[with thanks to the Natural History Museum Library for the copy]
Tuesday, 23 July 2013
1832 Toilet Plan
And here's J.C.Loudon's 1832 design for a public toilet:
Labels:
London,
Loudon,
public toilet,
public toilets
Urine Deflectors in Fleet Street
The average (male) Londoner of the early 1800s, out and about, was quite happy to relieve himself in the nearest alley. Urinals were becoming more common - usually outside pubs - but typically one found a quiet corner and had a pee.
Those who lived in said alleys, or who owned commercial property adjoining, were not entirely forgiving of this practice, as this quote from 1809 suggests:
in London a man may sometimes walk a mile before he can meet with a suitable corner; for so unaccomodating are the owners of doorways, passages and angles, that they seem to have exhausted invention in the ridiculous barricadoes and shelves, grooves, and one fixed above another, to conduct the stream into the shoes of the luckless wight who shall dare to profane the intrenchments.
This was the only reference I'd ever seen to these 'barricadoes and shelves' and I wondered if the writer was exaggerating, perhaps just drawing on one or two peculiar examples. Then a few days ago I found a quote from 1853
considering how disgusting are the preventives that disfigure every alley and court, and every piece of blind wall; considering, too, how ineffectual these contrivances are ...
Today, by chance, I walked down Clifford's Inn Passage, off Fleet Street - an ancient bit of London that used to lead to the Inn of Chancery of that name, whose gatehouse still survives. Here, Rokesmith takes Mr. Boffin aside from the bustle of the main thoroughfare in Dickens' Our Mutual Friend. And here, I only now realised - even though I've been here before a hundred times, and even feature it in my Dickens guide-book - was where many a Victorian stopped for a pee.
I remain a bit mystified by this hinged flap in one of the (metal) shelves
I know, you'll now tell that there's a whole website somewhere devoted to 19th century urine deflectors.
I don't care. I think I have discovered something.
But if you can find any more of them, let me know. Keep watching the alleys.
UPDATE: A comparable example in Nottingham
http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/3320611
Small example on Tower Bridge
http://www.flickr.com/photos/83516580@N03/8122009306/in/photolist-dnHqpd-dnHurj
Chatting with people on twitter, some have asked why only a part of an alley might contain these shelves. In terms of this example, I can't say why there are no flaps over where it looks like there were basement light wells or similar; possibly there were originally, but they were removed when those spaces were filled in; or possibly people just didn't tend to piss where there was a light well.
As for more generally, these would have been deterrents created by the owners of particular buildings, not the parish (at least, I've seen no mention of parishes installing anything like this), so coverage would necessarily be - cough - patchy.
It's also worth noting that building owners weren't necessarily troubled by the impropriety of alley-way urination as much as the damp and the smell ( in a period when 'miasma' was believed to cause disease).
UPDATE II.
Recently noticed this outside the gates to Staple Inn, whose residents were wont to complain to the local vestry about urinating passers-by ... another method ... you would have to stand well back, and therefore you would go somewhere more private. You see these elsewhere in London ... will keep an eye out ...
UPDATE III. (2014)
I'm told the Staple Inn device has been removed during rebuilding work and not replaced. And on a listed building, too!
UPDATE IV. (2015)
Good news! The Staple Inn urine deflectors have been returned to their rightful home.
Labels:
shelves,
urination,
urine,
Victorian London
Thursday, 18 July 2013
Smallpox and Sending Out Laundry
REPORT
OF
THE LANCET SPECIAL COMMISSION
ON THE
SPREAD OF DISEASE THROUGH
LAUNDRIES.
THOUGH cleanliness is the best safeguard against disease, it is nevertheless an undoubted fact that clean linen is often the medium for propagating small-pox and other similar complaints. Under these circumstances, the recklessness and ignorance displayed, not only by common washerwomen, but even by the managers of model laundries, are totally out of keeping with the progress we have achieved in other sanitary matters. The smallest rooms, the most unwholesome back kitchens, still seem good enough for the washing of linen; and the same is dried in passages frequented by the lowest class of persons, and hung between walls on which the dirt of ages has accumulated. The clothes that go nearest to the skin, that are the most likely therefore to introduce through the pores any germs that may fall on them, are thoughtlessly entrusted to a laundress without any inquiry being made as to the suitability of the place where they are to be washed. If they are taken to the suburbs it is simply because rents are cheaper in those districts; but there, as in town, clean and dirty clothes are brought into constant contact, and the washerwoman's family, perhaps also some of her assistants, sleep, eat, sicken, and die, with their customers' linen lying round about them. We have visited innumerable laundries, and what we describe is not the exception, but the rule.
For instance, at Kensal New Town, a district especially favoured by washerwomen, we inspected a row of dilapidated cottages, each containing four rooms, with a little yard behind, and a plot of ground in front, called, by courtesy, a garden. The two central cottages were occupied by washerwomen, each washing for from twenty to thirty families, according to the season. During the month of March last a boy, living in the first of these cottages, was taken ill with small-pox, but, fortunately, the sanitary inspector of the district received timely information, and acted with commendable energy. The linen in the house was all seized and disinfected, and the washing for customers abandoned during the course of the illness. But the inspector had no power to interfere with the neighbours, who still continued washing as usual, hanging up their clothes to dry almost immediately under the window of the room where the patient was lying. In the back-yard also clothes were hung up to dry, and these within two or three feet of the closet used by the patient. The two front rooms of these cottages contain about 1200 cubic feet, the back rooms 600 cubic feet; doors and windows are generally kept open, the neighbours constantly entering each other's houses. But, further, to prove that this case of small-pox was likely to spread, perhaps indefinitely, we should add that the boy's aunt, who assisted at the washing, took the disease home to her husband. The date further helps to demonstrate the origin of this second case, for the washerwoman's husband was ill three weeks after the boy, and this latter was so severe a case that death ensued in a few days. These misfortunes do not seem, however, to have conveyed any useful lesson to the widow and her fellow-washerwomen. We conversed with them for some time, and noted that they were not at all impressed with the necessity of taking sanitary measures to prevent other similar outbreaks.
We visited several other laundries where there had been cases of small-pox or scarlet fever, and in every instance the clothes there washed must in all probability have been contaminated with the germs of disease, and the action of the authorities was not always sufficient to entirely dispel the danger. Innumerable cases are concealed, and washing taken in during the whole time. In other instances the washerwomen are not aware of the nature and danger of the disease from which an inmate of the laundry may be suffering. Thus we discovered, near the Blackfriars-road, a woman who took in washing for several families for a children's school, and dried the clothes in her small cottage, in the passage or in the back yard—the latter barely twelve feet square, and containing the dustbin and the closet. This woman has five children, and some weeks ago one of her boys was severely attacked with small-pox. Two other children were also unwell, but their symptoms were so slight that the mother let them run about as usual, and it was not till they were nearly cured that the attending practitioner saw them and succeeded in persuading her that they also had the small-pox. How far this woman continued washing while the small-pox was raging in her tiny and overcrowded home is a moot question, as sbe, of course, will not give all details. We succeeded, however, in extracting from her the confession that she brought the linen from the school into her house while her son was there sick with smallpox, but she urges that she was not then aware of the character of the disease. Subsequently she sent the clothes to be washed by a friend in the suburbs. She also admits that during the whole course of the illness she did her own washing in the house, and also that of a neighbouring customer, whom, she affirms, did not object to her linen being brought into such close proximity with the small-pox patients. It is questionable, however, whether this neighbour was fully aware of the danger she was incurring, and whether she had any right thus needlessly to expose herself by wearing linen which she knew would probably be infected.
To show the prevalence of such cases, we may mention that at the same time, and in the same street, another case of small-pox occurred in a house where washing is also taken in. The back room on the ground floor in this house was used as the laundry. It measures 8 ft. 2 in. by 9 ft. 6 in., including therein a staircase rising along the wall, with a coal-cellar under it. At the top of this staircase, which is a little more than 2 ft. broad, there is a bedroom, where the small-pox patient slept, and which is separated from the laundry by a mere wooden panelling and a door, generally left ajar. The ceiling of this upper room slants, and when it reaches the outer wall is only 5 ft. high, while the window is only 2 ft. 6 in. high and 3 ft. 6 in. broad. Close under this window, in a yard measuring 10 ft. by 11 ft., the clothes are hung up to dry, by the closet, and over the dustbin, and lumber of all descriptions. Fortunately, in this case, the small-pox patient was removed to the hospital ; but how often do similar cases escape detection? Some of the sanitary inspectors with whom we have conversed on this matter assure us that they have entered rooms where the linen was hanging to dry from strings drawn across the ceiling and a fever or small-pox patient lying on the floor under the damp clothes. The inspector, for instance, of St. Martin's parish, recently discovered a case of this description in Bedfordbury. Here a woman, occupying a single room, with children sick with small-pox lying in the corner, had collected some of her neighbours' linen to wash, and was about to carry them away to the public baths when the inspector entered just in time to seize the bundle. The Broadwall case,' already mentioned in these columns, and which caused so much sensation at the time, was not so bad as this, for the patient was not in the same room as the linen. The Broadwall case has, however, a sequel which should not escape notice. In the next house there is another laundry, and in the third house there were two other cases of small-pox, and one resulted in death. These were not removed to the hospital, but were kept in the back rooms. As there was no illness in the middle house, the washing continued there as usual, and the clothes were hung up in the back yard to dry, though on both sides, and at a distance of only a few feet, there were windows whence the germs of small-pox must have escaped and fallen on the damp linen.
Near the Queen's-road, Peckham, there are great numbers of both large and small laundries, and here the small-pox epidemic has been more than usually severe. We were shown one street, consisting of about seventy small cottages, where some thirty cases of small-pox occurred. At one house in this street a man died of the disease, and his room was fumigated; but as there were fourteen persons living in the house at the time, who could not be easily disturbed, we may be permitted to doubt whether the disinfection was effective. In one case, a woman who earned her living by working a mangle caught the disease, and was removed to the hospital. Her daughters, however, still continued to mangle for some days before the doctor discovered them at work and stopped them. A poor washerwoman lived next door, and, on learning that the small-pox was raging on. both sides of the street, a gentleman who had given this woman his clothes to wash, chiefly in the hope of helping her, called and suggested that, for the moment, it was scarcely safe for her to take in linen. She, however, warmly rejoined that the worst of the danger was now over, and that the small-pox had not been in her house, though it had done so much mischief among her neighbours. It happened, however, that this gentleman met, the same evening, a local practitioner, from whom he accidentally discovered that a man suffering from small-pox had been removed from his laundress's house ten days prior to his visit. Further, this woman had actually washed nearly all his blankets while the small-pox patient was still in her house, and delivered them back to her customer the day after the sick man had been removed—that is to say, long before any disinfection had been attempted. Thus, every bed in this gentleman's house might have harboured the germs of disease. But, further, this woman was washing for a lady who had been confined at the same time as the small-pox broke out in her laundry, and she also washed a large number of table-napkins for a West-end restaurant. Thus, even at our meals, if we escape being poisoned by our cook, we may catch small-pox from our table-linen. Let us add, that this woman was not prosecuted, is still washing for a number of customers, that small-pox is still prevalent in her street, and that should it again visit her household, emboldened by her past impunity, she will doubtless again hang her customer's linen up to dry in the tainted atmosphere of her home.
