Baseball fans take note.
Arizona's Hohokam Park in Mesa, Ariz., may ring a bell as the spring
training grounds of the Chicago Cubs baseball team. It is named
for the far-flung, extinct Hohokam Indians who played their own
brand of ball and worked those same fields centuries before.
They were the master farmers of America's Southwest, and engineers
of great networks of irrigation canals in the Salt River Valley.
They first appeared about 350 B.C., building canals of open ditches,
gouged out with stone tools and wooden hoes. The canals spanned
almost 250 miles, stimulating trade and commerce between communities
of hundreds and thousands of people. No one knows why, whether
by climatic upheaval, drought or floods, the Hohokams suddenly
vanished in 1450 A.D., well before Columbus discovered America
or the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock.
Left: American water pipes originally
were made from bored-out logs like this artifact.
The Pueblo Grande ruins of this lost culture sit in ironic view
of the jet planes taking off at the Phoenix airport. Located on
East Washington Street, they provide a specter of dry bank canals
80 feet wide and 20 feet deep. Strange trash mounds offer clues
of organic wastes, vegetation and shells. And multi-storied "apartment" buildings
attest to a condo style of life. But there is no evidence of any
piping, latrines or privies. Native Americans, it is explained,
have always shunned communal spots for defecation.
New World settlers would copy the Indians casual discharge of
waste and refuse in running water, open fields, shrubs or forests.
Like their folks back home in Europe, the colonials would also
toss garbage and excrement out the front door and windows onto
the streets below. The country's first garbage disposers would
be hogs and scavengers.
It would be more than midway through the 19th century before young
America would develop reasonably efficient water and sewage systems,
and for the great invention of the water closet to make an appearance.
But our forefathers made up nicely for lost time.
Thanks to the plumbing industry, the United States would set standards
in health and safety unsurpassed m the world today. At the forefront
was the unsung plumber, the skilled craftsman of lead, expert bell
hanger, blacksmith, tool maker, tin and sheet-iron worker.
Closet Lore: Over 2,800 years ago, the fabled King
Minos of Crete owned the world's first flushing water
closet, complete with a wooden seat. Lost for centuries in the
rubble of the palace ruins, the invention did not materialize
again until 1594. Then, Sir John Harington built
a "prive in perfection" for his godmother, Queen Elizabeth, to
use in Richmond Palace, and one for himself at his humbler estate.
Once he published his pompous book of terrible puns and off color
jokes about the new device in 1596, A New Discourse of a
State Subject, Called the Metamorphosis of Ajax, the ridicule
and scorn would hound him for the rest of his days, and he never
built another one. ("Ajax" was the slang in those days for a
privy or "a jakes.") To the world's misfortune, another 200 years
would pass before the idea took hold again.
Thus, when the colonists packed for the New World, they probably
tucked a chamber pot in among other crockery items and tinware.
But to a backwoodsman or a bride of 14, the term "chaise percee" or "commode" often
disguised its use. In the early 1800s, a settler's wife reportedly
bought several from the new stock at the local store for kitchen
and table use.
The privy or outhouse slowly became accepted, albeit a peril for
those walking by. One diarist disgustedly wrote: 'Privy houses
set against ye Strete which spoiling people's apparill should they
happen to be nare when ye filth comes out ... Especially in ye
Night when people cannot see to shun them."
From the more humble and ramshackle outhouses of wood emanated
more glorious structures. Human nature as it is, some became symbols
of distinction as would current bathrooms of the well-to-do. William
Byrd’s 1730 outhouse was made of brick and had five
holes. Byrd was chef magistrate of the colonial court and thus
sat on the largest seat at the center of a raised, semicircular
bench. So did Mr. Byrd preside in the family privy.
Dozens of years later a two-story model was built and still stands
in Crested Butte, Colo. The upper level was used when heavy snow
blocked the first floor. A more typical, single-hole outhouse is
found in a replica located in Old Sturbridge, Mass.
