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Health by design: teaching cleanliness and assembling hygiene at the nineteenth-century sanitation museum

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 September 2018

HILARY BUXTON*
Affiliation:
Institute for Historical Research, School of Advanced Study, University of London, Senate House, Malet Street, London WC1E 7HU, UK. Email: hilary.buxton@sas.ac.uk.

Abstract

In 1878, amid a rapidly proliferating social interest in public health and cleanliness, a group of sanitary scientists and reformers founded the Parkes Museum of Hygiene in central London. Dirt and contagion knew no social boundaries, and the Parkes's founders conceived of the museum as a dynamic space for all classes to better themselves and their environments. They promoted sanitary science through a variety of initiatives: exhibits of scientific, medical and architectural paraphernalia; product endorsements; and lectures and certificated courses in practical sanitation, food inspection and tropical hygiene. While the Parkes's programmes reified the era's hierarchies of class and gender, it also pursued a public-health mission that cut across these divisions. Set apart from the great cultural and scientific popular museums that dominated Victorian London, it exhibited a collection with little intrinsic value, and offered an education in hygiene designed to be imported into visitors’ homes and into urban spaces in the metropole and beyond. This essay explores the unique contributions of the Parkes Museum to late nineteenth-century sanitary science and to museum development, even as the growth of public-health policy rendered the museum obsolete.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British Society for the History of Science 2018 

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Footnotes

I am deeply indebted to Seth Koven and Carla Yanni for their invaluable instruction and readings of numerous drafts of this article. I would also like to thank, for their comments and assistance, A.J. Blandford, M. Dale Booth, Alexander Hyde, Clare Kim, Vivien Ravdin, Katherine Ryan and Andrew Seaton. Special thanks are due to Beverly Bergman, who first ‘rediscovered’ the Parkes in 2003 and helped me track down several records; to the obliging staff at the Wellcome Library Rare Materials Room; and to Charlotte Sleigh and the two anonymous reviewers for their generous comments and suggestions.

References

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28 Poore, op. cit. (21), p. 556.

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30 ‘Meeting at Mansion House’, op. cit. (29), p. 2. Galton served for over a decade as a general secretary for the British Association for the Advancement of Science. His inventions often benefited the public as much as the military: spending much time on the sanitary construction of military barracks and hospitals, he developed the Galton grate, a ventilating fire grate which burned coal more efficiently and reduced the amount of smoke and waste gases that drifted into interior rooms. ‘Obituary: Sir Douglas Strutt Galton’, Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers (January 1899) 137, pp. 413–417.

31 ‘Meeting at Mansion House’, op. cit. (29), p. 2.

32 ‘The Parkes Museum of Hygiene’, The Times, 28 July 1880, p. 7.

33 See, for example, the Thomas Cook Handbook for London, the Baedeker Handbook for Travellers, the Greenwood Guides to Museums and Art Galleries, the Charles Gillig Guides to London for American Travellers, and the Langham Hotel's annual guides to London for its guests.

34 The Parkes Museum of Hygiene, 1879, the Wellcome Library, London (hereafter WL) SA/RSP/A/4/1.

35 Galton asserted that Judge resigned due to an ‘increase of his private work’. His politics in and outside the museum echoed his secular radicalism. Later, as the honourary secretary of the Sunday Society, his push for museums like the Parkes to open to the public on the Sabbath was, in part, intended to expand the working classes’ access to public institutions. Five years after leaving the museum, he used his elected membership of the Metropolitan Board of Works to fiercely question its integrity during the Herschell Commission's investigation. Parkes Museum annual report general meeting, 9 July 1884, WL SA/RSP/A/4/1; Owen, David, The Government of Victorian London, 1855–1889: The Metropolitan Board of Works, the Vestries, and the City Corporation, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1982, pp. 192, 207CrossRefGoogle Scholar; ‘Notes’, Nature (25 June 1896) 54(1391), p. 183. On the Sunday Society and rational recreation see Bailey, Peter, Leisure and Class in Victorian England: Rational Recreation and the Contest for Control, 1830–1885, London: Routledge, 2014CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

36 ‘The Parkes Museum’, Saturday Review of Politics, Literature, Science, and Art (2 June 1883) 55(1440), p. 687.

