How Britain bought all the tea in the world

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Montegriffo
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How Britain bought all the tea in the world

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No one example captures how deeply tea drinking was embedded in the fabric of British everyday life than the decision of the government in 1942 to buy up every available pound of tea from every country in the world except Japan.

Britain faced defeat by the Axis powers of Germany and Japan. Its troops had been forced to make a complete withdrawal from Europe, leaving it open to an expected and narrowly avoided invasion. The “impregnable” fortress of Singapore had fallen, essentially ending Britain’s colonial dominance of Asia. Britain was close to broke, as its reserves were drained to keep imports flowing in as Atlantic convoys were hunted and often destroyed by U-boats. The US had not yet mobilized its massive manufacturing capabilities, post Pearl Harbor.

And Britain was buying tea!
In huge amounts. One estimate is that the largest government purchases in 1942 were, in order of weight, bullets, tea, artillery shells, bombs and explosives.
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https://blog.teabox.com/year-britain-bought-tea-world


Was watching an old QI the other day and it was suggested that without tea there could have been no industrial revolution. Populations of towns and cities rocketed as workers moved from agriculture to the new mills and factories. Without the practice of boiling your water diseases would have spread and workers would have gone back to the countryside. Not sure I agree completely as there was always small beer which was also safer than drinking water but it must have aided the population growth.
For legal reasons, we are not threatening to destroy U.S. government property with our glorious medieval siege engine. But if we wanted to, we could. But we won’t. But we could.
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Speaker to Animals
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Re: How Britain bought all the tea in the world

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Also brought poppies to the world.
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Re: How Britain bought all the tea in the world

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As far as the contaminated water thing..

Nah.

You guys had a horrific cholera problem because of all your common water wells. It didn't slow down urbanization.
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Montegriffo
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Re: How Britain bought all the tea in the world

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One of the central reasons for the explosive growth in tea consumption in the UK in the 1700s was that water was such a danger that it had to be avoided. Figures show a strong correlation among the general population between tea and reduction in dysentery and bacterial infections. It also reduced infant mortality, since the antiseptic properties of tea were passed on to breast milk.
I think it had a large positive effect on health in large towns and cities.
Maybe water born diseases on their own wouldn't have stopped the industrial revolution but they certainly would have slowed it down.

https://blog.teabox.com/how-tea-made-water-safe
For legal reasons, we are not threatening to destroy U.S. government property with our glorious medieval siege engine. But if we wanted to, we could. But we won’t. But we could.
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Speaker to Animals
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Re: How Britain bought all the tea in the world

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The correlation to getting cholera was your proximity to a cholera-infected well.
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Re: How Britain bought all the tea in the world

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Putting ice in your tea is the patrician choice.
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Montegriffo
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Re: How Britain bought all the tea in the world

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Speaker to Animals wrote: Sat Sep 08, 2018 1:22 pm The correlation to getting cholera was your proximity to a cholera-infected well.
Boiling water kills the cholera bacteria.
For legal reasons, we are not threatening to destroy U.S. government property with our glorious medieval siege engine. But if we wanted to, we could. But we won’t. But we could.
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Re: How Britain bought all the tea in the world

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Montegriffo wrote: Sat Sep 08, 2018 1:28 pm
Speaker to Animals wrote: Sat Sep 08, 2018 1:22 pm The correlation to getting cholera was your proximity to a cholera-infected well.
Boiling water kills the cholera bacteria.
That may be, but Londoners didn't know that at the time, and the actual data is overwhelming: the cholera cases clustered around specific wells that were later found to be contaminated. The people did not boil their water else you wouldn't see the data like that.

This is one of those cases you might learn when studying the scientific method. Between parish and city records, and the fact that London has the most advanced water and sewage system in the world (mapped out in detail), you can actually overlay the addresses of the cholera fatalities on the water supply map. It shows you quite clearly which wells were contaminated.

Unless Londoners were to only drink tea and always boil their water, they faced a very high probability of infection if they used one of the contaminated water sources.
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Re: How Britain bought all the tea in the world

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A scientist literally started modern epidemiology in London by solving this very problem.
Dr. John Snow is regarded as one of the founding fathers of modern epidemiology. As London suffered a series of cholera outbreaks during the mid-19th century, Snow theorized that cholera reproduced in the human body and was spread through contaminated water. This contradicted the prevailing theory that diseasses were spread by "miasma" in the air.

London's water supply system consisted of shallow public wells where people could pump their own water to carry home, and about a dozen water utilities that drew water from the Thames to supply a jumble of water lines to more upscale houses. London's sewage system was even more ad hoc: privies emptied into cesspools or cellars more often than directly into sewer pipes. So the pervasive stench of animal and human feces combined with rotting garbage made the miasma theory of disease seem very plausible. Disease was more prevalent in lower-class neighborhoods because they stank more, and because the supposed moral depravity of poor people weakened their constitutions and made them more vulnerable to disease.

The September 1854 cholera outbreak was centered in the Soho district, close to Snow's house. Snow mapped the 13 public wells and all the known cholera deaths around Soho, and noted the spatial clustering of cases around one particular water pump on the southwest corner of the intersection of Broad (now Broadwick) Street and Cambridge (now Lexington) Street. He examined water samples from various wells under a microscope, and confirmed the presence of an unknown bacterium in the Broad Street samples. Despite strong scepticism from the local authorities, he had the pump handle removed from the Broad Street pump and the outbreak quickly subsided.

Snow subsequently published a map of the epidemic to support his theory. A detail fom this map is shown below. The complete map shows the locations of the 13 public wells in the area, and the 578 cholera deaths mapped by home address, marked as black bars stacked perpendicular to the streets.
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https://www1.udel.edu/johnmack/frec682/cholera/
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Montegriffo
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Re: How Britain bought all the tea in the world

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That doesn't really disprove the proposition that drinking tea played a large part in reducing water born diseases as cities grew.
After all the industrial revolution was already a hundred years old by then.
People didn't have to understand that boiling water made it safe to drink. They drank tea and it reduced illness.
For legal reasons, we are not threatening to destroy U.S. government property with our glorious medieval siege engine. But if we wanted to, we could. But we won’t. But we could.
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