The Laundry

The Laundry

  • Doing laundry is a fact of life, and this display shows how it was done here in a small country town around the turn of the century.
  • Double washtubs made it convenient to wash and rinse either on the back porch or in the back yard, with a scrub board kept handy. Also in the back yard there was always an iron wash pot for boiling the whites and other clothing items as needed, along with a stirring stick.
  • All yards had a drying area, with clotheslines strung between two trees or a post as needed. Sometimes, but usually only by the poorest families who did not have clotheslines, clothing was strung along a fence line. On rainy days clothing had to be dried on racks beside the fire, or on porches or attics if handy.
  • Ironing boards came in different sizes and were laid across the tops of two chairs at a convenient height. Most housekeepers still used flat irons which were either heated at the back of the cook stove, many still used wood stoves, or by the fire place. A very modern contraption was a gas powered iron which was a luxury item. Even with today's modern washers and dryers, there is still nothing like the fresh smell of sun-dried sheets!

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