How to bring a workable water closet into the house without mess
or odor was an invention waiting to be born, however. Some of the
country's leading citizens would try to improvise on the basic
knowledge of the times.
Thomas Jefferson, for example, devised an indoor
privy at his Monticello home by rigging up a system of pulleys.
Servants used the device to haul away chamber pots in his earth
closet (a wooden box enclosing a pan of wood ashes below, and a
seat with a hole cut out at the top). An architect and inventor
as well as statesman, Jefferson also built two octagonal outhouses
at his retreat at Poplar Forest in Virginia.
In the early 1840s, the architect and designers of New York City's
Central Park denounced the outhouse as 'troublesome, unhealthy,
indelicate, and ugly." It was all true. They tried to correct
this by designing little Gothic structures combining a summer-house
with a view of the garden on one side, and a two-holer on the other.
Outside of a few private homes, hotels were the bastions of luxury
and comfort - and indoor plumbing. In 1829, the brilliant young
architect, 26-year-old Isaiah Rogers, sent ripples
of awe throughout the country with his innovative Tremont Hotel
in Boston. It was the first hotel to have indoor plumbing and became
the prototype of a modern, first - class American hotel.
The four-story structure boasted eight water closets on the ground
floor, located at the rear of the central court. The court was
connected by glazed corridors to the bedroom wings, dining room
and rotunda.
The bathrooms in the basement were fitted with cold running water
which also went to the kitchen and laundry. The bathtubs were copper
or tin and probably had a little side-arm gas furnace attached
at one end. Perhaps shaped like a shoe as the French and English
models, the water in the tub would flow and circulate backwards
until the entire bath was heated to satisfaction.
Since the 1790s, the Northeast had bath houses, but not until
this period several decades later would city hotels or new dwellings
have baths as well. This simply was not feasible without a suitable
water and waste supply system.
In the Tremont, water was drawn from a metal storage tank set
on top of the roof, the recently-invented steam pump raising the
water on high. A simple water carriage system removed the excretal
water to the sewerage system. As with other individual buildings
of the time, each had its own source of water and removal.
Five years later in New York City, Rogers surpassed his achievements
of the Tremont Hotel.
He built the Astor House with six stories, featuring 17 rooms
on the upper floors with water closets and bathrooms to serve 300
guest rooms. The Astor and the Tremont were the first modem buildings
built with extensive plumbing. (In contrast, the Statler Hotel
in Buffalo caused a sensation in 1908 by offering 'A room with
a bath for a dollar and a half.')
Rogers the architect was in very good company. His former employer
was Solomon Willard, who had developed the first
widely-used American system of central heating.
In the 1830s, at least one private house, a James River mansion,
had a wood-fired hot air heating system. Heat wafted up to the
first floor via handsome brass registers. Ladies of New York City's
High Society wasted no time in flocking to the parlor after dinner
to stand over its registers for warmth.
Central heating, however, was generally confined to the public
rooms and hallways. Guest rooms were still heated during this period
by parlor stoves and fireplaces. This lack of heat throughout the
home retarded the development of bathrooms.
Our Dirty Forerunners: It was said that no house
in Quincy, Mass., had a bathroom before 1820. When the temperature
of a bedroom dips below the freezing point, there is no satisfaction
in bathing.
Most Colonial bathing consisted of occasional dips in ponds or
streams. Typical was a quote from Elizabeth Drinker, the wife of
a highly-placed Philadelphia Quaker. She had a shower (probably
a bucket arrangement) put up m her backyard for therapeutic use
in 1799. She said, 'I bore it better than I expected, not having
been wett all over at once, for 28 years past."
Left: A Copper lined closet, with oak high tank and seat.
When bathing did become the rage, it evolved over quack hygiene
rather than cleanliness. Then there emerged a blend of latrine
and spa just like in Merrie Old England.
In aping the customs of fashionable Britain, one historian commented
that dueling probably killed fewer people than the spas springing
up in various parts of the country. If the mineral waters tasted
or smelled foul enough, people believed they could cure anything
that ailed them. In the latter 1770s, Colonials would soak and
sip in fashion as their counterparts at Bath or Spa, England, imitating
the good society of the Old Country.
