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Wikipedia talk:Featured article candidates/1858 Bradford sweets poisoning/archive1

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Cartoon in Punch, November 1858
Cartoon in Punch, November 1858

In 1858 a batch of sweets in Bradford, England, was accidentally adulterated with poisonous arsenic trioxide. About five pounds (two kilograms) of sweets were sold to the public, leading to around 20 deaths and over 200 people suffering the effects of arsenic poisoning. With increasing urbanisation and the rise in shop-purchased food, adulterants became a growing problem. With the cost of sugar high, replacing it with substitutes was common. For the sweets produced in Bradford, the confectioner was supposed to purchase powdered gypsum, but a mistake at the wholesale chemist meant arsenic was purchased instead. Three men were arrested—the chemist who sold the arsenic, his assistant and the sweet maker—but all three were acquitted after the judge decided as it was all accidental, there was no case for any of them to answer. The deaths led to food adulteration legislation and were a factor in the passage of the Pharmacy Act 1868.