Hard Rock Miners' Phthisis in 19 and Early 20 Century Britain: From

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Hard Rock Miners' Phthisis in 19 and Early 20 Century Britain: From Hard Rock Miners’ Phthisis in 19 th and Early 20 th Century Britain: From Diagnosis to Compensation By Fredric Mintz A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the Requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy In History In the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in charge: Professor Thomas Laqueur, Chair Professor James Vernon Professor Victoria Bonnell Fall 2009 Acknowledgments I thank the University of California at Berkeley for providing me with all of the opportunities for which a hopeful scholar could wish. I am especially grateful to Susanna Barrows, PhD., Thomas Laqueur, PhD. and James Vernon, PhD. for their guidance, encouragement and inspiration. i Abstract Introduction: Hard Rock Miners Phthisis in 19 th and Early 20th Century Britain: From Diagnosis to Compensation By Fredric Mintz Doctor of Philosophy in History Professor Thomas Laqueur, Chair The development of new technologies and new patterns of working were indispensable to the accelerated economic growth, which characterized most of nineteenth century Britain. For much of that period the demand for raw siliceous containing materials increased sharply. In this process, equipment, which was ever more sophisticated, generated increasingly fine and more harmful siliceous dust, increasing early disability and death in mines and quarries as well as in numerous other industries. The present study examines the elaboration of silicosis, the disease, and the development of social policy directed at its prevention and compensation from the 1830s until 1918. I concentrate mainly on the nineteenth century and the twentieth century until 1907. In 1907, the law recognized that an occupational disease was a notional injury and a few became compensable. Others, including silicosis were certain to follow. Both the etiological elaboration and prevention of silicosis, and, ultimately compensating its sufferers occurred over a very long period. My major subject is the causes of this time lag. While this study emphasizes mining and quarrying, workers in siliceous industries outside of these occupations had the same issues. Others have reviewed the nature of medical practice in the nineteenth century but medical interest or disinterest in occupational disease during that period has only received cursory coverage. Indeed, this is characteristic of the slighting of occupational disease as opposed sanitation by historians during most of the period I have studied. While some investigators have alluded to the early public health emphasis on worker well-being, I also address how occupational health became a secondary consideration for most of the nineteenth century, despite its promise of achieving as much as “Chadwickian” sanitation, at much less cost. In this, Chadwick and his coterie of second-generation utilitarians with their stress on engineering as opposed to medical investigation were largely responsible. The government created commissions and committees to learn more about occupational health conditions. However, it appears that it offered these, without much intent to follow through, but rather, as a temporarily sop to placate those with a special interest in the subject. This work studies in more depth than others of which I am aware, the 1862-64 Commission of the Condition Of All Mines In Great Britain To Which The Provisions Of The Act 23 & 24 Victoria Do Not Apply (coal mines). During those proceedings, I found that the etiology and partial prevention of silicosis were clearly established. This information was relegated to the blue books for reasons that I also investigate. When interest in silicosis revived, there was little or no reference to this work. 1 Students of the subject have noted that in the 1880s British medicine was anecdotal and derived from experience in private practice. I have attempted to show how this influenced the elaboration of a specific disease, silicosis. In addition, medical teaching, membership in societies and with an interest in some aspect of medicine, (very likely, what submissions were accepted to medical journals as well) were controlled by a metropolitan medical elite with little or no scientific, social or pecuniary interest in the diseases of miners. This view was transmitted to general practitioners as well. Another aspect of the present work, different from most, has involved a careful reading of all the issues of The Lancet and The British Medical Journals from 1864 through 1906. I found relatively few articles relating to silicosis, confirming that the readers’ level of interest was not very great. In addition to demonstrating a paucity of articles about miners’ lung disease, these journals also reported on the controversial role of tuberculosis in the elaboration of silicosis. Failure to scientifically address this debate significantly delayed compensating for and preventing silicosis. Additionally, I show that the journals revealed a terminological obfuscation that made the understanding of what silicosis was, very difficult. Various authors commented on this confusion but their criticism does not appear to have resulted in any editorial attempt to rectify the problem (assuming that any editorial intervention existed). The science of statistics was in advance of other medical tools and did provoke some interest in silicosis but the journals and reports of the commissions also show how statistics were manipulated to minimize the incidence of silicosis. Moreover, organizations presumably having a keen interest in the etiology and prevention of silicosis (and its compensation) were often, themselves, a source for the lag. These included unions, mine and quarry owners, both the Liberal and Conservative Parties, the public health establishment and, to a lesser extent, the mining and quarry inspectorate. Most work on this subject studies the post-WWI period. This work shows that these organizations had distinctly different attitudes about compensation legislation than they held the in the twentieth century. In the process of arriving at the correct etiology of silicosis, and, as a result, whether it should be indemnified, all interested parties picked through what was on offer to patch together some commonality of position that had little to do with any adherence to an overall structure, coherency or rational knowledge. Inevitably, their motives were an admixture of highly parochial and shortsighted deliberations and considerations that were more altruistic. Any attempt on the part of various parties to act in unison was a material and a practical matter and had little to do with systematic logic. The authority of the interested organizations related to the power that sustained them and to what was required to disrupt them and bring about fragmentation. In this process, as Bruno Latour has pointed out, the content of what was achieved, always involved fusion with the context. This work concludes that when problems resist timely solutions, the reasons are always multiple and that they shift over time without result until a reconciliation of various social and cultural differences becomes possible. In fact, reconciliation did occur despite the fact that the motivations of the negotiating parties were contradictory. 2 3 Introduction Hard Rock Miners’ Phthisis in 19 th and Early 20 th Century Britain: From Diagnosis to Compensation Alarmed by the high morbidity and mortality in certain occupations, Sir John Simon, M.D. pointed out: “The canker of industrial diseases gnaws at the very root of our national strength.” 1 The development of new technologies and new patterns of working were indispensable to the accelerated economic growth that characterized most of nineteenth century Britain. For much of that period, the demand for raw siliceous containing materials increased sharply. At the same time, increasingly sophisticated equipment generated ever finer siliceous dust that accelerated and further aggravated its harmful affect on the lungs. It was responsible for a marked increase in early disability and death in mines and quarries as well as numerous other industries. These included sanding, filing, cutlery, roofing, piping, guttering, and the manufacture of doorknobs and other fixtures, copper wire, electromagnets, household products such as pots and pans, most flatware, water heaters, coinage, and chemical applications such as ceramic glazes, and Fehling’s solution. Tin was crucial to the production of bronze, pewter, as a dye casting alloy, white metal and as a solder. Quarrying was requisite for pottery, brick-making, glass, for fettling material. Sand was vital for molding, bedding, blasting and limestone. The present study examines the elaboration of silicosis, the disease, and the development of social policy directed at its prevention and compensation from the 1830s until 1918 My interest in undertaking it was kindled by the great time lag that occurred between its scientific elaboration and its acceptance by the medical community as well as the long legislative process that finally sought to protect and compensate miners suffering silicosis. While this study emphasizes mining and quarrying, I am well aware that workers in siliceous industries other than mining suffered from the same issues. I found scientific acceptance of the etiology of silicosis and the pursuit of ameliorative legislation were not interdependent. Moreover, organizations presumably having a keen interest in the investigation of, prevention from and compensation for occupational diseases were often, themselves,
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