
audiobook
Transcribed from the 1878 edition by David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org
In the spring of 1878 a quiet village in Essex was shaken by a wave of infant deaths that left mothers bewildered and the community on edge. When a local father reported a terrible skin rash in his baby after using a popular violet powder, officials were alerted to a possible link between the cosmetic and a sudden, lethal outbreak. The Local Government Board promptly dispatched a medical investigator, who soon found himself amidst grieving families, overworked health officers, and a town desperate for answers.
The report painstakingly details the harrowing symptoms—blackened, swollen skin in delicate folds, blistering “little white blisters,” and a rapid decline that often ended in death within days. As the inquiry unfolds, the physician weighs two grim possibilities: a misidentified form of erysipelas or a silent arsenic poisoning hidden in the very powder meant to soothe. Listeners will be drawn into the early struggle to uncover the truth behind a tragic public‑health mystery.
Language
en
Duration
~28 minutes (27K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2017-01-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1842–1916
A leading Victorian public-health doctor, he helped turn disease investigation into careful, evidence-based work. His career in sanitary reform and epidemiology made him an important figure in British medicine at the turn of the 20th century.
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