Absolutely not , Ships had no piping as everything was either rowing or sail, There was no such thing as hydraulics or fire suppression systems. There was only public out houses that had 23,765 adjoining toilets BUT no sinks as there was no bamboo in America or England=Plumbing came after WW 2 when they took the old guns and canons and made them to carry waste and water=
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yes
The ancient Egyptians had flush toilets. The ancient Romans had indoor plumbing.
Indoor Plumbing
The first indoor bathtub was introduced in 1870. It was in Seattle, Washington. John Michael Kohler later made the first tub specifically for indoor bathing in 1883. He did this by applying enamel to a horse through. His company later started making indoor toilets, sinks, and other plumbing. Kohler is still a popular name in indoor plumbing to this day.
Yes they had indoor plumbing in World War 2. Some farmers did not have it but nearly everyone in the cities in the US, US and Europe and Some Asian places had indoor plumbing. You asked the right person. My grandfather had a hardware store and plumbing business way back then.
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Johnathan R. Plumber
I was born Mar 31. 1929. In a small town in IL. We always had indoor plumbing. The Aztec's had indoor plumbing.
Indoor plumbing was invented by the Romans. Its common use in the US began around the turn of the 20th century with the advent of pumps to move water. Some inventive people had used storage tanks and hand powered pumps to provide indoor plumbing as early as the 18th century but these were not in widespread use.
It’s indoor plumbing
The ancient Egyptians had flush toilets. The ancient Romans had indoor plumbing.
About 2,000 years ago the Romans started using indoor plumbing.
yes they have it
Indoor Plumbing
Check out ancient Rome or Greek plumbing history