Death by Wallpaper: The Alluring Arsenic Colors that Poisoned the Victorian Age (2024)

Posted inBooks Reviews

Lucinda Hawksley’s book Bitten by Witch Fever chronicles the rise of poisonous pigments in the 19th century through the burgeoning British wallpaper trade.

Death by Wallpaper: The Alluring Arsenic Colors that Poisoned the Victorian Age (1)byAllison Meier

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Death by Wallpaper: The Alluring Arsenic Colors that Poisoned the Victorian Age (2)

“A great deal of slow poisoning is going on in Great Britain,” wrote Birmingham doctor William Hinds in 1857. He was among agrowing movement of peopleconcerned aboutatoxic killer intheir daily lives: namely, their wallpaper.

Lucinda Hawksley’sBitten by Witch Fever: Wallpaper & Arsenic in the Nineteenth-Century Home, out this monthfrom Thames & Hudson, chronicles the rise of poisonous pigments in the 19th century through the burgeoning British wallpaper trade. The beautifully designed book includes facsimiles of 275 Victorian wallpapers, all of which were found to contain arsenic after recent testing by the British National Archives.

Death by Wallpaper: The Alluring Arsenic Colors that Poisoned the Victorian Age (3)

The title is taken from a dismissive quote bythe most famous wallpaper designer to come out of that time: William Morris. The “doctors were bitten as people were bitten by the witch fever,” he wrote to his friend Thomas Wardle in 1885. In other words, it was all hysteria.

Morris didn’t just have his identity as an artist linked to the wallpaper industry and its arsenic pigments, which allowed for the mass production of newly vibrant and durable colors; his wealth also came from his family’s mine, DevonGreat Consols, which was among the leading producers of arsenic. Part of Hawksley’s research was todelve into how Morris— a philanthropist who advocated for humane working conditions in his decorative arts company— overlooked the incredible hazards of the arsenic mine and the use of poison in his wallpaper.

“One of the great unanswered questions about Morris is why he never visited the mines or concerned himself with the welfare of the miners and their families,” Hawksley writes. Perhaps, like much of the country, he was unable to resistthe huge profits of the industry.

Death by Wallpaper: The Alluring Arsenic Colors that Poisoned the Victorian Age (4)
Death by Wallpaper: The Alluring Arsenic Colors that Poisoned the Victorian Age (5)

Back in 1771,Swedish chemist Carl Wilhelm Scheele had developed a green pigment from a compound ofcopper arsenite. In 1814,Wilhelm Sattler, a German industrialist, seemingly perfected it by using arsenic and verdigris for a more steadfast green. The pigmentcould also be mixed to createbrightyellows and rich blues, perfect for the Victorian craze for opulent interior design. In 1834, Britain produced 1,222,753 rolls of wallpaper; that number rose by2,615% to32,000,000 rolls in1874.

That arsenic was poisonous was certainly not a secret; every Victorian home had a bit of the powder lying around for rats and mice, and people likely knew tales of the “inheritance powder” being used for murder. Yet they also appliedarsenic cosmetics, gave their children toys painted with arsenic, wore dresses and hats dyed with arsenic, and ate meat dipped into it to keep away flies.Alison Matthews David, in her 2015 book Fashion Victims, notes that asnature was vanishing from the industrial city, the “Emerald Green” became popular on artificial flowers worn in the hair. She points out that just as Baudelaire was titling his book of dark poemsLes Fleurs du Mal (The Flowers of Evil), the death of a young Parisian artificial florist was being investigated in regards to the poisonous colors.

Death by Wallpaper: The Alluring Arsenic Colors that Poisoned the Victorian Age (6)
Death by Wallpaper: The Alluring Arsenic Colors that Poisoned the Victorian Age (7)

Insome kind of disconnect,people believed that only by licking the walls would theyget poisoned, or only bythe green colors. In this way, it wasn’ttoo different from theradium cosmetics that took off in the mid-20th century, even whilethe potentially dangerous power of radiation was evident. Left untouched, Victorianwallpaper could still release flakes of arsenic into the air or produce arsenical gas when conditions were damp.

Hawksley addsthat while other European countries regulated arsenic, Britain was slow, and it was only public demand and new dye techniques that changedthe industry. Initial reports of wallpaper poisoning were shared in medical literature in the late 1850s, and in an especially horrifying incident in 1862, children died in an east London home after they’d torn down the wallpaper and licked the green off its surface. Queen Victoria reportedly had all thegreen wallpaper torn down in Buckingham Palaceafter a visiting dignitary became ill in 1879. Yet it wasn’t until the Factory Workshop Acts of1883 and 1895 that Parliament instituted any sort of regulations for conditions in factories where workersregularly encountered arsenic.

“It proved effective: arsenic was responsible for a mere 1 per cent of the cases involving industrial poisoning by the twentieth century,”Hawksley writesof the new guidelines. By then, a consumer interest in “arsenic free” wallpaper had changed the market. “In the absence of government intervention, the people of Britain had used the power of their pocketbooks to make the presence of arsenic in wallpapers obsolete,” she concludes, “and as a result, their homes no longer held a fatal secret.”

Death by Wallpaper: The Alluring Arsenic Colors that Poisoned the Victorian Age (8)
Death by Wallpaper: The Alluring Arsenic Colors that Poisoned the Victorian Age (9)
Death by Wallpaper: The Alluring Arsenic Colors that Poisoned the Victorian Age (10)
Death by Wallpaper: The Alluring Arsenic Colors that Poisoned the Victorian Age (11)
Death by Wallpaper: The Alluring Arsenic Colors that Poisoned the Victorian Age (12)
Death by Wallpaper: The Alluring Arsenic Colors that Poisoned the Victorian Age (13)
Death by Wallpaper: The Alluring Arsenic Colors that Poisoned the Victorian Age (14)
Death by Wallpaper: The Alluring Arsenic Colors that Poisoned the Victorian Age (15)
Death by Wallpaper: The Alluring Arsenic Colors that Poisoned the Victorian Age (16)
Death by Wallpaper: The Alluring Arsenic Colors that Poisoned the Victorian Age (17)
Death by Wallpaper: The Alluring Arsenic Colors that Poisoned the Victorian Age (18)

Lucinda Hawksley’sBitten by Witch Fever: Wallpaper & Arsenic in the Nineteenth-Century Homeis out now fromThames & Hudson.

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Allison Meier

Allison C. Meier is a former staff writer for Hyperallergic. Originally from Oklahoma, she has been covering visual culture and overlooked history for print and online media since 2006. She moonlights...More by Allison Meier

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