1. Chapman S.D. ‘Working-Class Housing in Nottingham during the Industrial Revolution’, 133–64 in Chapman, S.D.The History of Working-Class Housing(Newton Abbot: David & Charles, 1971), 132.
2. Other essays in Chapman, ref. 1 that contain detailed discussion of back-to-back houses are Beresford, M.W. ‘The Back-to-Back House in Leeds, 1787–1937’, 93–132; Chapman, S.D. ‘Working-Class Housing in Nottingham during the Industrial Revolution’, 133–64; Treble, J.H. ‘Liverpool Working-Class Housing’, 165–220; and Chapman, S.D. ‘The Contribution of Building Clubs and Freehold Land Society to Working-Class Housing in Birmingham’, 221–46. Other works dealing with backs to back-to-backs in particular urban localities are Sheeran, G. ‘Back-to-Back Houses in Bradford’,The Bradford Antiquary, 2 (1986), 47–53; Pollard, S.A History of Labour in Sheffield(Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 1959), 17–23; Upton, C.Living Back-to-Back(Chichester: Phillimore, 2005); Nevell, M.Manchester The Hidden History(Stroud: The History Press), 146–53; and Simons, M.South of the Essex Bristol Line: Courts and Back-to-Back Housing in Mid-Nineteenth Century Reading(Economic History Society conference paper, 2006), online at [accessed 10 November 2012]. For more general comment, see Burnett, J.A Social History of Housing, 1815–1970(Methuen, 1980), 70–6; Muthesius, S.The English Terraced House(New Haven: Yale University, 1982), 106–23; Brunskill, R.W.Illustrated Handbook of Vernacular Architecture(Faber and Faber, 1971), 166–7; and Daunton, M.J.House and Home in The Victorian City, Working-Class Housing, 1850–1914(Edward Arnold, 1983), 42–6.
3. Treble, ref. 2, 176–80.
4. Burnett, ref. 2, 71.
5. Smith J.H. ‘Ten Acres of Deansgate in 1851’,Transactions of the Lancashire and Cheshire Antiquarian Society,lxxx(1980), 47. See also Kidd, A.Manchester(Keele: Ryburn, 1993), 45–50.