Greetings All,
Recently while helping to clean out a summer kitchen on a farm property I came across what I later learned was a bath brick. Made in England from alluvial matter from the river Parrett at Bridgwater, it is about the size of a normal building brick. It was used primarily as a scouring material in the cleaning of metal. Material could be scraped from the brick to scouring powder or metal items, such as knives, could be cleaned by rubbing on the brick.
A search on "bath brick" in a search engine should turn up a number of entries about this household cleaning product that sources date first from the late 18th century or first quarter of the 19th century and still being made into the 1920s by ten different manufacturers. There was a nice article titled "Clean and Gleam" at www.thisisbristol.co.uk/news dated 07.08.07 but I cannot seem to now find it online but I do have a hard copy if anyone is interested. Also, "Mrs. Beeton's Book of Household Management" published in England in 1861 (see Google Books) makes mention of bath bricks.
Now a question: Does anyone have any material culture resources that might help to date the bath brick I have? One side is marked as follows:
The Parrott
Bath Brick Co
Limited
Bridgwater
My first attempt at getting a digital photo of the brick was a bust. I'll be trying again over the holiday break later this month.
Thanks,
Recently while helping to clean out a summer kitchen on a farm property I came across what I later learned was a bath brick. Made in England from alluvial matter from the river Parrett at Bridgwater, it is about the size of a normal building brick. It was used primarily as a scouring material in the cleaning of metal. Material could be scraped from the brick to scouring powder or metal items, such as knives, could be cleaned by rubbing on the brick.
A search on "bath brick" in a search engine should turn up a number of entries about this household cleaning product that sources date first from the late 18th century or first quarter of the 19th century and still being made into the 1920s by ten different manufacturers. There was a nice article titled "Clean and Gleam" at www.thisisbristol.co.uk/news dated 07.08.07 but I cannot seem to now find it online but I do have a hard copy if anyone is interested. Also, "Mrs. Beeton's Book of Household Management" published in England in 1861 (see Google Books) makes mention of bath bricks.
Now a question: Does anyone have any material culture resources that might help to date the bath brick I have? One side is marked as follows:
The Parrott
Bath Brick Co
Limited
Bridgwater
My first attempt at getting a digital photo of the brick was a bust. I'll be trying again over the holiday break later this month.
Thanks,
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