SLAHS.org
is available for sale
About SLAHS.org
SLAHS is a highly brandable 5 letter .org name for a history site. It served as an online platform for Sussex-Lisbon Area Historical Society, an educational society dedicated to collecting and preserving historical artifacts, stories, and similar materials from Sussex, Lisbon, and surrounding areas.
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Domain name SLAHS.org
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The World & Milwaukee Early Sanitation History - Outhouses, Privies, Scavengers & Sewers or Privileged Privy Prattle
Back in 1996 the Iowa Antique Bottleers published an article in their newsletter describing the duties of a "scavenger". I often wondered if Milwaukee had similar ordinances and names for people who cleaned outhouses or privy vaults as they're described here. Listed below you'll find selected sections from chapters dealing with buildings and health that many of you outhouse diggers can truly appreciate. It's also a good look at a bit of our history.
And speaking of history, let's first take a look at early sanitation efforts.
The people of ancient times disposed of human waste with no more care than their garbage. In the fifth century, the people of Athens simply allowed their wastes to pile up at the outskirts of the city. These people who gave great thought to about public hygiene and pure drinking water couldn't care less about safely treating their human waste products.
The Romans built sewers primarily for the conveyance of storm water. The other items that floated along were of no concern. Most homes or apartments were served by cesspools or covered storage tanks behind the dwelling. Every now and then, manure merchants would collect the wastes and sell it as fertilizer. People who lived on the second and higher floors didn't always use the common, ground-floor privies. They would use chamber pots and dump the contents out their windows and onto the street or alley below. Latrines were sometimes water-flushed in ancient times and the Middle Ages using either diverted streams or buckets.
There were practically no sewage systems in any Middle Ages city or town. Chamber pots were normally dumped in street ditches and open sewers. Occasionally, lime or carbolic acid was used to flush the sewers. Outside of the cities and towns people used cesspools. Where there was running water, they positioned their privies so that the waste dropped directly into the river or stream. Medieval Paris was noted for its smell. The west side of towns were favored because of prevailing western winds. The east side had the worst odors. To thwart the smells typical of the day, a pomegranate stuffed with cloves was set out in each room, the for runner of the Airwick.
It wasn't surprising that under these conditions whole cities would fall to hepatitis and typhoid. Many health officials today believe that recent continued population growth stems not due to medicine advances but to advances in municipal hygiene.
The city of Bunzlau in Silesia (Germany now Poland controlled) was purportedly the first to install a sewage treatment plant. London didn't build a sewer for human waste until 1815. From the Roman era until about 1840, little improvement was made in sewers and sewage treatment. Basically it was moved from place to place, usually downhill.