The History of Plumbing - Roman and English Legacy
Testaments to the ancient plumber echo in the ruins of rudimentary
drains, grandiose palaces and bath houses, and in vast aqueducts
and lesser water systems of empires long buried. Close to 4,000
years ago, about 1700 B.C., the Minoan Palace of Knossos on the
isle of Crete featured four separate drainage systems that emptied
into the great sewers constructed of stone.
Terra cotta pipe was laid beneath the palace floor, hidden from
view. Each section was about 2 1/2' long, slightly tapered at one
end, and nearly 1" in diameter. It provided water for fountains
and faucets of marble, gold and silver that jetted hot and cold
running water.
Harbored in the palace latrine was the world's first flushing "water
closet" or toilet, with a wooden seat and a small reservoir of
water. The device, however, was lost for thousands of years amid
the rubble of flood and decay. Not until the 16th Century would Sir
John Harington invent a "washout" closet anew, similar
in principle. And it would take still another 200 years before
another Englishman, Alexander Cumming, would patent
the forerunner of the toilet used today. The luminous names of Doulton,
Wedgwood, Shanks, and Twyford would follow.
But it's to the plumbing engineers of the Old Roman Empire that
the Western world owes its allegiance. The glory of the Roman legions
lay not only in the roads they built and the system of law and
order they provided. It was their engineering genius and the skill
of their craftsmen that enabled them to erect great baths and recreation
centers, the water supplied by aqueducts from sources miles away.
The Roman
answer to the hot tub about 50 A.D. Bath, England
Plumbing Defined: While early pipe and conduit
was made from wood or earthenware, later refinement to lead made
skilled workers in lead indispensable. The Latin term "plumbus" means "lead," as
was also the weight at the end of a line for perpendicular alignment.
The plumber was a worker in lead who, in today's connotation, repairs
or fits the apparatus of water distribution in and to a building.
The Roman artisan plumbed pipe, soldered, installed and repaired;
he worked on roofs and gutters, down to sewers and drains; in essence,
everything involving supply and waste. In fact, this general job
description of plumbers' work lasted into the 20th century.
Hot and cold water systems were already developed by the Greeks,
but to the stalwart, individualistic Spartan, it was unmanly to
use hot water. His idea of the bath tub was a polished marble bowl
about 30" in height. He would stand in the tub, and have a slave
douse him with water over his head and his body. The sole purpose
was a quick, functional, cold rinse-the colder, the quicker! Thus
Grecian bath houses never developed hot water systems as extensively
as the Romans.
Roman society, on the other hand, fostered a communal spirit,
and barracks camaraderie for its troops. The public baths were
the city centers of group enjoyment, places of gossip and contacts.
To prolong their pleasure and relaxation, they developed hot water
and steam systems that evolved to service colossal structures.
Some would say that the Roman bath houses by early A.D. would pale
only next to those of King Minos.
The baths of the Emperor Caracalla, for example, covered nearly
a 28 acre site. It contained more than 1,600 marble seats, and
still fell short of the baths of Diocletian, which seated over
3,000. "Stupendous aqueducts," reported Gibbons in the Decline
and Fall of the Roman Empire, "replenished the Thermae, or
baths, constructed with Imperial magnificence...walls covered with
mosaics; perpetual streams of hot water poured into capacious basins
through so many wide mouths of bright and massy silver."
Miles from the source of supply, water flowed through a series
of aqueducts, streaming by gravity along the contours of land.
The longest overhead section was about 14 miles long, but by 52
A.D., channeling covered a total of 220 miles all but 30 miles
underground. At its peak development, aqueducts carried about 300
gallons of water for every citizen.
At first, the Roman baths opened only during the daylight hours,
which allowed for the emptying and refilling of the water at least
once a day. This helped matters somewhat, in that hundreds would
use the same pools of stagnant, germ-ridden, unfiltered, fetid
water. The dawn of scientific discovery would not be for hundreds
more years. Even the best and brightest of the ancient Romans knew
nothing about bacteria and the true causes of disease.
The bath complex housed a succession of baths, with many entrances
for easy access. Surrounding the complex on at least three sides
were houses and shops.
Warm air for the Thermae bath was supplied by furnaces heating
hollow bricks located under the entire floor. As the name suggests,
the Frigidarium was the cold water bath; it fed the hot water tanks
and other baths. The Tepidarium contained baths of moderate heat,
and the Caldarium the hottest.
