Department of History/Centre for the History of Medicine, University of Warwick.
J Hist Med Allied Sci. 2021 Jan 1;76(1):53-77. doi: 10.1093/jhmas/jraa054.
Efforts to improve the quality and quantity of seafarers in the Royal Navy and merchant service became a particular concern amidst the degeneration debates of late-Victorian Britain. Maritime reformers not only promoted fitness in adult sailors, but also particularly sought to improve health and physique of boy recruits in order to rear a new generation of healthy sailors. This article shows how both services experimented with tighter admission criteria and dietary and exercise reforms, and became early advocates of using metrical standards to exclude all but the fittest, healthiest boys from training opportunities. While the physical monitoring of boy recruits undoubtedly showed the value of early lifestyle interventions in fostering healthy development, the rising physical standards of British seafarers in this period was just as much the result of restrictive medical examinations as a commitment to welfare initiatives.
提高皇家海军和商船队海员的素质和数量的努力,成为了维多利亚时代后期英国退化辩论中一个特别关注的问题。海事改革者不仅提倡成年海员的健康,还特别希望改善男孩新兵的健康和体质,以培养新一代健康的海员。本文展示了这两个服务部门如何尝试更严格的入学标准以及饮食和锻炼改革,并成为早期倡导使用度量标准来排除除了最健康的男孩之外的所有人,以获得培训机会。虽然对男孩新兵的身体监测无疑显示了早期生活方式干预在促进健康发展方面的价值,但这一时期英国海员的身体标准的提高,既是对福利计划的承诺,也是限制性体检的结果。