A London dustman is forced by noise abatement legislation to change his trade: he becomes a vendor of cat's meat. Coloured lithograph, 1839.

Date:
[1839?]
Reference:
2491042i
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About this work

Description

The interlocutors are a street sweeper and a catsmeat-man who was formerly a dustman. "Traditionally, dustmen rang a bell to warn of their arrival, and to accompany their cry of "Dust-O!", but the ringing of the bell was banned by the Metropolitan Police Act of 1839, a piece of legislation which restricted many areas of street life affecting mainly poor people" (Hounsell, op. cit.,p. 28) . "Dustmen [in the early 1800s] began their rounds early morning ... announcing their presence with the loud toll of a handbell or a hearty shout of "dust ho!'". The 1839 Act forbade the handbell but permitted the "dust ho!' call (Jackson, op. cit., pp. 7, 244-245)

In the background is a street gas lamp

Publication/Creation

London (377, Strand) : Published by William Spooner, [1839?] (London (22 Denmark St. Soho) : Printed by W. Kohler)

Physical description

1 print : lithograph, with watercolour ; image 24 x 18 cm

Lettering

Hallo Jem! Vot are you turned cat's meat perweyor? Vy, yes, now the beaks have done avay vith the bell; and as my woice aint wery strong my phersician thought it adwisable to cut the perfession at vonce! The substitution of V for W and vice versa in the spoken language of London dustmen, as shown here, was noted by Henry Mayhew and others (Hounsell, op. cit., p. 30)

References note

Peter Hounsell, London's rubbish: two centuries of dirt, dust and disease in the metropolis, Stroud 2013
Lee Jackson, Dirty old London, New Haven 2014

Reference

Wellcome Collection 2491042i

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