Evidently, and notwithstanding the occasional interference of sanitary inspectors, the clothes sent to be washed in small cottages and the crowded dwellings of the poor must come into constant contact with persons suffering from contagious diseases. After washing at home, which at present is the safest of all methods, laundries managed on a large scale evidently offer the greatest security. But even here the dirty linen is not generally kept thoroughly apart from the clean. At the Metropolitan and Suburban Steam-power Laundry Works, where nearly all the table-linen of the great West-end clubs is washed, the dirty linen is certainly sorted in a separate room, boiled and washed in the next compartment, mangled in the third, and ironed in the fourth room. But the clothes hung up to dry in the yard are sometimes too near to the sorting-rooms. The Great Western and Parisian Laundry Company, a remarkable society, governed by a board composed exclusively of lady directors, who hold high positions in the world of art, music, and letters, purpose making a special feature of their sanitary arrangements. Apart from commendable cleanliness and excellent open-air drying-grounds, the chief sanitary advantage of this establishment is due to the fact that the washerwomen sleep on the premises, instead of coming in every day from the worst streets of London and bringing with them the seeds of disease.
As the poor, however, are more susceptible of epidemics than the wealthy patrons of such establishments as those above mentioned, we were more anxious to inspect the public baths built in accordance with the Baths and Washhouses Act of 1846. These institutions, though in many respects so admirable and useful, are, we fear, often the means of propagating disease. It would take too much space to describe how public laundries are disposed. They are for the most part built on the same model. The chief point we have to consider is the fact that no precautions whatsoever are taken to prevent the admission of infected linen. Indeed, the managers of these establishments were surprised when we suggested that this should constitute a portion of their duties. They certainly protested that if they were aware that a woman had brought in infected linen, she would be forthwith compelled to quit the premises; but the idea of prosecuting such a delinquent for having endangered the lives of all the persons in the laundry and the health of all their customers does not seem to have occurred to them. Practically speaking, no control is exercised; with a few rare exceptions, infected clothes have been brought into public laundries without any let or hindrance. Nor are the laundries so disposed as to minimise the chance of contagion. On the contrary, the clean linen is ironed and mangled side by side with piles of dirty clothes, so that the germs may fall from the latter on to the former. We would suggest that in future the clothes should be washed and boiled in one room and ironed and mangled in another. The drying horses should occupy the intervening space between the two compartments, and be heated with a view of not merely drying, but, if practicable, of disinfecting the linen. As it is, we found that the heat varied from only 90° to 120°.
Other cases, besides the one mentioned above as occurring in Bedfordbury, conclusively prove how often infected clothes are taken to public baths. A woman, who washes for several families in Soho, related to us that she had two or three times taken and washed clothes at the Leicester-square public laundry which emitted so peculiar an odour that her suspicions were excited, and, on making inquiries, she ultimately discovered that there had been fever or small-pox among her customers. Yet the manager of this laundry declared that, though he had occupied the post five years, he never knew when these or any other infected clothes had been brought in. At the Endell-street public laundry, where 180 to 200 people wash their linen on Saturdays, the manager in the course of eight years only discovered one woman bringing in clothes from a small-pox bed. Last year 30,000 washing tickets were sold at this laundry. Is it likely that in eight years there should have been only one bundle of infected clothes brought? But the Westminster public laundry affords the most startling illustration of this description. Here the manager has been in office since 1851. An average of 1000 washings are done per week, so that, if this average has been the same throughout, something like 1,352,000 separate bundles of linen must have been brought into this laundry since his tenure of office, and yet, out of the entire number, he only detected one lot that came from an infected house! This, too, only occurred a few weeks ago. We visited the case, and it was certainly the most appalling one we have ever seen. A man, who kept a cat's-meat shop, died of small-pox, and we inspected the premises. On the ground floor there is the shop where cat's-meat in every stage of decomposition poisons the air. The man died in a room upstairs, and next to him lives and works a woman (with children), who washes linen for several families, carrying it backwards and forwards from her bedroom and the public laundry; this, too, after nursing her landlord, the cat's-meat dealer, whose attack of small-pox presented symptoms of more than usual severity. Underneath, in the cellar, a woman and her two daughters t (and sometimes her two sons), live, cook, sleep, and, worse than all, mangle the linen belonging to several neighbouring families. The stench and the filth accumulated in this cellar were perfectly appalling. There were no beds, but some heaps of black rags. The walls were black, the floor slippery and oozing with grease and dirt; a feeble light d twinkled through a small aperture near the ceiling, but a there was nothing we could call a window, and not even a gleam of sunshine has ever entered this awful abode. Here the woman, apparently unconscious of her misery, and not in the least ashamed of her filthy home, was actually congratulating herself that, notwithstanding the death of her a landlord, she had still been able to do some mangling during the whole time. Nor is this all. She sometimes washes and hangs the clothes out in the back yard, close to a closet, without a trap, and a dustbin which has never been emptied, and is entirely hidden by the dust and refuse a strewn over it. To add to this confusion, a few planks roughly joined together constitute a stable for the pony that fetches the cat's-meat; thus there is manure, as well as general dirt and rotting meat, ready at band to absorb the germs of disease, to retain them for months, so that the two washerwomen, who are to continue living and working in this house, may have ample opportunities of carrying thesmall-pox to their customers. The room in which the man died will, of course, be disinfected ; but zymotic germs cannot be isolated in a house of this description.
At the St. George's Laundry, Buckingham Palace-road, the same indifference as to the admission of infected linen is displayed, though it is stated that here a woman lost her husband through her carelessness. Instead of emptying the copper used by her predecessor she boiled her linen in the same water, and as her husband died of small-pox a few weeks afterwards, and her child was very ill with the same disease. The widow made some inquiries, and found out that the woman who washed before her had small-pox in her house. Probably, however, the disease was not caught from the copper where the water boiled, but from the germs left on the floor, &c.; but in every case stringent means should be employed to keep infected linen out of laundries, especially public laundries. Printed notices should be hung on the walls warning all of the danger incurred, and threatening to prosecute anyone who knowingly brings infected clothes. A few severe sentences would soon spread knowledge on this question, while women who take washing in at home should be under the constant supervision of competent sanitary inspectors, who would compel them to cease washing whenever any danger was present, giving, if necessary, some compensation for the time lost, Even with all these precautions linen should be disinfected by washing, and not allowed to be near the clean linen till it has been washed, as we do not always know when clothes are infected, and must sometimes unwittingly send them to the laundry when they should be sent to the disinfecting oven.
OF
THE LANCET SPECIAL COMMISSION
ON THE
SPREAD OF DISEASE THROUGH
LAUNDRIES.
THOUGH cleanliness is the best safeguard against disease, it is nevertheless an undoubted fact that clean linen is often the medium for propagating small-pox and other similar complaints. Under these circumstances, the recklessness and ignorance displayed, not only by common washerwomen, but even by the managers of model laundries, are totally out of keeping with the progress we have achieved in other sanitary matters. The smallest rooms, the most unwholesome back kitchens, still seem good enough for the washing of linen; and the same is dried in passages frequented by the lowest class of persons, and hung between walls on which the dirt of ages has accumulated. The clothes that go nearest to the skin, that are the most likely therefore to introduce through the pores any germs that may fall on them, are thoughtlessly entrusted to a laundress without any inquiry being made as to the suitability of the place where they are to be washed. If they are taken to the suburbs it is simply because rents are cheaper in those districts; but there, as in town, clean and dirty clothes are brought into constant contact, and the washerwoman's family, perhaps also some of her assistants, sleep, eat, sicken, and die, with their customers' linen lying round about them. We have visited innumerable laundries, and what we describe is not the exception, but the rule.
For instance, at Kensal New Town, a district especially favoured by washerwomen, we inspected a row of dilapidated cottages, each containing four rooms, with a little yard behind, and a plot of ground in front, called, by courtesy, a garden. The two central cottages were occupied by washerwomen, each washing for from twenty to thirty families, according to the season. During the month of March last a boy, living in the first of these cottages, was taken ill with small-pox, but, fortunately, the sanitary inspector of the district received timely information, and acted with commendable energy. The linen in the house was all seized and disinfected, and the washing for customers abandoned during the course of the illness. But the inspector had no power to interfere with the neighbours, who still continued washing as usual, hanging up their clothes to dry almost immediately under the window of the room where the patient was lying. In the back-yard also clothes were hung up to dry, and these within two or three feet of the closet used by the patient. The two front rooms of these cottages contain about 1200 cubic feet, the back rooms 600 cubic feet; doors and windows are generally kept open, the neighbours constantly entering each other's houses. But, further, to prove that this case of small-pox was likely to spread, perhaps indefinitely, we should add that the boy's aunt, who assisted at the washing, took the disease home to her husband. The date further helps to demonstrate the origin of this second case, for the washerwoman's husband was ill three weeks after the boy, and this latter was so severe a case that death ensued in a few days. These misfortunes do not seem, however, to have conveyed any useful lesson to the widow and her fellow-washerwomen. We conversed with them for some time, and noted that they were not at all impressed with the necessity of taking sanitary measures to prevent other similar outbreaks.
We visited several other laundries where there had been cases of small-pox or scarlet fever, and in every instance the clothes there washed must in all probability have been contaminated with the germs of disease, and the action of the authorities was not always sufficient to entirely dispel the danger. Innumerable cases are concealed, and washing taken in during the whole time. In other instances the washerwomen are not aware of the nature and danger of the disease from which an inmate of the laundry may be suffering. Thus we discovered, near the Blackfriars-road, a woman who took in washing for several families for a children's school, and dried the clothes in her small cottage, in the passage or in the back yard—the latter barely twelve feet square, and containing the dustbin and the closet. This woman has five children, and some weeks ago one of her boys was severely attacked with small-pox. Two other children were also unwell, but their symptoms were so slight that the mother let them run about as usual, and it was not till they were nearly cured that the attending practitioner saw them and succeeded in persuading her that they also had the small-pox. How far this woman continued washing while the small-pox was raging in her tiny and overcrowded home is a moot question, as sbe, of course, will not give all details. We succeeded, however, in extracting from her the confession that she brought the linen from the school into her house while her son was there sick with smallpox, but she urges that she was not then aware of the character of the disease. Subsequently she sent the clothes to be washed by a friend in the suburbs. She also admits that during the whole course of the illness she did her own washing in the house, and also that of a neighbouring customer, whom, she affirms, did not object to her linen being brought into such close proximity with the small-pox patients. It is questionable, however, whether this neighbour was fully aware of the danger she was incurring, and whether she had any right thus needlessly to expose herself by wearing linen which she knew would probably be infected.
To show the prevalence of such cases, we may mention that at the same time, and in the same street, another case of small-pox occurred in a house where washing is also taken in. The back room on the ground floor in this house was used as the laundry. It measures 8 ft. 2 in. by 9 ft. 6 in., including therein a staircase rising along the wall, with a coal-cellar under it. At the top of this staircase, which is a little more than 2 ft. broad, there is a bedroom, where the small-pox patient slept, and which is separated from the laundry by a mere wooden panelling and a door, generally left ajar. The ceiling of this upper room slants, and when it reaches the outer wall is only 5 ft. high, while the window is only 2 ft. 6 in. high and 3 ft. 6 in. broad. Close under this window, in a yard measuring 10 ft. by 11 ft., the clothes are hung up to dry, by the closet, and over the dustbin, and lumber of all descriptions. Fortunately, in this case, the small-pox patient was removed to the hospital ; but how often do similar cases escape detection? Some of the sanitary inspectors with whom we have conversed on this matter assure us that they have entered rooms where the linen was hanging to dry from strings drawn across the ceiling and a fever or small-pox patient lying on the floor under the damp clothes. The inspector, for instance, of St. Martin's parish, recently discovered a case of this description in Bedfordbury. Here a woman, occupying a single room, with children sick with small-pox lying in the corner, had collected some of her neighbours' linen to wash, and was about to carry them away to the public baths when the inspector entered just in time to seize the bundle. The Broadwall case,' already mentioned in these columns, and which caused so much sensation at the time, was not so bad as this, for the patient was not in the same room as the linen. The Broadwall case has, however, a sequel which should not escape notice. In the next house there is another laundry, and in the third house there were two other cases of small-pox, and one resulted in death. These were not removed to the hospital, but were kept in the back rooms. As there was no illness in the middle house, the washing continued there as usual, and the clothes were hung up in the back yard to dry, though on both sides, and at a distance of only a few feet, there were windows whence the germs of small-pox must have escaped and fallen on the damp linen.
