JF Ptak Science Books Quick Post
You can't have a Second Industrial Revolution without people living closely together, and you can't have that without cities, and you have cities without water, and you can't have any of that without a way of getting rid of the water and what all of those people were evacuating. And so the issue of "drainage" takes on a lot of powerful meaning--in getting rid of sewage, and rainwater, and a host of other things.
Now 1892 is already decades past the Second Industrial Revolution (as was indoor plumbing) and of course cities continued to grow, and so did the needs for plumbing in delivering the byproducts of consumption and maintenance of the city. The Durham system--manufactured in NYC--was one of these responses, and the image below shows a cross section of a multi-story structure with a several toilets, basically a map showing the flow of the exuded lubricant of the great machinery of the city. That prose was a little purpley, but it is sorta true.
The Durham Patent System of Screw-Joint Iron House Drainage addressed this issue, manufacturing the pipe and all of the other necessaries, ready for you to install:
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