Wash Day
I can remember my mom Sybil Miner Beck as she washed our family’s clothes in the old Maytag wringer washing machine. Mom would have me fill the square tub of the machine with hot water and the two galvanized rinse tubs with cold water. The side-by-side tubs were on legs wirh wheels on the legs and a drain on the bottom of each tub. Those tubs were placed next to the wringer arm where it could swing over top of both tubs.
Mom would dump soap powder into the washer and pull out a red recessed knob to engage the agitator allowing the powder to mix with the water and get frothy. The bright red knob on the side of the washer reminded me of a bellybutton.
The first items to go into the washer were white and light colored clothing; underwear, socks, undershirts, and dress shirts. Mom would figure out how long to allow the clothing to slosh around until they were clean. She would push the agitator button in and the sloshing would stop Mom would fish the clothes from the hot water with a wooden spoon handle and feed the clothes through the wringer that was positioned over the tub with the “first” rinse water. It was interesting to watch the clothing flatten out, squeezing the wash water back into the washing machine. Sometimes trapped air would hiss and cause the water to squirt high into the air as the pocket was compressed. The flattened clothing rolled out into the rinse tub.
Once the washer was empty of clothing, the next load was tossed in; bright colored tee shirts, shorts, dress pants, and shirts. Mom would allow the whites to soak in the rinse water swirling them around with her hand. Just before the brights were washed clean, she would swing the wringer over the center between the two rinse tubs running whites from the “first” rinse, into the “second” rinse water. She’d swirl them to soak the last of the soapiness from them.
Back went the wringer and Mom would run the bright clothing from the washer into the recently vacated “first” rinse and toss in the jeans and darks into the washer. The wringer was turned to the far side of the “second” rinse and the whites would be forced between the rollers, to tumble down into a laundry basket. It was time to hang them on the clothes line outside.
Loads of towels, sheets, my dad’s work clothing, and finally the rugs were washed in the washer then rinses, only to join others on the rope clothes lines. It didn’t matter the weather, Mom would hang the clothing outside. (She didn’t wash on rainy days.)
In the winter, she’d come back inside, her hands reddened from the cold on her moistened hands from the clothes. More often than not the clothing was frozen stiff before next piece could be hung. Even though the clothing had been soaking in cold rinse water, steam would rise from the wet clothes in the frigid air. Once the clothing would “freeze dry” Mom would fetch them in to re-hang them on lines in the basement to finish drying. She’d take them down and iron them to get the last of the dampness out of the clothing for storage.
Thursday, March 23, 2023
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