipes stopped, sinks overflowing and emitting offensive odors; fever had prevailed all winter, nearly every person in the house having had an attack, four having died. It was never inspected by a city official. The owner was induced to clean the house, and from that date not a case of fever has occurred. The inspector who reports this case very justly adds: “If, when the first case of fever occurred in this building, the owner had been compelled to put it in a good sanitary condition, six human lives would undoubtedly have been saved, besides a great amount of sickness.”
Cholera infantum and diarrhoeal affections are found in their greatest intensity where putrescible animal matter and domestic filth exist. Remove these causes, or remove the patients from the neighborhood, and these diseases generally disappear at once. Diphtheria is found to be most intense in the vicinity of unclean stables. It is, therefore, with great propriety, that the entire class of zymotic diseases are now called “filth and foul air” diseases by the English sanitary writers. Remove the filth and foul air, and these diseases disappear as effect follows cause.
But while it is admitted that the streets of a
town may be cleaned, the condition of the
poor improved, and diseases, under the
most favorable circumstances, prevented, it may
be doubted whether the sanitary condition of
populous towns can be
Can Populous Towns
Be Improved?
materially changed, and
the death-rate greatly
reduced. Yet in England,
where sanitary science is enthusiastically
cultivated, there is not only no doubt that large
towns can be thus improved, but that the mortality
of London itself may be no greater than
that of the country.
Already, indeed, the London Times boasts “that the average of health throughout the City of London is higher than the average of health throughout all England, taking town and country together. The mortality in all England is at the rate of 22.8 in every 1,000 of the population; in the City of London it is at the rate of 22.3 for every 1,000 inhabitants! The improvement has been progressive; it has been slow, but steady and sure. Gradually the mortality has decreased, until the yearly death roll of 3,763 has been reduced to 2,904 within a period of nine years, during which the city has been under the rule of the Sanitary Commission. The deaths this year—22.3 per 1,000, or one in every forty-five of the inhabitants—are nine per cent below the general average, and represent a saving of 286 lives. And secondly, this gratifying result has been obtained in the face of obstacles which seemed to be almost insurmountable.”
Liverpool affords a striking example of the power of sanitary measures, rigidly enforced to improve the public health. It was formerly the most unhealthy city of England, being the very home of typhus, smallpox, and allied preventable diseases. But it adopted vigorous measures of reform, improving its poorer districts, and the death-rate has fallen eight in 1,000. Macclesfield, Salisbury, and many other English towns have had their mortality reduced 8, 10, and 15 in 1,000 by the vigorous prosecution of sanitary improvements. All the populous towns of that country are moving in this reform, and, as a result, the general death-rate of towns is approximating that of the country.
The Health Officer of London announced that
cleanliness would preserve a town from the
visitations of epidemics. But there must be
cleanliness of the streets, cleanliness of the
Cleanliness Preserves
from Epidemics
courts, cleanliness of the apartments, and cleanliness
of the person. On the approach of the
cholera in 1849 the
town of Worcester,
England, determined
to test the theory, and
set vigorously to work and cleaned the town
thoroughly, removing everything of an offensive
nature, and adopting the most stringent regulations
against the accumulation of filth about or
within the homes of the people. The result
was that this “destroyer” of unclean cities
made a Passover with the people of Worcester,
for on every lintel and door-post was written—Cleanliness,
Cleanliness. Not a house was
entered, and the town was saved in the midst
of the most frightful desolation.
New Orleans is another striking example of the value of civic cleanliness. Since, by military regulations, it is kept constantly in a cleanly condition, it has had no visitation of its old enemy, yellow fever.
The degree of public health of a town is therefore measured by its cleanliness, and its capacity for health depends upon its capacity for cleanliness.
There is scarcely a city which has such absolute
need of an efficient and intelligent
sanitary government as New York. On its
small territory three, four, or five millions of
Importance of Sanitary
Government
people are yet to be accommodated with houses.
Already there are crowded upon less than eight
of its thirty-two
square miles all of our
commercial, business,
and manufacturing
interests, and the houses of nearly 1,000,000 of
people. And in the natural relations of the poor
and rich, the former consisting of more than
half of the entire population, are crowded into
less than a fourth of this area. Of what vast
importance is it that a wise and intelligent
authority be vigilantly exercised, so that in its
future growth and expansion every condition
pertaining to health shall be secured to its inhabitants!
