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Many Industrial towns had problems during the Industrial Revolution. The conditions in leeds are well documented, this 'inquiry into the state and condition of leeds' by Dr. Robert Baker provides some evidence that can be used to compare conditions in Bradford with those found elsewhere.
Things to consider:
From An Inquiry into the State and Condition of Leeds, Robert Baker, 1842
Courts and Cul-de-sacs exist everywhere ... In one cul-de-sac in Leeds there
are 34 houses, and in ordinary times there dwell in these houses 340 persons,
or ten to every house. The name of this place is Boot and Shoe Yard, from whence
the commissioners removed, in the days of Cholera, 75 cartloads of manure which
had been untouched for years.
For the most part these houses are built back-to-back. ... A house of this description
will contain a cellar, a house and chamber ...
To build the largest number of cottages on the smallest possible space seems
to have been the original view of the speculators. Thus neighbourhoods have
arisen in which there is neither water nor privies.
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