Formation | 1833 |
---|---|
Type | learned society |
Registration no. | 1069363 |
Legal status | Charity |
Purpose | the collection of facts illustrative of the condition of society, and the discussion of subjects of social and political economy. |
Headquarters | Manchester, United Kingdom |
Region served
|
Manchester and Greater Manchester |
Official language
|
English |
Activities
|
Research & Publications, Lectures & Events |
Collections
|
Library, Archives |
96th President
|
Dr John Rigby |
Website | www.manstat.org |
Manchester Statistical Society is a learned society founded in 1833 in Manchester, England. It claims to be "the first organisation in Britain to study social problems systematically and to collect statistics for social purposes" and in 1834 was "the first organisation to carry out a house-to-house social survey". The first of around 20 such societies that were either mooted or actually formed in the early Victorian period, only this and that which was then known as the London Statistical Society still exist.
Those who were most concerned with the public health consequences of the rapidly expanding, industrialising city of Manchester in the early years of the Manchester Statistical Society (MSS) came mainly from relatively new, minor medical charities such as the Manchester Lying-in Hospital, the Chorlton Dispensary and the Ardwick and Ancoats Dispensary rather than being leaders of the city's medical profession who were based at medical schools and the Manchester Infirmary. John Roberton came from the first of these new charities and was the driving force of the Society in the 1840s, sharing an interest in collation and interpretation of medical statistics with fellow members such as James Kay. Their efforts followed those made by Thomas Percival and John Ferriar, who had made significant medical advances at the Manchester Infirmary in the late-eighteenth century before that institution became overwhelmed by the demands being placed upon it by the city's growth. The pioneering work of the MSS in the sphere of public health issues was in turn followed by the reinvigorated interest of more senior medical practitioners and members of society after the introduction of the Public Health Act of 1848 and the formation of the Manchester and Salford Sanitary Association in 1852.