It is universally conceded that New York has in the highest degree all the natural advantages of salubrity. Its climate is the mean between the extremes of heat and cold; its topographical peculiarities are admirably adapted for drainage and sewerage; its exposure is southern; its shores are swept by two rivers, which bear seaward everything that enters them beyond the power of the flowing tide to return it; its rural surroundings are of the most healthful. In every respect it is regarded by competent observers as most favorably located for cleanliness, and the highest degree of public health. And there can be no doubt, that should New York be placed under a wise sanitary government, which would improve all its natural advantages for health, it would become the cleanest and healthiest city in the world, and one of the most delightful places of residence.
But this is not a matter which concerns the
citizens of New York alone. The people of
the State have a vital interest in the public
health of our city. Connected as it is by means
of rapid inter-communication with all parts of
the country, there is every
The Entire Country
Concerned
facility offered for the
wide diffusion of the
seeds of contagion. It is
estimated by accurate statisticians that no less
than 250,000 persons pass in and out of New
York daily over the ferries and railroads. It
could not fail to happen that if any contagious
disease prevailed in this city, it would be
carried into the country and widely disseminated.
And such is now a matter of daily occurrence.
There is no doubt that nearly all the
epidemics of smallpox in country towns, and
much of the typhus and similar diseases, have
their origin in New York. I have in my hand
letters from all parts of the State confirming this
statement. They strikingly illustrate the want
of a good sanitary police in New York, and the
power of a great commercial centre to scatter
disease broadcast over the country.
A few of these cases will abundantly illustrate the point:
Dr. J. S. Sprague, of Cooperstown, Otsego County, reports the occurrence of twenty-six cases of smallpox in that town, communicated by one person in October, 1860, who took the disease at a hotel in our city, in which a person with the disease had recently died. He was a merchant, and came to the city on business.
Dr. C. C. F. Gay, of Buffalo, reports the case of a female, who arrived from New York in November, 1860, and was removed from the cars of the Erie Railroad to the State Line Road, and proceeded westward. As was afterward ascertained, she had smallpox, and communicated the disease at Columbus, Ohio, where there were three deaths produced by it. Four deaths were directly traceable to this exposure, viz.: three milkmen and one baggage man, all of whom came in contact with the sick woman.
W. T. Babbitt mentions the case of a young man who took the disease in this city at a hotel where it was prevailing, at which he stopped while on a visit here, in whom the disease appeared after his return to Olean, in Cattaraugus County.
Dr. M. Jarvis, of Canestota, Madison County, relates the case of a man who visited this city with horses for sale, and was attacked with symptoms of smallpox some ten days after his return to Smithfield, in that county, who communicated the disease to his family, from whom it spread to others in that and, also, in a neighboring town.
Dr. C. M. Noble, of Waverley, Delaware
County, mentions the case of a merchant
of that place, who came to this city with
his wife, and went to one of our most frequented
hotels. Being very much fatigued, they retired
to the room provided
Smallpox in a
Hotel Bedroom
for them without any particular
examination of it—but
found in the morning
that they had been put in a room from which
a patient with smallpox had just been removed,
without its having been cleansed. The gentleman
was seized with a malignant form of that
disease after his return home. Two deaths and
six cases of smallpox and varioloid resulted
from this case.
Dr. S. W. Turner, of Chester, Connecticut, gives also two cases, one of smallpox and one of varioloid, in that and a neighboring place, which could be traced to this city.
Dr. Snow, the vigilant Health Officer of Providence, R. I., states that smallpox is rarely known in that city, except when imported from New York.
I could repeat these details until it was
shown that nearly every town in the State,
and nearly every city in the country, has been
inoculated by New York with this most loathsome
disease. The most striking and most
melancholy instances of
New York Inoculates
the Nation
the free dissemination
of contagion are found
in the army, where
whole regiments have been stricken with smallpox
through infected clothing manufactured at
the homes of the poor, where the disease was
prevailing. But these are facts too well known
to every medical man, and even to the community,
to require further illustration.