Near the Queen's-road, Peckham, there are great numbers of both large and small laundries, and here the small-pox epidemic has been more than usually severe. We were shown one street, consisting of about seventy small cottages, where some thirty cases of small-pox occurred. At one house in this street a man died of the disease, and his room was fumigated; but as there were fourteen persons living in the house at the time, who could not be easily disturbed, we may be permitted to doubt whether the disinfection was effective. In one case, a woman who earned her living by working a mangle caught the disease, and was removed to the hospital. Her daughters, however, still continued to mangle for some days before the doctor discovered them at work and stopped them. A poor washerwoman lived next door, and, on learning that the small-pox was raging on. both sides of the street, a gentleman who had given this woman his clothes to wash, chiefly in the hope of helping her, called and suggested that, for the moment, it was scarcely safe for her to take in linen. She, however, warmly rejoined that the worst of the danger was now over, and that the small-pox had not been in her house, though it had done so much mischief among her neighbours. It happened, however, that this gentleman met, the same evening, a local practitioner, from whom he accidentally discovered that a man suffering from small-pox had been removed from his laundress's house ten days prior to his visit. Further, this woman had actually washed nearly all his blankets while the small-pox patient was still in her house, and delivered them back to her customer the day after the sick man had been removed—that is to say, long before any disinfection had been attempted. Thus, every bed in this gentleman's house might have harboured the germs of disease. But, further, this woman was washing for a lady who had been confined at the same time as the small-pox broke out in her laundry, and she also washed a large number of table-napkins for a West-end restaurant. Thus, even at our meals, if we escape being poisoned by our cook, we may catch small-pox from our table-linen. Let us add, that this woman was not prosecuted, is still washing for a number of customers, that small-pox is still prevalent in her street, and that should it again visit her household, emboldened by her past impunity, she will doubtless again hang her customer's linen up to dry in the tainted atmosphere of her home.
Evidently, and notwithstanding the occasional interference of sanitary inspectors, the clothes sent to be washed in small cottages and the crowded dwellings of the poor must come into constant contact with persons suffering from contagious diseases. After washing at home, which at present is the safest of all methods, laundries managed on a large scale evidently offer the greatest security. But even here the dirty linen is not generally kept thoroughly apart from the clean. At the Metropolitan and Suburban Steam-power Laundry Works, where nearly all the table-linen of the great West-end clubs is washed, the dirty linen is certainly sorted in a separate room, boiled and washed in the next compartment, mangled in the third, and ironed in the fourth room. But the clothes hung up to dry in the yard are sometimes too near to the sorting-rooms. The Great Western and Parisian Laundry Company, a remarkable society, governed by a board composed exclusively of lady directors, who hold high positions in the world of art, music, and letters, purpose making a special feature of their sanitary arrangements. Apart from commendable cleanliness and excellent open-air drying-grounds, the chief sanitary advantage of this establishment is due to the fact that the washerwomen sleep on the premises, instead of coming in every day from the worst streets of London and bringing with them the seeds of disease.
As the poor, however, are more susceptible of epidemics than the wealthy patrons of such establishments as those above mentioned, we were more anxious to inspect the public baths built in accordance with the Baths and Washhouses Act of 1846. These institutions, though in many respects so admirable and useful, are, we fear, often the means of propagating disease. It would take too much space to describe how public laundries are disposed. They are for the most part built on the same model. The chief point we have to consider is the fact that no precautions whatsoever are taken to prevent the admission of infected linen. Indeed, the managers of these establishments were surprised when we suggested that this should constitute a portion of their duties. They certainly protested that if they were aware that a woman had brought in infected linen, she would be forthwith compelled to quit the premises; but the idea of prosecuting such a delinquent for having endangered the lives of all the persons in the laundry and the health of all their customers does not seem to have occurred to them. Practically speaking, no control is exercised; with a few rare exceptions, infected clothes have been brought into public laundries without any let or hindrance. Nor are the laundries so disposed as to minimise the chance of contagion. On the contrary, the clean linen is ironed and mangled side by side with piles of dirty clothes, so that the germs may fall from the latter on to the former. We would suggest that in future the clothes should be washed and boiled in one room and ironed and mangled in another. The drying horses should occupy the intervening space between the two compartments, and be heated with a view of not merely drying, but, if practicable, of disinfecting the linen. As it is, we found that the heat varied from only 90° to 120°.
Other cases, besides the one mentioned above as occurring in Bedfordbury, conclusively prove how often infected clothes are taken to public baths. A woman, who washes for several families in Soho, related to us that she had two or three times taken and washed clothes at the Leicester-square public laundry which emitted so peculiar an odour that her suspicions were excited, and, on making inquiries, she ultimately discovered that there had been fever or small-pox among her customers. Yet the manager of this laundry declared that, though he had occupied the post five years, he never knew when these or any other infected clothes had been brought in. At the Endell-street public laundry, where 180 to 200 people wash their linen on Saturdays, the manager in the course of eight years only discovered one woman bringing in clothes from a small-pox bed. Last year 30,000 washing tickets were sold at this laundry. Is it likely that in eight years there should have been only one bundle of infected clothes brought? But the Westminster public laundry affords the most startling illustration of this description. Here the manager has been in office since 1851. An average of 1000 washings are done per week, so that, if this average has been the same throughout, something like 1,352,000 separate bundles of linen must have been brought into this laundry since his tenure of office, and yet, out of the entire number, he only detected one lot that came from an infected house! This, too, only occurred a few weeks ago. We visited the case, and it was certainly the most appalling one we have ever seen. A man, who kept a cat's-meat shop, died of small-pox, and we inspected the premises. On the ground floor there is the shop where cat's-meat in every stage of decomposition poisons the air. The man died in a room upstairs, and next to him lives and works a woman (with children), who washes linen for several families, carrying it backwards and forwards from her bedroom and the public laundry; this, too, after nursing her landlord, the cat's-meat dealer, whose attack of small-pox presented symptoms of more than usual severity. Underneath, in the cellar, a woman and her two daughters t (and sometimes her two sons), live, cook, sleep, and, worse than all, mangle the linen belonging to several neighbouring families. The stench and the filth accumulated in this cellar were perfectly appalling. There were no beds, but some heaps of black rags. The walls were black, the floor slippery and oozing with grease and dirt; a feeble light d twinkled through a small aperture near the ceiling, but a there was nothing we could call a window, and not even a gleam of sunshine has ever entered this awful abode. Here the woman, apparently unconscious of her misery, and not in the least ashamed of her filthy home, was actually congratulating herself that, notwithstanding the death of her a landlord, she had still been able to do some mangling during the whole time. Nor is this all. She sometimes washes and hangs the clothes out in the back yard, close to a closet, without a trap, and a dustbin which has never been emptied, and is entirely hidden by the dust and refuse a strewn over it. To add to this confusion, a few planks roughly joined together constitute a stable for the pony that fetches the cat's-meat; thus there is manure, as well as general dirt and rotting meat, ready at band to absorb the germs of disease, to retain them for months, so that the two washerwomen, who are to continue living and working in this house, may have ample opportunities of carrying thesmall-pox to their customers. The room in which the man died will, of course, be disinfected ; but zymotic germs cannot be isolated in a house of this description.
At the St. George's Laundry, Buckingham Palace-road, the same indifference as to the admission of infected linen is displayed, though it is stated that here a woman lost her husband through her carelessness. Instead of emptying the copper used by her predecessor she boiled her linen in the same water, and as her husband died of small-pox a few weeks afterwards, and her child was very ill with the same disease. The widow made some inquiries, and found out that the woman who washed before her had small-pox in her house. Probably, however, the disease was not caught from the copper where the water boiled, but from the germs left on the floor, &c.; but in every case stringent means should be employed to keep infected linen out of laundries, especially public laundries. Printed notices should be hung on the walls warning all of the danger incurred, and threatening to prosecute anyone who knowingly brings infected clothes. A few severe sentences would soon spread knowledge on this question, while women who take washing in at home should be under the constant supervision of competent sanitary inspectors, who would compel them to cease washing whenever any danger was present, giving, if necessary, some compensation for the time lost, Even with all these precautions linen should be disinfected by washing, and not allowed to be near the clean linen till it has been washed, as we do not always know when clothes are infected, and must sometimes unwittingly send them to the laundry when they should be sent to the disinfecting oven.
Labels:
laundress,
laundry,
Victorian London,
washerwomen
Wednesday, 17 July 2013
The Swimming Baths of London, 1870
SWIMMING
BATHS OF LONDON
by R.E.
DUDGEON, M.D
LONDON
HENRY
TURNER AND CO.
77 FLEET STREET, E.C.
1870
Price
Sixpence
Swimming
is an exercise at once healthful, pleasant, and useful.. The full hygienic
effects of swimming can only be obtained when it is practised in the open air,
and in unpolluted water of a natural temperature. In a close, more or less
imperfectly ventilated room, and in water artificially heated, from which,
consequently, the air has been partially expelled, swimming, while still retaining
its characters of pleasantness and utility, ceases to be a hygienic agent of
any considerable power. Every town which aspires to be considered at all
perfect in its sanitary arrangements should possess ample swimming baths of
pure water in the open air. The seaside towns of this sea-girt land are
provided by nature with a most exquisite description of swimming bath in the
ever-changing, ever-fresh sea - ever-fresh, that is, when not polluted by the
drainage of the town, as often happens. But our inland towns are not so well
off, and must construct artificial baths or do without them. Even when they
have a lake or river they too often allow it to be so polluted by sewage as to
render it unfit for bathing purposes; and when they have neither lake nor river,
they too often neglect to provide artificial substitutes, thus depriving
themselves of a powerful hygienic agent, a pleasant recreation, and a useful
accommodation.
The
healthful effects of swimming in cold water in the open air result from the
peculiar exercise, the temperature of the surrounding mediums, and the
exhiliration of the spirits it causes. Before entering the water, and each time
of leaving it, we enjoy an air-bath, the beneficial effects of which are not
solely or chiefly dependent on the temperature, but are mainly owing to the
actual impact of the atmospherical gases, and of the light, and possibly the
direct rays of the sun upon the skin. In the water, if it be considerably
colder than the ordinary summer air, say 50 to 60, there is a rapid abstraction of heat from the surface,
causing contraction of the cutaneous blood-vessels, and expulsion off their
blood, which sometimes produces an almost painful sensation. If we then get out
of the water at once, there is a rapid reaction and an intense glow, often so
intense as to cause tingling over the whole surface, accompanied with visible
redness, owing to the sudden reflux of the blood into the cutaneous vessels.
If, however, we remain in the water in spite of the painful sensation caused by
the first action of the cold, this gradually subsides, and if the water be not
very cold, and our reactive powers good, and we keep ourselves always moving,
the blood gradually returns towards to the cutaneous surface, and we thus
become accustomed to the low temperature, and can remain a considerable time in
the water that seemed at first too chilling to be borne. When we then come out
of the water we do not perceive any sudden reaction but unless we have remained
too long in the water, we only feel refreshed and invigorated.
