In the summer of 1858, the stench from the River Thames is appalled and terrified Londoners living and working beside it. Theories of disease at the time held that the smell itself was effectively toxic, a miasma of cholera. Within a decade, the engineer Joseph Baselget had ensured the Thames was no longer an open sewer by building a vast network of buried sewers. We'd been to discuss the great stink of 1858 of Paul Lebracic, lecturer at the Bartlett School of Architecture at University College London. And Rosemary Ashen, Emeritus Quain Professor of English Language and Literature at University college London.

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