Yes! And it was the last job he did well!
the first flushing toilets were made in Elizabethan England
George Washington George Washington
cuz your ghey
The Minoans invented the first flushing toilets among many other things. Information about the first modern-day flushing toilets: The first patent for a flushing toilet was issued to Alexander Cummings in 1775, sixty years before Thomas Crapper was born. Crapper was awarded 9 patents during his lifetime, 3 of them for improvements to the flushing water closet, but the true inventor was Alexander Cummings. Also, Sir John Harrington had invented a water closet in 1596 with a proper flush, but no water trap.
The earliest known flushing toilets were in the Indus Valley in the 26th century BC. Flush toilets were also used in Crete and the Roman Empire.Sir John Harrington, in 1596, designed a toilet with a flush valve. Another name associated with toilets is Thomas Crapper, whose company built toilets in the late 1800s designed by Albert Gilbin.16th century England in Queen Elizabeth's palace
This is one question that still has alot of mystery around it, it is believed that Thomas Crapper invented the first toilet, however this has never been proved, but according to documentation, in 1738 J.F Brondel invented the first valve type flush toilet. Thomas Crapper invented the toilets...it figures!
Toilets are no problem, the dishwasher shouldn't be either. Sometimes the seals can dry out and may leak slightly the first time it is used, but only a very little and should be fine after the first time. This may not happen at all, but there is a slight chance of it.
The first flushing toilet was for queen Victoria the first.
Yes it does have toilets, as it is a first world country.
Yes, eye flushing is a form of first aid.
Flush toilets were first used in the 26th Century BC in the Indus Vally. Flush toilets were used through out the Roman Empire. In l596 Sir John Harington published a paper describing what was to become a modern system and installed one for Elizabeth the First (although she refused to use it) The flushing mechanisms have been subject to improvement ever sinceEngland, in the reign of Queen Elizabeth I.
Toilets in modern Rome are like all modern toilets. The modern flushing toilet with an S- bend was first patented by Alexander Cummings in 1775 and the first toilet with a U-bend was patented by Tomas Crapper in 1880. The toilets of ancient Rome were totally different. They were communal and could be in rooms without partitions or outdoors. An outdoors toilet found at Ostia (Rome's port) had three walls and the fourth side was open. Along three walls there are benches with openings which rested on top of brickwork. The toilets had their sewage. They were flushed with running water. When possible they were built near the baths so that the water from the baths could be recycled to flush them.