The
exercise in swimming is quite peculiar. The body and limbs being completely
supported by the medium in which they are immersed, the muscles are not
employed in supporting their weight, consequently their movements have a
freedom not enjoyed in any other exercise, and are attended with little or no
fatigue. This is, however, only the case with experienced and confident
swimmers, swimming deliberately and at their ease. The inexperienced swimmer
finds the exercise very fatiguing. This, I believe, is chiefly owing to his
unconscious efforts to keep more of his body out of the water than would be
effected by its own natural buoyancy. The experienced swimmer lets the water do
all the supporting business, and consequently swims deeper than the tyro. Very
rapid swimming, of course, will soon exhaust even the most experienced swimmer,
just as any other violent exercise will exhaust. The quickest swimmers show
very little above the water when swimming a race. Most swimmers, when making a
spurt, throw themselves on one side. If one the right side, they make a
downward stroke with their right arm, then a horizontal stroke with their left,
and lastly the legs are forcibly extended, during which last movement their
right arm is stretched in front as a cutwater, and the nose and mouth, brought
to the surface for respiration. Swimming on the left side is done in the same
way, mutatis mutandis. In this kind of swimming the only parts of the body
visible above water are small portion of the face, and that only for a short
time, and occasionally the left shoulder and arm to the elbow. It has a very
ridiculous appearance, and as the swimmer from his position cannot see in front
of him, it often happens that two competitors in the races that take place in
our short swimming baths will when swimming in opposite directions, run their
heads full tilt against one another to their mutual discomfiture. But it is not
this sort of swimming I mean when speaking of swimming as a hygienic agent, a
pleasant recreation, or a useful art. It so happens that swimming competitions
are confined almost entirely to rapidity of swimming, and everything is
sacrificed by competitors to quickness. The kind of swimming cultivated by our
swimming athletes, whether amateur or professional, is neither graceful nor
salubrious, and its utility, except for gaining cups and medals, is very
doubtful. The secret of the hygienic effects of swimming in the sea, lake or
river, is gentle exercise in a medium whose temperature excites the system to vigorous
reaction. I do not attach much importance to swimming in cold water as a mean
of cleansing the body. There is no doubt that it does wash off the grosser
impurities that accumulate about the skin, but it cannot be considered as a
substitute for the daily tub with plenty of soap, by means of which only can
the skin be kept perfectly clean and wholesome.
The
pleasures of natation need not be dwelt on. To feel oneself completely at home
in a new element, to lose the sense of ponderosity, to be able to move one's
limbs in any direction, through an unresisting medium, is to enjoy, for the
moment, the pleasures of an existence of a different order of animals. To feel
not the weight of the flesh which we often find "too, too solid" on
terra firma; to dart hither and thither at will, roll over on side or back, or
dive into the depths beneath us, is little short of ecstacy; we are no longer a
terrestrial animal, we have entered a new phase of existence, we are a fish,
our limbs are fins, and the water is our element. He who passes through life
without learning to swim misses one of the purest pleasures life affords, and
deserves to be drowned in a six foot pond.
The uses
of swimming are obvious. To be drowned by the upsetting of a pleasure boat
within a few yards of the shore - can anything be more pitiful? To see our
friend, perhaps our child, perish because we cannot swim a few yards to save
him - can anything be more painful? Think of the number of lives that have been
saved by the possession of this faculty. He who cannot swim is as far from
being perfectly educated as he who cannot walk.*
[*I
believe no arrangements exist for teaching our soldiers or sailors swimming
(except in the training ships, whence a few of our sailors are derived), the
consequences of which is that a very small proportion of the men in either
service can swim. In some Continental countries, particularly France, every soldier is taught to swim
just as he is taught his drill, and yet French soldiers are not nearly so much
exposed to "perils of waters" as our own.]
But it
will be alleged that there are dangers connected with swimming. And so there
are dangers connected with walking, riding, driving, railways, steamboats; but
these dangers do not deter us from making use of these means of locomotion. But
let us see what these dangers are. In learning to swim you may get out of your
depth and be drowned: - Then learn to swim in shallow water. The cold water may
give you a chill:- Not much fear of that unless you are very imprudent, but to avoid
that insignificant risk you can learn to swim in tepid water. There are plenty
of such baths in London and most large towns. There is a
risk of cramp overtaking the most practiced swimmer and sinking him suddenly to
the bottom: - Swimmers do sometimes sink suddenly in deep water and so get
drowned, but I doubt if they are often good swimmers, and I doubt if it is
cramp that sends them to the bottom. The Lancet recently alluded to the
subject, and suggested that it might be a sort of spasm of the respiratory
muscles, whereby the air was suddenly expelled from the lungs, and the specific
levity of the body being thus lost, the swimmer sank like a stone. That may be
partly true, but I am convinced it is not the whole truth, nor does it explain
how the catastrophe is caused. I believed the so-called cramp to be a spasm of
the heart and respiratory organs, and that it is produced in this way. The
swimmer may be accustomed to swimming but he has never thoroughly mastered the
indispensable first step in swimming, of committing the support of his body
entirely to the water. He exhausts himself in efforts to elevate his head and
shoulders above the water. As he gets into deep water efforts, which are of the
nature of nervousness, are increased; the cold of the water (to which perhaps
he is unused from having hitherto practised swimming chiefly in tepid water)
sends the blood in upon the heart, he feels choking, throw up his arms with a
loud cry, and goes to the bottom at once. The cause of this often fatal seizure
I believe to be a compound of the difference that prevails in regard to the
power of resisting cold. I have seen a man shivering and blue after five
minutes in one of the tepid swimming baths, while others can remain an hour or
longer in the sea, and come out warm and comfortable. A dip in cold water, even
a cold sponging bath, will cause some men's extremities to die away and remain
apparently devoid of circulation for hours. We can then easily imagine that the
cold of sea, or of a lake or river, may in an individual so sensitive to its
effects cause such an accumulation of the blood about the heart and lungs as to
produce the phenomena observed in drowning by so-called cramp. That a certain
degree of fear or anxiety is one of the causal elements is, I think,
sufficiently proved by the fact that this so-called cramp never occurs in
shallow water. That it is not cramp of the voluntary muscles is, I think,
evident from the fact that many people do get cramp in their legs when swimming
and this, though painful, is not dangerous, for we can always throw ourselves
on our back or swim in spite of the pain. I have actually plunged into deep
water with a slight attack of cramp in one of my legs, but found no difficulty
in keeping myself afloat until the cramp subsided. Although, until its nature
is precisely understood, there will always remain some risk of accident from
so-called cramp, still I believe the risk would be reduced to insignificance if
those who chill rapidly, whom swimming fatigues, or who become nervous in deep
water, would refrain from venturing beyond their depth until they have
conquered these failings, which habit will soon enable them to do.
But the
slight risk attending swimming in cold water should not deter a community from
providing itself with open-air swimming places. The risk from drowning will be
entirely obviated by artificial constructions on a lake or river, such as are
to be found in many continental towns. English towns are for the most part
entirely destitute of open-air swimming baths, and if they have suitable rivers
or lakes near the it is rare, indeed, to see any portion of them inclosed for
bathing purposes. London itself, with a population of three
millions, is now without any regular open-air swimming bath. A noble river runs
through it, but in spite of the gigantic works for intercepting and carrying
off the sewage, the Thames is still such a polluted stream that no-one with all
his senses entire - especially those of sight, smell and taste - would venture
to bathe in it below Teddington Lock. It is true that one sees in the summer
many boys disporting themselves on its grimy bosom between the bridges, and I
have even seen some enjoying a douche at the outfall of a sewer, but such feats
will be more admired for their temerity than imitated for their propriety; and
the Thames from Richmond downwards must still be considered as unsuitable for
bathing. London has many lakes or more or less clear water admirably adapted
for swimming purposes, but bathing is forbidden in all these with the exception
of three, and in these it is only allowed at such inconvenient hours as
practically to exclude all but a few from using them. London has many canals, but bathing is
forbidden in them, and though it is impossible to keep the boys out of them,
they bathe in peril of being seized by some policeman and of being fined by
some magistrate for 'indecent exposure of the person.'
In the
absence or dearth of open-air swimming baths London is pretty well supplied with
covered swimming baths, mostly tepid, but some few cold. With only one
exception (and that because it was closed) I have inspected and with six
exceptions (four of these because there was no water in them at my visit, two
because they were so repulsively dirty) I have bathed in all these baths,
so that I can describe them from
personal experience.
I shall
begin with the cold baths, these being entitled to the first place by reason of
their antiquity. And here let me pay a tribute of regret to the memory of the
only open-air swimming bath London ever possessed, specially constructed for
that purpose and available at all hours of the day - I mean the ancient Peerless
Pool in Baldwin Street, City Road. It measured fifty yards by thirty, was
built of stone, and several flights of steps led down to its bottom. It was
amply provided with open bathing boxes and was a secluded spot in a densely
populous neighbourhood. Its water was clear and cold, and it was large enough
and deep enough for swimming purposes. Its site is going to be built over, the
more's the pity, as London is now absolutely without a real
open-air swimming bath.
Old Roman
Bath, Strand Lane, Strand. - The ancient Roman bath which gives its name to this bath
is not the place used for bathing. It is where the spring rises. It is in a
cellar, is built of brick, and is about 3 yards long by 1.5 wide. It is said to be
near 2000 years old. The water, which rises at the rate of 10 tons per diem,
from a spring at one end, is cold and as clear as crystal; it overflows through
a pipe into the more modern bath, which is in an adjoining cellar, low-fronted,
whitewashed, and obscurely lighted by a dimmed glass window. This bath is said
to have been built by the Earl of Essex in Queen Elizabeth's time. It is a
basin, 4 yards long by 2.5 wide; sides and bottom
of marble slabs; steps leading down to it at one corner; depth about 4 feet 6 inches. Flags of sandstone surround the
bath, The water is delightfully clear, cool and refreshing, but the atmosphere
of the apartment is rather musty and cellar-like, and the size hardly admits of
anything in the way of swimming except mere paddling about.
Old Royal
Bath, Bath Street, Newgate Street. - This is a very remarkable bath. It is said
to have been built for Charles II and it still bears traces of royal magnificence.
The floor of the apartment is of marble, and the bath itself, which is 7 yards long by 3 wide, is made of black
and white marble slabs, forming a pleasing pattern. The depth is 4 feet 6 inches, and in the middle of the bath
floor is a depression or trough, making the water 5 feet deep there. In the sides of the
bath the marble floor is raised a few inches. The walls of the bathroom to the
height of 9 feet are covered with painted Dutch
tiles, with 4 niches for statuary on either side, also faced with tiles. Above
the tiles on both sides of the room is a sort of balcony with a railing but
with no visible access to it. Higher up is an octagonal cornice, from which
springs the dome shaped roof, richly ornamented with carved stone or stucco
garlands, whitewashed over and terminating in a round skylight. There is
another window at the lower part of the dome. It is on the whole rather dimly
lighted. The water is clear and cold and is derived from a spring. At one end
of the bath steps cut in the marble floor lead to the bottom of the water. The
boxes for bathers run along one side of the room, and a quaint little
pyramidical mirror apparently as old as the bath serves for toilet purposes.
The ventilation is good and the bath very refreshing, but not large enough for
vigorous swimming.
Coldbath,
Coldbath Square, Clerkenwell. - This bath, whence the name of Coldbath Fields
comes, is upwards of 200 years old. Access is obtained to it by a steep narrow
and dark staircase that descends to a considerable depth below the level of the
ground. The present bath was originally two baths, one for ladies, the other
for gentlemen. They have been thrown into one which is seven yards square,
lined with marble, 4.5 feet deep, with a deep longitudinal
depression in the centre of what was formerly the men's bath, making the depth
there 5 feet, just as in the old Royal Bath.
Above the marble, for a bout 3 feet, the wall is faced with Dutch
tiles. Above this, on two sides, rises a whitewashed wall. On the other two
sides runs a platform with a railing at the edge next the bath. At the angle
formed by the platform the railing is pierced to allow access down to the bath
by means of marble steps. The ceiling is of wood, whitewashed, and is low. Two
dim windows afford scanty illumination. There are two or three bathing boxes in
the bath room, and there is a dressing room up a few steps, with benches to lay
the clothes on. The water is very clear and cold, and is said to possess
medicinal qualities from mineral impregnation. It is derived from a spring and
is constantly running into the bath, from a lion's head in clay. It is
delightfully fresh and cold, but hardly large enough for swimming comfortably
in, and its underground situation is a great drawback.