Warm Springs, Pa., in 1775 drew people from all over, taking in
the waters. Some lived in cabins, all cooking at a common fire.
Gentile boarding houses and pumps were built, and dancing rooms
added to the pleasantries. The adjacent mosquito-rich swamps were
drained, and the church was enlarged to keep pious visitors happy.
A Dr. Benjamin Rush had the bad luck to have a well with horrible-tasting
water in his back yard. The whole town flocked to it to cure all
kinds of ailments. When the overpumped well went dry, the people
learned too late that the well connected to the doctor's privy.
Many thought bathing was a health hazard. In 1835, the Common
Council of Philadelphia almost banned wintertime bathing (the ordinance
failed by two votes). Ten years later, Boston forbade bathing except
on specific medical advice.
Poor water supply contributed to this attitude. The bathtub had
to be filled and emptied with a hand pump and pail. It was too
onerous a chore.
But by 1845, the installation of sanitary sewers began to pay
off with an outlet for waste water, indoor plumbing and working
water closets were getting closer to fruition. Unfortunately, bad
plumbing and the stench from open sewer connections made some new
homes uninhabitable.
Early in the 19th centery, the stack was vented through the roof,
but no one knew how to property size the pipe. Usually the size
was understated. Many vent pipes were so small they would clog
up with frost during the winter. Not long after, a crown vent was
added, i.e., the connection was made at the top of the vent.
In 1874, there was a tremendous breakthrough when an unknown plumber
solved the problem of venting. He suggested balancing the air pressure
in the system with the outside atmospheric pressure to prevent
the siphonage or blowout of a water seal in the traps. He installed
1/2" pipe at the traps and extended the pipe outside. It worked
for a little while, but then the vent clogged and the stench returned.
Through trail and error, the plumbers learned to increase the size
of the pipe.
Boring Business: Early settlers knew nothing
of lead or iron pipe - they knew only to build with wood, the country's
bounty.
Water pipes were made of bored-out logs, preferably felled from
hemlock or elm trees. The trees would be cut into seven-to-nine-foot
lengths, their trunks around 9-10" thick.
Wooden pipe laid below ground created several problems, however,
especially in larger settlements or towns. Uneven ground below
the joists would cause sags in the log where water would stagnate,
infest with insects, and generally leave a woody taste.
The borers themselves were colorful characters who usually traveled
in pairs from town to town bringing news and gossip of the area
as they went about their job. With a five-foot steel auger between
them, a handle at one end, they would fix the log by eye, size
it up with a point of the ax, and drill or bore out the center.
Ramming one end to make a conical shape, they would jam the logs
together in a series, using a bituminous-like pitch or tar to caulk
the joists. Sometimes they would split the log and hollow it out,
put it together, connect the logs with iron hoops, or get the blacksmith
to caulk the logs with lead.
They would set up a gravity water system, starting from a spring
or stream on high ground, allowing water to flow downhill to the
house or farm. It would cut a path back of the house, through the
barn, and flow into a catch basin.
In 1652, Boston incorporated the country's first waterworks, formed
to provide water for firefighting and domestic use. As fire was
a common hazard in those days of wood-framed houses and stores,
and chimney fires always a risk, it was imperative that a ready
supply be on hand.
The line supplying water to Boston's wharves and other buildings
ran from Jamaica Pond to the Faneuil Hall area, the meeting place
for the Massachusetts rebels who held their Boston Tea Party in
the nearby harbor on Dec.16, 1773. Just recently a section of a
wooden water main was removed from that same vicinity. The log
measured 22 feet long, the bore a 4" I.D. for the lower half of
the tree, and 2-1/2" in the upper. Common with early wood pipe,
the tree's natural forks branched out in wyes and tees.
In 1795, the Jamaica Pond Aqueduct Corp. followed through with
15 miles more of 3" and 5" wooden water pipe of bored logs, again
using hemlock trees for construction. Since open wells provided
easy access to contamination from nearby privies, the new supply
of fresh water contributed to a lower death rate.
