Promoting Clean Water in Nineteenth-Century Public Policy: Professors, Preachers, and Polliwogs in Kingston, Ontario
Authors
Colleen MacNaughton
Abstract
A case study of Kingston, Ontario, reveals that growing confidence in the response
of science and statistics to the threat of epidemic disease supported the development
and expansion of municipal water and sewer services in the late nineteenth century.
Informed by science and statistics, professional city managers and sanitary experts
sought solutions combining fiduciary responsibility with public service. Preliminary
evidence also suggests that, in some cases, Protestant-inspired rhetoric contributed
to this support for new sanitary measures.