George Witt (collector)
George Witt | |
---|---|
Born | 25 March 1804 Swaffham Prior, Cambridgeshire, England |
Died | 20 February 1869 London, England | (aged 64)
Education | Leiden University |
Spouse | Elizabeth Hedley |
George Witt FRS (25 March 1804 – 20 February 1869) was a doctor, banker and mayor known for his collection of erotic objects.
Life
George Witt was born at Swaffham Prior, Cambridgeshire, the fifth son of Matthew Witt, a farmer, and Sarah (née Woollard). He was baptised on 23 May 1805, at the Anglican St. Mary's Church, Swaffham Prior.[1]
Witt studied to become a physician at Northampton General Infirmary before he worked briefly for the East India Company. He notably took charge of a cholera epidemic on board a ship at Calcutta. He became a surgeon at Bedford Infirmary from where he visited Leiden for just three months. Based on his work in Calcutta he graduated as a Doctor of Medicine at the University.[2] Witt married Elizabeth Hedley in Bedford in 1832. He practised as a doctor in Bedford where he rose to be the medical lead at Bedford Infirmary and by 1834 he was elected to the Mayor of Bedford.[3] Witt was also elected to be a Fellow of the Royal Society the same year.[4] Witt however failed to become an Alderman in Bedford until 1845 as his first application was turned down as he was not thought to have been a first class mayor a decade before.[2]
In 1849 he was made "physician extraordinary" after he resigned from the Infirmary citing personal reasons. Witt had been recognised for the contribution of anatomical specimens and his collection of antiquities and natural history artefacts were particularly valued and it was thought that the town could establish a museum based on Witt's collection. Part of this collection was sold and eventually became part of first Bedford Modern School and eventually Bedford Museum.[2]
Australia and London
Witt emigrated to Australia and settled in Sydney in 1850 where he resumed his medical career. Within a short time however he was distracted to banking and speculation and at this occupation he made a fortune as a banker. Witt returned to the United Kingdom where he used his money to establish a new house near Hyde Park. Witt now began to put together a collection of what would have been considered obscene objects. Witt was not concerned with the detailed provenance of these objects and he collected both ancient and modern items.[5] Witt shared these objects with an international group of correspondents who appreciated these artefacts.[2][3] Some of the items concerned nothing more unusual than body cleaning including the Uerdingen Hoard.[6]
In the 1860s there was a lot of interest in the theories concerning the worship of
Promotion of the Victorian Turkish bath
In the late 1850s, Witt was much influenced by his long-standing friend, David Urquhart, who in 1857 had just opened England’s first Victorian Turkish bath in Manchester. Urquhart argued that, just as he had made his own bath available to his friends, others should follow suit in order to spread knowledge about the bath and encourage the building of such baths for the public.[8] Witt was one of the first who acted upon this suggestion, converting a room in his Knightsbridge home into an effective Turkish bath as early as 1858. Although it was only a single room, bathing in the hot air at different temperatures was achieved by arranging seating at different levels. Witt became a strong advocate of the Turkish bath and was responsible for introducing many friends, especially medical practitioners, to its therapeutic possibilities. Among his guests were dermatologist Erasmus Wilson (who went on to write a book on the bath),[9] Thomas Spenser Wells, Queen Victoria's surgeon and president of the Royal College of Surgeons,[10] Charles Lockhart Robertson (who successfully introduced the bath into the Sussex and District Lunatic Asylum at Haywards Heath),[11] and William Joseph Goodwin, Queen Victoria’s personal vet (who installed a Turkish bath for the Queen’s horses at Hampton Court Palace Mews).[12]
Witt died on 20 February 1869, at his home, 20 Princes' Terrace, Hyde Park, London.[2] He was buried at Swaffham Prior. His wife, Elizabeth (née Hedley), died at the same house in 1871 and was also buried at Swaffham Prior.
Legacy
Witt's collection remained together in the Secretum until the
In 2014 the "secret" collection contains half of Witt's legacy which have not been reclassified. The curators of the museum think that these remaining items, and another 100 items from other sources, will be kept as a single collection as these items record Victorian values and the changing attitude to obscenity.[5]
References
- ^ "Swaffham Prior: St Mary". A Church Near You. 15 September 2022. Retrieved 14 October 2022.
- ^ a b c d e f g David Gaimster, " Witt, George (1804–1869)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2010, accessed 27 July 2014
- ^ a b c Thomas, Laura (25 May 2000). "Restricted to men of 'taste and education'". Times Higher Education. Retrieved 26 July 2014.
- ^ "Royal Society". The Spectator. June 1834. Retrieved 26 July 2014.
- ^ a b c d Gainster, David (2000). "Sex and Sensibility at the British Museum". History Today. 50 (9). Retrieved 26 July 2014.
- ^ Toilet set, British Museum, retrieved 31 July 2014
- ISBN 978-1-84331-273-4. Retrieved 26 July 2014.
- ^ Avcıoğlu, Nebahat (2011) Turquerie and the politics of representation, 1728-1876 (Farnham: Ashgate) pp.206-7
- ^ Wilson, Erasmus (1861) The Eastern or Turkish bath… (London: Churchill)
- ^ Wells, T Spencer 'Lecture on the revival of the Turkish, or ancient Roman bath' Medical Times and Gazette (3 Nov 1860)
- ^ Shifrin, Malcolm (2015) Victorian Turkish Baths (Swindon: Historic England) pp.190-192
- ^ Stevenson, Alexandra 'A Turkish bath for horses at Hampton Court Palace' Historic Royal Palaces Blog (16 Jun 2022) Retrieved 6 October 2022