I had always wondered about this hot bath scene in 1986’s Northanger Abbey (click on the link to watch a 2-minute YouTube video) and how accurate it was. I was particularly curious to know if men and women truly mingled in the hot baths, and what kind of items were placed on the floating objects that the bathers held. While Jane Austen did not write this scene in her novel, the scene in the film lent a note of authenticity to Catherine Morland’s visit to Bath.
In Aristocrats, Stella Tillyard writes a full description of these 18th century bathers:
In the eighteenth century pride of place went to the Pump Room, where warm mineral water was sold by the glass, and the King’s Bath. This giant communal cistern was right under the windows of the Pump Room, open to the gaze of all. Patients sat in the bath with hot water right up to their necks. Men were enveloped in brown linen suits. Women wore petticoats and jackets of the same material. They sat side by side in a hot, faintly sulphurous mist.
Limp cotton handkerchiefs caught the sweat which dribbled down the bathers’ faces; afterwards they were tucked away in the brims of patients’ hats. Lightweight bowls of copper floated perilously on the water. Inside them vials of oil and sweet smelling pomanders bobbed up and down. On a cold morning the bathers in their caps and hats looked to the curious onlookers pressed against the glass above them like perspiring mushrooms rising into the thick gaseous air (p 35-36).
- My other posts about Bath
- Update: Victoria Art Gallery, Bath
- Mary Chandler, Poet and Bath Milliner
- The Official Roman Baths Museum Website
- Roman Baths, England
- Northanger Abbey, 1986

Image and two details: Cruikshank, Public Bathing in Bath or Stewing Alive, 1825
Thanks for a fascinating post, Vic! I too am fascinated by the baths of Bath, and I truly appreciate that description from Aristocrats. My research tells me that the floating bowls were meant to “spread purification and perfume,” with an emphasis on perfume, for an era when bathing was more about an occasional medical treatment than a practice for cleanliness. And speaking of Stewing Alive, if you have not already read it I’m sure you would enjoy the Victoria Art Gallery’s wonderful exhibition catalogue by that name, which is all about the history of the baths at Bath.
Thanks, Laurie. Fabulous advice!
Terrific post!
I wonder about the feathered bonnets in those photos, though. Feathers were extremely expensive and ladies would probably not have risked making them damp and droopy in the midst of this miasma. What do you think?
In the water fully clothed, lol!
Catherine, I agree with you. Those feathers would have drooped in that moist, humid space, ruining them. Cruikshank’s illustration, which I imagine is the most accurate, shows men and women wearing small caps, which was also mentioned by Stella Tilyard.
Very interesting indeed! They must have made quite a sight.
Years ago I tasted the water in the Pump Room while visiting Bath – my dad caught my expression with the camera – very amusing!
I had no idea about Bath protocol; that is so interesting! I wish when I went to the Baths they had more information about them in this period.
[…] In honor of this event, I will feature a series of posts about Bath, such as this one entitled Public Bathing in Bath, which I featured last July. In addition, it is not too late to join Laurel Ann and her cohorts in […]
[…] at Jane Austen’s World wrote a post on the hot baths that quotes a book providing an explanation for the floaties: In the eighteenth century pride of […]
[…] Public Bathing in Bath, Georgian Style Possibly related posts: (automatically generated)Book Giveaway of Rude Awakenings of a Jane Austen AddictJane Austen in Comics: Artists Liz Wong, Kate Beaton, and Sonny LiewElizabeth Gilbert, Lori Smith, Tina Fey and Will You Get On With This Proje…Jane Austen in Bath: Queen’s Square […]
[…] Public Bathing in Bath, Georgian Style […]
Thank you for sharing it! I was really curious about this “pool”! :)