NGfL CYMRU GCaD www.ngfl-cymru.org.uk. NGfL CYMRU GCaD www.ngfl-cymru.org.uk Newport in 1850 Look at this map of Newport from the mid 19 th Century. What.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Adapting to the Geography of New Orleans in 18 th & 19 th century How the climate and land affect architecture- before there were air conditioners and.
Advertisements

What Am I? At look at everyday items from America in the 1800’s.
VICTORIAN LONDON (19 th century). QUEEN VICTORIA ( ) Was crowned queen of England in 1837 at the age of 18 Married Prince Albert of Germany in.
Cholera, Fever and Statistics in Victorian Liverpool Death By Numbers.
NGfL CYMRU GCaD NGfL CYMRU GCaD Newport in 1850 Look at this 1836 map. What has changed since 1800? Click.
Lesson Objectives  To understand what life was like for people living in an Industrial Town.
NGfL CYMRU GCaD How will I carry out my historical enquiry?
Jeopardy $100 Section 2Section 3Section 4Section 6Section 8 $200 $300 $400 $300 $200 $100 $400 $300 $200 $100 $400 $300 $200 $100 $400 $300 $200 $100.
What were the living conditions like for the poor in the 19th century?
Second Grade English High Frequency Words
Essay Writing Skills Nat 5
Fire and Fire Safety Fires can be very useful in the outdoors if they are used right. Fires can be very useful in the outdoors if they are used right.
Demographic Transition Model
Spelling Lists.
NGfL CYMRU GCaD NGfL CYMRU GCaD
GLOBE THEATRE. THE GLOBE THEATRE GLOBE THEATRE: HISTORY Globe theatre was built in 1599 The Globe was a warm-weather theatre as it had a roofless yard.
Outline the differences in lifestyle between groups of people in Brazil’s cities.
“A perfect wilderness of foulness” Why were towns so unhealthy?
Demographic Transition Model. Birth Rate and Death rate are both high. Population growth is slow and fluctuating. Reasons Birth Rate is high as a result.
THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
 What is the difference between  Equality of opportunity  Equality of outcome How would you define equality?
NGfL CYMRU GCaD PLUMBING APPLIANCES & COMPONENTS.
End Show 5-1 How Populations Grow Slide 1 of 22 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall Chapter 5: Populations (“Population Biology”)
The Industrial Revolution
Sight words.
NGfL CYMRU GCaD NGfL CYMRU GCaD Industry in Monmouthshire Look at these maps of Monmouthshire. Can you identify.
Population Growth in Britain 1880s onwards. The Census Census- a periodical official count of the people who live in a country. Government count of the.
Living Conditions in Towns and Cities (19 th Century)
World development and interdependence compilation.
Housing for The Irish Lesson starter: Describe working conditions for Irish immigrants.(3 marks)
Write down five words to describe housing in cities during the Industrial revolution.
The Industrial Revolution
NGfL CYMRU GCaD NGfL CYMRU GCaD Newport in 1800 About how many streets did Newport have in 1800? What were.
Planning Construction Chapter 15. Private Sector  Most buildings and other structures are built for ordinary people. These people make up the private.
High Frequency Words August 31 - September 4 around be five help next
How the Other Half Lives Jacob Riis, Squalid housing tenements were referred to as "Dens of Death.“
Sight Words.
World Population Change. What Is It? The population of the world grows according to two factors: birth rate and death rate. The relationship between these.
Population Demographic Transition Model. The changes in the birth and death rates and the effect on population can be shown on the Demographic Transition.
What is the Demographic Transition Model (DTM)? The demographic transition model explains the transformation of countries from having high birth and death.
DICKENS’ VICTORIAN LONDON (19th century)
Housing for The Irish Lesson starter: Describe working conditions for Irish immigrants.(3 marks)
* of 26 What were the social consequences of the Industrial Revolution? 19 th Century Widnes.
19 th Century Cities and Town in the UK What Were Cities and Towns like during the Industrial Revolution?
Manchester Industrial Revolution Day 4. Manchester October 22, 2012 Preview: –What are some problems that can arise due to urbanization? Don’t know what.
Apples Think of five or six names of boys or girls you might marry, As you twist the stem of an apple, recite the names until the stem comes off. You.
NGfL CYMRU GCaD Word Scramble Unscramble the letters to reveal a name or word Hurry - you only have 30 seconds Unscramble the letters.
Urbanisation LO: Describe the growth of cities and explain why this happened. Key word- Urbanisation- an increase in the proportion of people living in.
Public Health (It’s not just drains and sewers!).
Article 40 Accessory Apartments ANNUAL TOWN MEETING 30 MARCH 2016.
Few people knew London as well as Dickens. He saw the great wealth that businessmen such as Scrooge were amassing, and he saw the overcrowding, the dirt,
Health in the industrial revolution. Introduction  The health in the industrial revolution era was very bad; middle class people were not expected to.
Bellwork: 1.Are you glad to be growing up in Nashville? Why or why not? 2.What are some benefits to growing up in a city? 3.What are some disadvantages.
 Demographic Transition Model.  The demographic transition model shows population change over time.  It studies how birth rate and death rate affect.
Life in an Industrial Town
At our place they commenced coming down about 1 o’clock in the afternoon, at first only one at a time, here and there, looking a little like flakes.
Jacob Riis wrote a book, How the Other Half Lives, to demonstrate the deplorable conditions immigrants and the poor endured in American cities. The following.
High Frequency Words. High Frequency Words a about.
Industrial Revolution: Living Conditions
The Industrial Revolution
Global problems of XXI century
Global problems of XXI century
First Grade High Frequency Words
The. the of and a to in is you that with.
Tenement life in The lower east side
Housing in cities during the Industrial revolution
The Black Death Lesson #1
UNIT I.
UNIT I.
Industrial Revolution: Living Conditions
Presentation transcript:

