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2:
The start of the row:
Dr Madden's article
In March 1860, a writer calling himself
'Photophilus'
published a pamphlet recounting the beginnings of this
sometimes bitter controversy over whether the hot air in a Turkish
bath should be dry or wet (or at least humid).
The
identity of the author is still unknown, but he might have been connected in some
way with St Ann's Hydropathic Establishment or, perhaps, with the
Turkish Bath Company of Dublin.
He prefaced his account by likening the
progress of a new idea to that of a moving body, suggesting that it
is not possible to determine its strength until it meets with
resistance; the ease or difficulty with which that resistance is
overcome allows us to assess the power of the innovation.
Our new Irish Bath has repelled an
attack upon the existence of its early infancy...with a display of
inherent vitality which promises a future of appreciated benefit and
wide-spread popularity. The circumstances of this attack will be
found in the following pages; the results of it must be looked for
in the return-sheets of the
TURKISH BATH COMPANY OF DUBLIN
(LIMITED), which has now found
it necessary to prepare additional accommodation for the fast
increasing supporters of this National Institution.
As described by 'Photophilus', the controversy erupted with the publication
of an attack on Dr Barter's Turkish baths which was published on 16 January in the
Dublin Hospital Gazette. The form of the attack was
unusual. Dr Corrigan, who was a well-known medical man, generally
respected and the author of a number of successful medical texts, wrote
a letter to the editor asking him to publish an important article on the bath
written, not by himself, but by a medical colleague, Dr Richard
Robert Madden.
Corrigan wrote that he was worried that many of
the Turkish baths being built in Ireland had a 'deficiency of a
sufficient supply of vapour'. Whether this defect arose by 'accident
or ignorance it is a serious and dangerous mistake' which could
produce in some bathers an effect 'not only dangerous but positively
fatal.'
Accordingly he was now forwarding a
paper 'of very great value' by Dr Madden—than whom, perhaps, 'in the
kingdom there is no one more competent,...from his long residence in
the East and his high scientific attainments, for the task he so
kindly undertook at my request.'
Madden had in fact published an account of his
travels in Turkey, Egypt, Nubia and Palestine some twenty
years before Urquhart, but his own description of hammams in the
Middle East had not been as widely noticed by medical practitioners as Urquhart's
in The Pillars
of Hercules, nor as influential as the latter had, by then,
become. In his article for the Dublin Hospital
Gazette, Madden praises vapour baths above all other Turkish
remedies.
In rheumatic diseases and those of the skin, he 'cannot
sufficiently extol the advantages of the Turkish bath.'
Unfortunately, he complains,
my own experience of the 'Turkish bath', as
it exists in this country, taking the establishment at B*** as the
type of all that have been established up to this time, leads me to
the conclusion that the use of this bath must be attended with great
aggravation of symptoms in several disorders, and with great danger
in others...'
Since the only Turkish bath in Ireland which
he could have been referring to here was Barter's establishment at
Bray, it is odd that he felt the need to be so coy about it.
Continuing, he refers to his own sciatica which had
earlier shown signs of improvement but became more aggravated after
each visit to the bath.
This result I attribute entirely to the
essential difference that exists between the Hammam of the east and
the so-called 'Turkish bath' of this country. The former is a hot,
humid air bath—a vapour bath, conjoined with a plentiful use of hot
water and friction of a particular kind, which can only be employed
with it advantageously. The other, or so-called 'Turkish bath' here in use, is a parched air bath, the dry
heated air being generated from the combustion of coke in furnaces,
which communicate by passages extending under the flooring of the
bath-rooms to them in various directions.
Whether intended or accidental, the wording of
this last sentence is extremely loose and could be interpreted as
suggesting that the hot air and fumes from the burning coke were
directly channelled by underfloor ducts into the hot rooms in order
to heat them, an extremely dangerous situation, and one without any
foundation in fact. The suggestion was made more directly later in
the article and would be carefully refuted.
Nevertheless, despite his complaints regarding
Dr Barter's establishments, and the dangers which might befall
anyone who used them, he was, he maintained, only offering
constructive criticism for the public good. He wanted the new baths
to succeed. Damning with not a little faint praise, he wrote that it was greatly to the credit of their
promoters that
they should even attempt to provide hot-air bathing on such a large
scale.
But it is only an attempt, or
rather an imitation of the outward form, interior arrangement of
chambers, of details in the process of manipulation, and attendance
in them, of the Oriental Hammam. The main element of the latter,
vapour air, that is not only hot, but humid, is wanting in our
so-called 'Turkish Baths.' Owing to ignorance, or to false
representations, or to foolish economy on the part of projectors, or
those who invested their money in a novel and uncertain undertaking,
the great mistake was committed of imposing a name and a character
on those baths which in reality did not belong to them, calling them
'Turkish', and giving it to be understood that they were identical
with the Oriental Hammams, of heated humid air, which they certainly
are not.
He warns that the public will not appreciate
being fooled and repeats, more directly, his accusation about the
origin of the heated air in the hot rooms.
