London's Pulse: Medical Officer of Health reports 1848-1972

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Battersea 1896

Report upon the public health and sanitary condition of the Parish of St. Mary, Battersea during the year1896

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TABLE IV. Quarterly and Annual Summaries of Births and Deaths.

Battersea. 1896.BirthsDeathsDeathsSmall PoxMeaslesScarlet FeverDiphtheriaWhooping CoughFeverDiarrhoeaCholeraViolenceInquestsPublic Institutions (including Non-Parishioners.
Under 1 YearAbove 60 Years
1st Quarter E6182719536...6...918...1...1433...
w74043590131...4...815...3...1442140
2nd Quarter E62229195......45...425110...1533...
w68849813296...89...446...4...2044108
3rd Quarter E61130716024...25...511170......16...
w6894892139i...14...517271...2136145
4th Quarter E6492658049...2...8335...1639...
w74138572123.........7243...1435114
Whole Year E25001134430139...7812657586...48121...
w28581807507441...10742480681269157507
Totals53582941937580...185550137111672117278507

The Births and Deaths during the various quarters in the whole parish are here set out:—

Births.Deaths.
1st quarter1,358706
2nd „1,310789
3rd „1,300796
4th „1,390650
Total5,3582,941

Table V. contains a veritable sanitary history of the parish
of Battersea since 1856, the year in which modern sanitation
first came into existence under the provisions of the Metropolis
Local Management Act of 1855, and by which sanitary authorities,
in the form of Vestries and District Boards, the latter consisting
of small parishes grouped together, were first constituted for
London as a whole.