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Uses and users of water in Bilbao, c. 1890–1910: a social-spatial analysis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 May 2019

Pedro A. Novo*
Affiliation:
Departamento de Historia Contemporánea, Universidad del País Vasco/Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea, Leioa, 48940, Spain
Karmele Zarraga
Affiliation:
Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia, 48920, Portugalete, Spain
*
*Corresponding author. Email: pedro.novo@ehu.eus

Abstract

The article analyses the characteristics of the public water service in the city of Bilbao between the end of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth century. It addresses both the study of potable water and the different uses of non-potable water. In addition, the article includes the relationship between the water supply and the population that receives it. We are interested in knowing who enjoyed it at home, linking demographic sources with records of the water service of the city.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2019 

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20 Per tap, in pesetas per year: 10 per kitchen sink, 5 per kitchen washbowl, 2 per toilet washbasin, 5 per toilet, 15 per bathtub and 5 per fire hydrant.

21 0.10 pesetas per m3.

22 AHFB-AMB Tercera, 0426/002, and Cuarta, 0398/056. See also ‘La cuestión del agua’, El Noticiero Bilbaíno (ENB), 9 Jan. 1892 and 12 Aug. 1898; and ‘Las aguas del Nervión, el Ganges de Bilbao’, El Liberal, 6 Aug. 1912; and ‘Bilbao en peligro. La política y el tifus’, El Liberal, 7 Feb. 1912.

23 The municipal laboratory began operating in 1885. Its main task was to analyse the food products consumed in the village, especially those that were suspected to be adulterated. The laboratory staff also analysed the chemical qualities of water and gas.

24 Proceedings of the Municipal Health Board, 3 Jun. 1887, AHFB-AMB Sección Bilbao Libros.

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31 The management of the domestic water supply system in Bilbao was different from that of British cities, as the works of Trentmann and Taylor indicate, specifically in the case of nineteenth-century London. The authors distinguish two categories, users and consumers. The latter were urban landowners and, as such, subject to the payment of local taxes and the rates charged by the private companies providing the water. Those amounts were related to the value of the property, and not the volume of water consumed, as was the case in Bilbao whenever metered water was available, by the subscribers to the service. Trentmann, F. and Taylor, V., ‘From users to consumers: water politics in nineteenth-century London’, in Trentmann, F. (ed.), The Making of the Consumer: Knowledge, Power and Identity in the Modern World (Oxford, 2005), 5379Google Scholar. See also Trentmann, F. and Taylor, V., ‘Liquid politics: water and the politics of everyday life in the modern city’, Past and Present, 211 (2011), 199241Google Scholar.

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34 ENB, 1 Apr. 1895, ‘Contadores de agua’.

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57 AHFB-AMB Sección Bilbao Libros (access number 0128), 1908.

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61 AHFB-AMB Segunda, 0573/054.

62 AHFB-AMB Segunda, 0573/023.

63 AHFB-AMB Cuarta, 0262/005.