Crude by almost anyone's standards, these new pipelines were nonetheless
invaluable to firefighters. They would punch a hole into the wooden
pipe along the edge of the street, insert a smaller pipe., presized
to fit the newly borred hole and harness the hose of their fire
wagon, a two man pumper. The fire out, they would plug up the hole
again with a pre-cut conical stopper on the end of a long pole,
insert it into the hole, and bang it shut. This was the " fireplug, " the
wooden pole left sticking out of the ground marking the plug, ready
to be pulled out for the next chimney fire.
Wooden pipes were common until the early 1800s when the increased
pressure required to pump water into rapidly expanding streets
began to split the pipes A change was made to iron.
Waterworks Come Of Age: In 81804, Philadelphia
earned the distinction as the first city in the world to adopt
cast iron pipe for its water mains. It was also the first city
in America to build large scale waterworks as it drew upon the
ample supply of the Schuykill River. A friendly neighbor, Philadelphia
sold its cast- off wooden pipe to Burlington, N.J., where it remained
in use until 1887, when larger mains were required.
Those were the days when the science of medicine in its infancy,
and misguided notions of causes of disease ruled the day. Philadelphia
was motivated to clean up its city and draw upon a new supply of
water in the mistaken belief that yellow fever was caused by the
city’s polluted wells rather than the bite of the mosquito.
Yellow fever hit Philadelphia in 1793 with an impact like the Great
Plagues of London.
Efficient waterworks depends on pumps. Prior to steam power in
the 1800s, water wheels harnessed river flow to raise the water.
On the frontier and on farms, windmills and simple hydraulic pumps
provided the most efficient means of pumping water for the entire
farmyard. A storage tank large enough to hold two or three days'
supply of water would be mounted on the upper floor of the barn,
water then piped to individual locations
By the latter 1800s, windmills would still be, in full force,
their new and better workings keeping the farmers son from the
lure of the big city. Who could resist this 1893 sale pitch from
Aermotor Company
"Many a farmer’s boy has been content to remain home through
the great assistance rendered him by the Geared Aermotor. This
tireless worker not only pumps water, but turns the grindstone,
saws the wood, shells corn, chums, and a dozen other things that
are most disagreeable to the boy, and that would tend to discourage
him and make him discontented."
But metropolitan cities require more than windmills or simple
hydraulic pumps to generate a water supply for an entire population,
especially for those in the throes of the Industrial Revolution.
The population of Chicago, for example, soared from 350 people
in 1835 to over 60,000by mid-century. In 1869, the city unveiled
a new engineering feat that made newspaper headlines around the
world. Left: An early
20th century outhouse with a fanciful design.
The Chicago Waterpower supplied the city with water via a twin-tunnel
system which extended two miles out into Lake Michigan. Offshore,
the clear take water entered an underwater shaft leading to the
tunnel below the lake bed, the intake shaft protected by a wooden
crib.
The first tunnel, completed in 1869, completed in 1869, contained
a massive three foot-wide, 138, foot-tall standpipe which equalized
pressure in the mains throughout the city’s water system.
The building was miraculously spared in the Great Chicago Fire
of 1871, and still stands as a monument to the city’s past.
Coal-fired, steam-driven engines drew water from the tunnel beneath
the lake. They provided 15 million gallons per day into the city's
water mains. When the pumping station was modernized in 1906 and
new engines installed, the standpipe was removed. The station today
contains six powerful engines which pump 72.5 million gallons on
an average day.
Sewers, PLEASE: Although Chicago is credited
with having the first comprehensive sewerage project in the country
(designed by E. S. Chesbrough in 1885), the already
teeming city of New York provided the general model for the development
of water supply and sewage disposal systems across the country.
Water was always at a premium in Manhattan, from day one of its
purchase from the Indians in 1626. A bucket of water had to be
hand-drawn and carried from springs or wells. Those too far away
relied on peddlers who made rounds selling water by the bucket,
off water carts or barrels. Later, water would be rationed at street
pumps or hydrants which would operate frequently during the day.
