Tom Glaser

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before the 1870s, running water was not available everywhere, and cesspools and open gutters offered the only drainage. Typhoid, tuberculosis, and (until the 1870s) cholera were often rampant, and in the minds of better-off outsiders those proletarian diseases were associated with other pathogens harder to trace: sexual misbehavior and socialist agitation.
The Ghosts of Berlin: Confronting German History in the Urban Landscape
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