There was also a separate steam bath, and a small circular chamber
covered by a high dome. An opening in the center of the dome provided
light; it also vented the chamber. As a rudimentary way of regulating
the heat, the vent could be raised or lowered.
One could take a hot bath in a tub or a plunge into cold water,
but the tub was soon supplanted by a larger unit.
The bath measured 10-12 ft. in diameter, and was about 3 ft. deep.
One stepped down into it on two marble steps. A circular seat about
10" from the bottom allowed the bathers to sit and wash themselves.
It was customary to bathe after exercise, and before a meal to
promote digestion. As just one example of his fabled excesses,
it was Nero's pleasure to bathe, gorge himself with food and fancy,
bathe, etc., in his great catered affairs.
In the cold water bath of Pompeii, water was supplied through
a bronze spout, and wound its way through a conduit on the opposite
side. It was also equipped with a waste pipe which prevented the
water from running over.
A marble platform surrounded the bath, with pedestals for statues.
The ceiling was vaulted and lighted by a window in the center.
By the 4th century A.D., Rome would have 11 public baths, 1,352
public fountains and cisterns, and 856 private baths. In Pompeii,
some homes had 30 taps.
As mentioned, the water supply was provided by aqueducts, the
first one built in 312 B.C. Named in honor of its originator, Appius
Claudius, it spanned a total of 11 miles. However, it marked a
milestone as the previous water supply was only from the immediacy
of wells, cisterns, springs, or the Tiber River itself. As the
city became more populous, and the Roman emperors more decadent
and demanding, the engineering feats in water systems became increasingly
monumental.
An artificial lake created for Augustus measured 1,800' long x
1,200' wide. One of his favorite spectator sports was watching
actual battles between opposing fleets of ships, manned by criminals
and slaves of the emperors. By Nero's time of 37-68 A.D., a "sea" fight
for his amusement would utilize 19,000 men on 100 ships. They fought
in gladiator fashion, i.e., until one was killed in combat, or
spared by the emperor.
The English Connection: At the height of its
power the Roman Empire had conquered most of Europe, including
about 1,600 so. mi. of Britain, its farthest outpost. And in the
ruins of Aquae Sulis, the famed spas of Bath, lay the vestige of
the rise and fall, and redevelopment of plumbing technique.
By the time the Romans reached Britain in 43 A.D., the curative
powers of the hot baths were already part of English legend. Back
in 863 B.C., the waters had supposedly healed the leprosy of its
Celtic discoverer, Prince Bladud (the father of King Lear, who
was to be immortalized by Shakespeare). Bladud founded the city
of Bath, and dedicated the springs to the goddess Minerva. The
Roman name of Aquae Sulis means "Waters of Minerva."
Aquae Sulis was at a strategic crossroads for the Roman troops,
and the natural hot springs made it a logical setting for the baths
of the Emperor Claudius. In addition, the springs produced a constant
supply of soothing mineral waters, heated by Nature to a temperature
of 46.5 C. Important too was that available sources of building
stone and lead were close by.
Following Roman custom, Claudius developed Aquae Sulis in the
image of the great baths back home, but scaled in size to its smaller
location. At that, the complex must have comprised approximately
23 acres.
One monumental hall led into another as the floor plan radiated
to various heated rooms, steam rooms, baths and swimming pools,
plus a gymnasium and social rooms for eating and drinking. A play
field was attached to the complex as well.
The small, circular pool was probably built for women and children,
who at first used the pool only at stated hours and separate from
the men. But eventually regulations broke down and both sexes intermingled
throughout the pleasure complex.
The Romans controlled the site for about 500 years, but their
influence floundered, waned and just about expired in phase with
the decline of the Empire, whose ruination became complete by the
sixth century A.D. By then Roman garrisons in Britain had been
invaded by hordes of Picts, Saxons, Scots and Irish, and could
count on no help from Rome, which was in trouble itself. When the
last Roman garrisons fled the isle of Britain, the secrets of sanitary
design went with them.
Replacing them were the Barbarians, leveling cities and decimating
populations as they hacked their way across the continent. Civilization
reeled and regressed. Sanitation technology reverted to its basest
forms.
The early Christians rejected most anything Roman, including the
value of cleanliness. They considered it unsanitary to be clean,
sinful to display material wealth. "All is vanity," stated an early
Christian writer. St. Benedict pronounced that "to those that are
well, and especially for the young, bathing shall seldom be permitted." A
4th century pilgrim to Jerusalem would brag that she had not washed
her face for 18 years so as "not to disturb the holy water" used
at her baptism.
