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TOOLS
AND EQUIPMENT
Tools or props that would be at a laundress station would include the
following.
- Ash
hopper-The
ash hopper is a large wooden container filled with layers of ashes and
straw. Water is poured into the ash hopper and is it seeps through the
ashes, it is chemically transformed into lye. The lye is collected in
buckets through the spigot at the bottom of the ash hopper and is then
mixed with animal fat to make lye soap.
- Boiler Clothes
are boiled in the boiler, which is a large iron or copper pot.
- Dolly, Maid,
or Washing Stick This was a wooden
stick used much the same as an agitator in a modern washing machine.
This could be used to stir the clothes, and because it had little feet
could lift the clothes from the water (not pictured).
- Ironing
boards The ironing boards of the 1840s were made
out of wood. They came in various shapes and sizes.
Often an ironing cloth would be placed on top of the board to enable clothes
to be ironed more smoothly.
- Irons
There were two main types of irons: flat irons and box irons. Both
were made of cast iron, but the box iron had a hollow core where coals
could be placed. The flat iron was solid; it was heated simply by placing
it on a trivet above the coals of a fire.
- Lines
Clotheslines made of cotton were draped across the laundress quarters
on wash days.
- Line pegs (clothespins)
(not shown)

- Laundry
tubs, large and small These were round tubs made of
wooden planks and were used to soak and scrub the laundry. They had
to be soaked for two or three days prior to use so that the wood would
swell and prevent leakage.
- Lye soap
-Laundresses generally made their own lye soap mixing animal fat and
lye together. The lye was collected from the ash hopper (see above.)
Lye soap was good for cleaning but was hard on the skin.
- Washboard
The washboards at Fort Scott in the 1840s had a rough wood surface
that clothes could be scrubbed on.
- Washing bench
Tubs were generally placed on a bench so that laundresses would not
have to bend down so far to do the wash.
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LAUNDRESS
OUTFIT
- Dress and apron
made of plain cotton and/or wool
- Undergarments
Cotton drawers, camisoles, and petticoats.
- Shoes
Black leather high-topped shoes.
- Stockings
Long cotton stockings held in place by garters. Common
colors were neutral or beige.
- Hair
The laundress generally wore her hair smoothed back neatly into a
bun. It would never have been worn loose during the day.
- Head Coverings
A bonnet or day cap was worn at all times.
Some of the definitions on this page are based on
information found in Laundry
and Cleaning Practices of the Mid-Nineteenth Century by
Virgnia Mescher, published by Nature's Finest, 1994. Used by permission.
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