But I am quite sure when the public find out
that they have been deceived in their expectations of deriving all
the benefit they ought to have received from the use of those new
baths had they been in reality what they were represented to be,
genuine Turkish baths, the Oriental mode of heating the Hammams with
humid air in a state of vapour will be adopted, and the Brummagem
idea will be abandoned of generating heat by the combustion of coke
in furnaces, and conveying the parched, overpowering, disagreeable
smelling and greatly deteriorated air from those furnaces, through
numerous channels beneath the floor into a bath room, where the
lungs of an unhappy individual...have to breathe it, and to drink it
in for a period of half, or even three-quarters of an hour.
As if attacking Barter's Turkish baths was not
alone sufficient to convince the public of the dangers that lay
within, Madden broadens his attack by drawing attention to part
of an untitled (but widely circulated) pamphlet which praised the
new bath. The author, he complains, makes a 'variety of
statements in regard to it, which he believes to be true, and I know
to be false.'
The pamphlet in question, Life in a tub, was
a originally a review article which had appeared a year earlier in
the Irish Quarterly Review. It dealt in a very positive way with
five recently published books on hydropathy, and was later
reprinted, with an additional section on the Turkish bath.
Madden focuses on the definition of a Turkish
bath given by the pamphlet's pseudonymous author 'Diogenes'.
[The Turkish bath]...is a bath differing from
all other hot baths in this important particular, viz.—that the
heated medium is AIR instead of water; and that all parts of the
body, when in a bath, are subjected to an even and equal
temperature...
Thus far it seems to be such a clear concise
definition that one wonders how anyone could possibly take exception
to it. But it was the rider to the definition which had upset
Madden.
...The result of which is, that
inasmuch as man was constituted to breathe
AIR
instead of vapour, the Turkish bath may be enjoyed for hours at a
time, without inconvenience; whereas in the vapour-bath the patient
is unable to remain in it for more than about a quarter of an hour,
in consequence of a feeling of suffocation, for want of the
necessary supply of air to the lungs.
'Diogenes' then differentiates the Turkish bath
from the vapour bath by stating that the former normally has little
effect on one's pulse rate. Furthermore, perspiration, being a
safety valve designed to maintain a person's body heat at around
98ºF, needs optimum conditions to be effective; heat is lost to the
body by the evaporation of sweat caused by its absorption by the
surrounding air, so that 'it is evident that no evaporation can take
place where the air is saturated with moisture, and it is also
evident that the amount of evaporation will vary with the dryness of
the air.'
Madden makes no attempt to offer any
scientific explanation as to why this should not be so. He sees fit
only to contradict 'Diogenes' by relating his own contrary
experience while using the baths at B***. Specifically,
he claimed that as one entered the ante-room of the bath at 90º
or 100º
one immediately felt 'a sense of oppression,
heaviness, and slight headache', and that this was also felt by
other bathers as well. He then claimed that at the end of the main
hot room,
there is a bench with a marble slab for bathers not easily
made to perspire, and there is a communication beneath the bench
with a hot air channel, the mouth of which is in one of the furnaces
nearest to it…
This last misstatement, even more specific
than the two noted above, was extremely serious.
For he was saying that instead of clean air being heated by being
passed to the hot rooms through pipes running over (but quite
separate from) the furnace, the hot air duct was in effect
equivalent to a chimney stack through which all the gases from the
coke-fed furnace passed directly into the hot room. The fact that
such a suggestion could only have been nonsense in no way lessened
its ability to disturb potential patients who might themselves have
no understanding of how boilers and furnaces worked.
Madden did go on to admit that in the hot-room
(where the temperature was usually 130ºF, but occasionally even
higher) the unpleasantness caused was less than in the ante-room
because the bather was by this time perspiring. And when he was in
the hot room his pulse 'was never under 86 or 90' [sic], and on his
first visit was 'upwards of 100.'
Whilst there, Madden took the opportunity to
take the pulse of two or three other bathers, one of whom was, in
fact, the principal bath attendant. His pulse was 86 although he
stated that he had spent seven hours in the bath every day for
several months 'and never suffered the slightest inconvenience from
his occupation, or had his pulse in the smallest degree quickened or
[been] excited by it.'
His statement was treated with contempt by Madden
who wrote that,
This man seemed to me not to be aware that he
was stating what was not the fact, but merely to have delivered
himself up to a reckless tendency to exaggeration which
characterizes the statements of the advocates of hydropathy in all
its branches...
Furthermore, he continued, the man was 'apparently in full
bodily health and strength' seeming to imply that of course this
meant that anyone who was not one hundred percent fit was likely to be in a very
dangerous situation.
To any unbiased reader, both Corrigan's letter and
Madden's enclosed 'paper' seem to lack any substantive basis for
their conclusions and it is surprising that, even in the 1860s, a
medical journal should print them in such a manner.
This was not, however, to be the last
surprise.
3. Barter's
response
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