By the Middle Ages, the "hot houses" or "stews" of the Roman baths
carried the stigma of debauchery and wild parties. During the reign
of Richard the Lionhearted, the little rooms or "bordellos" of
the baths became synonymous with brothels.
In 1348 the first wave of Black Plague entered England through
the town of Melcombe in Dorset County. One third of the population
would be wiped out, as rats and fleas thrived in the filth and
garbage steeped in and about and all around.
The Dark Ages had begun.
The Recovery: The spas of Aquae Sulis lay dormant,
buried under rubble and dirt, and unappreciated for centuries before
being restored to use. In the 16th century, the Cross Bath was "worthilie
called the hot bath, for at the first coming, men thinke that it
would scale their flesh, and lose it from it the bone, but after
a season. . . more tolerable and easier to be borne."
Cartloads of wood or coal provided the fuel for the warm-air furnaces,
especially for the hottest room with its sub-floor heating. The
Great Bath, which measured 80' long x 40' wide and 6' deep, was
still supplied water from the original conduit installed by the
first Roman plumber in town. In the last century it was the rage
to drink copious glasses of water from Bath s pump room, located
next door to the bathing room. According to one account, ladies
of the Blunderhead family allowed their servant girl, Tabitha Runt,
to bathe in the waters next door while they drank their water at
the pump. In those days servants bathed even less than their masters,
who bathed hardly at all. Those were the days of perfume, powders
and oil, not of soap and clean water. The following doggerel catches
the tone of the age:
You cannot conceive that
a number of ladies
Were washed in the water
the same as our maid.
So while little Tabby
was washing her rump,
The ladies kept drinking it
out of the pump.
It was not until the activities, and public relations, of the
dandy Richard "Beau" Nash in the last century that Bath reclaimed
its luster.
Nash was a celebrity of his day, a nobleman gambler who set the
rules of behavior that proved fashionable for the era. The social
whirl was comparable perhaps to the "jet setters" of our current
age who seem to do nothing but get their pictures in magazines,
and help sell supermarket tabloids. The little town that had sprung
up around the baths became the "in" place of royalty and the upper
class, sort of a trendy "hangout" for Nash and his crowd. The Bath
Address Book listed such dignitaries as Queen Anne and Thomas Gainesborough,
and the showrooms of the great potter, Josiah Wedgwood.
In 1780-81, the future Admiral Lord Nelson spent some of his youth
in Bath, and later paid occasional visits. After one visit to recuperate
from battle wounds, he wrote: "My health, thank God, is very near
perfectly restored, and I have very near the perfect use of my
limbs, except my left arm."
The baths were back in business. When it happened, their reputation
for healing had been embellished beyond even Roman legend. The
waters would be touted as "good for obstructions, still more: ague,
dropsy, black and yellow jaundice, schirrus hints or hard swelling
of the spleen, scurvy, green sickness, whites in women, and defect
and excess of their course."
Waste And Sewers: Where and how to dispose of
waste and sewage have been the bane of Man since the beginnings
of time.
While early on he recognized the value of camping downstream to
let "running water take its course," the problem of disposal became
acute as populations proliferated and banded together.
Aristotle instructed his prize pupil, Alexander the Great, to
make sure that dung from animals, human waste, etc., was disposed
of far from camp. Predating his words by about 3,000 years is the
Old Testament injunction that stated: Thou shalt have a place
also without the camp, whither thou shalt go forth abroad. And
thou shalt have a paddle upon thy weapon; and it shall be when
though silt ease thyself abroad, thou shalt dig wherewith, and
shall turn back and cover that which comets from thee. (Deuteronomy
23)
But for a workable, though odoriferous, plan on a grand scale,
the Western world will have to again look to the ancient Romans.
The first sewers of Rome were built between 800 B.C. and 735 B.C.,
preceding the first aqueduct by about 500 years. Called the Cloaca
Maxima, this sewer is one of the largest of the ancient sewers
still in use. It was designed to carry off the surface water, and
otherwise provide drainage for the entire city.
It was said that every street emptied into a channel of the sewer.
However, only a few privileged patricians or noblemen had outlets
to their houses. These were but extensions to their latrines located
adjacent to their kitchens. As the untrapped ends of the sewer
were the only sources of ventilation that the sewers had, noxious
fumes expelled into the immediate area and wafted about. One wonders
what the "smell" of "good cooking" really meant in those days.
