- Tosher
A tosher is someone who scavenges in the sewers, especially in
London during the Victorian period. This activity began around the time of the construction of theLondon sewerage system , designed byJoseph Bazalgette .The toshers decided to cut out the middle man and it was a common sight in 19th Century
Wapping for whole families to whip off a manhole cover and go down into the sewers, where they would find rich pickings.As most toshers would reek of the
sewers , they were not popular with the neighbours. The word tosher was also used to describe the thieves who stripped valuable copper from the hulls of ships moored along theThames .One unexpected side-effect of the sewer work was that toshers - or, at least, those toshers who survived - built up a strong tolerance to
typhus and the other diseases that swept the ghettos.The word “"tosh"” for rubbish entered the language, though "toshing" – and the other dirty jobs of the era – have long since gone.
There is another similar sounding term from the same period :
tosheroon which has been applied to a tosher in error but it in fact it originally denotes a piece of pre-decimal British currency : the half-crown. Whether the two words are related is not known.ee also
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mudlark - someone who scavenges in river mudtosher -Undergraduiates' slang: 1839 "An unattached or non-collegeiate student at a university having residential colleges." The Oxford Universal Dictionary Illustrated, Little, William; Fowler, H.W; Coulson, J; Rev. and Ed. Onions, C.T. OUP., 1965External links
* [http://www.eastlondonhistory.com/toshers.htm Toshers and Mudlarks (from East London history website)]
* [http://www.myspace.com/eustonworms Toshers and mudlarks in fiction : "The Worms of Euston Square", a historical and literary mystery set in Victorian London]
* [http://www.funtrivia.com/playquiz/quiz2146701894798.html Toshers and mudlarks in "The Horrid Jobs Quiz"]
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