A housing tax, created during the 17th century in England, limited the number of fireplaces per house. To avoid this tax, several chimney pipes would be connected to a single fireplace, resulting in angled pipes. Young children, between the ages 5 and 11, were often hired for their ability to fit through the narrow chimney chutes. Chimney sweeping was a common practice across Europe and North America. The disease was mostly found in the United Kingdom, where climbing boys were used. The most likely reason for the high prevalence of the disease in the UK was that chimney chutes were narrower. Another reason can be attributed to poor hygiene standards in the 18th century: during this time, hygiene standards were lacking and bathing once a year was not uncommon. Families often shared sleeping blankets and these blankets were often the ones used by the chimney sweeper to collect soot, resulting in further repeated soot exposure. It was also not uncommon for children to work naked. The lack in hygiene standards coupled with working naked allowed for repeated skin exposure to toxins in chimney soot, a possible cause for this disease. In the United States, enslaved black children were hired from their owners and used in the same way, and were still climbing after 1875.
Sir Percivall Pott Sir Percivall Pott (6 January 1714 – 22 December 1788) London, England) was an English
surgeon, one of the founders of
orthopedy, and the first scientist to demonstrate that a cancer may be caused by an environmental carcinogen. In 1765 he was elected Master of the Company of Surgeons, the forerunner of the
Royal College of Surgeons. It was in 1775 that Pott found an association between exposure to
soot and a high incidence of chimney sweeps' carcinoma in chimney sweeps. This was the first
occupational link to cancer, and Pott was the first person to demonstrate that a malignancy could be caused by an environmental carcinogen. Pott's early investigations contributed to the science of
epidemiology and the
Chimney Sweepers Act 1788. Pott describes chimney sweeps' carcinoma thus:It is a disease which always makes it first attack on the inferior part of the scrotum where it produces a superficial, painful ragged ill-looking sore with hard rising edges.....in no great length of time it pervades the skin,
dartos and the membranes of the scrotum, and seizes the testicle, which it inlarges, hardens and renders truly and thoroughly distempered. Whence it makes its way up the
spermatic process into the
abdomen. He comments on the life of the boys: The fate of these people seems peculiarly hard … they are treated with great brutality … they are thrust up narrow and sometimes hot chimnies, where they are bruised burned and almost suffocated; and when they get to
puberty they become … liable to a most noisome, painful and fatal disease. The suspected carcinogen was
coal tar, and possibly
arsenic. == Diagnosis ==