By 14th century England, the problem was still unsolved. Culled
from an old record, one reads that "the refuse from the king's
kitchen had long run through the Great Hall in an open channel,
to the serious injury to health and danger to life of those congregated
at court."
Further complications resulted from medieval privies or the euphemistic "garde
robes" (wardrobes for undressing) located in the "Great House" or
castle. The chamber would be in a small vaulted room about 3' wide
with a narrow window. The privy was built within the wall, with
a vertical shaft below a stone for a wooden seat. The waste would
discharge into the moat below. If there were no water, the receptacle
might be a barrel or a pit. In either case, it was a deadly chore
to rake the offal. The job paid top wages for brave but desperate
men needing to work. A crew of 13 men were paid three times the
normal rate to clean the pit at Newgate Jail in 1281. It took them
five nights.
But pity the plight of one Richard the Raker. He fell through
the planks of a public latrine and drowned in the deep pit of excrement
below.
Underground channeling was a haphazard arrangement as well. Drain
tiles, constructed from the "roughest brickwork" or masonry, were
12' in cross section, made by laying flat stones to form the bottom
of the din. Then brick walls built up, and topped with flat stones.
The drains were built helter-skelter with no understanding of
purpose. Some would be too big or too small, or running uphill
or at right angles, etc.
The possibility of disease being transmitted through water and
waste began to chip through centuries of ignorance. Scientific
discoveries began to unfold. Some would even believe that an open
cesspool was "the probable cause of headache, sore throat and depressed
health to many a cook, kitchen maid and butler, and perhaps indirectly
leads, in not a few instances, to the use of those treacherous
self-prescribed medicines-spirits and beer."
Stinks, Pots & Loos: The rivers of the Thames,
Fleet and Walbrook were open sewers, the Thames the most foul of
all. The abominable odors of the Fleet, complained the monks of
the White Friars, "have overcome the frankincense burnt at the
altar" they claimed the fumes caused the deaths of several brethren.
Sherborne Lane, once a lovely stream back in 1300, was to be more
popularly known as Shiteburn Lane. However, these were minor when
compared to the state of the Thames.
No longer could a king's polar bear catch salmon in the Thomas
River, as did the pet of King Henry VIII. By the mid-1800s the
by-products of the Industrial Revolution were flowering, mixing,
and foaming with the waste and stench of nearly 3 million people
in London. All sewers led to the Thames, pouring through bulkheads
along the shores.
For several sultry days in 1859, the Thames seethed, seeped, and
nearly boiled under the burning sun of an unusually hot season.
Parliament was suspended as window blinds saturated with lime chloride
and other disinfectants failed to subdue the odor and revulsion.
It was so revolting that one foreign newspaper bannered twin headlines
to catch the calamities of the day: "India Is In Revolt, and The
Thames Stinks."
Personal hygiene fared no better under such a dead-end sanitary
system. Tenements swarmed with people, but there were no indoor "necessaries" for
them, not even running water.
Water was drawn from pumps stationed in streets throughout the
city, the water rationed and serving hundreds of people. The pumps
were open only during certain hours of certain days, the water
to be carried home in pots or jugs, or just tasted in a pittance
of a sip.
The finer homes may have had a tin or copper bath tub. But in
the early 1800s piping was still confined to the first floor, the
water heated by kettles over an open fire.
Tenements loomed several stories high as space was at a premium.
The buildings were erected in long rows, back to back, containing
tiny-room apartments with little or no ventilation (landlords were
taxed for windows). Dank and putrid latrines, if any, were on the
ground floor.
Inside the house or apartment, waste was stored in a glass urinal
or metal chamber until filled. Tenants usually disposed of the
contents by tossing them out the doors or windows.
Injuries caused by the far-flung contents of the chamber pots,
or "missiles of mirth" as the ancient Greek dramatist, Aeschylus,
would call them, persisted through the ages. Early Roman law included
the Dejecti Effusive Act, which fined a person who threw or poured
anything out of an open window and hit someone. The law awarded
damages to the injured party. Strangely, the statute applied only
during daytime hours.
The habits of people remained basically the same, and the problem
continued well after the Romans left England. King Richard II followed
suit with his writ of Statuto quo nut ject dung "A writ
that no one is to dump dung." This earliest of health laws was
finally repealed in 1856.
