• Source: Metropolitan Commission of Sewers
    • The Metropolitan Commission of Sewers was one of London's first steps towards bringing its sewer and drainage infrastructure under the control of a single public body. It was absorbed by the Metropolitan Board of Works on 1 January 1856.


      Formation



      The commission was formed by the Metropolitan Commission of Sewers Act 1848 (11 & 12 Vict. c. 112), partly in response to public health concerns following serious outbreaks of cholera. The commission's mandate was renewed and amended with supplementary acts:

      Metropolitan Sewers Act 1851 (14 & 15 Vict. c. 75)
      Metropolitan Sewers Act 1852 (15 & 16 Vict. c. 64)
      Metropolitan Sewers Act 1853 (16 & 17 Vict. c. 125)
      Metropolitan Sewers Act 1854 (17 & 18 Vict. c. 111)
      Metropolitan Sewers Act 1855 (18 & 19 Vict. c. 30)
      Commissioners included Sir Edwin Chadwick, Robert Stephenson and Thomas Field Gibson.
      The new body combined eight local boards of commissioners that had been established by earlier acts of Parliament:

      Tower Hamlets Commission of Sewers
      St Katherine's Commission of Sewers
      Poplar and Blackwall Commission of Sewers
      Holborn and Finsbury Commission of Sewers
      Westminster and Middlesex Commission of Sewers
      Surrey and Kent Commission of Sewers
      Greenwich Commission of Sewers
      Commissioners of the Regent's Park Sewers
      The area covered by the Metropolitan Commission was defined as the City and Liberties of Westminster, the borough of Southwark, the areas of the previous commissioners and "any such other place in the Counties of Middlesex, Surrey, Essex and Kent or any of them, being not more than twelve miles distant in a straight line from St. Paul's Cathedral, but not being in the City of London or the liberties thereof". No area was to be exempt from the commission's jurisdiction by virtue of being extra-parochial or beyond the ebb or flow of the tide. The headquarters of the commission were at 1 Greek Street, Soho.
      The City of London was excluded as it had its own Commission of Sewers dating back to 1669.


      Activities


      The commission surveyed London's antiquated sewerage system and set about ridding the capital of an estimated 200,000 cesspits, insisting that all cesspits should be closed and that house drains should connect to sewers and empty into the Thames (ultimately, a major contributing factor to "The Great Stink" of 1858).
      The commission was notable in that it employed Joseph Bazalgette, first as assistant surveyor (from 1849), taking over as engineer in 1852 after his predecessor died of "harassing fatigues and anxieties". Bazalgette was then appointed chief engineer of the commission's successor, the Metropolitan Board of Works in 1856, and by the end of the decade after "The Great Stink" – his proposals to modernise the London sewerage system were being implemented.


      = Chairmen

      =
      Viscount Ebrington (1 January 1849 – 6 October 1851)
      Edward Lawes (6 October 1851 – 24 July 1852)
      Richard Jebb (24 July 1852 – 1 January 1856)


      Archives


      The Archives are held at the [[London Metropolitan Archives


      See also


      Public Health Act 1848
      Medical Officer for Health
      Commissions of sewers


      References

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