What the History of the Bathtub Can Teach Us
by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
DIGG THIS
This
is the preface to 33
Questions About American History You’re Not Supposed to Ask,
which was released this week.
"The
truth, indeed, is something that mankind, for some mysterious reason,
instinctively dislikes. Every man who tries to tell it is unpopular,
and even when, by the sheer strength of his case, he prevails, he
is put down as a scoundrel." ~ H.L. Mencken
Most Americans
have forgotten about the great bathtub hoax of early last century.
On December
28, 1917, the great journalist and social critic H.L. Mencken wrote
"A Neglected Anniversary" for the New York Evening
Mail. He regretted that the seventy-fifth anniversary of the
invention of the bathtub had passed without any official acknowledgment
by any sector of society. Mencken then took it upon himself, on
this important occasion, to recall some of the basic history of
the bathtub.
The bathtub,
Mencken explained, originated in England, where it began as rather
a puny thing, little more than "a glorified dishpan."
Filling and emptying the water required the work of a servant. Adam
Thompson, an American who dealt in cotton and grain, got the idea
that the bathing process would be simplified and improved if the
water could be transported to the bathtub by means of a system of
pipes, and then discarded by the same method.
Thompson
pursued the idea, and on December 20, 1842, at his home in Cincinnati,
took the first bath in the first bathtub.
Within days
the new invention was the talk of the town. The bathtub became the
subject of surprisingly energetic debate. Naturally, a great many
Americans delighted in Thompson’s invention. But to some critics,
the bathtub was a dangerous luxury that would undermine the republican
simplicity of American society. The medical profession even denounced
it as a health hazard.
Millard Fillmore
became the first president to use a bathtub in the White House,
where one was installed in 1851. The president’s example quieted
much of the opposition to the bathtub, which rapidly gained acceptance.
In the
wake of Mencken’s article, this rudimentary history of the bathtub
quickly became the standard account.
But there
was a little problem. Mencken had made the whole thing up.
The bathtub
had not originated as a "glorified dishpan," and had not
been invented in Cincinnati in 1842 by anyone named Adam Thompson.
The medical profession had never opposed the bathtub. "What
the actual history of the bathtub may be I don’t know," Mencken
later confessed. "[D]igging it out would be a dreadful job,
and the result, after all that labor, would probably be a string
of banalities."
That the
article was a hoax – "a burlesque history of the bathtub,"
Mencken later called it – should have been clear enough from the
beginning, he thought; it was filled with "obvious absurdities"
from start to finish. But the confident and authoritative tone in
which he wrote it, combined with its citation of impressive-sounding
(but nonexistent) periodicals, secured the article’s triumph over
common sense.
Mencken
had hoped people might enjoy his clever, but certainly not serious,
rendition of the history of the bathtub. But he found that they
enjoyed it rather too much, not only accepting his narrative at
face value but even, in the case of some readers, writing to him
to corroborate facts he had invented! "Pretty soon," Mencken
recalled, "I began to encounter my preposterous ‘facts’ in
the writings of other men…. They began to be cited by medical men
as proof of the progress of public hygiene. They got into learned
journals. They were alluded to on the floor of congress…. Finally,
I began to find them in standard works of reference."
Mencken
recounted his bathtub ordeal "not because it is singular, but
because it is typical. It is out of just such frauds, I believe,
that most of the so-called knowledge of humanity flows. What begins
as a guess – or, perhaps, not infrequently, as a downright and deliberate
lie – ends as a fact and is embalmed in the history books."
Mencken made particular reference to the propaganda that was permitted
to spread during the years of World War I: "How much that was
then devoured by the newspaper readers of the world was actually
true?" And although much effort was expended in overturning
the myths that spread during the Great War, Mencken maintained that
"every one of those fictions retains full faith and credit
today."
My cynicism
doesn’t run as deep as Mencken’s, which may be why the longevity
of certain historical myths, and the slogans and platitudes that
support them, still manage to surprise me. This book punctures many
of them. It poses 33 questions about American history for which
the typical answers are either misleading, grossly unsatisfactory,
or clearly and demonstrably wrong. Worse than the standard answers
to these questions is that many of them are simply never raised
in the first place, since they may give rise to forbidden thoughts
that run counter to established opinion.
Nobel
laureate F.A. Hayek once observed that our understanding of history
decisively influences our interpretation of current events. The
less real history we know, the more susceptible we become to manipulation
by shysters. No, Adam Thompson didn’t invent the bathtub in Cincinnati
in 1842. That harmless myth has, at long last, finally perished.
Let us begin to emancipate ourselves from other specimens of phony
history that, even more widespread than Mencken’s bathroom hoax,
are no less foolish, and far more dangerous.
July
12, 2007
Thomas E. Woods, Jr. [view
his website;
send
him mail] is
senior fellow in American history at the Ludwig
von Mises Institute and the author, most recently, of 33
Questions About American History You’re Not Supposed to Ask.
His other books include How
the Catholic Church Built Western Civilization (get a free chapter
here),
The
Church and the Market: A Catholic Defense of the Free Economy
(first-place winner in the 2006
Templeton Enterprise Awards), and the New York Times
bestseller The
Politically Incorrect Guide to American History.
Copyright
© 2007 Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
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