Proper manners would prescribe warning unwary pedestrians that
a shower was on its way. Thus the cry of "Garden l'eau" (pronounced Gardy-loo,
and meaning "Watch out for the water!") would echo up and down
the streets. Over time it evolved into English slang for the toilet,
or loo.
The chamber pots of the working class were usually made of copper,
although later ones might be of crockery. The chamber pots for
the rich and royalty were solid silver, the kings' ornate and pretentious.
James I had a portable "potty," which he used for traveling.
All the chamber pots, of course, were carried and emptied by servants.
Paranoid about being poisoned, James I had one encased in a leather
box and locked shut with a key. Edward Vl had a padded chamber
pot, and the "close stool" of Henry VIII was padded in black velvet,
trimmed with ribbons, fringes, and quilting, all tacked on with
2,000 gilt nails. The Victorians of the last century, the "wizards
of gadgetry" invented a musical chamber pot that played when the
hidden drawer in the table or commode was opened.
The Necessaries: But for sheer invention, there
is the relic of Sir John Harington's "Ajax" water
closet, the first "necessary" ever built in English history. He
built the toilet in 1596 for his godmother, Queen Elizabeth I (immortalized
as the queen who took a bath once a month "whether she need it
or no"), and installed it for her use in Richmond Palace. Although
the Queen did use it, the toilet and Harington were subject to
ridicule and derision. Harington never made another. It would be
another 200 years before the idea took hold again.
Examples of ornate Victorian closets at the Gladstone
museum.
The first patent for a "modern" toilet belongs to Alexander Cumming,
who invented the "S" trap in 1775. It had a sliding valve underneath
to hold the water. Three years later, Joseph Bramah,
a locksmith and engineer, patented an improved version with two
hinged valves. An original is still used in the House of Lords.
The "Bramah" also became a prototype for closets on boats and ships.
The Good Life: In 1848, England passed the national
Public Health Act, which would become a model plumbing code for
the world to follow. It mandated some kind of sanitary arrangement
in every house, whether a flushing toilet, or a privy, or an ash
pit. The government also released 5 million British pounds for
sanitary research and engineering, and began to build a sound sewer
system. Now that there would be outlets for toilet systems, their
manufacture made sense.
With this new incentive for invention, pottery makers including
Josiah Wedgwood, Thomas Twyford, and John Shanks began to team
with the inventors as they replaced brass and metal workings of
Bramah's invention with all ceramic parts.
By 1858, George Jennings had popularized public
lavatories. He had introduced the novelties by installing them
in the Crystal Palace for the Great Exhibition of 1851; over 827,000
people paid to use the "necessary convenience."
By 1870, Thomas Twyford's improved version of the Bramah contained
no metal parts, and Bramah fell out of production. And, although
Jennings' pedestal vase toilet of 1884 won the Gold Medal at the
Health Exhibition, it was Twyford who is credited with the revolutionary
design of a one-piece toilet.
Before, a toilet was built in two parts: the top part a bowl,
and the bottom half holding a separate pan. To keep the two together,
the entire unit had to be contained within a wood box. The box
would leak at the joints, and the smell would be terrible.
In 1885, Twyford pioneered the first trapless toilet and built
the "Unites" as a one-piece, free-standing unit on a pedestal
base. This eliminated the problem of leaky joints and foul odor.
Tests for quality control were very basic: Jennings, whose toilet
was judged "as perfect a sanitary closet as can be made," tested
his unit by throwing in 10 apples 1-1/4" in size, one flat sponge
and four pieces of paper. If the items cleared, the unit was pronounced
fit.
John Shanks devised a different test for his
units. He would throw a cap into the bowl and pull the chain. When
the cap disappeared, he would cry out, "It works!"
Acceptance of water closets came slowly at first. But as closets
became better made, and as proper connection eliminated disease,
production grew. But there were still sporadic cases of typhoid
in the second half of the 19th century. One of the most notable
cases affected the royal family. Queen Victoria's husband, the
popular Prince Albert, had died of typhoid in 1861, as almost did
her son, the future Edward VII, ten years later.
In 1871, the Prince of Wales lost his groom, a friend, and almost
his life to an outbreak of typhoid in Londesborough Lodge where
he and his friends were staying. His groom died as well as his
friend, the Earl of Chesterfield. Investigation proved contamination
in the plumbing lines, and the problem was corrected and eliminated.
The craftsmanship of the 19th-century sanitary engineer had come
almost full cycle from the days of King Minos. In tribute, the
Prince would be quoted as saying, "If I could not be a prince,
I would rather be a plumber."