Waste and garbage thrown onto the streets created abominable conditions,
though people were merely following centuries old customs. hey
were compounded by privy stations set against buildings whose "cleanup" presented
even more problems. As early as 1700, concerned officials passed
an ordinance prohibiting scavengers from dumping "tubs of filth" in
the streets.
But driving wells and digging cisterns to collect water were still
the primary means of procuring water throughout most settlements.
However, water was not a popular beverage during those early days.
A little girl from Barbados boarding with her grandmother in 1714
while the eight-year-old attended school in Boston, complained
to her father that grandmother was making her drink water. Dad
wrote back and insisted that she get beer or wine as befitting
her station.
This distaste for water probably harkened back to the medieval
notion that water caused the chills, plague and all sorts of ailments.
The more likely reason was that the privy and the local well were
too close together and spawned cholera and typhoid instead of good
taste and purity.
In the early 1700s, New York, as did Boston, had constructed a
wooden pipe system under the roads, and sold water at street pumps
or hydrants. It would take New York another 25 years to lay underground
sewers for storm water as well.
Another 50 years passed before New York constructed a truly viable
public waterworks system. In this plan, well water was pumped to
an above-ground reservoir and distributed via water mains of cast
iron. The main carried the water to fire hydrants along the narrow
streets. But five years later, the system broke down in the chaos
of the great New York fire of 1835, which destroyed 530 buildings.
The water supply could not cope with the demand of the firefighters.
In response to the needs of its firefighters and to provide potable
water for the already teeming population, the city revamped its
designs and developed a more sound, pressurized system.
Completed in 1842, the Croton Aqueduct System transported water
from a huge reservoir in Croton, 40 miles north of the city, to
a secondary reservoir on 42nd Street, and to another in Central
Park. They fed into a network of underground mains. Now it was
possible to supply buildings with running water. However, except
for a simple water carriage operation, there was no provision for
waste water.
Engineer Julius W. Adams provided the framework
upon which modem sewerage is based. In 1857, Adams was commissioned
to sewer the city of Brooklyn, which then covered 20 square miles.
There was no data available in proportioning sewers for the needs
of the people. Yet, working from scratch, Adams developed guidelines
and designs that made modem sanitary engineering possible. More
importantly, he published the results. By the end of the century,
how to textbooks would be available for towns and cities to use
all across the country.
The pieces to the puzzle of good plumbing had finally come together
proper venting, waterworks and sewers brought the closet indoors
to stay. American potters duplicated the successes of their English
predecessors, and then some. Finally, the mass production line
brought down the cost of production of fixtures, fittings and valves,
making them affordable and available from the rich on down. With
the final correlation between disease and water borne bacteria
the impetus to plumbing was complete.
The Closet Evolves: The development
of the water closet in the United States parallels the experience
of England where the modern closet was
invented. But until the development of a one piece toilet with
no metal parts, the closet would continue to be a source a contamination
and a health hazard.
Like in England, the conical-shaped hopper was invented first.
It set into a lead trap that was placed under the floor. Flushed
by a valve directly connected to the bowl, it readily became a
source of contamination.
Next came the pan closet, consisting of an upper earthenware basin
and a shallow copper pan containing 3-5” of water as a seal
at its base. It could be tipped to discharge the contents into
a lower, large cast-iron receptacle connected to the drainage system.
The metal pan operated on hinges, activated by a lever.
The washdown closet followed the principle of pan closets. The
water was flushed by a direct line from a storage tank in the attic.
Pull the handle in the closet, and it opened a valve at the top
of the chamber. It was connected by a copper wire. The water flowed
until the handle was released. It scored a complete flush as the
water struck against a piece of sheet lead inside the bowl and
caused a spray in all directions.
Unlike earlier models, a short hopper closet followed that was
set on a tray, and the trap was placed above the floor. Originally
made of stoneware, it was practically impervious. But later on,
fireclay closets would be passed off to unwary customers.