37 Judge, Mark H. (comp.), Descriptive Catalogue of the Parkes Museum of Hygiene (ed. Corfield, W.H and Dr Poore, G.V.), London: The Executive Committee of the Parkes Museum, 1879Google Scholar, WL SA/RSP/A/4/4/1, p. 5.

38 These complaints were intimately tied to the rhetoric of and campaigns against ‘overcrowding’ in the late Victorian city. On hygiene reformers’ configuration of housing as the root of sanitary problems see Jackson, op. cit. (15), pp. 209–211; on the decline of formal apprenticing and regulated training for trades like plumbing, bricklaying, carpentry, masonry and plastering, among others, see Pelling, Henry, Popular Politics and Society in Late Victorian Britain, London: Palgrave Macmillan, 1979, pp. 4446CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

39 Address by George Wilson’, Transactions of the Sanitary Institute (1889) 10, pp. 9798Google Scholar.

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41 Descriptive Catalogue of the Parkes Museum, 1879, p. 45.

42 Among the prolific histories of cholera and public health in Britain see Wohl, op. cit. (15); Gilbert, Pamela, Cholera and Nation: Doctoring the Social Body in Victorian England, Albany: State University of New York Press, 2008Google Scholar; Mclean, David, Public Health and Politics in the Age of Reform: Cholera, the State, and the Royal Navy in Victorian Britain, London: I.B. Tauris, 2006Google Scholar; and Arnold, David, ‘Cholera and colonialism in British India’, Past and Present (1986) 113, pp. 118151CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

43 The coffin, constructed out of perishable yet sturdy compressed pulp, was intended to hasten the decay of the corpse once buried. Several doctors, including the surgeon Francis Seymour Haden, believed that earth burials should facilitate quick decomposition to avoid the risk of long-decaying bodies imparting disease to the living. Thus compostable coffins were preferable to heavy wooden vessels. Wickes, Stephen, Sepulture: Its History, Methods and Sanitary Requisites, Philadelphia: Blakiston, 1884, pp. 142143Google Scholar; ‘Burial reform and patent coffins’, The Lancet (26 March 1892) 139, p. 710; Francis Seymour Haden to editor, The Times, London, 12 January 1875, p. 10.

44 On public interest in interior design see Cohen, Deborah, Household Gods: The British and Their Possessions, New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2006Google Scholar. On the classed allure of slum tours see Koven, Seth, Slumming: Sexual and Social Politics in Victorian London, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2004CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Pike, David Lawrence, Subterranean Cities: The World Beneath Paris and London, 1800–1945, Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2005Google Scholar.

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46 Kriegel, op. cit. (22).

47 Untitled, London Daily News, 28 May 1883, p. 2.

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50 Increasingly popular from the 1880s to the 1920s, cellular clothing was manufactured out of loosely woven cotton, a combination of cotton and silk, and occasionally wool. Its porous texture allowed greater circulation between skin and air, affording better breathability in the summer and purportedly more insulation in the winter. ‘Reports and analyses and descriptions of new inventions in medicine, surgery, dietetics, and the allied sciences’, British Medical Journal (October 1888) 2(1451), pp. 885–886.

51 ‘The Royal Sanitary Institute’, British Architect (2 July 1909) 72(1), p. 17.

52 The Parkes's geography speaks in a way that site architecture did for other museums of the day. See Forgan, Sophie, ‘Bricks and bones: architecture and science in Victorian Britain’, in Galison, Peter and Thompson, Emily (eds.), The Architecture of Science, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1999, pp. 181208Google Scholar; and Yanni, op. cit. (22).

