In Knaresborough, near
where I live, is Tentergate, part of the high sloping bank above the River
Nidd.
Once it was the open area
where cloth from the water-mill was stretched tightly across frames to dry,
avoiding shrinkage.
The tenters – the fence-like frames – were set in rows
across the tenterfield.
The sharp-toothed pegs that held the pieces of cloth so
tightly were known, of course, as tenterhooks.
I have been thinking about
washing and drying, because a new, long-awaited washing line runs along the
length of my lawn, beside my house. One end is fixed to a holly tree and the
other to a sturdy young birch and the area is protected from the street by
hedges. While the sun smiles on Yorkshire, my washing billows in the wind and the
clothes and sheets come back indoors smelling of fresh air.
Before this blissful
event, a short double line ran across the small yard just outside the back
door. Hidden behind our 1920’s house, the old line was invisible from the
street. The washing line was, however, very visible from my workroom. As
indicated by the partly working bell panel, this was once the servant’s room so
whenever rain dotted the window-pane, she could nip out, rescue the washing and
pop back in again to speed on with her other duties.
My renewed interest in
washing lines must have alerted me to a BBC news item about the recent washing
line rebellion on the Millbank Estate in Pimlico, London. The residents
discovered workmen about to remove the washing lines that had been a feature of
their yard for seventy years. As the workmen arrived with chainsaws, the women
grabbed hold of the washing line posts and halted the official vandalism.
The estate managers
claimed the lines were “health and safety hazards” but the women said that they
were needed: the kitchens in the flats were too small for tumble-dryers. The
posts were left standing and - just in case the workmen returned - the bold
residents hung out their protest message. Painted letter by letter, the row of
old shirts spelled Save Our Lines.
Are washing lines always
seen as an eyesore, except when you are a tourist taking photographs? In 2010,
residents on Will Crooks Estate complained when their washing lines were
removed.
It seemed the area was being tidied up and those unsightly lines were
visible from the prestigious Canary Wharf opposite.
Meawhile, across in
America, where local housing committees have traditionally banned
washing lines, the national “Right To Dry” movement won its first washing line battle in
Colorado, in 2008.
Has laundry always been a
source of power and conflict? Originally women gathered to wash clothes on the
rocks and stones by streams or riverside - and still do in some parts of the
world. Then came the communal
wash-houses where women could pass on news and family secrets. Was the power of
gossip what tainted clean linen?
Or does the display of
washing – including those awkward personal garments, not always in good repair
– lower the status of the home-owner and surrounding community? (Might someone
be secretly “taking in” washing?)
Or was it the worry that -
being so intimate with “unmentionables” and the rhythms of the household - a laundress or servant might know too
much?
Certainly the home laundry
routine, regardless of the British weather, was evidence of a woman’s
character:
They
that wash on Monday have all the week to dry;
They
that wash on Tuesday are not much awry;
They
that wash on Wednesday are not so much to blame.
But
they that wash on Thursday wash for shame.
They
that wash on Friday wash in need
And
they that wash on Saturday are sluts indeed.
(Anon)
The lazy display of
washing seems somehow linked to hints of easy virtue, loose morals and loose clothing.
Dylan Thomas’s Polly
Garter, in his play Under Milkwood, was no better than she should be:
“Nothing
grows in my garden but washing and babies.”
I recall an earlier
History Girls post describing how young gentlemen gathered to watch
laundresses hoist their skirts above their ankles as they trampled the washing.
And surely there are songs suggesting maidens risked their virtue by going to
spread linen on bushes to dry?
Even Tentergate, with all
its frames, then lay outside the town, Perhaps that was known as a risky place for a
young girl to go to alone too?
Penny Dolan
Excellent post and very interesting stuff. Here in Norwich the flat area to the NW outside the city walls was known as the Drying Ground, used for drying finished cloth, as well (I think) as household linen. It was reached via a gate in the city walls called Hell Gate, so maybe the supposed immorality of laundresses applied there too. You may also know Laundress Lane and Laundress Green in Cambridge - as well as being the actual women who did the students' washing, the word was used as a euphemism for the city prostitutes. I wonder whether the disreputable connotations of, for instance, 'washing dirty linen in public' carry over to terms like 'money laundering'?
ReplyDeleteGreat post, Penny! I love the way you connect women's work and together, ranging across time and countries. Wide ranging, full of fascinating facts but never, never boring. Difficult to do.
