Monday Washing Lines

Unlike many participants in Andrew’s Monday Washing Lines theme, I don’t have a stash of pictures of artfully draped laundry on balconies in exotic locations. However, I spotted this line in an unusually visible back garden on one of my recent Glasgow West End wanders. This also prompted some childhood memories of wash day.
On the left, above, I am standing in the kitchen of my first home, aged about 2½ years. The washer behind me was, as I remember, red and white, and lifting off the lid revealed a mangle folded beneath. I was unable to say the word machine and referred to it as the sheen. My mother said to me one day: Anabel, don’t say sheen, say MAchine. I looked at her very seriously and replied: But Mummy, it’s not MA sheen. It’s YOUR sheen! Mum sent this anecdote to a women’s magazine which published it on its readers’ letters page – we still have the magazine to prove it!
Perched on my shoulder is a budgie named, in retrospect unfortunately, Boris. A few years later, he provided my first encounter with death. I’m not sure how the concept was explained to me, but I still remember being completely puzzled as to why he was put in a flower bed.
Fast forward a few more years, and two houses, and I am now about 7 or 8. I find it odd that I am posing in my bathing suit and my sister is wearing a cardigan, given that I was usually the child shivering in her coat on the beach as everyone else cavorted around half naked. However, posed or not, here is visible proof that I have pegged out a washing at least once in my life. I’m not sure if we still had the same washing machine, or had moved on to a twin tub by then. I remember that, then a huge, heavy top-loader, and a spin-drier that danced across the floor if you didn’t load it right. Thank goodness for modern conveniences: I’m leaving you right now to unload my automatic washer!

Anabel, so interesting to read your memories of doing the wash in your early years. In my early childhood, my Mom used a wringer washer, which had to be rolled into the middle of the kitchen and the hose attached to the faucet. We were not allowed to go near it because Mom was worried we get our hands caught in the wringers. She pinned the wet clothes out on the clothes line, and in minus 30 or minus 40 temperatures, the frozen clothes would be brought indoors and stacked like boards to thaw. I don’t know how she did it, especially in the years of diapers.
Jude
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Washing on a Monday was always a marathon! We knew a boy whose arm got caught in the wringer so your mother was very sensible.
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Oh, this made me laugh! Did your mother win a prize for having her story published?
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She did, I think it was a ten shilling note! Worth having in those days.
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It would have been a small fortune.
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Hi Anabel – I remember it well hanging out washing many times in my life – but I have no photos to prove it! Love those early photos of you … and your Boris …
I wrote about the finials that have been rescued from the washing lines built into Basil Jellicoe’s St Pancras and Humanist Housing development in the late 1800s – the finials are on display in the foyer basement of the British Library. Jellicoe is a well known housing reformer, who died very young. No clothes though …
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That sounds interesting!
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These photos are great and I just love that anecdote! 😀
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Thanks! The simple logic of a child.
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You might not have photos of washing lines in exotic locations, but you do have some incredible memories and photos of the past! And that’s more entertaining (to me) than colorful clothes lines in the Med. 🙂 Love that anecdote from when you were a child as well. I was scratching my head as to how you could possibly remember all this. The proof in the magazine might have something to do with that!
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Yes, I’ve seen the magazine. I don’t actually remember the incident, but mum has told me about it. I do remember the machine itself, and the budgie’s death.
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Oh yeah, mine too.
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🙂
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Love the washing line and the old photos as well!
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Thank you!
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I loved those old photos and the story about your pronunciation of “washing machine!” Thanks for sharing those!
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Thanks Ann! A bit of a nostalgia-fest.
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These photos are great, and thank you for evoking childhood memories in me too. Did your mother insist that washing was hung out in a particular way? Certain things on certain parts of the line, socks with the soles facing the sun to help clean them, pillowcases positioned perfectly to allow the wind to blow them open and speed up the drying? 😀
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That I can’t remember, but it sounds feasible. I think my “helping” with the washing here was probably play-acting!
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😀 😀
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Liked the old photos. I was spared hanging out washing as a kid (far too small to reach the line anyway) but I do remember all the 1960s kitchen gadgets. I’ve watched all the Back in Time series on TV and there’s definitely a kind of mental alchemy that occurs with nostalgia that you can almost bottle. Memories/things/people that you haven’t thought about for many, many decades are suddenly recalled instantly by a visual object in a house.
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I think that’s very true. But nostalgia is one thing and the concept of “the good old days” is another – not sure they always were!