What terror smallpox creates in country towns when it attacks its first victim, you very well know. The house where it occurs is quarantined, and not unfrequently the sufferer is deserted by his friends, and left to recover or die, as the case may be. Business with the country is often suspended by the placards posted upon the highways, with the terrifying word “Smallpox” upon them, and a finger pointing ominously to the town. In nine cases out of ten, another finger should point toward New York, as the source of the pestilence.
It has been estimated by a competent observer, that every case of smallpox in a country town costs, by derangement of business alone, more money than is annually expended upon its public schools. If we add to this pecuniary loss the feverish excitement and popular apprehension, and the sufferings and probable death of the victim from want of proper care, we may but indifferently estimate the cost to the country of the prevalence of this disease.
Now, this diffusion of contagion from New York, we contend, is unnecessary. Every well-informed medical man knows that we may have a sanitary police so vigilant, so efficient and so powerful, that it will not only preserve the public health, but prevent the spread of disease therefrom. We hold, therefore, that you are not only called upon to protect the people of the City of New York from contagious disease, but equally that you are bound to protect the people of the State from dissemination of pestilence by every legislative safeguard which sanitary science can suggest.
The Sanitary Committee of the Board of Health, during the prevalence of cholera in 1849, remark in their report:
“The labors of your committee, during the
Inefficiency of
Health Organizations
past appalling season of sickness and death,
and the awful scenes of
degradation, misery, and
filth developed to them
by their researches,
have brought into full view the fact that we
have no sanitary police worthy of the name;
that we are unprotected by that watchful regard
over the public health which common sense dictates
to be necessary for the security of our
lives, the maintenance of the city’s reputation,
and the preservation of the interests of the inhabitants.”
This is a perfectly truthful statement of the
present condition of New York. Practically,
it is a city without any sanitary government.
In its growth it is developing the natural history
of a city that utterly ignores all rules and
regulations which tend to
Without Sanitary
Government
make the homes of its people
pleasant and healthy.
It is the only city in
the civilized world which disregards the Platonic
idea that in a model republic medical men
should be selected to preserve and promote the
public health. Its board of health, the mayor
and common council, is an unwieldly body.
Its commissioners of health have limited powers,
and are equally incompetent.
The City Inspector’s department, which alone
has the machinery for sanitary inspection
and surveillance, is a gigantic imposture. Of
its forty-four health wardens, whose duty it
should be to make house-to-house inspections,
searching out the cause
The City Inspector’s
Department
of disease, and using
every known agency for
the control and suppression
of epidemics, many are liquor dealers, and
all are grossly ignorant. Not one has any
knowledge of medical subjects, nor dare they
freely visit such diseases as smallpox, typhus,
or cholera.
During this entire voluntary inspection, extending over six months, health wardens have rarely been known to visit infected quarters, although smallpox, fever, etc., etc., have been prevalent, and the city has been in a most disgracefully filthy condition. A single health warden recently ventured to visit a house where smallpox existed in an upper room; he sent for the attendant, and when she appeared, ordering her not to approach him, he gave the following as the best means of prevention: “Burn camphor on the stove, and hang bags of camphor about the necks of the children.”
To what depth of humiliation must that community have descended, which tolerates as its sanitary officers men who are not only utterly disqualified by education, business, and moral character, but who have not even the poor qualification of courage to perform their duties. But perhaps the most decisive proof of the utter and hopeless inefficiency of our multiform health arrangements is found in the fact that all the evils from which we now suffer have grown up under their care. A late City Inspector thus emphatically gave expression to the popular feeling in regard to existing organizations:
“With such a system, can there be a wonder that the sanitary condition of the city is not improved? * * * Nor must the consideration be kept from view, that the members of the common council, the board of health, and commissioners of health are all, from the manner of their appointment, subject to partisan influence. To expect a perfect sanitary system, under such a condition of things, is to expect an impossibility.”
The medical officer of health for the City of
London, a gentleman of large experience,
thus defines a health organization capable of
answering the demands of a large and growing
town: “The object of this organization lies in
a word: inspection, inspection of
Sanitary
Inspection
the most constant, most searching,
most intelligent, and most trustworthy
kind, is that in which the
provisional management of our sanitary affairs
must essentially consist.” The results of this
work of voluntary sanitary inspection which I
have before me prove on every page the truth of
the above statement. No health organization without
daily inspection would have any efficiency.