NGfL CYMRU GCaD

NGfL CYMRU GCaD Newport in 1850 Look at this map of Newport from the mid 19 th Century. What do you think the redder areas are showing? Click on the these areas to get a magnified view. Do you still think you are right? The redder areas indicate ‘DENSITY OF POPULATION AND PREVALENCE OF DISEASE’. What do you think this means? Can you see a pattern? Do the two areas have anything in common?

NGfL CYMRU GCaD Causes of Death in Newport Using a map of modern day Newport, can you find if any of these streets and areas still exist? Do you know what all of these diseases are? Are some of them still dangerous today? Which area was the worst hit in 1855? What was the most likely cause of death? Can you think of any reasons why some areas had more deaths than others?

NGfL CYMRU GCaD Living Conditions in Newport s Almost the first matter for remark which presented itself to my notice was the continued presence of typhus fever, especially in the more crowded and dirty parts of town…Scarlet Fever, measles and small-pox, when occurring in these districts are more malignant in their character, and meet with circumstances favourable to the promulgation of their stay. G T Clark. Report to the General Board of Health on the Borough of Newport. 1850, pg 14 In Charles Street are 30 houses, most of them connected with the culvert in the street. Six are low lodging houses, sublet into different apartments, and are very much overcrowded, as, for instance, the house inhabited by 30 persons; each room used for all domestic purposes during the day and as a sleeping room at night. Most of these lodgers are collectors of old rags or bones, which are heaped up in the rooms. In some of the lodging houses large quantities of dried fish are kept until they are often in a putrified state. In others are vegetables, such as remain unsold during the day. G T Clark. Report to the General Board of Health on the Borough of Newport. 1850, pg 18 Fothergill Street – There are 21 houses in this street, several consisting of four or five rooms, occupied by several families, and again, sublet by them to eight or ten, or sometimes twelve to fourteen persons, nearly all irish, having but the limited accommodation of one room, in which they all sleep in beds made of shavings and rags, on the floor, with windows closed and the fire places stopped up, breathing the same atmosphere over and over again… I found five beds in one room, six men in each bed, three with their heads in one direction, and three, with their heads in the other, one had fever…… G T Clark. Report to the General Board of Health on the Borough of Newport. 1850, pg 21 It is no uncommon occurrence to find old women or children sleeping in cupboards with their doors closed, and in one case the straw bed had not been changed for two years, and in another the mother of the tenant was found with three grandchildren sleeping in a small cupboard 20 inches wide and 41/2 feet long. G T Clark. Report to the General Board of Health on the Borough of Newport. 1850, pg 21 Wedlake’s Court – here are 14 houses, 11 of them have no ventilation, are inhabited by low Irish, low in position, filthy and unhealthy.. The drain is covered with flags and a board and has not sufficient fall. The privies are also filthy. The lower part of these houses are not fit for people to live in. Before the sanitary board came into operation this was one of the worst courts. In the middle of the court there was a large ash pit into which all of the house refuse was thrown, and this was built up against two privies, the contents of which flowed into the ash pit and so impregnated the atmosphere that it was most unpleasant for a person not accustomed to the Court to enter it. G T Clark. Report to the General Board of Health on the Borough of Newport. 1850, pg 26 Tabernacle Chapel Yard Burial Ground – this ground is crowded, loathsome and offensive; surrounded by a populous and respectable neighbourhood. The average depth of the graves I understand is from 4 feet 6 inches to 5 feet; the soil wet. Consequently the graves, to a certain extent contain water. A part of Llanarth Street bounds it on the north; the pumps and wells of these houses are worse than useless, as any water in them is discoloured, and is so fetid that it cannot be used for any other purpose. G T Clark. Report to the General Board of Health on the Borough of Newport. 1850, pg 39 The [water] supply is very insufficient for the wants of the town, and the cottages suffer materially from the scarcity. For ordinary purposes they have recourse to the canal, the water of which is very dirty, many of the houses draining into it. G T Clark. Report to the General Board of Health on the Borough of Newport. 1850, pg 31

NGfL CYMRU GCaD What you need to do… 1)This slide has several pieces written about the living conditions in Newport during the rapid rise of industrialisation in the mid 1850s. Each one can be viewed (and hidden) by clicking on the numbers. Read each one carefully and type any information that you find in the text box provided. When collecting information, think about: Conditions of living areas and houses – why were they like this? Access to clean water Presence of diseases Other factors that might have affected the health and safety of people at the time. 2) Read the pieces again. Why do you think living conditions were like this during the mid 18 th century in Newport? Why did people put up with these problems?