Camden
Swimming Bath, Hampshire Grove, Torriano Avenue. - This bath is about 20 yards long by 5 wide. It is lined
throughout with plaster, and is accessible only from one end, where there are
wooden steps down to the bottom. The walls, whitewashed, run sheer up from the
bath on either side and at the other end. The depth is about five feet. At the
entrance end is a platform and six quite open boxes like square church pews.
The ceiling is on the double slope, whitewashed, and pierced by seven small
skylights, which illuminate the bath but dimly.
These are
all the cold plunge baths London possesses. The three first are too small for
swimming purposes, and the last, though long enough, is very narrow and
decidedly mean in appearance. Being all under cover and some of them quite
subterranean, the air feels chilly and cellar-like and the great charm that all
swimming in cold water should possess, namely, the accompaniment of pure fresh
open air and sunlight, are sadly conspicuous by their absence in them all. All
except the Camden bath are open all the year.
I shall
now pass on to a description of the tepid swimming baths of London, but, before
doing so, I will first make a few remarks on tepid swimming baths in general.
If the water be but moderately heated, say not above 70, and frequently
renewed, and if the ventilation of the bath be good, swimming in it would be
refreshing and salubrious, and if not possessing all the charm or all the
hygienic power of open-air bathing, it may still be a health-gibing exercise
not altogether despicable. But if, as so often happens, the water is too warm,
say about 80, seldom renewed, and the ventilation bad, in all or either of such
conditions swimming, in place of being a healthy exercise, becomes just the
reverse. On coming out of such a bath we feel no refreshment, but on the
contrary, we feel limp and exhausted from the heat of the sodden water which
has lost all its vivifying air, and from the confined atmosphere of the bathing
room, tainted with the exhalations from the bodies of the bathers. The temperature
in these baths, even of the same bath at different times, is very unequal.
Sometimes they are fresh and cool and apparently unmixed with warm water. I
found this to be case in one of the best of these baths one Sunday morning. I
asked the attendant how it happened that the bath was so pleasantly cool, and
he informed me that it was often so on a Sunday morning, as so many people came
there for warm baths that there was no warm water to spare for the swimming
bath. However, he added a piece of information no altogether so agreeable, to
the effect that when it was deemed necessary to heat the swimming bath under
these circumstances, this was often done by letting into water that had already
been used in the warm baths. If this little manoeuvre, so naively revealed to
me by this bath attendant, often takes place, it will fully account for the
flat "wersh" feel of the water of so many of the swimming baths. But,
without supposing anything so nasty, the water will readily acquire this
unrefreshing character, with a number of persons bathing in it, if it be not
frequently renewed. In some of the swimming baths the water is allowed to flow
off every night and fresh water admitted in the morning, and in them a certain
amount of freshness is always perceptible. But in many baths this excellent
plan is not adopted and the water is either very seldom allowed to flow off
entirely, or the dribbling inflow from a meagre jet and a corresponding outflow
are considered sufficient. Swimming in baths of this character is neither
refreshing nor wholesome. Imperfect ventilation is not such a common occurrence
in the metropolitan swimming baths, for they have mostly lofty roofs and plenty
of open windows. However, some of them are defective on this point, and all
swimming in such a tainted atmosphere must be more prejudicial than beneficial.
On the whole, however, a careful examination of the London swimming baths has
convinced me that, as a rule, they are highly creditable to the parochial
authorities, by whom they have mostly been erected. If not equal in hygienic
influence to the open-air swimming baths, they are, at all events, excellent
swimming schools, and, as they are to be found in every quarter of the town,
and their price is extremely moderate, it is the fault of the Londoners
themselves if they do not learn to swim. The art acquired even in a tepid
swimming bath will be serviceable under all other circumstances and though one
accustomed to these artificially warmed shallow pools may at first feel not
altogether at his ease in cold deep water, yet the power of swimming will not
forsake him under these novel conditions, and familiarity will soon enable him
thoroughly to enjoy a swim in river, lake or sea, and lead him to despise the
languid joys of the tepid tank.
Albany
Swimming Bath, York Road, Lambeth. - Length of bath, 17 yards; breadth 12; depth from 3 to 5 feet. 50 boxes with half doors along 3
sides of the bath. A footway all round the bath; a rude spring-board at the
deeper end. The ceiling is traversed by great beams; is dark coloured and
pierced by few windows. The water is of a yellowish colour, and so opaque that
no part of a body immersed in it is visible. This peculiar appearance, I was
told, was owing to the quantity of iron it contains. "Highly recommended
by the faculty for its strengthening effects" I was informed. It would
need to have some great medicinal virtues, for its appearance was not very
inviting.
Alexandra
Swimming Baths, Bennett Park, Blackheath. - This bath is 18 yards long by 8 wide. Sides and bottom
face with white porcelain tiles. Depth from 3 ft 6 in. to 5 ft 6 in. Ceiling low, whitewashed. The
lighting is effected by 4 dimmed windows in a recess at the shallow end, and 6
windows at one side, 5 of which open on to
large square bathing boxes of unequal sizes, with curtains in the place
of doors. Few of the boxes are provided with mirrors. There is a spring-board
at the deep end, and "headers" may be taken from the platform on
which stand the bathing boxes. The water is clear, but the ventilation seemed
to me not very perfect, and the illumination very indifferent, for though the
bath has, apparently plenty of windows, 5 of these windows do not admit the
direct light of heaven, but only the light reflected from the walls of the
bathing boxes, and the other windows are dimmed and unfavorably placed for
illuminating purposes. Bathing drawers are required to be worn and are supplied
by the establishment.
Bermondsey
Swimming Baths, Spa Road, Bermondsey. - This bath is 13 yards long by 9 wide. The sides are of
white porcelain tiles, the top row having an ornamental blue pattern. Bottom of
white glazed bricks. Depth from 3 ft 6 in. to 5 ft 6 in. The ceiling, of tasteful iron
work, nicely painted, forms a double slope, in which there is plenty of glass
to illuminate the bath well. The bathing boxes, 34 in number, are at both ends of bath,
18 at the deep end, in two tiers, 14 at the shallow end similarly arranged.
They are roomy, neatly painted, and are provided with mirrors and curtains in
place of doors. There is a broad footway in front of the boxes, and a gangway
across the water at one side, leading from one end to the other, and which,
being about 5 feet above the water, may be used as a
spring-board. Walls painted in oil colour rise from the water on both sides.
The water is quite clear. There is a second class bath precisely the same in
dimensions, the only difference being that the boxes are not painted nor
furnished with mirrors or curtains, and that there is no ornamental border
round the top of the bath.
City of
London Swimming Baths, Golden Lane, Barbican. - These baths are situated in a
squalid district, the teeming population of which seem not to avail themselves
to any great extent of the facilities for ablution the establishment affords.
The first class swimming bath is underground, dimly lighted by grimy windows on
both ends and one side, which derive their light at second hand from other
windows rising from the level of the pavement. It is about 30 yards long by 11 wide; is deepest (5ft 6 in.) in the centre, and shallow (3ft. 6 in.) at either end. The sides and a
few feet of the bottom at one end are paved with white porcelain tiles, the
rest of the bottom with reddish tiles. The water is clear. There is no visible
out-and-in flow. The bathing boxes, 20 in number, are sufficiently roomy.
They seem originally to have had half doors, but only two or three of these
remain. These boxes stand upon a sort of platform over-hanging the bath on one
side. On the opposite side is a spring-board, and another at one end. At the
other end a sort of Chinese bridge without a parapet crosses the water. The
ceiling is of a moderate height, and consists of boards, through which project
clusters of iron pipes, evidently connected with the bath and laundry
arrangements above. The sides of the walls are painted over with pious texts,
with which the language of the bathers at my visit did not correspond. There
was a close smell about the place, which must be much intensified when the bath
is full. Although the size of the bath is great, and the water clear, and at my
visit not too warm, this bath is not very inviting, it being dark, ugly and
ill-ventilated. There is a second-class bath here of somewhat smaller
dimensions.
Greenwich
Swimming Baths - The first class bath is 17 yards long by 6 wide. Depth from 3ft 6 in. to 5ft 6in. Sides and bottom
covered with a sort of asphalte painted white. Fourteen open bathing boxes,
painted light blue, with curtains and mirrors, along one side of the bath.
Footway in front of the boxes of slate. A narrow stone ledge at deep end and in
front of a plank across the bath from a spring board. Walls of brick,
whitewashed, rise directly from the bath at the shallow end, and the side
opposite the boxes. Ceiling, of iron work, double slope, with glass let in at
the top. Ventilation and lighting good. The second class bath is almost
precisely the same, differing only in the colour of the boxes, and there being
no curtains to them.
Hammersmith
Swimming Bath, Bridge Street, Hammersmith. - This bath is 20 yards long, by 7 wide. The sides are of
white porcelain tiles with round black spots at the angles, the top row having
a flower pattern. The bottom of white and black glazed bricks forming a
pattern. Depth from 3ft 6 in. to 5ft 6in; 22 bathing boxes
painted drab and blue, with small mirrors and half doors, run along one side
and the shallow end. The footway in front of the boxes and at the deep end is
of wood, and projects over the water. A narrow stone ledge runs along the
opposite side. The walls are sized stone colour. The ceiling is moderately
lofty, arched, and whitewashed. Gasoliers depend from it. Daylight is admitted
by two large windows in the side wall, and three semicircular windows at each
end. Panes of thick unpolished glass are let into the roof all down the side
where the boxes are. The illumination is good. there is a spring board at the
deep end. The warm water is admitted at the surface of the water at one corner
of the bath, whereby the heat is very unequally distributed. At my visit the
top of the water in many parts was quite warm while the depths of the bath were
very cold. The water is clear. This bath is first class on Mondays, Wednesdays,
and Fridays, and second class on the other days of the week. It is an excellent
bath, of good size, well lighted and ventilated and very clean - perhaps
because it is new, and the only fault to be found with it is in regard to the
heating of the water, which would be better if the warm water were admitted at
the bottom of the bath about its middle, in place of at the surface of the
water at one end.
Kensington
Swimming Bath, High Street, Kensington. - This little bath is about 10 yards long by 7 wide. It is lined, sides
and bottom, with cement painted white. Depth from 3 to 5 feet. The walls, which rise straight up
form the bath on three sides, are painted in imitation of stone and are
festooned all round with chains, for the bathers to lay hold of. The ceiling,
not very lofty, is of wood, whitewashed, pierced by six windows, which admit a
good quantity of light. Four chains hang from the ceiling to near the surface
of the water. The water is very clean and fresh. There are 8 boxes for bathers,
entered at the back by doors, and with half doors facing the water. Stone steps
lead down to the bottom of the water from these boxes, which occupy the whole
of the shallow end of the bath, are rather narrow, but clean and neat with
mirrors. At one side of the bath is a short footway, projecting about 10 feet over the water. A spring -board in
the middle of the deep end and at the corners, ladders for diving from. This
bath, though small, is clean, well-ventilated and select.
Lambeth
Swimming Baths, Westminster-Bridge Road. - The first class bath is 41 yards by 15. Depth from 3 to 5 feet. The sides of the bath have a row
of white porcelain tiles above, the rest of the sides and the bottom are lined
with dusky tiles. The water tolerably clear. An elegant fountain in the centre
admits the warm water. An aquarium at the shallow end. A lofty spring-board at
the deep-end, a lower one at one side.
