This is a watercolour painting of a condition known as ‘Chimney Sweep's Cancer’, also called soot wart, on a 32yo man. Soot warts are a squamous cell carcinoma of the skin of the scrotum & it was the first reported form of occupational cancer.
(gruesome) Thread!
Sweep’s cancer was a common condition in 18th century Europe, but it was particularly prevalent in Britain where the flues were much narrower. Adults couldn’t fit inside, so very young boys aged between 4 and 7 years were apprenticed to sweeps to do the work.
It was extraordinarily dangerous. These ‘climbing boys’ could get jammed in the flue, suffocate or burn to death if their master lit a fire beneath them to speed things up. Its likely this is where the expression to 'light a fire' under someone comes from
Whereas German chimney sweeps tight clothing (like this image from 1785), British child sweeps were sent up the chimney wearing just a shirt or often completely naked. At night, they slept under soot sacks.
Sweeps were notorious for not washing. This meant they were in contact with soot all the time. Several laws were passed to try and end the practice & raise the minimum age of apprenticeship for chimney sweeps to 16 years, but they were difficult to enforce & largely ignored.
Sweep’s cancer is a squamous cell carcinoma of the skin of the scrotum. The average age for the onset of symptoms was 37, but it was reported in children as young as 8. The disease was preceded by the development of hyperkeratotic lesions, which the sweeps called ‘soot warts’.
If they are not removed, they will develop into scrotal cancer & prove fatal. Most doctors thought they were the result of an STI & treated them with mercury.
But sweeps would often try to deal with soot warts by themselves by simply cutting them off. In 1850, Dr George Lawson treated one such man; "he seized with a split stick & cut off with a razor. He remarked that it was not very painful. He resumed work the following day."
If removing the soot wart wasn’t successful it would become malignant. This is a description of one 28year old man who was admitted to hospital in 1825.
It is understandable that sweeps would delay seeking medical treatment for this. The only course of action was surgery to remove the testicle – without anaesthetic. This is a description of one such operation carried out by William Sand Cox in 1846.
The Barts Pathology Museum in Smithfield holds several specimens of sweep’s cancer and soot warts that were removed from afflicted patients that you can see today.
It was English surgeon Percivall Pott who in 1775 first suggested this was a cancer caused by exposure to soot as a child. In doing so, Pott was the first physician to claim cancer could be caused by an environmental carcinogen.
What no one understand is how does soot cause cancer? The prevailing theory was that soot got caught in the skin folds of the scrotum and irritated the skin, causing the cancer.
It wasn’t until 1922, that R.D. Passey, a research physician at Guy's Hospital in London proved skin cancer in mice was caused by exposed to an extract made from soot. From there, doctors soon found out that there are several polycyclic hydrocarbons in soot that are carcinogens
Children were still used as sweeps in Britain until the practice was finally outlawed in 1875, following the death of twelve-year-old George Brewster whose master had caused him to climb and clean the chimney at Fulbourn Hospital.
George got stuck and a wall had to be pulled down to get him out. He died a few days later and his master was charged with manslaughter.
The 1875 act prohibited any person under 21 from working as a sweep, forced all sweeps to register with the police, & order official supervision of their work.
George Brewster was the last child chimney sweep in England to die in a chimney.
(Medical mages from the Wellcome Collection)
If you would like to read more about the history of soot warts and sweep cancer, here are some great online resources
Erotic pottery made by the Moche, the society that dominated Peru’s northern coast for 800 years until about A.D. 800. The invading Spanish were deeply shocked at the Moche’s sexual attitudes & set about stomping them out.
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In 1590, Jesuit Jose de Acosta, a famous colonial-era churchmen, wrote that “virginity, which is viewed with esteem and honor by all men, is deprecated by those barbarians as something vile.”
“Except for the virgins consecrated to the Sun or the Inca, all other women are considered of less value when they are virgin, and thus whenever possible they give themselves to the first man they find”
The philosopher Diogenes (c.412-323 BCE) was described by Plato as ‘a Socrates gone mad'. He lived in a barrel & believed man must embrace nature & reject shame. He openly masturbated in public, saying “If only it were so easy to soothe hunger by rubbing an empty belly”.
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Diogenes rejected all of the norms of “civilised” behavior. He urinated, defecated, and masturbated in public. Later images of him often showed him carrying a lamp in the day, to symbolise his futile search for an honest man.
He was hugely influential and inspired a school of philosophy called the cynics. The name of comes from the Greek κυνικός (kunikos), meaning “dog-like”.
This is an advertisement for the famous “Coraline Corset”, patented by two brothers, Dr Ira & Dr Lucien Warner in 1873. They marketed it as a “health corset”.
Corsets were a staple of women’s fashion (and some men’s) since the 16th century & stayed in fashion until the early 20th century. Corsets were generally made from a stout fabric, with bone or metal inserts. Fastening at the front with hooks, the back closed with adjustable laces
*They are lovely things and everyone should have one.*
This is the bed of the legendary courtesan Émilie-Louise Delabigne (1848-1910). The writer Emile Zola wrote about it in his novel, Nana. ‘A bed such as has never existed, a throne, an altar where Paris came to admire her sovereign nudity’.
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By the time she died, Louise was a millionaire with a vast estate of grand houses, jewellery, & a substantial art collection. But her beginnings were considerably more humble.
She was the illegitimate daughter of Émilie Delabigne, a laundry maid from Normandy who sold sex to subsidise the pittance washing clothes brought in.
This is the work of African American photographer, Alvin Baltrop (1948-2004). Alvin photographed the gay community at the piers lining Manhattan’s west side in the 1970s. Pier 48 was then an abandoned wooden structure where gay men met to socialise and have sex.
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Alvin didn’t achieve commercial success with this art during his lifetime. He was a poor man who struggled with poverty and often couldn’t pay his rent. He made his money mostly through odd jobs, but photography was his passion.
Born in the Bronx, Alvin’s mother was a devout Jehovah’s Witness who hated his art and regularly threw it away. Eventually, Alvin left home and served in the navy during the Vietnam war. He started taking portraits of sailors during this time.