Catalogue description METROPOLITAN COMMISSION OF SEWERS

This record is held by London Metropolitan Archives: City of London

Details of MCS
Reference: MCS
Title: METROPOLITAN COMMISSION OF SEWERS
Description:

Administrative Papers

Date: 1847-1862
Held by: London Metropolitan Archives: City of London, not available at The National Archives
Language: English
Creator:

Metropolitan Commission of Sewers, 1847-1862

Physical description: 498 Files
Access conditions:

MCS/PR/6, 20, 29 and MCS/1060 are unfit for consultation

 

172 items are missing within MCS/498

Subjects:
  • Sewers
  • Drainage
Administrative / biographical background:

As a result of the rapid increase of population and of building in the last quarter of the 18th century and the first few decades of the 19th most of the scattered villages and hamlets in the areas covered by the 7 commissions of sewers in the neighbourhood of London had by the 1840s coalesced into one urban area for which the old piecemeal drainage systems were quite inadequate. Sewage accumulated in cesspools and open ditches and even on the surface of the ground, fouling the water supplies. Cholera epidemics increased in frequency and intensity until the government was forced to take action. In 1847 a Royal Commission was appointed to "inquire whether any, and what, special means might be requisite for the improvement of the health of the metropolis, with regard more especially to the better house, street and land drainage .... etc.". One important conclusion of the Commissioners was that adequate provision for the sewerage of London could not be made until it became the responsibility of one competent body. The matter was treated as one of urgency and Her Majesty's Government acted on this advice in advance of legislation in November 1847, by the device of summoning the same 23 commissioners for each of the 7 districts (plus the extra Westminster district in the palatinate of the Savoy). The same chief officers were appointed for all the districts and so some unity of policy and organisation was already in being before the combined Metropolitan Commission of Sewers was appointed under the Act of 11 and 12 Vic. cap. CXII [September 1848] "to consolidate and continue in force for Two Years and to the End of the then next Session of Parliament, the Metropolitan Commissions of Sewers". Further Acts "to continue and amend the Metropolitan Sewers Act" were passed in 1851 (14 and 15 Vic. cap. LXXV) and 1852 (15 and 16 Vic. cap. LXIV). Both the powers and the resources of the Commission were however inadequate for the entire replanning and reconstruction of the main drainage of the London area which was what the situation required and in 1855, under the Metropolis Management Act, the Commission was superseded by the Metropolitan Board of Works.

 

The Metropolitan Commission of Sewers, being the direct successor of the 7 earlier commissions, took over their records (see separate lists); in the same way these records, with those of the Metropolitan Commission, passed to the Metropolitan Board of Works in 1855 and to the London County Council in 1889. This list of the Commission's records was prepared in March 1958.

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