ReplyDeleteReally nice, Penny. I have washed on both Thursday and today, so I am clearly a shameful creature. I love the washing that characterises Cannaregio. But I have always thought it takes a lot of moral courage to display one's knickers aloft, even when one is not inside them. In San Polo in Venice the laundresses used to make a kind of tented village, filling the whole large square with sheets. I guess the nobles had monogrammed sheets so they could always be identified. Thank you, Penny.
ReplyDeleteThis is wonderful, Penny. An author of historical fiction has to know how clothes were washed in their period. I've set scenes in Roman fullers (who used urine) and Chinese laundries (in the Wild West). Washing and drying was not solely a woman's job in either of those contexts.
ReplyDeleteGreat to start the day learning stuff I did not know! Now, slut that I am, I must be getting some washing done. Though if I pretend it's actually next week's laundry, started early, could my reputation be made a little sweeter smelling?
ReplyDeleteLoved this, Penny.
ReplyDeleteI take great satisfaction in often doing my washing on a Sunday. I believe the rhyme condemns me to Hell, but I can't remember the line.
You bring up the social and historic significance of laundry - it's fascinating. Work that's essential, but unvalued because it's 'women's work.'
It's hilarious how the washing lines could be written off as 'against Health and Safety' without anyone stopping to think how the drying was then going to be done in a small flat. Quite obviously, the people making these decisions aren't doing the housework in a small place! And it was ever so.
Super post and I never knew that about tenterhooks! You learn something new every day! My rotating, collapsible washing line is stuck in the middle of the grass at the back ( can't really call it a LAWN just now!) and I treat it like an Art Installation. It's called The Angel of the Wash. In summer, wings are extended and in winter it's sheathed in a grey plastic cover and looks elegant and modernistic.
ReplyDeleteI love my two long washing lines and wish the weather would allow me to use them more often. Just done a wash (on Saturday - oh dear!) and it's started raining again. It's sad that washing lines are always seen as unsightly. To me, they show that a neighbourhood is alive - and clean! The story of the Pimlico washing lines is most inspiring!
ReplyDeleteFascinating post! I love hanging my washing outside and never find laundry unsightly. I would never use a tumble dryer with the great outdoors to do the job for free - and the clothes come in smelling of fresh air and sunshine. I too would defend my washing line with all my strength!
ReplyDeletelovely post! can I advertise a book by a friend of mine? The Politics of Washing: Real Life in Venice [Paperback]by Polly Coles.
ReplyDeleteYou see there is more to washing than we realise!
Thank you for a thoughtful look at a subject which touches all - even those who prefer not to admit it (and those who can afford not to even know about it).
ReplyDeleteI have two lines outside and two in my basement, and the economy alone dictates keeping them in constant use! A few years ago, the local news did a story on local clotheslines in central Virginia, a neighbor of mine was featured. This is something that means a great deal to us simply as human beings!
Really pleased that so many of you were interested in this post.
ReplyDeleteWhile I was away from home last week (and fretting slightly about the content of this scheduled but unreachable post) I visited an old Lancashire mill and saw wool stretched on a tenterhook frame. There were even two rows of glass tenterhooks on display but the guide had whisked us on to the next thing before I could ask her why.
Congratulations on all your fine washing lines - both outdoors and indoors - and that book about washing in Venice sounds intriguing, Mary. Washing lines are picturesque there, so why not here, for sure? Especially when they double as Angels, Adele?
Wonderful post! II didn't know the orgin of tenterhooks before, either.
ReplyDeleteI believe that washerwomen of the past often turned to prostitiution to supplement their incomes, so maybe that's how washing itself became associated with sluttishness?
It says a lot about our society that the complaints of the wealthy automatically override the needs of those less well-off. And how typical of a local authority to go ahead and do something like removing clotheslines without recourse to common sense or consultation with those most affected by their actions! Good on those women for standing up for their rights!
And at a time when we're re-evaluating our use of resources (or certainly should be), surely hanging out the washing to dry in the sun and wind is far more ecologically sound than using electricity unnecessarily, even if you can afford to do so. It's also somehow very satisying to see the tangible results of our time and efforts hanging out there drying away :)
ReplyDeleteThe following stride in wedding dress cleaning is an exhaustive examination of whatever remains of the dress for some other stains. Wine stains are anything but difficult to spot. The more troublesome stains to see are those brought about by cake icing, different soft drinks, and some white wines. These should be evacuated. toronto coin laundromat