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Site of the first Victorian Turkish bath in London
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Photo: Shifrin |
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5
Bell Street, off the Edgware Road, site
of the first Victorian Turkish bath to be built in London.
'The proprietor [Roger
Evans] was an
uneducated man, of much good sense, but strong prejudice, absorbed by
one idea—that the bath was the antidote to all human defects, whether
physical or moral; and I think he was almost prepared to pledge himself
to the doctrine, that the Turk is the perfection of human nature. He had
been a mechanic, and kept a small coffee-shop. Having some business
which brought him to [Rickmansworth], he there saw Mr [Urquhart], and
went into the bath which that gentleman has most hospitably provided for
all comers.
'He was then a severe
sufferer from tic douloureux, and had been so for years.
Receiving great relief from the pain (and the only relief he had ever
experienced), he determined to build a bath in his little house in
Bell-street, intending it for the use of mechanics at a small fee
of one shilling.
He built the bath, I believe, with his § 'The Turkish bath' / R H Goolden The Lancet (26 Jan 1861) pp.95-7 (Letter on proposed Turkish baths at St Thomas's Hospital, with author's letter to the hospital's Treasurer appended.) |
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This page enlarges an image or adds to the information found on the following pages: The Victorian Turkish Bath Movement. Pt 4: Foreign Affairs Committees & their baths London's first Victorian Turkish bath. Part 3: The first in London Early problems and controversies. Part 5: doctors' attitudes
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This is a page from Victorian Turkish Baths: their origin, development, and gradual decline are most welcome. |
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The
right of Malcolm Shifrin to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him |
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