Eighty roomy boxes for bathers with half doors, running along each side
of the bath. Above these, on each side, is a gallery supported on light iron
pillars, with 16 superior rooms for bathers. Ceiling lofty, double slope,
pierced with numerous windows, which light the water. This is the largest first
class bath in London, and is much used for swimming
matches. It is well lighted and ventilated. There is a second-class bath nearly
as large, 38 yards by 17.
Marylebone
Swimming Baths, Marylebone Road. - The first class bath is 15 yards by 8. Depth from 3ft 6 in. to 5ft 6in. It is paved with blue
and white porcelain tiles arranged in a pattern. The sides are of slate slabs,
with an elegant border at the top, of blue and white pattern, in porcelain
tiles. The boxes, 10 in number, are provided with a
complete door that closes with a spring lock, which can be opened on the inside
by a handle, but on the outside only by a key, are roomy, clean and provided
with mirrors. They run along one side of the bat only and in front of them is a
footway of slate. The walls rise from the water on the other sides, and are
painted imitation stone. A spring-board passes across the deep end of the bath.
At the shallow end is a shell fountain of white marble, whence fresh water is
always flowing into the bath with a pleasant sound. The ceiling is lofty, ridge
and furrow, with many lights. This is a little gem of a bath, the water is
generally fresh and clear, the lighting and ventilation excellent. It is open
on Wednesdays till 2 o'clock for ladies. There are also a second and a third
class bath below the level of the street, each 23 yards long, lined with blue and white
porcelain tiles, well lighted by glass roofs, clean and tasteful. Accommodating
respectively 30 and 40 baths in neat, open, varnished wooden boxes.
Metropolitan
Swimming Baths, Ashley Crescent, City Road. - The principal bath is 33 yards long by 11 wide. Depth from 3ft 10 in. to 5 ft. There is also a smaller bath 16 yards long by 9 wide, of a uniform depth
of 5 feet. The large bath is lined with reddish bricks, and a
row of white porcelain tiles runs round the top. The boxes, 47 in number, run down both sides and
along the shallow end. They are placed two and two between pillars supporting
arches. They are roomy, and are entered by a door leading from a corridor at
the back. A half door opens on to the water, down to which there are wooden
steps in front of each box. The boxes have no mirrors. The corridor extends all
round the boxes which are between it and the bath, so that the bath can only be
entered through the boxes, or at the deep end of the bath, where there is a
platform and spring-board beneath which the water is admitted, when required,
in a large cascade. Ornamental colouring is applied to the pillars and arches
supporting the ceiling, which is moderately lofty, flat and whitewashed with
two circular skylights. The bath is further lighted by 22 windows looking into
the corridor, placed just below the ceiling. The lighting is not so good as
might be expected from the number of windows, as they are unfortunately placed.
The water is clear and the ventilation good.
The
smaller bath is lined with cement painted. It is surrounded by 48 boxes, with
half doors placed against the wall, and there is a broad footway betwixt the
boxes and the bath. Some of the boxes are in a recess at the head of the bath.
There is a spring-board at one end. The water is clear, and apparently kept
somewhat cooler than that in the large bath.
The
Wenlock Swimming Bath, Wenlock Road, is the second class bath to the
Metropolitan. It is 60 yards long, and 10 wide. It can
accommodate a vast number of bathers in boxes with half doors on either side
and at the top, and an unlimited number of spectators in galleries above the
boxes. This bath being the longest in London is much used for swimming matches.
The water is very far from clear, and the arrangements are altogether very
second class.
North
London
Swimming Baths, Pentonville Road. - The first class bath is 18 yards by 7. Depth from 3 to 4 feet; deepest in the middle. The sides
are lined with white porcelain tiles with ornamented top row, the bottom paved
with red tiles. There are 24 roomy bathing boxes with mirrors, running along
one side and one end. Above there is a gallery which will accommodate bathers
or spectators. A flagged footway runs in front of the boxes. At the end and
side not occupied by the boxes, a spring-board runs along the whole length, and
there is a another spring-board near the middle of the opposite side. Three
trapezes hang from the ceiling for the daring flights of amphibious Leotards.
The ceiling is lofty, of dark stained wood and glass in sufficient quantity to
light the bath well. The side walls are of bare yellow brick. The water is
clear, the lighting and ventilation good, but the depth of the bath is quite
insufficient, and in plunging from the spring-board one must take care of one's
head against the bottom. There is a second class bath somewhat smaller.
Poplar Swimming
Baths, East India Dock Road, - There are two baths, first and second class, of
similar dimensions, 15 yards by 9. I was unable to inspect them
as the baths close at the end of September and my visit was made during the
first days of October, when the baths were locked up0, and the man who had the
key was absent. They were described to me by an intelligent policeman as very
nice baths - I presume of the usual character of parochial baths, of which I
have examined and described so many.
Royal
York Swimming Baths, York Terrace, Regent's Park - These are two swimming
baths, one for gentlemen, the other for ladies.
The
gentleman's bath is of an irregular shape, about 22 yards long by 7 wide. Depth from 3 to 5 feet. A spring-board at each end. The
bath is floored with tiles of a dusky reddish-brown colour, the sides of white
bricks. The bathing boxes, 20 in number, very narrow, with half
doors, run along the top and down a part of one side. the walls, whitewashed,
support a low ridge and furrow ceiling, with dimmed panes of glass let into it.
A narrow ledge runs along one side of the bath. Small jets of water run in at
one end. At my visit the plaster was peeling off the walls in patches and green
mould was creeping up the walls. Tiles, with the low ceiling, the dim illumination,
and the dismal colour of the material of which the bath is constructed, gave a
gloomy and uninviting aspect to the place. Still, I am bound to say, the water
was clear and pleasant.
The
ladies bath is smaller, 10 yards by 7. Depth 4 ft 6in. Lined with porcelain tiles.
Platform and 6 boxes with curtains at one end. The walls, whitewashed, rise up
from the bath at the other three sides, and support a not very lofty ridge and
furrow ceiling pierced with a few windows. This bath, which is the only one I
know of in London exclusively devoted to ladies,
deserves attention on that account. It is far from being everything that is
desirable, but the water is clear and there is just room enough to learn
swimming.
St;.
George's Swimming Bath, Davies Street, Berkeley Square. - This bath is 14 yards by 8. Depth 3ft 6in. to 5ft 6in.
Sides paved with white porcelain tiles, with black spots at angles; a top row
with Greek pattern in blue, bottom of white glazed bricks. Open boxes with
mirrors and half curtains, 42 in number, all round the bath. A
sloppy, slippery, wooden footway in front of boxes. Spring-board at deep end.
Wooden steps down to the bath at the middle of one side, and at one corner.
Ceiling supported on iron pillars of painted iron work. The light comes from a
large skylight at the top of a high narrow funnel with painted iron sides, and
from 7 small windows over the top of the boxes on one side. The water is clear,
but the lighting is very indifferent and the ventilation decidedly defective.
The wringing machine belonging to the laundry keeps up an almost incessant and
very lugubrious noise. The bath is first class on Mondays, Wednesdays and
Fridays, and second class on the other days of the week. It is under the same
management as
St. George's Swimming Bath, Buckingham Palace Road. - This bath is 20 yards by 8. Depth from 3ft 4in. to 5ft
4in. Sides of white porcelain tiles with black spots at angles, and a Greek
pattern in blue along the top row. Bottom of white glazed bricks. Forty-six
open boxes, with half curtains, and mirrors, on three sides of the bath.
Lighted by a large glass roof. Spring-board at deep end. This bath is much
superior in size, lighting and ventilation, to the establishment in Davies Street. Like the latter it is first class
on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, and second class on other days. It closes
the end of October, but the bath in Davies Street is open all year.
St. Giles
and St.
George's, Bloomsbury, Swimming Baths, Endell Street. - The first class bath has an
oblong shape, broader at one end than the other. Its length is 12 yards by 10 at the deep end, tapering off
to 8 at the shallow end. Depth from 4ft to 6ft. Sides lined with white
porcelain tiles with round black spots at angles, a blue pattern on top row.
Bottom of white glazed bricks. Twenty-three open boxes, with mirrors and
curtains on one side and along the shallow end. A wide footway of slate on
three sides of the bath. A spring-board at deep end. Pillars of painted iron,
round three sides of the bath, supporting the roof. A painted screen about 12 feet high separate this from the second
class bath, which is in all respects the same as the first class, except that
the boxes are not painted and have neither mirrors nor curtains. The two baths
have a common roof of glass, very lofty, and with elegant iron-work supports.
The water is clear and fresh, the ventilation and lighting excellent. This and
the Tower Hamlets bath are the only ones in London where a middle-sized man can get
out of his depth, which is a great charm to the practised swimmer.
St.
James' Swimming Bath, Marshall Street, Golden Square. - You mount up a flight of steps
to get to this bath. It is about 13 yards by 9. Depth from 3 to 5 feet. Sides of bath slate, bottom
plaster. Eighteen open boxes. A lofty ceiling, well lighted. The water is dirty
looking, and the whole arrangements very inferior and altogether second class.
St.
Margaret's and St. John's Swimming Baths, Great Smith Street, Westminster. - The first class bath is 12 yards by 10. t is lined throughout, and
for 3 feet above the water, with white glazed bricks. Depth
from 3 ft to 5ft 6in. Boxes, 16, open with mirrors, in two
tiers at shallow end. A footway 6 feet broad in front of boxes, about 3 feet above the water, to which two
flights of wooden steps lead down. A narrow gangway about 6 feet above the water leads to a door
opening on to the second class bath, which is very similar to this, only 3 feet longer, and with double the number
of boxes arranged similarly at either end. the walls, whitewashed, rise from
the water on three sides. They support a lofty double-sloped ceiling of painted
wood, with glass let in along each slope. The water is clear, and the bath is
tolerably well-lighted, and ventilated, but as it is deficient in everything
ornamental, it has rather a mean appearance.
St.
Pancras Swimming Baths, King Street, Camden Town. - The first class bath is 19 yards by 8. The corners of the bath are
rounded. The sides of white porcelain tiles, the top row ornamented with blue
dolphins. The bottom is of glazed black and white bricks arranged in a pattern.
Depth from 3ft 4in. to 5ft 5in. A spring-board at deep end. The boxes, 25 in number, with mirrors and half
doors, run down one side and along deep end. At the shallow end, and in front
of the boxes, a footway of stone flags. At the other side runs a screen about 10 feet high, separating it from the second
class bath, which is identical with it in all respects, save the mirrors and
dolphins. The two baths are covered to the extent of one half by a very lofty
glass dome. The other half of the bath is overhung by a not very lofty ceiling
of plaster and ironwork, with sundry round holes in it, displaying intricate
conglomerations of iron pipes. The water is beautifully clear, and the lighting
and ventilation good. It is one of the most recent of the parochial baths and
does great credit to the much-reviled St. Pancras Board of Guardians.
Tower
Hamlets Swimming Baths, Church Street, Mile End New Town - First class
bath 23 yards by 10. Depth from 5 to 6 feet. The sides and bottom of bath of
cement painted white. Forty-two unnumbered boxes, with doors which do not lock,
and are cut away slightly at top to admit light, run along the two ends and one
side o the bath. Above them is a gallery with seats, where more bathers or
spectators can be accommodated. On the opposite side runs a gangway over the
water, which can be used as a spring-board. The footway in front of the boxes
is of stone flags. The walls, of brick, are whitewashed on the three sides
where the boxes are, with some attempt at colour near the top, and a gorgeous
Royal Arms at one end. The other sides is of wood painted, forming the
partition between this and the second class bath. The roof is on the double
slope, of wood, dark and grimy. Glass is let in at the top on both sides. the
illumination is indifferent, the boxes rather rickety, and, on the whole, the
bath, though extent and depth of water are satisfactory, is decidedly shabby.
