Excremental Flows: Manchester Corporation's 'Dung Hill Scheme' and the Rampton Manor Estate, Nottinghamshire 1892
With high population densities and concentrated industry, towns and cities generate
vast quantities of waste. Maintaining the flow of waste, especially excremental matter,
away from these centres to areas of final disposal or dispersal, is an essential priority
for urban authorities. To operate effectively, waste management infrastructures and
protocols must have sufficient capacity to cope with the volumes and different types of
waste produced, and be able to move this on efficiently and economically. Ruptures and
blockages that disrupt the flow of waste, or increasing volumes of waste that threaten to
engulf older infrastructure designed for smaller flows, represent major challenges that
need to be addressed urgently. Manchester faced this scenario in the 1890s. How the
city’s authorities sought to resolve their difficulties is examined here. The strategy
deployed is revealing of the competing conceptualisations of waste flow in Victorian
England – linear versus cyclical flows; permanent disposal versus reuse – and the
impact urban waste might have on distant rural communities.
History
Author affiliation
College of Social Sci Arts and Humanities History, Politics & Int'l RelationsVersion
- AM (Accepted Manuscript)