First Gedling Water Pump Mapped
Pubblicatu di alexkemp lu 20 April 2017 n English Ùrtimu aggiurnamentu lu 3 July 2022.I referred to the wiki entry for man_made=water_well & used the following tags to produce this result:–
historic=yes
image=https://www.mapillary.com/map/im/6dIxP4t24DxXw8GWw-YGIQ
man_made=water_well
pump=manual
This is not exactly my best photo ever, but the chap that I woke in the middle of the day with my knock on his door was a shift-worker (speaking to me naked from his cottage bedroom window) & I really did not want to disturb him any further, so fled without a better one (the pump handle is on the unseen side; the pump stands at the centre-boundary of two semi-detached cottages):–
Before the industrial era every British town street (and many individual houses) had their own hand-operated pump for obtaining fresh water. One of my favourite stories concerns the 1854 Broad Street Pump, in which Dr. John Snow used for the first time epidemiological mapping of cholera outbreaks to conclusively prove that the Water Pump on Broad Street (at what today is the intersection of Broadwick Street & Lexington Street) in Soho, London was solely responsible for local outbreaks; at the same time, his research proved that water was the medium of infection rather than miasma.
One incidental extra to the Broad Street Pump story is that the 19th Century cholera infections which are so often spoken of as London outbreaks were in fact nation-wide — the St Mary’s Churchyard where Bendigo was buried was originally established due to the 1832 outbreak. Cholera at that time produced such a flood of dead bodies that a new churchyard was required to cope with them.
July 2022 update: That 19th Century cholera so-called epidemic was actually part of a Pandemic (Wikipedia).
Update 3 July 2022
Mapillary has changed it’s download URLs & therefore all links within my diaries that use photos stored in Mapillary are broken. I’m slowly going through to update them. The new URLs are terrifyingly long, but show OK on my screen (and I hope also on yours).
Discussion
Cummentu di philippec lu 21 April 2017 ê 08:43
I also take a picture of the flow rate. Many water taps are just ornamental or broke. The stateofrepair tag is really important.
If possible I take a picture if it is drinkable or not. https://www.mapillary.com/app/?lat=51.129578928499086&lng=4.578338242212226&z=17&pKey=_Ad5ZPZGWyTeDwCxyXbMBA&focus=photo&x=0.4823305964522697&y=0.3862365065007829&zoom=0
Cummentu di alexkemp lu 21 April 2017 ê 09:41
Hi @philippec
Well, I’m not going to fuss too much about it since the current rendering doesn’t bother to show it on the map at all.
Cummentu di robbieonsea lu 23 April 2017 ê 11:39
A few people use man_made=village_pump.
osm.wiki/Proposed_features/Village_Pump