Until the last half of the eighteenth century,
sanitation in country houses was extremely elementary. In fact, it remained
fairly unsatisfactory until the end of the nineteenth century.
18th Century Bath
Carshalton House, Surrey. The bathroom in the water
tower (1719-20)
(Above left) The cistern tower at Blenheim Palace, Oxfordshire
(Above right) A conduit house at Bowden Hill, Wiltshire. Water was supplied from it
to Lacock Abbey.
Lacock
Abbey
Rainwater was put to good use. In the alterations
made by Lord Lumley to Lumley Castle around 1570, the roof drains were
connected to cisterns which fed two lavatory basins in alcoves to either side
of the hall porch.
At Hardwick Old Hall, a stone down-pipe ran from the
flat roof of the Hill Great Chamber (built in 1588) and fed a stone trough in
the kitchen. Rainwater was such an obvious source of supply that it would be
surprising if more examples of its use at this and earlier periods did not come
to light: it was usually the only, if highly variable, means by which water
could be brought without inconvenience to upper floors. Houses supplied by
conduit seldom had a head of water sufficient to carry the supply above the
ground floor. A hand pump, such as seems to have been installed at Hardwick,
could only raise water about fifteen feet, and in very limited amounts. It
could supply the kitchen, but little else.
A good many sixteenth-century houses acquired new
water supplies, rather than taking over old ones. The most ambitious system was
that which finally brought running water to Windsor Castle from Blackmore Park,
five miles from the castle. It took at
least four years to construct, between about 1551 and 1555. The water was piped
in a lead conduit and the head of water brought it up the castle hill to a
great lead cistern in the upper court. From there, more conduits distributed it
to other points in the castle.
Some first-hand accounts:
Longford Castle, Wilts: Nay, art here hath so well
traced Nature in the most ignoble conveyances (which are no less needful than
the most visible conveniences) as to furnish every story with private conduits
for the suillage of the house, which are washed by every shower that falls from
the gutters, and so hath vent from the very foundations to the top for the
discharge of noisesome vapours, by a contrivance not enough followed elsewhere
in England, tho’ recommended by architects.
Pelate, A
Longford Manuscript, 1678
(Above left) A
buffet of 1704 originally at Chatsworth but now at Thornbridge Hall,
Derbyshire.
(Above right) The
buffet of 1703 at Swangrove, Gloucestershire.
Chatsworth, Derbs: There is a fine grotto all stone
pavement roof and sides, this is designed to supply all the house with water
besides several fancyes to make diversion; within this is a batheing room, the
walls all with blew and white marble the pavement mix’d one stone white another
black another of the red rance marble; the bath is one entire marble all white
finely veined with blew and is made smooth, but had it been as finely polished
as some, it would have been the finest marble that could be seen; it was as
deep as one’s middle on the outside and you went down steps into the bath big
enough for two people; at the upper end are two cocks to let in one hott the
other cold water to attemper it as persons please; the windows are all private
glass.
Celia Fiennes, The
Journeys of, 1697
Wentworth Woodhouse, Yorks: There is a little
skittle ground for the youth to divert themselves, not to omit a beautiful
temple to Cloacina with a portico round it, supported by columns made of the
natural trunks of trees.
Richard Pococke, Journey
into England, 1750
Woburn Abbey, Beds: Men’s time at day’s work for His
Grace the Duke of Bedford from November 15th to the 22nd,
1760 To squaring and setting Dutch tiles in His Grace’s water closet in the
garden.
Woburn
Abbey Accounts, 1760
I breakfasted the day before yesterday at Aelia
Laelia Chudleigh’s … of all curiosities, are the Conveniences in ever
bedchamber; great mahogany projections, as big as her own bubbies, with the
holes, with brass handles, and cocks, etc. I could not help saying it was the
loosest family I ever saw! Never was such an intimate union of love and a
closestool! Adieu!
Horace Walpole to George Montagu, 27.3.1760
Elizabeth, 1st Duchess of Northumberland
was deliciously candid about the sanitary arrangements, or the lack of them, in
the various grand country houses she visited during the age of elegance.
At Hopetoun House: The housekeeper sent me into the
Closet to look for a Chamber pot but it being in a Box I could not find it.
Elizabeth, 1st Duchess of Northumberland,
Travel Journals (unpubl.) 1771
But at Harewood she was only too easily directed to ‘a
water closet which stinks all over the house’.
As for personal cleanliness before the days of hip
baths and running water even Dukes were often grubby.
Moccas Court
The numerous visitors to Moccas included:
The old Duke of Norfolk (in his old coach and four
black horses) who always drank like a fish, and it was said that he used to
make a compromise with his coachman, saying ‘John, you must be sober tonight, I
shall be drunk,” or vice versa. Sometimes he slept at Moccas, but never brought
a clean shirt with him and came down to breakfast next morning with a portwine
spotted shirt, generally himself unwashed. The servants considered him a dear
man, as he never wanted any water in his bedroom.
Lady Duff Gordon to her niece, Mrs. A.C.Master
(unpubl.) 20.11.1872
Research: The
Country House Compiled by James Lees-Milne, Small Oxford Books
Life
in the English Country House, Mark Girouard, Yale
University Press
Maggi Andersen is an author of historical romance, mysteries,
and young adult novels. Website: http://www.maggiandersenauthor.com
V. interesting! There's a bit about country-house plumbing in Life in the English Country House, but this really illuminates the subject and gives ideas on where to follow up. I'm glad, though, that I'm not writing anything earlier than 1920s these days!
ReplyDeleteWhenever I read details about the past when it comes to plumbing and hygiene, I just thank my lucky star that I was born into this time of modern conveniences.
ReplyDeleteI found the pictures interesting and helpful. I couldn't always visualize what people described in their writings.
Thanks!
Very interesting. Loved the pictures and quotes.
ReplyDeleteTerrific post, Thanks, Maggi. Lots of really useful stuff here. It's hard to find good resource material on the "unmentionables".
ReplyDeleteWonderful post! I found the collection and use of rainwater especially fascinating, and ingenious, of course, on the part of the Brits! Had never seen that mentioned anywhere before, although it's obvious really, and some recipes for mead specify that rain water be used.
ReplyDelete