I was born in 1959. In contrast to the Liverpool wash house, my parents had a 1956 (or thereabouts) Kenmore wringer washer and took clothes to the laundromat to dry them during the winter, when hanging outdoors wasn't an option. She also had a couple of those multi-tiered air drying racks in the house. And this was in the era of cloth diapers! No boiling for sanitation as in the wash house, but she used liquid chlorine bleach a lot.
Early in 1960, my dad bought the Kenmore Model 80 pair I grew up with. My mom, who used a public by-hand wash house in Italy before coming to the States after the war, was not convinced the automatic would clean as well as her wringer, so she'd wash in the wringer, then transfer the clothes to the automatic and select the Rinse & Spin cycle. No wonder the black lettering on that cycle button was the first to wear off. She had the automatic a good nine months before trusting it with the whole job.
Thanks for embedding the fascinating film, Launderess!
Early in 1960, my dad bought the Kenmore Model 80 pair I grew up with. My mom, who used a public by-hand wash house in Italy before coming to the States after the war, was not convinced the automatic would clean as well as her wringer, so she'd wash in the wringer, then transfer the clothes to the automatic and select the Rinse & Spin cycle. No wonder the black lettering on that cycle button was the first to wear off. She had the automatic a good nine months before trusting it with the whole job.
Thanks for embedding the fascinating film, Launderess!