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When I was just a tad younger, my mother had a washing machine with a hand turned wringer on top. The Wringer had cogs. Some one recently put a picture of one such machine on Facebook and asked if anyone remembered a machine like this,. I said that I did and still had the scar to prove it
It never occurred to me ( I think I was about 6 ) that it would cause damage to my finger. I actually thought sticking my finger in the cog would cause the machine to stop – a good joke to play on my mum. So that’s what I did.. We wont go into what followed I leave that to your fertile imagination. Did that cure me of being silly? Not really, I tried to electrocute myself – but that’s another story.
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Aargh! I think that’s the third similar story that’s been told since I published this. Wringers are obviously lethal around small children!
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Enjoyed the photos and stories of your early days washing machines. There was a period in my life when we hung our wash out to dry, but it didn’t last long.
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Thanks. It’s not something I ever do now either, though some people are braver than I am with the Glasgow weather.
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For us it would be dirt and bird bombs!
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Definitely the latter, too – and in one place we lived the local steelworks produced red dust!
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Fashionista hanger of washing 🙂 I agree with Jo that us kids did look very different compared to the kids nowadays. Not many if any fashion labels about to give companies free advertising 🙂
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Indeed, my sister’s outfit is fairly typical. A cotton dirndl skirt cut down from one of my mother’s old summer dresses and a completely mismatched t-shirt or cardigan. All our pictures are the same, but I don’t remember caring or even noticing at the time.
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Most of us got hand me downs though not me as I was bigger than any of my cousins. All mismatched unless it was Sunday mass or a special event like a day at the races!
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Yes, I did best as the oldest of four girls, my sister and two cousins. My mum would buy cut out and ready to sew kits in four different colours, and the youngest got to wear them all in successive years!
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Hahaha and they say it’s the golden years, the nightmare started with the introduction of polyester in the seventies. Oh my goodness, that material had me scratching for hours!
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Oh yes, and Crimplene, which I think was a trademark for an embossed polyester, so thick that when the hem was turned up (because you had to grow into it, of course) it made a huge fat roll. Still thought we were the bees knees though.
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I thought I was the bees knees when I purchased my first hipster jeans and sewed a very short top to go with it. Cool as, literally 🙂
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Kids look very different these days, don’t they? I remember being very nervous around the mangle and sure I’d end up with flattened fingers 🙂 🙂
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There was a flattened arm in the last page of comments! We were scruffy little urchins compared to today’s mini-adults.
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Eeek! 😦
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Those are such great pictures and I LOLed at your anecdote. Too funny! I’ve never heard of that photo challenge so I’ll have to take a look. I’m pretty sure I have a few laundry pictures from our travels.
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Thanks Janis! I’m amazed at what people are finding in their archives.
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No photos of washing days form my childhood, though my memories are very similar to yours. The closest I have to shots of washing on the line are a few “family snaps” my mum took of us all sitting in the garden. She never managed to point the camera in the right place, and shots tended to include the tops of our heads, sometime’s Dad’s whole head, and whatever was on the washing line.
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Ha ha, we had a few of those as well! Usually Dad’s efforts.
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I don’t think our early masheen was red and white, but it had a mangle that folded down (or up) and it ran on gas!
And you at 2 look very like me at 1 – I ex[ect it’s just the luscious locks.
Um… is that a real dog in the other picture?
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Gas! I’ve never heard of that. I was certainly quite curly haired when I was little. And no, that’s my sister’s toy dog! Which must have had a name, but I can’t remember it.
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The photo of you and Ma Sheen is a classic. I like the look on your face.
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I certainly look a bit shifty! Or maybe I was just wary of the bird.
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Oh wonderful! The memories and the photos. I remember having a toy washing machine in which I could actually wash my dolls clothes. No photos though.
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Oh, I never had anything like that! My dolls’ clothes probably never got washed 😱.
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Makes me remember the old washing-days in my childhood.
Have a great week,
Pit
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I think we all probably had similar experiences. I’m so glad we don’t have to put up with all that any more!
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Boris is a budgie. Explains a lot #birdbrain
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If only he were that bright!
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Incidentally, we also had an old fashioned washing machine with a mangle. One day my mother got distracted and my youngest brother, who can’t have been more than 2, decided to have a closer look and his arm got pulled through. It necessitated a trip to hospital. Fortunately, no bones broken – probably as he was so young. The sheen was off to the tip pronto after that. Don’t think we could afford a more modern one for a while, though.
