The Bath & Barber Shop

 

"The bathing rooms now kept by Rev. S. S. Ball in the rear of his Barber's Shop are in elegant trim for the accommodation of his Friends and the public," advertised Elder Samuel S. Ball.His shop was on the south side of the public square (1849-1852). He also sold "Ball Restorative" to prevent baldness. But the Reverend Ball's true passion was the betterment of his people. As an agent for the Colored Baptist Association he traveled to Africa in 1848 to evaluate Liberia as an "asylum for free blacks." He later championed colonization---believing that colored people could practice democracy and prosper economically in Liberia free from white oppression. He petitioned the Illinois legislature to finance emigration, but he died of typhoid fever at age 42---his plans unfulfilled. Many of Springfield's African Americans did not share their minister's dream. Local blacks held an anti-colonization rally in Clinton Hall on the north side of the square a few months before the Lincoln-Douglas debates in 1858.People did not bathe much in Lincoln's day. many did not consider being dirty as degrading. But churches began teaching that cleanliness was a moral requirement. And social reformers taught that it was necessary for respectability. Still, social commitment to cleanliness took time. Not until the 1850s did regular personal washing become routine for many Americans. By then many bedrooms had basins, pitchers, and washstands (but not tubs). An 1851 plan to put a bathroom in the White House was widely denounced as an "unnecessary expense." Bath soap became a middle-class standard around the Civil War. By 1860 Boston had 3,910 bathtubs for 177,840 people. New York's capital, Albany reported just 19 tubs. The 1860 newspapers here in Illinois' capital seldom advertised bathtubs or public bathing facilities.

Marker is on E. Adams Street.

Courtesy hmdb.org

Credits and Sources:

HMDB