| Count yourself
lucky for living in the modern world. If youre like most people, you begin every day
by taking for granted something that was not even available to some of the most wealthy
and powerful people throughout history -- a shower.
Today,
going without a shower for even a day is out of the question for most people, and to not
shower for a week or more would be unthinkable. But most of us have ancestors who probably
shunned bathing to the greatest extent possible. Even the Romans, who loved to bathe, took
their baths in stagnant pools of dirty water that they shared with hundreds of their
fellow citizens. They had no concept of bacteria of course.
In ancient times, the best a rich or royal person could do
was to have a servant dump cold water over them as they stood in a basin -- hardly a
relaxing experience by modern standards.
Today, manufacturers spend millions finding ways to make
water do magical things in order to make showering a luxurious, invigorating and
revitalizing experience.
"The soothing massage of a specially engineered stream
of hot water is what people seek in their showers today," says David Lingafelter,
Moen Incorporated's vice president of product marketing. "We spend a lot of time
figuring out how to make water create the sensation of a massage when designing shower
fixtures, he adds. Our Revolution showerhead actually spins each drop of water
that it puts out and then twirls the whole shower stream so that users feel enveloped in
water. Making the water droplets larger makes them feel warmer and the increased speed and
movement of each drop gives the sensation of higher flow and higher pressure.
You dont get that sort of feeling from your average
ancient servant with a bucket. But, at various times throughout history, ancient cultures
have embraced the notion of showering for cleansing. During excavation of the Egyptian
city of Akhenaten at Tel-el-Amarna, which dates back to 1350 B.C., a small bathroom was
found. Lawrence Wright's "Clean & Decent: The Fascinating History of the Bathroom
and the Water-Closet" reports that it was determined from the design of the basin,
complete with splashbacks, that it was a simple form of a shower. It is believed that the
water was most likely poured on the bather from servants holding vases.
Babylon had a series of aqueducts (the earliest ones on
record) laboriously maintained to provide the well-to-do with water for their bathrooms,
according to "The History of Plumbing - Babylon" on PlumbingSupply.com. While
the common people were bathing and washing clothes on the banks of canals or in cisterns,
King Nebuchandnezzar (605 to 562 B.C.) bathed in a shower room where, you guessed it,
slaves poured water over him as he washed with soap made of ashes and animal fat. The
plumbing was advanced enough that a drainpipe took away the wastewater, something modern
plumbers wouldn't accomplish until the 19th century.
In ancient Greece, citizens took outdoor showers by
standing under a stream of water coming from spouts found on the sides of large fountains
built in the cities, according to Penny Colman's, "Toilets, Bathtubs, Sinks, and
Sewers." Grecian vases with paintings of people showering in this manner were found
by archaeologists.
Unfortunately, the Western worlds showering
advancements stopped when people began to think that bathing itself was not altogether
necessary. Queen Isabella of Spain, who funded the voyage of Christopher Columbus, was
proud of the fact she had taken only two showers in her lifetime, reported Colman. In
fact, early Christians equated bathing with vanity and avoided it in order to be more
holy. Colman wrote that St. Francis of Assisi listed dirtiness as one of the signs of a
holy person, St. Catherine of Siena avoided washing, and St. Agnes, who died at the age of
13, had never taken a bath.
Eventually, cleanliness began to come into vogue again, but
only long after a third of Europe had succumbed to the Plague. In 1598, Wright reports,
bathing rooms were added to Windsor Castle in London. It was here that Queen Elizabeth
took a bath once a month whether she needed to or not.
As recently as 1812, bathing was looked upon as frivolous.
When the Lord Mayor of London requested a simple shower bath in the mansion house, he was
turned down by the Common Council on the grounds that no one had ever wanted one before.
It would take 20 more years before one would be installed.
Showers, as we know them today without the pouring
servants, came into use in the late 18th century, according to Rebecca Weaver and Rodney
Dale's, "Machines in the Home." The first patent for a shower was granted in
1767 and owned by William Feetham. The earliest showers usually had a hand pump and became
popular because they required a smaller water supply.
Frank Muir's "An Irreverent and Almost Complete Social
History of the Bathroom," reports that showers had other advantages over the
commonplace bathtubs. They were smaller, taking up less room in already tight areas, and
they were cheaper to install. With showers, servants had a wider area to clean, but they
also had less wastewater to carry away. But by far the biggest drawback of the shower was
the cold water shock that accompanied pulling the cord on the overhead tank. That reason
alone kept many people in baths until the advent of piped hot water. They reasoned it was
easier to slowly drop into a tub of cold water than to pull the cord and let it rain down
upon them.