53 The Sanitarian, quoted in ‘Hygiene as a subject for museum illustration’, Museums Journal (June 1902) 1, pp. 128–131, 130.

54 ‘Hygiene as a subject for museum illustration’, op. cit. (53), 130.

55 On the enduring spirit of ‘international emulation and competition’ in the second industrial revolution, see Miriam R. Levin, ‘Coda’, in Levin et al., op. cit. (4), pp. 255–260.

56 Conn, Do Museums Still Need Objects?, op. cit. (27), p. 26.

57 Corfield was a prodigious sanitary activist both professionally and politically. The first appointed professor of hygiene at University College London, he advocated for the establishment of the Parkes Museum, helped to shape and administer the Public Health Act of 1875 and served as the medical officer of health for St. George's, Hanover Square, for twenty-eight years. Corfield, like many other activists involved in the Parkes's Museum, combined his professional work with public advocacy. He acted as a sanitary consultant throughout the country and, like Mark Judge, served as a chairman of the Sunday Society, encouraging museums, galleries and libraries to open their gates on Sundays. ‘The National Health Society’, Morning Post, 7 March 1879, p. 6; Obituary: William Henry Corfield’, Journal of the Sanitary Institute (1903) 24(3), pp. 503535Google Scholar.

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60 Journal of the Society of Estate Clerks of Works (1903) 16, p. 33; pamphlets on The Parkes Museum Descriptive Catalogue of Sections: House Drainage, 1912–1915, WL SA/RSP/A/4/4/6.

61 Alberti, op. cit. (12), pp. 173–174; Bates, ‘Indecent and demoralising representations’, op. cit. (12); Burmeister, op. cit. (12).

62 On the creation of ‘new women’ through the fin de siecle museum enterprise in Britain, and the gendering of knowledge within the museum, see Hill, Kate, Women and Museums 1850–1914: Modernity and the Gendering of Knowledge, Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2016, pp. 813Google Scholar.

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64 ‘London’, London Daily News, 23 January 1885, p. 5.

65 ‘London’, op. cit. (65), p. 5.

66 Priestley recorded her visits to sanitary spaces and her own attempts to fashion a fully sanitary home. See, among others, Priestley, Eliza, Hygiene under Difficulties: Our Highland Home, London: Allman, 1891Google Scholar; and Priestley, Winged Carriers of Disease, New York: Tucker Publishing Co., 1900.

67 Mrs Priestley, Unseen Dangers in the Home, Read at the Parkes Museum, January 22, 1885, London: National Health Society, 1885, p. 23.

68 ‘A plea for housekeeping schools’, Review of Reviews (1893) 6, p. 480.

69 ‘Advertisement: the physical culture of women’, The Athenaeum (30 June 1888) 3166, p. 838.

70 ‘Chreiman physical culture department’, Educational Times (1 August 1887) 34, p. 282. On Chreiman see Hilary Marland, Health and Girlhood in Britain, 1874–1920, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013, pp. 127–129.

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75 Galton, op. cit. (49).

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77 Assorted pamphlets on The Parkes Museum Descriptive Catalogue of Sections: House Drainage, 1912–1915, WL SA/RSP/A/4/4/6, Folder 6.

78 Between the years 1905 and 1914, attendance and certification levels remained largely steady in proportion to the number of examination courses offered. For example, the five largest examination courses (Sanitary Science, Hygiene in Its Bearing on School Life, Women Health Visitors, Inspectors of Nuisances, and Inspectors of Meat and Other Foods), total enrollment grew throughout the 1900s, plateauing from 1910 to the First World War. From a total of 865 students in 1905, attendance grew to 1,188 in 1909, 1,228 in 1910, 1,187 in 1911, 1,077 in 1912, 1,196 in 1913, and 1,279 in 1914. Beginning in 1915, this figure fell, presumably due to increased enlistment in the military services. See Transactions of the Royal Sanitary Institute, years 1905–1915, volumes 26–36.

