Seabathing, Georgian Style
While Bath and other interior Spa towns remained popular places for Regency vacationers
and invalids alike, by the 1790’s a new fad had sprung up: Sea-bathing. Prescribed by
doctors as early as 1750, things really took off when George III chose to recuperate in Weymouth in 1789, giving this treatment the Royal stamp of approval.
The Austens enjoyed many sea-side holidays and Jane sent several characters to various sea
side resorts for adventures. Lydia travels to Brighton to meet her fate while Georgiana
Darcy shares a similar experience in Ramsgate, Anne and Captain Wentworth share a fateful
day in Lyme, the Knightly children spend the summer sea-bathing on the advice of their doctor,
Jane Fairfax and Frank Churchill meet and become engaged at Weymouth and Emma honeymoons by
the sea. Even Jane’s unfinished novel, Sanditon, is set in a seaside resort town of the
same name.
Sea-bathing was merely an extension of the indoor spa bathing practiced at the
various bath houses and hot springs located around England. The most obvious difference in this Regency form of exercise which sets it apart from its modern day equivalent are the conditions under which it was prescribed. While one would suppose the summer months to be the most popular in which to
visit, view and even bathe in the ocean, doctors of the time often prescribed immersion in
the coldest water available- records of the Austen family’s visits range from September to
February and nearly every month in between. Brrrr!
In 1791, Jane’s cousin and future sister-in-law Eliza spent January and February in Margate
for the sake of her small son. A Doctor, she wrote, had assured her that “one month’s
bathing at this time of year was more efficacious than six at any other...The sea has
strengthened him wonderfully, and I think has likewise been of great service to myself. I
still continue bathing notwithstanding the severity of weather and frost and snow [!],
which I think is somewhat courageous.” I find it courageous too! Austen, herself, went
bathing on several occasions during a visit to Lyme in September 1804.
In Persuasion, Mary Musgrove goes bathing during their extended stay in Lyme in
November. One can hardly imagine plump Mary strutting her stuff on a beach, but how else
was this to be accomplished? Another passage from the same book tells us, “the principal street almost hurrying into the water, the walk to the Cobb, skirting round the pleasant little bay, which, in the season, is animated with bathing machines and company...are what the stranger's eye will seek." Ah! The Bathing Machine. But what is that?
The Bathing Machine, invented in the early 1700’s by Benjamin Beale, was a wooden hut built
on wheels into which a Regency lady could ascend. Once inside, she could change into
garments suitable for bathing (in most cases a muslin shift) The vehicle would then be
pulled by horses or a bathing-woman out into to ocean until the water was about shoulder
deep where the lady would descend the stairs with the aid of the bathing woman (called a Dipper) and, once submerged, begin to enjoy all the healthful benefits of the sea. In such a way, the
ladies of the upper class were able to enjoy the ocean, while preserving their modesty.
A
terrific example of a period bathing machine can be seen in the film Mrs. Brown,
which stars Judi Dench as Queen Victoria.

Laura Sauer runs Austentation, a company that specializes in custom made Regency
Accessories.
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