Wallpaper
as a murder weapon? Poisoned in your sleep? This week's post recounts how a
fashion for green could kill!
“A great deal of slow poisoning is going on in Great Britain .”
Dr William Hinds 1857
In the
1850’s oil lamps, with their brighter light, replaced candles as the main
source of household illumination, and so walls no longer needed to be pale
reflective colours. Dark shades became fashionable and of these, there was a
passion for Scheele’s Green and Schweinfurt Green. Anyone who was 'on trende'
had to have a ‘green room,’ and manufacturers estimated that in 1858 there were
an estimated 100 million squares miles of green wallpaper in Britain alone.
Unfortunately, what people failed to realize was that their prized wallpaper was
coloured with arsenic, and very likely poisoning them.
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A fashionable green room. |
There first
hint of trouble was recorded in the Limehouse district of London, in 1862.
First one child, then a second, and tragically a third, died with symptoms
similar to diphtheria. However an inspection of their home by the Medical
Health Officer was of another opinion – he noted the green wallpaper in the
children’s bedroom. After tests it became clear that the painful, constricted
throats that ailed the children were not due to diphtheria, but arsenic found
in the Scheele’s green wallpaper.
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Limehouse, London, in 1899. |
A
correspondence on the subject of arsenical wallpapers took place in The Times
newspaper. One respondent, signing himself ‘A. Sufferer’ wrote that when he
told his decorator that he was distributing poison, the man:
“…denied the
possibility of ill resulting and offered to eat a pound of paper.”
However the
paper manufacturers had a lot to lose, and with much the same attitude as
tobacco manufacturers’ in the 1960’s, decided to deny the evidence, saying
things such as:
“Look, I can rub it [wallpaper]
hard, I can lick it [wallpaper] a dozen times with my hand and nothing
comes off.”
Their
defence was that good quality wallpapers didn’t shed arsenical dust and so
couldn’t be poisoning people. It took until the 1890’s for science to show that
arsenical vapour (not just solid arsenic) was deadly.
To make
matters worse, the Victorian remedy for illness was to be confined to a room
and avoid cold air. This meant that people suffering with headaches, fatigue,
chest complaints and nauseau (all symptoms of arsenical poisoning) were likely
to take to their beds in a green bedroom with the windows tight shut against draughts
and thus :
“Breath air loaded
with the breathe of death.”
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A typical Victorian sick room scene. |
In
‘Chambers Journal of Popular Literature, Science and Arts’ a story was
published about the orphan, Sir Frederick Staunton. Now Freddie’s guardian, his
Uncle, wished the boy harm so that he could inherit, and sent his ward to stay
with the local vicar. His instructions were to give the boy the best room in
the house, a room decorated with a wallpaper of a: “..rich,
deep, emerald hue.” Apparently the
room was cursed by a monk in the time of Henry VIII,
“Several deaths had
occurred in the green chamber in particular, for the most part blooming girls
who had faded and pined under ‘the curse’ until their dim eyes had looked their
last at the emerald-tinted walls.”
Fortunately for a sickening Freddie, a visiting physician
spotted the true cause of the boy’s ill health and all ended happily.
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A Victorian green dining room - (courtesy of the Guardian.com) |
Unhappily,
arsenic wasn’t just present in green wallpaper, but also in blue, pink, yellow,
brown, gray and white. In 1870’s America, the Michigan Board of Health
assembled books of samples of arsenical wallpaper, called ‘Shadows from the
Walls of Death’ to be circulated to every state library and increase awareness
of this silent danger.
Even so, it
Queen Victoria
was seemingly unaware of the danger when in 1879 she abraided a guest for being
late for his audience. His defence was that he had slept poorly because of the
green wallpaper in his bedroom. Astonished to learn of the dangers of arsenical
papers the Queen had every bit of wallpaper stripped out of Buckingham Palace .
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A typical Willam Morris design - courtesy of V&A museum. |
Not
everyone was so easily convinced. The famous artist and designer, William
Morris, only removed green arsenic
pigments from his wallpapers under protest, writing in 1885:
“….it is hardly
possible to imagine….a greater folly…than the arsenic scare.”
Eventually
in the 1870’s it was public fear of poisoning that saw the decline in fashion
for green. Some manufacturers’ tried to forestall this by printing ‘Free From
Arsenic’ on the back of their papers. This backfired since when tests were run
on these ‘arsenic free’ papers, they were found to contain very high levels
indeed. Public confidence never recovered and green walls went out of fashion!
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Sometimes it's easy to ignore the obvious..... |