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Until 1840, indoor plumbing could be found only in mansions and first-class hotels. Then, in the decade before midcentury, Americans representing a wider range of economic circumstances began to install household plumbing with increasing eagerness. Ogle draws on a wide assortment of contemporary sources -- sanitation reports, builders' manuals, fixture catalogues, patent applications, and popular scientific tracts -- to show how the demand for plumbing was prompted more by an emerging middle-class culture of convenience, reform, and domestic life than by fears about poor hygiene and inadequate sanitation. She also examines advancements in water-supply and waste-management technology, the architectural considerations these amenities entailed, and the scientific approach to sanitation that began to emerge by century's end.
Author: Maureen Ogle
ISBN-10: 0801863708
ISBN-13: 9780801863707
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Language: English
Published: 03/20/2000
Pages: 232
Format: Paperback
Weight: 0.75lbs
Size: 9.03h x 6.03w x 0.74d
Maureen Ogle is former assistant professor of history at the University of South Alabama.
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