Report to the Right Hon. Lord Panmure, G.C.B., &c., Minister at War, of the proceedings of the Sanitary Commission dispatched to the seat of war in the East, 1855-56 / presented to both Houses of Parliament, by command of Her Majesty, March 1857.
- United Kingdom. Sanitary Commission (1855-1856)
- Date:
- 1857
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Report to the Right Hon. Lord Panmure, G.C.B., &c., Minister at War, of the proceedings of the Sanitary Commission dispatched to the seat of war in the East, 1855-56 / presented to both Houses of Parliament, by command of Her Majesty, March 1857. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by The Royal College of Surgeons of England. The original may be consulted at The Royal College of Surgeons of England.
9/350 (page 9)
![Pages Hospitals on the Bosphorus, &c.—continued . , . 7 to 63 improvement in the health of the sick in the hospitals generally; the valuable assistance and co-operation of the authorities acknowledged; testimony borne to the zeal of the medical officers, and of Miss Nightingale and her nurses, p. 62, PART II. Proceedings of the Commissioners in the Crimea . . 64 to 148 1. Topograph)' of the Allied Occupation . . . 64 to 66 Its topographical peculiarities and geological formation and configuration (see Appendix); its soil a light loam or clay; vegetation scanty; natural drainage very de- fective; position of the town of Balaklava unfavourable to health; nearly the whole area occupied by the allies con- sists of loam and clay, with a spongy calcareous subsoil, retaining water (p. 65), with impervious beds below. G II 1^ ] 1 average temperature of the climate, with an intensely hot sun, very likely to generate malaria, and to produce slight attacks of periodic fever, not of malignant type. Ophthalmia prevalent in Sebastopol, p. 66. ^ No natural topographical conditions within the occu- pation that could by themselves have occasioned the disease and mortality that prevailed among the troops during the winter 185 4-5, p. 66. 2- Climate of the Crimea 66 to 70 Meteorological observations carried on only for a short time; kept by Dr. Jephson and Staff-Surgeon Matthew, at the Castle Hospital; results registered from April 1855 to June 1856, p. 67; comparison with the climate of London. Tlie climate of the Crimea must be considered as one of extremes, and therefore trying to the healtl) of the troops p. 69. ^ ' 3. Water Supply within the British Occupation . . 70 to 78 The Commander of the Forces applies for the assistance and advice of the Commissioners on this subject in May 1855; extent of the wator-shed, number of springs, water good and clear, but much deteriorated by mode of collecting, p. 71; native wells, quality of water clear and wholesonre - ancl l.ard, quantity easily capable of large increase by simple engmeenng appliances, p 72; open tanks employed, and water rendered less wholesome by the mode of supply; best](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b22280297_0011.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)