The first American patent for a plunger closet is attributed to William
Campbell and James T. Henry in 1857.
It resembled the twin-basin water closets deplored by the great
English engineer, S.S. Hellyer. The mechanism
was unsanitary, as was the trapless closet of George
Jennings.
John Randall Mann, and American, developed a
siphonic closet in 1870. Three pipes delivered water into the basin;
one fed the flushing rim around the basin’s edge, one discharged
about a half gallon rapidly into the basin and started the siphonic
action, and the third provided the after flush.
William Smith developed a jet siphon closet in
1876. It was carried still further by the famous American sanitary
engineer Col. George E. Waring, Jr., into larger
and more complicated pieces of sanitaryware.
Thomas Kennedy, another American, patented a
siphonic closet which required only two delivery pipes, one to
flush the rim, the other to start the siphon. William Howell improved
it in 1890, when he eliminated the lower trap without detriment
to the action.
Ten years later, Robert Frame and Charles
Neff of Newport R.I., produced the prototype of America’s
siphonic washdown closet, although it sometimes failed to develop
the necessary action and the contents overflowed. Another decade
passed before a redesigned bowl by Fred Adee would
spur the production of the siphonic closet in America.
In the early 19th century, U.S. production of the closet was inferior
to the English, and most closets were imported. By 1873, 43 British
firms, including Twyford, Doulton, and Shanks were exporting high-quality
closets to the U.S.
Left: A luxury bathroom of the 1890s would feature wood-encased
fixtures in Victorian spendor.
By century’s end, U.S. manufacturers caught up with the
Europeans, and American products began to swamp this market. The
American sanitary industry was said to have been born when pottery
maker and decorator Thomas Maddock teamed up with
his friend William Leigh. The timing was none
to soon, because importing English materials was a very costly
endeavor.
It was tough to convince fellow Americans to buy American products,
however, so Maddock carefully stamped each closet with a lion and
a unicorn, and the following inscription: "Best Stafford Earthenware
made for the American market."
Harington had suggested a basin of brick, stone or lead dressed
with pitch, resin or wax. Since then, stoneware, earthenware, fireclay
and vitreous enameled porcelain led the way. Salt glazing was an
early breakthrough; the process covered the materials with an impervious
glaze which offered new resistance to stain and liquid.
Decorations were confined first to the bowl’s interior because
the wooden surround precluded any outside design-no one would see
it. When the washout and the washdown models were now exposed in
their entirety, the water closet became not only a functional product
but an artistic one as well. The outside bowl could be embossed
or colored for esthetic choice.
Pedestal models proved most popular, highlighted with elaborate
patterns and fanciful names. Popular examples were the English
Lion and the Dolphin models. The Dolphin curled up into letter
S, the bowl in the shape of a fluted shell. (Carvings of dolphins
had separated the seats used by the Roman soldiers in the privy
at Timgad, an ancient Roman city in what is now Algeria.) A Dolphin
water closet of Edward Johns & Co. won a Golden Award for design
at the Great Philadelphia Exhibition in 1876. (The company today,
Armitage Shanks, has reproduced the original “Dolphin Suite,” complete
with mahogany toilet seat, vanity doors and polished brass taps
and fittings.)
Underglaze patterns became popular, too, as well as hand-painted
patterns of birds, flowers and fruit. Usually applied after the
glazing, particularly with fireclay and similar materials, these
underglaze decorations were less permanent. Gilding was the most
expensive decoration: a specially-prepared gold, ground down with
alloys and flux, compounded with turpentine and oil base, was applied
by brush on an already embossed pattern.
Without extensive piping and adequate sewer and supply systems,
however, the “modern” water closet would have gone
the way of Harington’s old relics. Early American plumbers,
unschooled in the impressive engineering feats of their old Roman
forerunners, would have to learn on their own how to build and
construct comparable supply and waste systems. The method was still
trial-and-error.
