Sanitary Statistics of Native Colonial Schools and Hospitals

audiobook

Sanitary Statistics of Native Colonial Schools and Hospitals

by Florence Nightingale

EN·~2 hours

Chapters

Description

A meticulous Victorian‑era inquiry examines how colonial schooling affected the health of indigenous children. Prompted by worries that European education might be harming native populations, the author gathered official returns from the Colonial Office and compiled them into a series of tables that reveal attendance figures, ages, sexes, and mortality rates across a wide range of territories.

The study draws on data from 143 schools in places such as Ceylon, Australia, Natal, West Africa, and British North America. While the records are uneven—many colonies supplied little or no information—the available numbers show striking differences: mortality is relatively low in Natal, higher in Ceylon, and especially severe in Sierra Leone, where death rates exceed twenty per thousand for boys and thirty‑five for girls. The work highlights both the promise of systematic statistics and the stark gaps that limited a fuller understanding of colonial school health at the time.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~2 hours (153K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by MWS, RichardW, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

Release date

2016-07-26

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Florence Nightingale

Florence Nightingale

1820–1910

Known as the founder of modern nursing, she transformed a calling often dismissed as domestic work into a profession grounded in training, discipline, and public service. Her work during the Crimean War, and the reforms she pushed afterward, changed how hospitals thought about care, sanitation, and evidence.

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