The second class bath is the same as the first, except that the boxes are open,
26 in number, and so much larger that each box will
accommodate on an emergency ten bathers. The proprietor informed me that he has
seen 1200 bathers together in this bath, 500 or 600 in the water at one time. There is no attempt at colouring on the
whitewashed walls, and the water is not so deep as that in the first class bath
by half a foot.
Some of
the above tepid swimming baths are open all the year round. Some, where there
are first and second class baths, close one of these during the winter and
strike an average of the prices of admission. Some closes at the end of
September, others at the end of October, to repoen in April. The prices of the
swimming baths connected with the parochial baths and washhouses are usually
4d. for the 1st class and 2d. for the 2nd class. A few charge 6d. 1st class,
some 3d. 2nd class, and one, the Marylebone, charges 8d 1st., 4d 2nd, and 2d
3rd class. The non-parochial swimming baths, Kensington and Blackheath, are 1s.
each.
Almost
all the swimming baths are the head quarters of one or more swimming clubs,
which generally have one night a week for their meetings and practisings. With
few exceptions they have all attached to them a professional swimmer, in most
cases one of the bath attendants, who teaches swimming to beginners and coaches
aspirants after prizes in that extraordinary mode of rapid swimming adopted by
the London aquatic athletes, in plunging, in picking up eggs from the bottom of
the bath, and other equally useless feats. The shallowness of the baths
prevents all practice of the really useful accomplishment of diving deep in
water from a height or while swimming; and I am not aware of any instruction
being given in the very difficult art of rescuing a drowning person. I need not
say that this is a dangerous and difficult operation as long as the person to
be rescued is able to struggle and clutch at his rescuer. It too often happens
that the desperate efforts of a drowning person drag both himself and his
would-be preserver to the bottom. In some books it is recommended not to
attempt the rescue of a drowning man until he has ceased to struggle, when it
may be too late. There is a method of grasping and supporting a drowning
person, however lively, that should be taught to swimmers, which will enable
them to save lift without much peril to themselves; and this could be taught in
our swimming baths, but no prizes are awarded for it, and professionals, for
the most part, think only of teaching what will win prizes at the swimming
competitions. By the way, either Shakespeare understood little about swimming,
or he intended to represent Cassius as a vain boaster, which, however, is
hardly consistent with his character in the play, when he makes him talk about
rescuing the drowning Caesar by taking him on his shoulders as Aeneas did
Anchises.
The above
as far as I can ascertain are all the places expressly constructed for swimming
purposes at present existing in London*
[*There
are, I believe, several additional tepid swimming baths in the course of
construction in London and suburbs, and one has been recently opened at
Stratford, but that town can scarcely be considered as part of London, though
within the postal district, and as Mr. Sweedlepipe says, "we must draw the
line somewhere." Some may think I have not drawn the line narrowly enough,
when I have included in my survey Hampstead, Hammersmith, Greenwich and
Blackheath, but I preferred to make it possibly too wide than to incur the
reproach of having made it too narrow.]
and if
they fully answers the ends for which they were designed, and enabled their
frequenters to obtain the full benefit of the hygienic exercise of swimming,
one could scarcely say that they were too few for even such an immense town.
But they are of little use in a hygiene point of view. I must remind the reader
that in order to derive the full health-giving advantages from swimming, it
must be performed in cool and deep water, with plenty of room, and surrounded
by the wholesome accessories of fresh air and sunlight. Moreover, the mind of
the swimmer should not be harassed and anxious. Now, the London swimming baths
satisfy none of these requirements, They are, with one exception (for we cannot
count the three ancient plunge baths among swimming baths, on account of their
puny dimensions), all tepid. This is no fixed temperature, but varies in every
bath and in the same bath at different times. It may mean any temperature from
65 to 80 or upwards. The lower temperature would not be objectionable in the point
of view of salubrity, but it would not be relished by the swimmers, who would
insist on more warm water being added, or otherwise the most of them would
forsake the bath. When the water approaches the higher temperature indicated,
swimming in it is followed by languour and prostration, more prejudicial to
health than otherwise. To me the water in this state feels sodden and lifeless,
and though one can stay in it a long time without shivering, the longer one
stays in the more prostrated does one feel afterwards, and a good cold douche
or shower-bath would be required to restore anything like tone to the system.
The London swimming baths are all shallow,
with two exceptions, and these are only six feet deep at their deepest part.
There is consequently no opportunity for diving deep and experiencing the
powerful influence of the pressure of a considerable column of water on the
organs of respiration.
With few
exceptions the London swimming baths are too small. When
any considerable number of bathers are in the water, then there is hardly room
for the swimmers who are consequently continually butting against, or kicking,
or even scratching one another in a manner anything but favorable for the
preservation of good temper - a most essential requisite in a hygienic point of
view.
None of
the London baths have the advantage of pure
fresh air. Some of them are close, stuffy and foetid. The best of them can only
be said to be well ventilated, but no amount of ventilation in a covered
building is an equivalent for the caller [sic] air with its fresh breezes, that
play around and about the exposed body of the open air bather.
Few of
the London baths have a sufficiency of light.
Some are mere gloomy cellars. In the very best of them the body does not
receive the direct rays of the sun, the light being transmitted through glass
of greater or less thickness, often artificially dimmed, in case it should
impinge too strongly upon the exposed body. The powerful hygienic effects of
light on the body have recently received much attention and it is no doubt a
chief agent in the salubrious influence of open-air bathing. To construct a
swimming bath where the light is nearly excluded is to forego one of the
greatest advantages of the bath.
Lastly,
how can the mind remain free from anxiety when, according to the arrangement in
every bath in London, with one exception, the bather's clothes and valuables
have to be left in open boxes, to which any person can enter, while in most
baths a notice is stuck up to the effect that the bath proprietor is not
responsible for clothes or valuables, but that each bather must look after his
own. In some of the baths the ticket givers will take charge of watches,
jewellery and money, but in many others they refuse to do so, and one of forced
to leave everything exposed. With this alarming notice staring one in the face,
what must be the state of mind of a timid bather under such circumstances, when
the bath is tolerably full of the extremely mixed company which frequents these
baths, I shall leave the reader to imagine. Certainly, if the conditions were
otherwise hygienically good, the moral state thus induced would suffice to
neutralize them.
Besides
the above swimming baths, cold and tepid, under cover, and not to be enjoyed
without payment, London has, or had, two large open-air gratuitous swimming
baths, fulfilling in many respects the requirements of hygienic swimming baths,
but objectionable in several important particulars; I allude to the great
bathing lake in Hyde Park - the Serpentine, and the two smaller lakes in
Victoria Park.
The
Serpentine, before the 'levelling up' operations commenced, was in very bad
repute. Its depth was supposed to be very great in some places; a delusion its
drainage has dispelled for it appears to be nowhere above 12 or 14 feet deep. Its bottom was supposed to be
foul with the accumulated sediment from the sewers which discharged themselves
into it for many years; its drainage has shown it to be foul beyond all
conception, and the wonder is that its water was not more impure than we know
it to have been, resting on such a thick stratum of abominations. The water was
impure*
[*I
suppose it was this impurity of the water which produced a remarkable disease
among the young sticklebacks and minnows, many of which I have found with
deposits, apparently of pus, on various parts of their bodies, rendering their
movements languid and awkward, and in some cases especially where these
deposits were on the head, causing hideous disfiguration.]
there is
no denying it, and its impurity was often as obvious to the nose as to the eye.
And yet a swim in the old Serpentine on a cool spring or autumn morning was not
a bad thing - experto credite. It was a fine expanse of water, with beautiful
surroundings. The eye rested with pleasure on the green sward of the park, the
stately old elms, the picturesque bridge, the pretty little Swiss boathouse,
and the monstrous black Duke prancing over the trees. Then, if you did not
examine too minutely the green confervae that rendered the water almost opaque,
if you kept your eyes more skyward, if you became use to the faint ditch-water
smell around you, and "made believe a good deal" you might almost
fancy yourself disporting in a retired lake far away in the country. The
company was not so bad as was usually supposed. The roughs don't like getting
up early even to wash themselves so there were few of them; they mostly
deferred their bathing till the evening. Most of the bathers seemed quiet,
steady, respectable people. The regular bathers would generally bring along
with them a bit of carpet or hire a rug from the Humane Society's boatmen to
lay their clothes on, and thus save them getting wet by the dew. There was room
and to spare for all on the broad bosom of London's great lake, and when you
could the stories about the horrors below you, and refrain from looking too
curiously at the green abominations that thickened the water, a long swim in
the deep placed Serpentine with the sun shining down on you, and the gentle
breeze fanning you, was infinitely preferable to any cold or tepid swimming
bath in London. If the lover of the swimming bath is to gain nothing by the
works now going on in the Serpentine beside clear water in a shallow bed, he
will, perhaps, rather regret the loss of his deep but dirty lake. Bathing was
permitted in the Serpentine from 5 to 8amm and again after sunset for an hour
or so; but no provision at all was made for the accommodation of bathers,
beyond a couple of boats belonging to the Humane Society stationed near where
most bathers resorted.
Victoria Park Bathing Lakes. - There are two of these lakes.
The more easterly one is nearly 300
yards long and is surrounded by a gravel walk, beyond which are shrubs. The
more westerly one is nearly as large, and is more hemmed in by trees and
shrubs, and has several islands in it. Both have a depth of 6 feet in their deepest part, becoming
gradually shallow towards the shore. The eastern lake is much the clearest.
There is a raft on one and a small shabby bathing house on the other. A
swimming master resides at one end of the eastern lake, who apparently adds to
the profits of his profession by selling ginger-beer and sugar-plums. The time
when bathing is allowed is from 4 to 8am. The remainder of the day the best
of the lakes is much resorted to by the owners of miniature yachts, in order to
test the sailing powers of their tiny craft. There is, of course, here also no
arrangement for the safe bestowal of one's clothes, while one is in the water,
so that, as in the Serpentine, you bathe at your own proper peril.
The lakes
in these two parks are the only places in which the inhabitants of London are permitted to indulge in
open-air bathing.*
[* I do
not forget the lower ponds of Hampstead, which were once magnificent sheets of
water, but then they were the property of the New River Company and bathing was
strictly prohibited in them. Now they seem to be abandoned by the Water Company
but they have been allowed to drain away or evaporate, until they are little
better than muddy pools, with a broad margin of sticky clay which would deter
any one except a London street Arab from attempting to bathe in
them. It would be possible to convert one or more of them into excellent
swimming baths of any required depth.]
To be
sure, there is the river, and there are numerous canals in which the gamins
plunge in summer, but they do so at the risk of being seized by the police and
brought before the magistrate charged with the heinous offence of indecency, so
that all who have any respect for the law are practically debarred from making
use of these waters. Besides, in spite of the recent drainage works, the Thames is still little better than an open
sewer, and it will be long before it is anything else;*
[* Were
the Thames once more the 'crystal stream' that poets used to call it, I fear
its tidal character would offer some difficulties to placing on it, between the
bridges, floating baths, such as we see on the Seine; for these, if placed near
the side, would be left high and dry at every ebb, and if stationed in
mid-stream, would seriously interfere with navigation.]
and the
canals are, with few exceptions, so dirty that there is little inducement to
the respectable swimmer to brave the terrors of the law, and deft the threats
against trespassers, in order to indulge in his favourte exercise in either
river or canal. So, practically, he is limited to the Serpentine and Victoria lakes, and to these only at the
inconvenient hours and under the uncomfortable circumstances I have described.
While
almost every second-rate continental town has ample provision for open-air
bathing, it is disgraceful that a large and wealthy metropolis like London should virtually have nothing of
the sort. How much pleasure do its citizens consequently lose! what powerful hygienic
agent are they not deprived of! And yet London offers more facilities than almost
any other town I know of for the construction of open-air swimming baths of the
best kind, and that without infringing on the comfort or privileges of any one.
