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Richard Jones

@rlcjones

Associate Professor of Landscape History, Centre for Regional and Local History, University of Leicester. Interested in people, soil, water, and waste from medieval to modern period. #Flooding #Manure #Sewage #EnvHist Alt-Acc @rlcj.mstdn.social.ap.brid.gy

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21.04.2025
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Latest posts by Richard Jones @rlcjones

Black cloth book cover with cream label with fancy hand-written title ‘Sewage Farm’.

Black cloth book cover with cream label with fancy hand-written title ‘Sewage Farm’.

Sample of handwritten text. Reads ‘Broom asks for tool for drilling in with Mangold seed & the same was ordered.’

Sample of handwritten text. Reads ‘Broom asks for tool for drilling in with Mangold seed & the same was ordered.’

Joyously in the #Archives today. In #Devon Heritage Hub to explore the #NineteenthCentury records of Tiverton #Sewage #Farm. #EnvHist #History (transcriptions in image Alt-text)

05.06.2025 16:22 👍 0 🔁 2 💬 0 📌 0

Just me messing around with my camera again this weekend. Potting sheds and flower beds!

28.05.2025 14:02 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Ceramic basin with two brass taps, plug and over flow. Creamy white.

Ceramic basin with two brass taps, plug and over flow. Creamy white.

John Bolding & Sons Co. “ONDO”. #Edwardian #Sanitation Encountered today in ‘Snowzell’. If you know the #Gloucestershire accent you’ll know where to find it!

17.05.2025 17:35 👍 0 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
A copy of Orchard, in autumnal livery, perched in the boughs of a lichen-covered apple tree.

A copy of Orchard, in autumnal livery, perched in the boughs of a lichen-covered apple tree.

In the magnificent ‘Orchard: a Year in England’s Eden’ Benedict Macdonald and Nicholas Gates trace abundant life & occasional death through the seasons in one ancient #orchard in #Herefordshire. They are careful not to reveal its location. It’s too precious. But […]

[Original post on mstdn.social]

11.05.2025 18:47 👍 7 🔁 3 💬 1 📌 0
Overhead view of a seed tray with seed compost against a brick and weed background. Photo taken on the diagonal.

Overhead view of a seed tray with seed compost against a brick and weed background. Photo taken on the diagonal.

#May is the month to sow your Mangel Wurtzels. I just have. Have you? #Autumn monsters to come. This variety is the classic Long Red Mammoth beloved of #NineteenthCentury #Sewage farmers. #Gardening #Roots #Vegetables

07.05.2025 18:45 👍 0 🔁 2 💬 0 📌 0
Nuisance and nuisance-makers in late medieval Nottingham: the Mickletorn jury presentments, 13 October 1407

In late mediaeval Nottingham, matters of nuisance were dealt with by the Mickletorn jury. Drawing on contextual information gleaned from the borough court roles, this article provides a detailed spatial analysis of the nuisances reported by the Mickletorn jury in October 1407 and biographical information on the named nuisance-makers. The role is shown to be unusual in its arrangement and, with its emphasis on removing dung and dunghills, unusual in its content. It is tentatively suggested that this change in procedure and focus may have been prompted by an outbreak of plague in southern and western England, and perhaps indicates that Nottingham town authorities moved proactively to sanitise its streets in an effort to protect its inhabitants in advance of the plague’s expected arrival.

Nuisance and nuisance-makers in late medieval Nottingham: the Mickletorn jury presentments, 13 October 1407 In late mediaeval Nottingham, matters of nuisance were dealt with by the Mickletorn jury. Drawing on contextual information gleaned from the borough court roles, this article provides a detailed spatial analysis of the nuisances reported by the Mickletorn jury in October 1407 and biographical information on the named nuisance-makers. The role is shown to be unusual in its arrangement and, with its emphasis on removing dung and dunghills, unusual in its content. It is tentatively suggested that this change in procedure and focus may have been prompted by an outbreak of plague in southern and western England, and perhaps indicates that Nottingham town authorities moved proactively to sanitise its streets in an effort to protect its inhabitants in advance of the plague’s expected arrival.

By way of introducing myself to those with #medieval interests, here’s the abstract of a recent article of mine. ‘Nuisance and nuisance-makers in late medieval Nottingham: the Mickletorn jury presentments, 13 October, 1407’ Nottingham Medieval Studies #EnvHist #History #Waste #Plague

23.04.2025 13:08 👍 17 🔁 4 💬 0 📌 1

Do follow my bridging account from Mastodon for more stuff like this. @rlcj.mstdn.social.ap.brid.gy #Nature

21.04.2025 11:47 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
First page of article with abstract. ‘With high population densities and concentrated industry, towns and cities generate vast quantities of waste. Maintaining the flow of waste, especially excremental matter, away from these centres to areas of final disposal or dispersal, is an essential priority for urban authorities. To operate effectively waste management infrastructures and protocols must have sufficient capacity to cope with the volumes and different types of waste produced, and be able to move this on efficiently and economically. Ruptures and blockages that disrupt the flow of waste, or increasing volumes of waste that threatened to engulf older infrastructure designed for smaller flows, represent major challenges that need to be addressed urgently. Manchester faced this scenario in the 1890s. How the city’s authorities sought to resolve their difficulties is examined here. The strategy deployed is revealing of the competing conceptualisations of waste flow in Victorian England—linear versus cyclical flows; permanent disposal versus reuse—and the impact urban waste might have on distant rural communities.

First page of article with abstract. ‘With high population densities and concentrated industry, towns and cities generate vast quantities of waste. Maintaining the flow of waste, especially excremental matter, away from these centres to areas of final disposal or dispersal, is an essential priority for urban authorities. To operate effectively waste management infrastructures and protocols must have sufficient capacity to cope with the volumes and different types of waste produced, and be able to move this on efficiently and economically. Ruptures and blockages that disrupt the flow of waste, or increasing volumes of waste that threatened to engulf older infrastructure designed for smaller flows, represent major challenges that need to be addressed urgently. Manchester faced this scenario in the 1890s. How the city’s authorities sought to resolve their difficulties is examined here. The strategy deployed is revealing of the competing conceptualisations of waste flow in Victorian England—linear versus cyclical flows; permanent disposal versus reuse—and the impact urban waste might have on distant rural communities.

By way of a Bluesky #introduction, this penning of mine went live last week: ‘Excremental Flows: #Manchester Corporation’s ‘Dung Hill Scheme’ and the Rampton Manor Estate, #Nottinghamshire, 1892’ in _Environment & History_ #EnvHist

21.04.2025 10:28 👍 5 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0