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Suburbia and infant death in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Adelaide
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 February 2009
Extract
Altogether, as a place of education Adelaide falls far short of the mark; as a place of amusement it is hopeless; and as a village — well, it is tolerably clean, and comparatively healthy.
Thistle Anderson (1905)
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- Research Article
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1994
Footnotes
Earlier versions of this paper were presented to various conferences in Australia and New Zealand during 1992 and 1993, and we are grateful to the participants for their comments and suggestions. We also wish to thank those colleagues who gave such excellent research assistance and to acknowledge the help of the various institutions who provided research funding and access to material.
References
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34 Mein Smith, Flinders University Infant Survival Project.
35 We are indebted to Graeme Hugo and Ralph Shlomowitz for making available 1911 registration data. The births cohort of more than 11,000 infants has since been completed, the data have been checked and corrected and 2,300 births selected for this paper.
36 The population count includes the corporate towns of Adelaide, Brighton, Glenelg, Hindmarsh, Kensington and Norwood, Port Adelaide, St Peters, Thebarton and Unley, Statistical Register of South Australia, 1911, 9.Google Scholar
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42 The City of Adelaide ratebooks are held at Adelaide City Archives, City Treasurer's Department (C5) Assessment Books, 4th Series (S34); the Port Adelaide ratebooks at State Records of South Australia, GRS 539/1/P; and the Unley ratebooks at the City of Unley Offices and Unley Museum.
43 Based on a sample of advertisements in the Adelaide Advertiser, 1911.
44 The record linkage was by the mother's as well as the father's name so as not to render invisible women and children living with extended families.
45 Calculated from Adelaide City Archives, City Treasurer's Department (C5) Assessment Books.
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47 Calculated from Death Registers, 1881. We have not collected birth certificates for 1881.
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49 Calculated from Death Registers.
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52 Mein, Smith, ‘Mothers, babies, and the mothers and babies movement’.Google Scholar
53 Map of Fullarton Estate, 1881. Held by Unley Museum.Google Scholar
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