Bathrooms Come Of Age: For the well-to-do, an
unused bedroom converted into the novel bathroom. The practice
probably foreshadowed the trend of present-day "empty-nesters" to
make unused bedrooms into fitness and relaxation centers. By the
mid-1850s, however, finer new homes were being designed with separate
bathrooms.
Benjamin Franklin is said to have imported the
first bathtub to America. Brought over from France in the 18th
century, this early creation was made of sheet copper shaped like
a shoe, and hand-filled by bucket. A more common model would be
in the shape of a mummy's tomb, all wood and six feet long. Left: An
earth closet used indoors used fresh earth or ashes on the bottom
of the wood structure to absorb ordors.
The popularity of tub-bathing grew as the country flourished and
expanded. For example, only 200 people resided in Tucson, Ariz.,
in 1865. By 1871, however, the town would boast 3,000 people, a
newspaper, a brewery, two doctors, several saloons and one bathtub.
But the country's first bathtub with fittings-was commissioned
by a Mr. Thompson of Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1842. He envied the invention
of Britain’s Lord John Russell and had the
same tub duplicated for himself. The tub was encased in mahogany
and lined with sheet lead. It measured 7'x 4', and weighed nearly
one ton.
The fittings connected to two pipes running from the attic tank.
One pipe carried cold water, the other was a hot water pipe that
coiled down the chimney. The water heated as it passed through
the coil.
Grander bathtubs a century later were encased in paneled or embossed
wood. Big, brass fixtures were bold and showy in Victorian splendor.
George Vanderbilt's bathroom of 1855 boasted a porcelain tub, and
featured exposed pipe for all to see, the fittings reduced to a
neat arrangement. Those with money tried to emulate Queen Victoria's
bathroom where, it was said, the controls looked like those for
a battleship.
The old Saturday night bath in front of the kitchen fire or potbellied
stove was of tin or copper. Lead "gave way" to cast iron, which
in turn was the forerunner of the modern enameled iron tub. Now
we can add porcelain enameled iron and steel and acrylic, too.
By the turn of the century, a luxury bathroom would be a grand-sized
room, outfitted with a 5-foot enameled tub, shower bath and receptor,
sitz bath, foot bath, pedestal lavatory and siphon jet closet.
Including all the fittings, trim and traps, the cost would come
to $542.50. (Heavy tasseled drapes and stained glass windows were
extra, of course. Although patterned wallpaper would yield to tile
on the walls and the floor, the big area carpet would remain.)
When Johnny came marching home after the wars, builders could
not keep up with the demand for housing. A land shortage in the
throes of urban development sparked cubbyhole apartments and smaller
homes than before. Tract housing would be one answer; downsizing
the bathroom in sacrifice for more space was another tradeoff.
Pedestal lavs disappeared as vanities with storage cabinets below
topped the trend. Today, the reverse is true - bathrooms are bigger,
the fixtures more imposing than ever. And at least two bathrooms
are a must in most new houses.
Today, there are tubs for two and oversized tubs with accompanying
oversized faucets, and lavs constructed from all materials including
marble and precious stone. Where chrome and nickel plated faucets
stood, luxury materials such as gold, malachite, tiger's eye, onyx
and polished granite would take their place. In such a setting,
King Midas might well turn green with envy.
The growth of plumbing in America was phenomenal. In one 25-year
period, from 1929 to 1954, sales by distributors of plumbing products
and heating equipment rose from $498 million to $2.33 billion,
a whopping 367% increase.
And manufacturers would cater to the increased demand with myriad
choices of materials, colors and styles. Forerunners of great plumbing
companies today would make their first appearances in the 1890s:
Crane Co., National Tube Works (U.S. Steel), Ahrens & Ott and
American Radiator (predecessor companies of American-Standard),
and the Kohler Company, to name just a few. The single-handle mixing
faucets so commonplace today are actually less than 50 years old. Al
Moen is credited with the design for a double-valve faucet
with a cam to control the two valves that he made in 1937. He refined
the design into a cylinder with a piston action. Continued refinement
has led to the replaceable cartridge, push-button diverter, back-to-back
installation, swivel spray and pressure balancing valve.
