PLASTIC TOILET BUCKET
(a) Large, cylindrical, white plastic bucket. Round, cylindrical bucket made of white plastic, with a long, ridged, white plastic handle attached to either side of the bucket's rim. On the base of the bucket are two raised, circular motifs, one of which has 'Nally' printed inside.
(b) Large, round, white plastic lid for bucket. Thin, round, white plastic disk, with a deep raised rim around the edge. Along one small section of the rim extends inwards creating a white plastic handle.
Provenanced to Fremantle Prison. The toilet buckets in the Fremantle Prison Collection were all left on site when the Prison closed in 1991, because the new maximum security prison Casuarina had adequate sewerage facilities.
Details
Details
'Nally'
The hygiene and sanitation standards of Fremantle Prison underwent little modification throughout its history. Upon completion of the Convict Establishment, the Main Cell Block incorporated small, single cells, each featuring a wash basin with running water. Such amenities were considered a rare luxury at the time, and were reportedly envied by the free settlers of Fremantle. Despite the initial intention to provide prisoners with high sanitation standards, the wash basins proved to be an expensive failure for the Establishment, due to their constant need for repairs, the overflow of water from tap leakage, and the pungent smell of waste. It was under the recommendation of the Establishment’s Surgeon that the wash basins were eventually removed from all the Prison’s cells. With the removal of the wash basins, prisoners were instead provided with two separate buckets; one for water and another to be used as a toilet.
The toilet buckets, or ‘slop buckets’ as they were also known, would become a prominent object within the lives of most prisoners throughout the history of Fremantle Prison, representing the dehumanizing conditions of the system to which they considered themselves subjected. During the 1970s there was an attempt to replace the toilet bucket with portable chemical toilets inside the cells. However, the introduction of these portable toilets proved to be unsustainable and impractical, as prisoners would both destroy the toilets and brew illicit beverages from the chemicals. As a result, the Prison returned to the traditional method of ‘slopping out’ with toilet buckets, a method which would endure until the Prison’s closure in 1991.
The emptying of toilet buckets was incorporated into the prisoners’ daily routine, which changed little over the course of the Prison’s occupancy. Every morning prisoners would be released from their cells, where they would be instructed to ‘file off’ to their division’s yard, wherein they would empty their buckets into septic traps before leaving the buckets on marked white lines to be disinfected by an appointed fellow prisoner. It is worth noting that the disinfection of the toilet buckets was not introduced until the mid-twentieth century.
The toilet buckets had a damaging effect on the mentality and psychology of prisoners and the lack of hygiene would ultimately contribute to the closure of the Prison. While some prisoners found it easier to accept the practice of toilet buckets, others found it repulsive and dehumanizing as one inmate recalls in 1991, “It’s really dehumanizing you know, just even to use one, to even have to look at one is dehumanizing. Lots of people don’t realise that outside. Has a very big effect on you morally you know.”