In the Serpentine, where the levelling operations are completed, the finest
swimming baths the world can show might be constructed for a very small sum of
money, and I venture to say that while the convenience and wishes of thousands
who delight in swimming, and to whom an open-air bath is a source of health and
pleasure, would be gratified, no person would be inconvenienced, nor would
anything unpleasant be presented to the eye.
The
arrangements heretofore in force pleased no one; the bathing public were put to
every sort of inconvenience, and the non-bathing public were disgusted that for
certain hours in the day the banks of the Serpentine should be handed over to a
horde of naked savages, rendering it impossible for any decent female to
venture near them. It is surely the duty of the authorities who permit bathing
in the Park, to provide that it may be done with safety and with comfort, and
without outraging decency.
I would suggest that a first and second class
swimming bath be built at the south side of the Serpentine, when its depth has
been equalised, as proposed to 5ft 6in., shelving into shallow water towards
the shore. These ought, I think, to be not floating baths, but permanent
constructions of light and elegant appearance. Each bath should be at least 150
yards long by 50 or 60 wide. Round the bath should run a platform flagged
with slates, with steps down to the water and spring-boards. There should be
boxes for bathers round the whole bath, to the number of 200 or 300. These
boxes should be numbered, and have complete doors, with a pane of glass to let
in, and closing with a spring lock, to be opened by the attendant to the bather
having a corresponding ticket. This for the security of the bather's clothes
and valuables. For what right, I may ask, has any one to invite me into his
bathing establishment, induce me to divest myself of my clothes and valuables,
and plunge beneath the water, while he offers me no security for my property,
which he directs me hang up in a perfectly open box, and cautions me to look
after myself? How am I to look after it when I am swimming in or under the
water, he does not inform me. Even if, when so engaged, I were to perceive a
thief occupied in rifling my pockets, or appropriating my garments, it would
avail me little that de profundis clamavi "stop thief!' By the time I
could get out of the water and make towards him, he would probably have got
clear off with his booty. Therefore, the simple plan adopted in the Marylebone first class swimming bath,
of full doors closing with a spring-lock, is indispensable for the security and
comfort of the bather.*
[*The
proprietor of a swimming bath which has full doors inveighed against them to me
as affording facilities for thieves, but then his doors have neither locks nor
numbers.]
To make
the security absolute, it would only be requisite to provide each bather with a
ticket of bone or metal, the number of which would correspond with his box; and
this by a simple contrivance might be fastened to his bathing drawers (without
which no-one should be allowed to bathe) and the attendant would only open the
door corresponding to this number. I have dwelt in what some may think too much
detail on this apparently trivial matter, but from experience I can testify
that the comfort of a bath depends on one being assured that one's clothes are
in a place of safety. The boxes should be closed in at top with a glazed roof,
as in the Hammersmith bath, and the roof, either glazed or of corrugated iron,
should extend over the platform, as in a railway station, to afford shelter
from sun or rain when not in the bath. The water should be quite open to sun
and air. The prices of admission need not be greater - might indeed by less -
than those of the generality of the parochial baths, viz. fourpence, first
class, twopence, second class. For this, the bather should be supplied with one
or two towels, and bathing drawers, unless he prefer to wear his own. And here
I would hint that the towels should always be washed after being used, and not
merely dried, as seems to be case in some of the baths, if I may be allowed to
infer from their sickening smell. It would surely not be too much to expect a
refreshment room or buffet in connexion with these baths, as if often to be
found on the continent; such an addition would be highly desirable.
These
baths should be open from an early hour until dusk, so as to suit the
convenience of all. Many persons cannot take an open-air bath in the morning
without injury, but can derive benefit from, and enjoy, a swim in the middle of
the day. Again, their occupations make it more convenient for some to bathe at
one time, for others at another time, and the tastes and convenience of all
would be consulted by having the bath open all day.
When such
swimming baths are built, bathing except in these, should be altogether
forbidden in the Serpentine. Thus the non-bathing public would gain greatly by
being spared the indecent scenes that have hitherto rendered that part of Hyde Park impassable for women in the morning
and evening, and swimmers would have everything they could wish for. It might
be a question whether bathers might not be permitted to swim from the bath in
the Serpentine outside of it early in the morning. In the competition of
swimming clubs, greater space is often desirable
than could be obtained in any bath.
A similar
construction might be made on the eastern lake in Victoria park, which is in size, depth, and
form, quite adapted for it. If the Lilliputian yachters should think their
vested rights thereby interfered with, the other bathing lake might be
abandoned to them entirely.
Excellent
swimming baths might also be made on one of the arms at the east end of the
lake in St. James's Park, without interfering with any one's rights, or
comfort. The water is already of the required depth, and the part indicated is
but little frequented except by a few water-fowl.
The lake
in Regent's Park is also well adapted for a swimming bath. There is a portion
of the water, midway between the two suspended bridges, nearly hidden from
every habitation by an island covered with trees, where the bath might be built
so as to be in nobody's way. However, as it is quite easy to make the structure
pretty, I don't see why any person should object to a full view of it.
Battersea Park possesses a large expanse of water,
and a few hundred yards of it might be very well spared by the gardeners and
aquatic birds, to whom it is at present dedicated for the purpose of a large
swimming bath, which would complement the gymnasia, in which the park at
present abounds. The water, being only about 3 feet in depth, would not be suitable for
a swimming bath without further deepening, but that is an operation which I
presume would present no difficulty. It would be a great advantage to have a
continuous and steady influx and outflow of water in all these lakes; this
would insure constant freshness of the swimming baths. I am not conversant with
engineering matters, but I should think that this might easily be effected by
means of artesian wells in suitable situations, if the flow of water cannot be
obtained from the water companies.
I have
thus shown how the great want of London, in the matter of open-air swimming
baths, might be supplied by utilising a portion of the water in five of the
existing parks.*
[I have
purposely said nothing about the extra-urban parks of Greenwich, Wimbledon,
Richmond, and Wanstead, all of which offer great facilities for the
construction of swimming baths, all having fine sheets of water. I confine
myself to the more pressing wants of the teeming millions of London proper.']
As there
are other parks projected, or in course of formation in other parts of London, it would, of course, be easy to
apply the same principle to the lakes that might be formed in them.
These
baths would not interfere in any way with the existing swimming baths, for
there would still remain a sufficiency of bathers who prefer tepid to cold
water, and as a vastly greater number of persons would take to bathing than do
now, they would, undoubtedly, first resort to the covered baths, in order to
learn to swim, before frequenting the open-air baths. The covered swimming
baths would also still be resorted to by those who prefer to swim in the
evening an by those who like to continue their bathing during the winter
months.
And here
I should say a few words respecting the prejudice in favour of sea-bathing,
which is almost universal with us. It is believed that there is something in
the seawater that renders it far more salutary than fresh water. This is undoubtedly
true with respect to certain morbid state of the body - such as scrofula; but
it is far from being universally true. To many persons, the seaside and sea
water are little else than poisonous, and bathing in the sea, or mere residence
near the sea, produces very prejudicial effects. to most healthy persons, it is
not the contents of the water that do good, but the exercise and the reactions
caused by its temperature and the other elements I have indicated above. By
many swimming in the sea is preferred to swimming in fresh water for various
reasons independent of any medicinal action of its salts. They like the charm
of bathing in the boundless ocean with all its romantic accompaniments; they
swim with greater facility and confidence, as the greater specific gravity of
salt water floats them higher. It may be urged that medical men invariably send
people to the sea for bathing. That is nearly true; but then medical men are
not altogether free from sharing the national prejudice in favour of the
superior salubrity of sea water. Moreover, it is for patients their advice is
sought, not healthy persons, and the maladies these patients are suffering from
may seem to them to require the medicinal effect of sea water. But undoubtedly,
the chief reason for their recommendation is, that they know that there are
facilities for bathing in the sea, but they would be much at a loss to name any
place where their clients could obtain comfortable freshwater open-air bathing.
For my own part, though I love the sea in all its moods, and in part because it
has so many moods, I dislike the sticky hair and generally dirty feeling it
causes, and its nasty taste when one gets a mouthful; and I would much prefer
that its waters were as soft, sweet and cleansing as those of a Scotch or Swiss
lake. To my mind, the finest swimming bath in the world is the Lake of Geneva. There you have the changing moods
of ocean, while the water is fresh and sweet, and of such a lovely blue, that
your body when immersed in it seems as white as marble, and, like Narcissus,
you are ready to fall in love with your beautiful person. Give us freshwater
baths in the open air, and a removal to the seaside will not be desired or
needed by many who are now attracted thither.
When
speaking of the advantages of swimming in the open air, I have not meant that
these advantages were limited to the male sex. On the contrary, I am strongly
of opinion that swimming is an exercise equally, if not more, adapted to women
as to men. Men have their hundreds of games and occupations that keep their
muscles in constant and varied play. From these women are practically debarred,
and the exigencies of society limit their exercises to but few, and some of
these can only be enjoyed by the wealthier classes. The tyranny of fashion,
too, compels them to dress themselves in a manner specially unfavorable to
healthy exercise, and the consequence is that thousands fall into ill-health
which might be averted if their muscular system and circulation had only a fair
chance. Swimming, which must be performed without the restraints of fashionable
garments, is of all others the kind of exercise from which most advantage might
be reaped. To most women, also, swimming comes easier than to men. Their bodies
are generally of less specific gravity, and so float more easily in water,
whether fresh or salt. This being so they sooner acquire the confidence
necessary to make good swimmers. Then, as the water sustains the whole weight
of the body, and as they are no longer restrained by the bands, bones and laces
of their dress, they are free to bring into full play, without fatigue, all
those muscles which have hitherto been kept in thrall by the milliner's
devices.
As a
means of maintaining and even restoring health, then, swimming in the open air
is of still greater importance to women than to men. But I have shown that even
in the matter of tepid swimming baths, the wants of the other sex have been
almost totally ignored, for with the exception of the little bath in York
Terrace, and the Wednessay morning's use of the smallest of the Marylebone
baths, there is actually no provision in London for women's swimming. As far as
regards open-air swimming they have been left out of consideration altogether.
Now, if open-air swimming baths are to be established in London, the interests of the softer sex
should be considered as much as those of the rougher gender. With this view, I
would give up the Regent's Park lake to the ladies, for which is already
adapted by its inferior depth - 4 feet, I believe, For the same reason it
may perhaps be thought best to make the proposed bath in St. James's Park one
for ladies only, and if the bath in the Serpentine be only made large enough
there is ample space there for all the wants of the male sex at that end of the
town.*
[* If it
is considered desirable to limit the construction of swimming baths at first to
the Serpentine, a ladies' swimming bath might be made in the portion of it
contained in Kensington Gardens.]
The water
in Victoria Park in its present condition is, of course, better adapted for a
men's bath, but in the event of a women's bath being required there, which I
doubt not will be the case, one of the other lakes might be given up for the
purpose, or a new lake altogether constructed, for which there is room enough
in the park.
When
women take to swimming, as I have no doubt they will eagerly when opportunity
offers, they will, of course, have to abandon their useless and inconvenient
bathing gowns and adopt the dress universally worn by their sisters on the
continent, or something equally well adapted to allow free play to the limbs.
When
London sets the example, our provincial towns will soon follow its lead, and
when once open-air swimming baths become general throughout the land, we may
hope one day to cease to deserve the reproach - that though we live in a
sea-surrounded and lake and river-abounding country, a much smaller proportion
of its inhabitants can swim well than is to be found in many continental
countries which have none of our aquatic advantages.
Labels:
bathing,
swimming,
Victorian London
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