Toilets and bathrooms

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Toilets and bathrooms

Royal palaces have always been at the forefront of the changes in technology that eventually affect everyone in society. 
The White Tower, Tower of London
Garderobe in the White Tower, Tower of LondonKings and queens are usually the first people to have new things, like flushing toilets. The garderobes set into the thickness of the walls of the White Tower at the Tower of London are ‘one of the building’s many sophisticated features and perhaps the earliest known example of such an arrangement in the country.  Waste was discharged through an opening halfway up the building’s outer wall’.   So begins the story of royal sanitary arrangements.

You can see latrines emptying directly into the moat set into the outer wall of Edward I’s Brass Mount in the north-eastern corner of the Tower.  The moat was used for drainage in this way until the 1840s, when the pollution was one of the reasons that it was filled in.   In 1830, the Duke of Wellington ordered the silt from the moat be taken to fertilize market gardens at Battersea, but this was not enough to prevent complaints in 1841 that the banks exposed at low tide were ‘impregnated with putrid animal and excrementitious matter … emitting a most prejudicial smell’ and 80 men from the garrison were in hospital as a result.  By the end of 1845 the moat had been largely drained.

Tudor chamber pot, Hampton Court PalaceThe sanitary needs of Tudor courtiers at Hampton Court Palace were met in a variety of ways.  The lodgings of the senior members of the court, such as those in Base Court, had their own garderobe shafts.  Some used piss-pots, like the Tudor pot excavated and displayed at Hampton Court (still containing traces of Tudor urine).  Lower-ranking members of the court would use the ‘common jakes’ in the south-west corner of the palace, later known as the Great House of Easement, where lavatories drained via the moat into the river.  Fourteen people could be seated here simultaneously. 

The grandest people continued to use a close stool – a padded seat placed over a chamber pot – and the Groom of the Stool had become the king’s most intimate, and therefore most powerful servant.  The close stool used by William III remains in the King’s Apartments at Hampton Court Palace today.  With the passage of the centuries, the court became more formal, both in terms of the variety of spaces it required and its personnel.  William III’s Groom of the Stool was his favourite Hans Willem Bentinck, Earl of Portland.  The Groom of the Stool, with access to the bedchamber, closet and close stool room, was inevitably the person closest to the monarch and consequently wielded enormous power.  He kept the key to the bedchamber on a blue ribbon round his neck.
In the late 16th century, Sir John Harington began a slow-burning revolution with his flushing toilet.  Harrington joked that the installation of one of his water-closets ‘in the palace of Richmond, or Greenwich’ would be a deed worthy of his being rewarded with a place among Elizabeth I’s gentlemen of the Privy Chamber.  

In the 17th century, the soldiers at the Tower of London were warned not ‘to ease themselves in any place than that appointed for that purpose, nor make water within six paces of the Guard, nor throw soile there or ashes, nor empty any pot, nor throw water out of any window’.   At Hampton Court Palace William III’s guards slept in the Guard Chamber of the king’s state apartments, and had more fortunately had the benefit of a ‘pissing cestorn’ installed for them in 1700.

George II, Hampton Court PalaceIn 1760, George II met his end in ‘the water closet’ at Kensington Palace: his ‘German valet de Chambre heard a noise, listened, heard something like a groan, ran in, and found the hero of [the battles of] Oudenarde and Dettingen, on the floor, with a gash on his right temple, by falling against the corner of a bureau’. 

George’s great-granddaughters had a flushing toilet in their closets at Kew Palace, but like Sir John Harrington’s toilet two hundred years before their cistern had to be filled and emptied manually before and after use.  In 1819, a patent was issued for the ‘Silent Valveless Water Waste Preventer’ and Hampton Court Palace and Kensington Palace contain Victorian sanitary ware.  

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