| dc.description.abstract |
By relying on existing cultural models, the Victorian spa promoted health
and wellness. Advertising, together with other forms of promotion, strengthened the
legitimacy of its claims to cure a variety of health problems. By the use of some links to
science and a mystical folk belief about the efficacy of the local mineral waters, three
spas emerged in St.Catharines: the Stephenson House, the WeIland House, and the
Springbank. As the twentieth century approached, the spa movement declined and
institutionalized medicine struggled to establish a monopoly on health care. This thesis
argues that the health spas in St. Catharines occupied that transitional space in nineteenth
century medicine between home remedy and hospital.
The interplay between scientific discovery and business enterprise produced a
climate in which the Victorian health resort flourished. This phenomenon, combined with
the various maladies brought on by industrialization, nineteenth-century lifestyle, and the
absence of medical options, created a surge in the popularity of health spas and mineral
spring therapies.
By the tum of the twentieth century, interest in mineral water treatments had
declined. The health resorts that had blossomed between 1850 and 1899 began to
experience a serious decrease in business. This popular movement became outmoded in
the face of emerging medical and scientific knowledge. In St. Catharines, the last resort
to remain standing, the WeIland House, finished out the city's spa era as a hospital. |
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