Of the value of such thorough inspection in the suppression of epidemics, and in the prevention of disease, there are abundant examples. The people of a populous town of England, becoming alarmed at the approach of cholera in 1849, organized a corps of inspectors, whose duty it was to visit from house to house, and inquire for cases of premonitory diarrhoea, and when found to apply the remedy at once. The result was that cholera did not visit that town. The same systematic house-to-house visitation was adopted in some poor districts of London in 1854, and there was an almost complete exemption of those parts of the city, while some quarters of the wealthy, which were not under such surveillance, suffered severely.
But it is essential that this inspection should
be by thoroughly qualified medical men,
and it must consist in a house-to-house visitation.
Disease must be sought for, found, its
incipient history completely made out, the
causes upon which it depends
Inspection Must
Be Thorough
reported, and its remedy
suggested. Every case of
death should be visited, and
all the circumstances attending the development
of the disease, if it belong to the preventable
class, should be rigidly investigated and reported,
in order that the central bureau may
apply the proper remedy.
Striking examples of the value of medical sanitary inspection are furnished by this voluntary organization. One inspector found diarrhoeal affections very prevalent in a settlement in an up-town ward, and for a long time was baffled in his efforts to discover the cause. He was finally led to examine the water of a neighboring well, which the people used. This water appeared to be of an excellent quality, but on examination by Prof. Draper, it was found to contain a large amount of organic matter, derived either from a sewer or privy. Prof. Draper pronounced it liquid poison. The mystery was at once solved, and the proper remedy suggested.
In another instance a very contagious disease was found in a tenant-house, and after a long course of inquiry it was at length discovered that a washer-woman, living in the basement, had taken in sailors’ clothing. The sailors were found, the ship visited from which they came, and there the disease was found. None but medical men can prosecute such investigations with success, or suggest the proper remedy. If such a corps of sanitary inspectors were daily patrolling their districts, visiting from house to house, searching out sanitary evils, advising and aiding the people in the adoption of preventive measures, no epidemics of smallpox, typhus, scarlet fever, or cholera would ever gain more than a transient foothold. The sanitary inspector would truly become an officer of health and would be everywhere welcome.
The remedy for our evils must be apparent;
and this remedy is suggested in such terse
unqualified language by the City Inspector
above quoted, that I call the attention of the
committee especially to this remark,
as a proper guide in your deliberations.
The
Remedy
In the City Inspector’s report
for 1861 we find the following:
“The stay of pestilence, to be effectual, must be prompt, and equally prompt must be the interposition of barriers against the introduction of disease, which may be kept back, but, once introduced, can with difficulty be checked or extirpated. For these reasons, there should be a power existing in other hands that may be ready to be used at the moment the exigency may arise.” * * * “The remedy, apparent to every one, must consist in the adoption of laws transferring the power of sanitary regulations to some other authority of a different order of instruction in sanitary science.” * * * “The first groundwork of reform, in the opinion of the undersigned, is to bestow upon some other body, differently constituted, all power over the sanitary affairs of the city; and, until this is done, all other proposals of reform will be deprived of their essentially beneficial features. To escape present complications is the first great point to be gained; and this point secured, simplicity, promptness, and efficiency may be substituted for inefficiency, complication, and delay.”
Accepting this as the first step in reform, the practical question arises: How shall that body be constituted to which is to be confided the sanitary interests of New York?
If the experience of other large cities is of any value, or, indeed, if we rely simply on common sense, the following are indispensable prerogatives in any well-organized health board:
1. It should be independent of all political influence and above all partisan control.
2. It should combine executive
ability with a profound knowledge of disease
and the proper measures of prevention. To
this end the board should be composed in part
An Efficient
Health Board
of men especially accustomed to the dispatch
of business, and in part of medical men of great
skill and experience.
3. It should have a corps of skilled medical officers as inspectors, which should be the eyes, the ears, in a word, the senses of the board, in every part of the city, searching out disease, investigating the causes which give rise to it, the conditions under which it exists, the means of its propogation, and the most effectual mode of its suppression.
4. It should have a close alliance with the police, which must be its arm of power in the prompt and efficient execution of its orders.