1886 Premier

By pure coincidence, this evening time I read part of a history of Charles Dickens in which it was stated that in 1850 when London was a city of some 3 million people, TWENTY THOUSAND tons of manure were cleared from the streets every day. Although in the past I've helped friends muck out their stables, I couldn't believe that figure so did some Googling.
An average horse produces approximately 50 pounds of manure a day (of which 30lbs is dung), so the daily output of 75 horses is approximately a ton, meaning that 20,000 tons would require 1 and a half million horses - so one horse for every 2 people in the city. As heavy goods transport often used teams of up 16 horses (and they'd be big horses, not your 'average'), it's not so unbelievable.
 
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