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That’s horrific – and actually, I remember something similar happening to a child we knew. Mangles must have been lethal. Back to the washboard for your mum, then? That’s all one of my grannies ever had. Used over the wooden bath, a phenomenon I have never come across anywhere else.
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The mangles on these machines weren’t guarded – but if they were that would surely have been “‘elf and safety gone mad”.
I think my mum resorted to handwashing and the launderette until my parents could afford a modern machine. But I was very young myself so the memories are hazy. I remember the arm going into the mangle well enough as well as the rush to hospital. The same brother also got run over by an ambulance when a young teenager.
My other brother once bit a neighbour’s dog on its nose.
What a family 😂
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What a family indeed! And what did YOU do? That bit seems to be missing from the story …
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Now that would be telling …. 😉
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Oh, brilliantly told, Anabel!
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Thanks Sue! It’s funny the memories that stick.
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Quite so!
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Some wonderful memories Anabel! Poor budgie though 😦 Like your new look blog format too! 🙂
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Oh well, I’m sure the budgie had a good life! The new blog theme took a bit of trial and error. I’m not 100% happy, though it does most of the things I wanted, but it’s only my third theme in nearly 10 years so I guess it will be here to stay for a while.
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I’ve been very conservative so far Anabel! Had the same theme more or less since I set the blog up. Have been absent for a little while as sadly we’ve had a family bereavement in the UK. My brother in law passed away last week – not unexpected but nevertheless a shock and obviously like many other families we have been dealing with things from afar. Hope all is well with you – things seem to be opening up a bit more now. Cautious steps forward I guess.
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I’m very sorry to read that, my sympathies to you and your family.
Yes, things are opening up but we are still being careful and haven’t changed our routine much at all yet. We had one brunch out and that has been it so far.
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Thanks so much Anabel – unfortunately we have had other friends here who have had to deal with similar situations overseas. The pandemic adds another layer of complication. I think being cautious is sensible – no one really knows what is going to happen once things start to open up. Brunch must have been lovely after so long!
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That must be so difficult for you.
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It’s not been an easy time Anabel that’s for sure. Just have to support as best we can from here. I think things really start to open up more for you next week – fingers crossed all goes well 🙂
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I love your photos. I inherited a twin tub when I got married. I always managed to soak the floor.
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Oh, thanks Anne – I remember that too! And pulling things in and out with big wooden tongs.
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Aw what fab photos and memories. Love little Boris on your shoulder. Is the dog real or a toy in the second photo. I don’t think I have any photos of me on washing day but we have some old cini film with my gran hanging out the washing on a blowy day at the farm. She had a clothes mangle. X
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It’s a toy dog which belonged to my sister. I’m sure it had a name, but I can’t remember what it was. The cine film sounds a wonderful thing to have. My uncle made a cine film of me when I was a little older than the first photo. I know I have a video copy somewhere in my files, I’ll need to find it and see if I can post it.
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Definitely. I remember our cini films always breaking. The remainders were eventually put onto dvd , I will have to find mine too. X
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Wonderful memories. I have searched unsuccessfully for photos like these.
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Thanks Andrew. I scanned a lot of old family photos a few years ago when Mum was writing a blog of her life story, so I knew exactly where to look for these.
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A great post which prompted some memories of my own and also gave me a giggle. I remember my mum having a similar type of washing machine with the mangle (or wringers as she called it) folded down inside it. It was cream trimmed with green and as far as I can remember it was a Hoover. She also had a Flatley drier, an electric cabinet about the same size as the washing machine – the washing was hung on wooden rods which fitted into slots just inside at the top.
Now I know the death of a pet isn’t funny, especially when you’re a child, but your sentence about Boris being put in the flower bed made me laugh 🙂 And quite coincidentally, I’m just about to rescue my washing from the machine 🙂
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Thanks, Eunice. We had a Flatley too, I should have added that! Also useful for standing next to to keep warm in a pre-central heating house. The budgie in the flower bed seemed very weird, but if that’s what your Daddy tells you he’s doing I guess at that age you just accept it without question.
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I don’t have many either Anabel of the artfully draped washing, but I too remember wash days and had my own little line to peg out some hankies or socks. Great retro photos, I’ve got many like that with the essential knitted cardigan
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Thanks Alison – I think if it was a better quality photo you would see the goose-bumps on my legs!
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Haha I’ll have to dig some of mine out ..although most are still in the UK with my mum and dad
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