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The History of Bubble Baths
Effervescent bath products came into use
as effervescent bath
salts early in the 20th Century; the "bath
bomb" became a popular form late in that century. The earliest
foam baths were foamed with soap,
which practice came about shortly after soap flakes were marketed.
Saponins were
also used to foam machine-aerated baths. Foam baths became more popular
with later surfactants;
the earliest recorded public use of an alkyl sulfate surfactant as
bath foam was in the original 1936 production of the play The
Women. Foam baths became standard practice for bathing children
after the mass marketing of products so positioned during the 1960s
and thereabouts; the dubious claim had been made that their normal
use (diluted in a tubful of water) would clean skin well enough without
soap or rubbing.
The History of the Shower
Little did our first brethren know when they stood under waterfalls to
wash themselves clean that they were engaging in something that would become
a daily ritual for most of the world. Although showering has in fact been around
as long as the human race, it has gone in and out of popularity throughout history.
The history of the shower is as old as our species.
The Egyptian Pharaohs were one of the first groups to invest in showering
as opposed to bathing in ponds or streams. Excavations of ancient
tombs and homes show stalls with a defined area and jars for water.
The Pharaoh would stand in the stall while servants poured water
over them from above. It was thought the Pharaohs were afraid of
germs in the bath waters of other people and only pure water could
be poured on them. Though Romans liked the baths, Greeks generally
preferred standing under pipes which came from aqueducts with the
belief that it washed the grime away and revitalized the skin(how
astute of them!). Just as Rome affected all cultures with their beliefs
in so many areas, they also affected the history of showering, as
most of Europe took to bathing the roman way and showers edged out
of history.
In the mid 19th century another shower emerged
that had slightly more success. When plumbing started becoming an
indoor feature, the system of pipes and drains led designers to explore
new ways to get clean. By the 1890’s the first showers of that era had a porcelain basin
connected to a drain and a metal cage with shower heads at different
locations to hit the body at every angle. A rubber curtain was pulled
around the small appliance leaving a claustrophobic place to stand in.
One of the early showers was Ewarts Improved Spray Baths which held 10
nozzles to spray the entire body. It became known as the needle shower
because the fine spray of water felt like needles against the skin. In
the early 1900’s it was determined by doctors that women simply
were not meant to endure that pain and showering was bad for them.
The shower again went into decline.
Wanting to conserve both water and time, showers were determined
to be a better way for many soldiers to get clean in a hurry during
World War I. Barracks were eventually constructed to have showers.
They were so successful that after the war, schools and gymnasiums
also began to utilize shower technology. Showers were not found
in homes until much later.
In the late 1940’s and early 1950’s western culture was still highly
in favor of the bath as the optimum mode of cleaning. But two things happened
that would change American views permanently. The first was a shift in how people
felt about hygiene. For most of Europe and America a weekly bath was good enough.
Before indoor plumbing the effort of preparing a bath was enough to make you
only want to do it once a week. After indoor plumbing and water heaters became
popular it was more convenient, but still the habit was to bathe once a week.
Eventually, ideas about bacteria, disease and cleanliness became part of the
community of knowledge and people wanted to bathe more often. Taking a bath daily
added a lot of time to the routine. The second factor in the shower’s success
was men returning home from World War II. Showers were the main form of cleanliness
for men in the barracks and they came home still wanting to take them and were
not pleased with the bathtubs that still sat in their homes. At that time
the shower head was created. And the rest is “history”!
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