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Booth's Poverty map, with added Turkish baths |
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Here, red spots show the location of Turkish baths which opened during Queen Victoria's reign. At least 36 of these were open in 1899. Although Urquhart and his supporters argued that Turkish baths were most needed in areas of poverty, Booth's map clearly shows that they tended to be established in the better off areas and that preferred locations were more often adjacent to railway stations used by commuters travelling home to the suburbs. < Charles Booth's Descriptive map of London poverty, 1889. — London : London Topographical Society, 1984. — (Publications; no.130) |
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This page enlarges an image or adds to the information found on the following page: Shampooers' wages and conditions. Part 1: Charles Booth's survey
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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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