The need to be clean hasn't always been as pressing as it is today.
In fact, the United States is one of the few nations of the world
where a daily shower is a must for most citizens. Indeed, most
Americans shower rather than bath. A bath has become a way to relax
- not something you do before work in the morning.
The desire to speed up the cleaning process isn't new. Our ancestors
started the showering craze with a natural showers waterfalls.
This fast - falling water helped scour the bather clean. The next
variation was more conducive to land - lovers, but did little to
increase the user's comfort level. After soaping up, a bucket of
water, usually of the frigid variety, rinsed the residue away.
The process was effective, but totally utilitarian .
That isn't to say there weren't some mighty fancy showers right
from the start. One of the earliest and most elaborate is the English
Regency Shower. Developed around 1810, the 12-foot high tote shower
probably had its home in an English manor house. However, even
among the English gentry, this bathing apparatus was considered
most unusual and somewhat suspicious.
Made of metal painted to look like bamboo, the shower consisted
of a basin with a drain on the bottom and a hidden tank at the
top, joined by poles about 10 feet long. A pump arrangement on
the lower basin forced water up to the top basin through one hollow
pole and then down over the bather’s head. The only drawback
was that the same water was reused time and time again.
Small hinges around the top held a form of a shower curtain, and
the bather probably wore a tall conical hat made from an oiled
materials - a forerunner of the modern shower cap. The user of
this device was just as likely a man as a woman, for this was the
era of the dandy, when men were as fussy as ladies about their
toilettes. After showering, men would perfume themselves and choose
their clothes for the day - a complicated and time consuming process.
The plumbers of the new world got into the act in the early 1800s.
As plumbing moved indoors and became more prevalent, especially
among the privileged homeowners in U.S. cities, alternatives to
the bathtub emerged.
Left: One of the earliest models on this side
of the Atlantic was called the American Virginia Stool Shower.
Developed in the 1830s, the all - wood unit was made of walnut
and included a revolving seat, much like a piano stool. The machine
was placed in a tub, and a hand-operated lever pumped water up
to the batller's head and shoulders. A foot pedal controlled the
scrub brush that could be worked up and down the user's back. This
unit didn't only clean away the dirt and grime, it provided an
aerobic workout as well.
Craftmen’s Work: The plumbers true art
- lead working - is displayed in some of the units created in the
1850s. These free standing units were crafted entirely of lead
bent and wiped by hand. Hot water entered through one of the pipes
at the bottom and cold water through the other. Two upright pieces
of pipe with ornamental tops were blocked off where the pipe turns
inward. They had no use and were include simple for decoration.
Cold water flowed directly from the intake up to the shower head.
Hot water, however, was directed through a horizontal section of
pipe at the center by blocking off a short curved section of pipe
between one end of the horizontal pipe and the vertical pipe at
the top. By adjusting a valve on the horizontal section of pipe,
the amount of hot water that mixed with the cold was regulated.
A faucet on the vertical pipe was included to drain the unit.
The first real heyday for the showers was the late 1800s. In the
1880s and 1890s showers were much like they are today, multiple
heads, body sprays, waterfall spouts, etc.
In 1889, the J. L Mott Irons Works, manufacturers and importers
of "the latest and most approved plumbing appliances for all classes
of buildings," included in its catalog its patent combination
unit with "needle, shower, descending douche, liver spray and bidet
bath." The bather was showered with warm water from every angle.
He or she also was surrounded by pipes that moved the water to
various outlets. None of the piping was concealed behind walls
or in the floor. It was all exposed and formed a sort of cocoon
or privacy shield around the user.
According to the catalog copy, the shower, offered in a tub or
stall model, was perfect for Turkish and Russian bathing establishments,
though private residences were a specialty of the firm.
The Russian and Turkish bath houses were likely the first place
most early Americans saw a shower. The baths were a set - up that
copied the lavish public baths of the Roman Empire. There were
communal hot tubs, steam rooms and cold baths. The showers were
used before and after a bather enjoyed all the other pleasures
of the facility.
The grandness of these showers didn't last. The norm for showers
became the single head. Often, the set-up was crude and, once again,
strictly utilitarian. At least this time the water was warm.
The possibilities for showers wasn't tapped again until the 1980s,
then it was deja vu all over again. The "vertical whirlpools" as
they're now called offer all the same creature comforts and amenities
as the Mott models did more than a century before. History does
indeed repeat itself.
from : Plumbing and Mechanical, July 1994
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