The Victorian outside toilet at Brodsworth Hall after it was restored, along with the Privy Garden (English Heritage/PA)
Embargoed to 0001 Friday May 5 Undated handout photo issued
by English Heritage of a Victorian outside toilet built for the exclusive use
of a wealthy family and their guests before being fully restored following
decades hidden under a mountain of ivy.
Loo with a
view: rare Victorian outdoor toilet restored to former glory
English Heritage completes repair of
‘gentrified decorate garden privy’ at South Yorkshire stately home
Little brick pavilion
toilet
The little brick pavilion housing the earth closet toilet
has been returned to its former glory at Brodsworth Hall. Photograph: Anthony
Chappel-Ross/English Her/PA
Maev Kennedy
Friday 5 May 2017 00.01 BST Last modified on Friday 5 May
2017 00.02 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2017/may/05/loo-with-view-rare-victorian-outdoor-toilet-restored
A historic view with a loo has been recreated, with the
rescue and restoration of a Victorian outdoor toilet in the gardens of
Brodsworth Hall in South Yorkshire. The toilet, described as “a rare surviving
example of a gentrified decorate garden privy”, is a far rarer survival than
the listed mansion itself.
The little brick pavilion housing the earth closet toilet –
which had disappeared under a mound of ivy – has been restored by English
Heritage, complete with its discreet screens of yew hedges and surround of
tactfully strongly scented plants, including orange blossom, scented geranium
and roses.
The mansion was built in 1861, and was opulently plumbed,
with nine flushing toilets for the family and staff. The garden toilet was
strictly for the family and visitors, not the small army of staff working in
the 8 hectares (20 acres) of gardens.
As there was no running water to the building, servants had
the daily task of emptying the bucket below a wooden bench and using the “night
soil” as fertiliser in the surrounding beds and lawns.
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