On this day … 19 August 1876

The Preston Guardian reported that ‘Eminent Prestonians’, including Joseph Livesey, had attended the opening of Brierley’s Hydropathic Establishment, 27b, Church Street (opposite the Old Dog Inn).

Joseph Livesey
Joseph Livesey – looking clean and healthy

Hydropathy was a water cure for a host of ailments. It flourished in Victorian England, with establishments springing up all over the country offering treatments. In Preston, its most fervent advocate was Livesey, who saw it as part of his prescription for a healthy life, along with total abstinence from alcohol. It seems to have worked for him, he lived a long and active life, dying aged ninety in 1884.

Livesey devoted a whole chapter of his autobiography to the treatment (another chapter is devoted to phrenology, including a long account of the flattering report of his character that a leading phrenologist produced after reading his bumps).

He was introduced to hydropathy by a practitioner in Windermere, near the summer residence he built for himself there, one of the new large houses overlooking the lake that were attracting wealthy Lancastrians after the railway reached Windermere. It opens as follows:

‘Water for both inside and outside has been what I have long preached and practised. Hence I have always advocated Hydropathy, and have also largely availed myself, for my bodily ailments, of that mode of treatment.

‘The first doctor practising Hydropathy which I consulted was Dr. Pasely at Bowness, Windermere. This was above thirty years ago, and his place was a most limited one compared with those which have been since erected in numerous parts of the kingdom, including the extensive establishment opened this year (1881) by the Windermere Hydropathic Company. This is situate on the slope of Biskey Howe, overlooking lake Windermere, and also the lovely lake-side village of Bowness, and immediately above my former residence at that place.

‘Subsequently I visited most of the leading Hydropathic Establishments—Gully’s and Wilson’s, Malvern; the Wells and Ben Rhydding at Ilkley; and Smedley’s I have visited several times. I have also been twice at the Hydropathic Establishment at Rolandseck on the Rhine—on one occasion remaining there nine weeks. No one has been more faithful to the use of Nature’s best remedy, simplifying the water treatment in many respects.’

The Ro Windermere
The Windermere hydropathic institution, formerly known as the Windermere Hydro Horel, now simply as ‘The Ro’: https://www.therohotel.com/windermere-hotels

Livesey, a shareholder in the Windermere Hydropathic Company, was less than happy when such establishments started offering alcohol to their guests:

‘But it is lamentable to find in places ostensibly for the promotion of health, that there has been introduced the very substance—Alcohol—which undermines men’s constitutions, and induces disease and every other evil.’

At his death, Livesey still held his shares in the Windermere Hydropathic Company, later named the Windermere Hydro Hotel, now simply ‘The Ro’. He left the shares to his children. By then he had sold his Lakeland retreat (for £1,250), but still owned other property in the district valued at £4,500.


Sources
Chapter 17 of Livesey’s autobiography
Livesey’s Lakeland retreat


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