This shower Renaissance was brought on, in great part, by
doctors prescribing water cures to their patients. The water was applied in a number of
ways, including the Rain Bath -- simply a shower where the patient would walk in and the
doctor would pull the cord on the nozzle to shower the patient.
Lawrence Wright includes this quote: It is no rare
thing to see a subject who at this first shower betrays actual terror, shouts, struggles,
runs away, experiences frightening suffocation and palpitation; and it is not rare to hear
him say, after a moment, 'so that's all it is.'"
Shortly thereafter, showers started becoming commonplace.
The plumbing industry responded with what some consider the first designer shower, the
English Regency Shower. According to "The Stand-Up Bath" on theplumber.com this
12-foot-high luxury shower was made of metal painted to look like bamboo. At its base was
a basin with a drain and above it was a tank. A hand pump forced water from the basin into
the tank and then over the bather's head. The main drawback of this design was that the
same water re-circulated over the bather.
In the 1830s, another unique showering device hit the
market, the American Virginia Stool Shower. This all-wood device resembled a quality piano
stool with a rotating seat. Placed in the bathtub, the Shower Stool had a hand-operated
lever that pumped water from the tub and over the bather's head and back. A scrub brush,
attached to a vertical pipe, could be worked up and down the user's body with the
accompanying foot pedal.
Advances in plumbing in the mid-1800s led to advancements
in showering capabilities. It was about this time that plumbers began making freestanding
showers with both hot and cold water, according to theplumber.com.
In 1879, Warren Wasson and Charles Harris, of Carson City,
Nev., patented a shower that required the bather to maintain a constant treading motion
with the feet to operate a pump which recirculated water from the tub, according to Weaver
and Dale.
They go on to report on William Luther's 1891 shower patent
in which a pump compressed air in a reservoir to force water up to a showerhead. In 1882
was the first appearance of Ewart's Improved Spray Bath with no fewer than 10 controls
that manipulated various body sprays.
In 1889, J. L. Mott Iron Works followed suit, offering a
unit that could shower the bather from every angle. The company's catalog touted that the
shower would provide for the bather "needle, shower, descending douche, liver spray
and bidet" functions. Other manufacturers got in on the act and provided a variety of
showering options like multiple heads, waterfall spouts and body sprays.
"The desires of the showering public really haven't
changed much when you compare these antique showers with shower suites available today.
Weve just gotten better at delivering what the consumer wants," Lingafelter
says. There are still waterfall spouts, rain-like showerheads and body sprays. For
example, Moen's Vertical Spa is available with multiple body sprays to hit every part of
the body.
The biggest difference between showers of the 19th and 21st
centuries is that today, the pipes are behind the walls and the hot water is a little more
reliable. For the hot water, we can thank Edwin Ruud, founder of the Ruud Manufacturing
Company, who in 1898 invented the automatic storage water heater. No longer would it be
necessary to begin boiling water well in advance of a bath, or stand under the shower
awaiting the shock of frigid water.
In fact, today's showering technology has even been able to
remove the dreaded shock that accompanies the untimely flushing of a toilet or running of
the kitchen faucet when another household member is in the shower. Pressure-balancing
thermostatic valves like Moen's ExactTemp are able to maintain a steady flow-rate and
constant water temperature, even if someone decides to start the dishwasher or do a load
of laundry while you're washing away the cares of the day.
Shortly after the shower renaissance in the late 19th
century, showers moved back to being thought of as strictly utilitarian devices and the
fancy designs disappeared until the 1980s when manufacturers began responding to the
desires of their customers for more versatility in the shower.
"Today, manufacturers are continually coming up with
advances in showering technology," Lingafelter says. "Manufacturers are
constantly working on ways to deliver the optimal shower to keep the showering public
clean as well as happy." Or, you could just get yourself a servant and a bucket!
Moen Incorporated is one of the world's largest producers of residential and
commercial plumbing products. Moen is the number 1 brand of faucets in North America. The
company manufactures a complete line of single and two-handle faucets in a wide assortment
of styles and finishes. It is also a leading producer of residential and commercial sinks,
a variety of shower accessories, bathroom accessories and a complete line of plumbing
parts and accessories (sold under the brands Moen, Cleveland Faucet Group, Creative
Specialties International, Dearborn Brass, Hoov-R-Line and Wrightway).
Courtesy of ARA Content
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