79 ‘Supplement’, Transactions of the Royal Sanitary Institute (1910) 31, p. 60.

80 Statistics on visiting students, institutions, and non-student visitors are mixed or unavailable before the museum's incorporation with the Sanitary Institute.

81 ‘Supplement to annual report’, Journal of the Royal Sanitary Institute (1907) 27, p. 54.

82 Yanni, op. cit. (22), p. 93.

83 Transactions of the Sanitary Institute (1891) 12, pp. 85–92.

84 Descriptive Catalogue of the Parkes Museum of Hygiene, 1879, p. 50.

85 Wells, op. cit. (1), p. 126.

86 ‘International medical and sanitary exhibition, 1881’, Medical Times and Gazette (23 July 1881) 2, p. 99.

87 Cohen, op. cit. (44), pp. 12–15.

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89 Nead, Linda, Victorian Babylon: People, Streets and Images in Nineteenth-Century London, New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2000, p. 16Google Scholar.

90 In December 1892 the Highgate Museum of Sanitary Appliances was opened by the lord mayor of London. Created in response to a public inspection of the local board's work during a cholera scare, the collection focused on drainage and plumbing. In contrast to the well-funded Parkes Museum, the Highgate was only open once a week, and did not have the same turnover of exhibitions. Though it discouraged advertising, it functioned largely as a showroom for the well-off residents of the district's Georgian houses, allowing them to examine and reconstruct the inner workings of their domestic interiors. Its small collection received attention in the British Architect; the American medical journal The Lancet (1894) 18, p. 176; and The Engineer (1893) 76, among others. ‘A local board museum of sanitary appliances’, British Architect, 9 December 1892, p. 432.

91 Transactions of the Sanitary Institute (1891) 12, pp. 93–102.

92 Trischler, op. cit. (6), p. 52.

93 ‘The Technological, Industrial, and Sanitary Museum’, Sydney Morning Herald, 22 October 1880, p. 3; ‘Sanitary exhibition’, Daily News, 12 August 1881, p. 3. The TISM was formally established as a branch of the Australian Museum, completed in 1880, and emphasized that it was a practical museum, rather than a cabinet de curiosité. The last adjective ‘Sanitary’ was added with the idea of embracing the Parkes Museum as a true imperial counterpart; it additionally allowed for the inclusion of medical materials. For more analysis of the role of technological exhibitions and museums in imperial realms see Roy MacLeod, Archibald Liversidge: Imperial Science under the Southern Cross, Sydney: Sydney University Press, 2009, pp. 201–203.

94 MacLeod, Roy, ‘Founding: South Kensington to Sydney’, in Davison, Graeme and Webber, Kimberley (eds.), Yesterday's Tomorrows: The Powerhouse Museum and Its Precursors 1880–2005, Sydney: Powerhouse Publishing, 2005, pp. 4254Google Scholar.

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100 In 1956 the formal museum closed. The Royal Society for the Promotion of Health removed the Parkes name and opened a series of rotating exhibits under the Health Exhibition Centre title to better target a public interested in shorter, themed displays. See Bergman and Miller, op. cit. (4), pp. 60–61.

101 Luckin, Bill, ‘The metropolitan and the municipal: the politics of health and environment in London, 1860–1920’, in Colls, Robert and Rodger, Richard (eds.), Cities of Ideas: Civil Society and Urban Governance in Britain 1800–2000, Aldershot: Ashgate, 2004, pp. 4666Google Scholar.

102 Wells, op. cit. (1), p. 178.

103 On the sociotechnical imaginary see Jasanoff, Sheila, ‘Future imperfect: science, technology, and the imaginations of modernity’, in Jasanoff, Sheila and Kim, Sang-Hyun (eds.), Dreamscapes of Modernity: Sociotechnical Imaginaries and the Fabrication of Power, Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2015, p. 19CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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