A lesson focusing on why school dinners were introduced as a way of improving public health.
Around the year 1900 there was a lot of concern about the physical state of the people of Britain. Even though there had been tremendous efforts in the late 19th century to provide better public health, housing and education, many children were still no more healthy than they had been back in the 1840s.
The new Liberal government elected in 1906 passed various measures to try to deal with this problem. They were particularly concerned to try to improve the health of children. They passed laws to ensure midwives were notified of each new-born baby, they introduced School Medical Examinations and, in 1906, they gave permission for schools to offer meals to their pupils. But what kind of meals?
These documents show how one city, Bradford, carried out an experiment to see how the system might operate.
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Could be a useful lesson particularly for KS4 if studying Medicine through time. However has a very heavy literacy content.
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