Stainless steel is also a relative newcomer to the surging market
of plumbing materials, perhaps exemplified by the growth of Elkay
Mfg. Originally incorporated to manufacture pantry sinks of German
silver and polished copper, Elkay added a line of d steel scullery
sinks in 1921. By the 1950s, the company was spurring lines of
sinks and faucets in stainless steel that would become mainstays
of the plumbing industry.
Flexible water
supplies are fairly recent developments as well. They were
pioneered by Robert M. Zell the founder of Brass-Craft
Mfg., back in 1939.
But today's manufacturers are not content to rest on past successes,
as research and development produce better pipes, valves, fittings
and fixtures. In the 19th century, plumbers used plain or tin lined
lead piping for cold-water service, but they also had a choice
of tin-lined, galvanized, enameled or rubber-coated wrought iron
piping. Copper tubing was added after World War 1, and now plastic
under certain conditions.
Left: This
wooden box encloses a square water closet from early American days.
It seems that the wonders of the Ancient World and the Old Roman
Empire have come full circle. Presently under construction is a
grand hotel complex in Scottsdale, Arizona. It is patterned after
the Hanging Gardens of Babylon. There will be 10 pools, 28 fountains,
47 waterfalls, a man-made sand beach and a Roman-style aqueduct.
Under the watchful eye of the old Hohokam spirits, about 28 basic
plumbing systems will be used to make this feat possible.
Of Codes And Men: It was only after the Civil
War that the germ theory of disease was proven true, that contagion
could be traced to contaminated water supply and unsanitary waste
disposal. With waves of cholera, typhus and typhoid fever sweeping
the country, the people turned to the resources of government to
investigate the causes.
The English Pubic Health Code of 1848 became a model plumbing
code for the world to follow. Twenty years later, the New York
Metropolitan Board of Health was formed, the first such health
board in the United States. Two years later, its Metropolitan Health
Law was considered the most complete health legislation in the
world. The nature of ground water was studied, as were drainage,
sewage, water supply, waste disposal and location and characteristics
of water closets. The plumber, long vilified in early years, saw
his status upgraded to that of the Sanitarians
The idea of sanitary plumbing systems within buildings was an
American development that soon spread throughout Europe. Over the
next two decades and more, plumbing health codes expanded coverage
to encompass examination, and licensing.
Trade associations were formed, spearheading plumbing ordinances
and laws for regulations and examination. Master plumbers, while
they had developed methods of trapping and venting to guard against
contamination, had no real knowledge of hydraulic principles. So
they installed systems they didn’t understand or know how
to design. Standards had to be proposed, and lessons in business
management learned.
Appropriately, the National Association of PHCC (formerly the
National Association of Master Plumbers), first met in committee
in 1883 at the old Astor House, the hotel that provided the impetus
to modern plumbing back in 1834. Many new plumbing inventions had
appeared and too many plumbers were ill-prepared. Close on their
heels would be the Mechanical Contractors Association of America,
the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air Conditioning
Engineers, and the American Society of Sanitary Engineering.
Wholesalers banded together, too starting programs to prod manufacturers
into standardizing such things as sink and basin outlets, faucet
drilling, trap gauges, etc. The Central Supply Association, for
example, was formed in 1894 and soon made contacts with the old
Eastern Supply Association, the Plumbers Association of New England
and the National Association of Master Plumbers. But it would take
another 30 years to accomplish the standardization on which everybody
takes for granted today.
An outbreak of amoebic dysentery in Chicago during the 1933 World's
Fair was traced to faulty plumbing in two hotels. Tragic results
were 98 deaths and 1,409 official cases. One year later, Major
Joel Connolly, Chief Inspector of the Chicago Bureau of
Sanitary Engineering, spoke these prophetic words:
"One of the lessons to be drawn from the amoebic dysentery outbreak
... is that plumbing demands the very best, painstaking effort
that thoroughly qualified, certified plumbers can give in every
building, and especially where the systems are complicated and
extensive, and where large numbers of people may be affected by
contamination of water."