Lavatorial Flush - Harington's Hotel - Bath, Somerset
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member SMacB
N 51° 22.980 W 002° 21.721
30U E 544397 N 5692611
Sir John Harington, inventor of the lavatorial flush, lived here.
Waymark Code: WMWK7N
Location: South West England, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 09/14/2017
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member greysman
Views: 1

"Sir John Harrington was a poet – an amateur and not very successful one! But his poetry was not why he would be remembered. Something much more ‘down to earth’ was to be his legacy.

He invented the lavatory!

He was a godson of Queen Elizabeth I, but he had been banished from court for telling risqué stories, and exiled to Kelston near Bath.

During his ‘exile’, 1584-91, he built himself a house, and devised and installed the first flushing lavatory, which he named Ajax.

Eventually Queen Elizabeth forgave him, and visited his house at Kelston in 1592.

Harrington proudly showed-off his new invention, and the Queen herself tried it out! She was so impressed it seems, that she ordered one for herself.

His water-closet had a pan with an opening at the bottom, sealed with a leather -faced valve. A system of handles, levers and weights poured in water from a cistern, and opened the valve.

In spite of the Queen’s enthusiasm for this new invention, the public remained faithful to the chamber-pot.

These were usually emptied from an upstairs window into the street below, and in France, the cry ‘gardez-l’eau’ gave warning to the people below to take evasive action. This phrase ‘gardez-l’eau’ may have been the origin of the English nickname for the lavatory, the ‘loo’.

It was almost two hundred years later in 1775 that a flushing water-closet was first patented by an Alexander Cummings of London, a device similar to Harrington’s Ajax.

In 1848 a Public Health Act ruled that every new house should have a ‘ w.c., privy, or ash-pit’. It had taken nearly 250 years for Sir John Harrington’s water closet to become universal …it cannot be said that the British embrace all new inventions with enthusiasm, despite Royal Approval!"

SOURCE - (visit link)

The plaque reads:
As you spend a penny
you may be interested to know that
Sir John Harington 1561 - 1612
God son to Queen Elizabeth I
who resided here,
invented the lavatorial flush...
Type of Historic Marker: Plaque

Related Website: [Web Link]

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Historical Marker Issuing Authority: Not listed

Age/Event Date: Not listed

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