Wheeling Wash Tub History



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  • Jul 20, 2012 - vintage wheeling double galvanized wash tub stand planter ebay.
  • Wheeling, VA grew quickly from an outpost on the state's western border to an important industrial city second only to Richmond. Maker, Wheeling Corrugating Company. Material(s), steel, paper, rubber, Zinc alloy. I love this double wash tub on a stand. Vintage double WHEELING wash tub measures side to side, front to back, and tall.

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Wheeling Wash Tub History Brush

Find many great new & used options and get the best deals for Antique Wheeling Double Galvanized WASH TUB/TUBS with stand VINTAGE at the best online prices at eBay! Free shipping for many products! Galvanized Wash Tub Woodland Wedding Inspiration Wash Tubs Little Black Books Old Kitchen Beautiful Mess Clothes Line Green Wedding Shoes Modern.

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Washing bats... hardwood... cross-ribbed, on one face, so that they could also act as rubbing boards...
E. H. Pinto, Treen and other Wooden Bygones, 1969


'Family size' washboard from Amazon

So when were washboards invented? There isn't going to be a neat and tidy answer to this - how can we guess when someone first cut notches into a piece of wood used for scrubbing clothes? - but we can tease out a few facts. First, here are links to a couple of 19th century Scandinavian washboards of the kind with a long heritage: one from Norway, one from Finland.

In Northern England there was a tradition of washing bats with ridged surfaces, though many were smooth. Except for their handles, allowing them to be used as beaters, they were pretty much like washboards. And many of the decoratively carved washing bats found across Scandinavia, the Baltic countries, and other parts of Europe had enough texture on the surface to rival grooved washboards. Boards were used by washerwomen in Italy well before the 19th century, and tilted boards on legs called washing stocks were used in England, France and elsewhere, but these had no grooves.

Some google searches suggest that the washboard was invented in 1797, but this cannot be right. 1797 is the date of a lost US patent offering an 'improvement' in washing clothes, but this was certainly not the only attempt to invent better ways of doing laundry around that time. There were even some 18th century washing machines in England and Germany.

At the turn of the 19th century washboards were not yet standard household equipment in the US. Specialist opinion at Mount Vernon (Virginia) says there's no evidence they were in use in that area. Meanwhile inventors were starting to experiment with 'machines' including grooved boards, grooved tubs, and more, as they tried to lighten heavy laundry work. Were they inspired by mama's old wooden board or bat?

Zinc and other innovations

Metal washboards were surely a 'great American invention'.

1833 offers a good clear-cut date in their story. On February 9th 1833, Stephen Rust of Manlius, NY patented a new idea: a 'Wash Board' with a piece of 'fluted tin, sheet iron, copper or zink'. (We were pleased to find this at the US Patent Office. It appears to be the first patent for a metal washboard.)

In 1842 a wooden washboard coated in rubber was patented by Marcellus Sands of Franklin, NY.

In 1843 Catherine Beecher said a 'grooved wash-board' was amongst the 'articles to be provided for washing' in households planning 'a full supply of all conveniences'. (See left-hand column.)

Wheeling wash tub history brush

By 1845 there was a listing in a Chicago business directory for a manufacturer of 'the improved zinc wash-boards'. How much, if at all, Mr. Rust (inappropriate name?) benefited is unclear.

Glass washboards must have arrived before 1877, when Hermann Liebmann of Chicago patented an 'improvement in wash-boards' with his idea of perforating 'glass or porcelain or terracotta'.

Questions - in search of a 'timeline'

This article took shape after an email exchange with the writer Kate Dolan who has a special interest in 18th century Maryland. There seems to be no evidence that the wooden washboard was a standard domestic item in 18th century North America. But what were things like between 1800 and the 1830s?


...dear Franklin has made me a nice pr of bedsteads, 2 washboards...

Letter written by Anna Briggs Bentley, a Quaker, in 1837 - from American Grit: A Woman's Letters from the Ohio Frontier, ed. Emily Foster, 2003

Did washboards spread out from particular communities - from Scandinavian settlers, or from Quakers, perhaps? Please consider emailing if you have answers.

The 1833 washboard patent

Be it known that I Stephen Rust of the Town of Manlius in the County of Onondaga and State of New York have invented a new and useful improvement in making 'Wash Boards' and that the following is a full and exact description of the construction of said machine as invented or improved by me viz. 'The side pieces of the frame are made of wood from one inch to three inches wide, and from twenty to thirty inches long and set from six to sixteen inches apart and parallel to each other. Between and attached to the side pieces in the upper part of the frame is inserted a plain board from one to six inches in width and slightly curved downwards. Attached to the board and also to the side pieces is inserted a piece of fluted tin, sheet iron, copper or zink [zinc] from ten to twenty inches in length and leaving an open space below and between the side pieces of from four to ten inches. The improvement claimed in this machine is in the use of the fluted tin sheet iron copper or zink.

Note that the washboard is called a 'machine'. This seems odd, even though dictionary (OED) definitions include 'an apparatus, device, instrument, or implement'. Perhaps this particular usage was Patent Office jargon?

More on washing with boards:
French washboards at the riverside
Washing boards in Italy

For more on laundry history and old washing methods go to
>>>>History of laundry and
>>>>Laundry from 1800

Or you may like:
Washing bats
Washing dollies
Bleaching with ashes (lye)
Laundry blue

And also:
History of ironing

To wash corsets: Take out the steel; use hot water; one teaspoonful of borax to every pail of water; place the corsets on the washboard and scrub well with a clean brush, using very little soap; do not boil the corsets, but if very yellow bleach in the sun; rinse well; rub in a little starch; iron when quite damp.
Hawera & Normanby Star, New Zealand, 1880

26 September 2007



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