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5: Conclusion
These letters were published on the 23rd and
24th of January—within a week of the original attack in the Dublin
Hospital Gazette. This must have helped to reassure potential
bathers that they could continue to enjoy their Turkish baths in
complete safety, for neither Corrigan nor Madden appears to have
written any further letters to the press at this time.
Nevertheless,
such arguments about whether 'dry' air was preferable to humid air
were to be repeated frequently in the future. And such patently
incorrect descriptions of the positioning of the flues in relation
to the furnace were to be repeated a year later in Thomas Westropp's
letter in
The Lancet, written after the inquest into the
unfortunate death of a bather at Barter's Limerick establishment, a
death which was found at the inquest not to have been related in any
way to the use of the Turkish bath.
In spite of the self-confidence apparent in
his robust reply, and the support he received from 'Diogenes' and
Griffith, Barter appeared to feel the need for some inner
reassurance. He must have felt that an appeal to Urquhart would not
be appropriate at this stage in their relationship. Instead he wrote
to Dr Robert Wollaston in Cheltenham, enclosing copies of the
correspondence in the Cork Daily Herald.
Wollaston had discovered the bath when he was
a physician on the Medical Staff of the Army in the Crimea and
Turkey. During a later visit to Ireland he had been introduced to Dr
Barter and had, at his invitation, spent a couple of days at St
Ann's. In September 1859 he wrote an article on the Turkish bath for
the Herald having, by then, visited all of Barter's
establishments.
Replying to Barter on 18 February, Wollaston
was able to explain how he thought Madden and other writers had come
to hold their views—views which he considered to be erroneous.
If you go early, the chambers contain nothing
but hot air; if you go some hours later, say in the afternoon or
evening, you often find a hazy vapour, sometimes considerable. This
arises from the hot chamber having some three or four, or even more
recesses, fitted up with cocks of cold and hot water to wash the
bathers, and from the splashing and use of the water, a quantity
falls on the hot floors, and becomes evaporated. In the course of a few hours this evaporation gives a hazy
appearance to the atmosphere; but this is an accidental occurrence,
and not a necessary condition of the hot-air chamber. The Turkish
Bath is therefore in essence an air bath, accidentally it may become
a vapour bath. But inhalation of vapour is not a genial process nor
a physiological purpose, and vapour rather obstructs a free
exhalation of the cutaneous system.
He
wrote that the baths in places such as Constantinople, Cairo and
Scutari were heated by hot air flues around the walls and below the
floors.
'Photophilus' went so far as to say that
Wollaston's explanation showed that Dr Madden had 'failed to
understand even the principles on which the Eastern bath is
constructed', and wished to improve the Irish bath by adding to it
that which was merely an accidental imperfection to be found in the
baths of the East.
In the more litigious world of the
twenty-first century, a person so clearly libelled would have
immediately consulted his solicitors. Barter does not appear to have
done so. But apart from the correspondence in the Irish
press, he did write directly to both Corrigan and Madden
referring specifically to their incorrect statements on the flues,
and the quality of the hot air, in his establishments. In order that
they might publicly correct these errors he offered them, or anyone
they cared to nominate, every facility to visit and examine the
construction of the baths, and the condition of its atmosphere. To
further assist them, he enclosed copies of his patent specification,
'which ought to satisfy you that in constructing these baths,
'accident or ignorance' were not the principles which guided me in
carrying it out.'
Corrigan did not bother himself to reply.
Madden wrote three short paragraphs, each a curt denial which had,
perhaps, been vetted by a solicitor before being posted.
In the
first, Madden denied 'having done, or intended to do, any injury to
your pecuniary or professional interests.'
The second denied Barter's 'right to assume or
assert' that Madden had been 'called on by Dr Corrigan to report on
the Turkish Baths of this country.' Such a denial was tantamount to
calling Corrigan a liar. It is difficult to understand why Madden
should think this was worth denying in view of Corrigan's clear
statement to the contrary in the second paragraph of his original
letter, or even why he thought such a denial might benefit him.
Finally, he denied Barter's 'right to ascribe
to me (or require me to retract) opinions on any subject of general
interest which you may consider at variance with your private
views.' This was, of course, a complete red herring; the
correspondence centred on a dispute over facts, not opinions.
Of course, the letters in the press aroused much
public interest, so that when Barter gave two lectures on the Turkish
bath (on 8 and 9 February at the Rotunda in Dublin) there was 'a
very numerous and fashionable assembly' there to hear him on each
occasion. At the first of these, he made use of a plan of the baths
to demonstrate 'the most ample provision, made for ventilation' and
'the most careful precautions taken to prevent the admission of
impure air.'
So while Barter was unsuccessful in obtaining
public retractions or corrections, perhaps he had some small
satisfaction from seeing an unwarranted attack so speedily collapse
at the first sign of opposition.
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