>> The April Fool's article with which I am familiar is in the April '75
>> issue. It does not mention pyramids. It does have my favorite hoaxes:
>> that Thomas Crapper invented the flush toilet and (in the follow-up
>> explanation article) that Otto Titzling invented the bra.
>Thomas Crapper did exist, and did make flush toilets; his contribution was
>the modern flushing valve mechanism. I have seen a roomful of his products
>at the Gladstone Pottery Museum, Stoke-on-Trent, England (really elaborate
>pans with the sort of decorative glazing you'd expect to find on an antique
>soup tureen). The museum will sell you postcards or posters reproducing
>some of his advertisements.
Nobody has helped me out by offering me copies of the articles in the
recent Crapper/Titzling thread, so I'll take a chance that I am repeating
something said there.
Here are quotes from the Sci Am articles on the subject.
In his 1975 April Fools article, Gardner writes:
Modern mechanisms, in which a ball float and automatic
cutoff stopper limit the amount of water released with
each flush, date from the early 19th-century patents
of Thomas Crapper, a British manufacturer of plumbing
fixtures who died in 1910. (See "Clean and Decent: The
Fascinating History of the Bathroom and Water Closet,"
by Lawrence Wright, Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1960, and
"Flushed with Pride: The Story of Thomas Crapper," by
Wallace Reyburn, Prentice-Hall, 1971.)
Then in his July, 1975, article Gardner explained his hoaxes. He wrote:
The data on the history of the water closet is accurate
except for the reference to Thomas Crapper. The book
by Wallace Reyburn, "Flushed with Pride: The Story of
Thomas Crapper," does exist, and it is the funniest
plumbing hoax since H.L.Mencken wrote his history of
the bathroom. Reyburn's book persuaded many readers
that the slang words "crap" and "crapper" derive from
water closets made in England by one Mr. Crapper, but I
shall cite two indications that the book is a joke: (1)
the entry on "crap" and "crapping case" in "The Slang
Dictionary" (London: Chatto and Windus, revised 1873)
and (2) Reyburn's latest book, "Bust-up: The Uplifting
Tale of Otto Titzling and the Development of the Bra
(Prentice-Hall, 1972).
Richard M. Mathews D efend
Internet: richard@locus.com E stonian-Latvian-Lithuanian
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