REMEMBERING MOM'S CLOTHES LINE

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REMEMBERING MOM'S CLOTHES LINE:


There is one thing that's left out. We had a long wooden

pole (clothes pole) that was used to push the clotheslines
up so that longer items (sheets/pants/etc.) didn't brush the
ground and get dirty.

You have to be a "certain age" to appreciate this one....
But you YOUNGER ones can read about "The GOOD ol' days"!!)

I can hear my mother now.....

THE BASIC RULES FOR CLOTHESLINES:

(If you don't even know what clotheslines are, better skip this.)

1. You had to hang the socks by the toes ... NOT the top.

2. You hung pants by the BOTTOM/cuffs ... NOT the waistbands.

3. You had to WASH the clothesline(s) before hanging any clothes - walk the entire length of each line with a damp cloth around the lines.

4. You had to hang the clothes in a certain order, and always hang "whites" with "whites," and hang them first.

5. You NEVER hung a shirt by the shoulders - always by the tail! What would the neighbors think?

6. Wash day on a Monday! NEVER hang clothes on the weekend, or on Sunday for heaven's sake!

7. Hang the sheets and towels on the OUTSIDE lines so you could hide your "unmentionables" in the middle (perverts & busybodies, y'know!)

8. It didn't matter if it was sub-zero weather... clothes would "freeze-dry."

9. ALWAYS gather the clothes pins when taking down dry clothes! Pins left on the lines were "tacky!"

10. If you were efficient, you would line the clothes up so that each item did not need two clothes pins, but shared one of the clothes pins with the next washed item.

11. Clothes off of the line before dinner time, neatly folded in the clothes basket, and ready to be ironed.

12. IRONED???!! Well, that's a whole OTHER subject!

And now a POEM ...

A clothesline was a news forecast,
To neighbors passing by,
There were no secrets you could keep,
When clothes were hung to dry.

It also was a friendly link,
For neighbors always knew
If company had stopped on by,
To spend a night or two.

For then you'd see the "fancy sheets",
And towels upon the line;
You'd see the "company table cloths",
With intricate designs.

The line announced a baby's birth,
From folks who lived inside,
As brand new infant clothes were hung,
So carefully with pride!

The ages of the children could,
So readily be known
By watching how the sizes changed,
You'd know how much they'd grown!

It also told when illness struck,
As extra sheets were hung;
Then nightclothes, and a bathrobe too,
Haphazardly were strung.

It also said, "On vacation now",
When lines hung limp and bare.
It told, "We're back!" when full lines sagged,
With not an inch to spare!

New folks in town were scorned upon,
If wash was dingy and gray,
As neighbors carefully raised their brows,
And looked the other way.

But clotheslines now are of the past,
For dryers make work much less.
Now what goes on inside a home,
Is anybody's guess!

I really miss that way of life,
It was a friendly sign
When neighbors knew each other best...
By what hung out on that line.



Posting with Tapatalk for iPhone.
 
Nice Hemi.......sad in way that it is becoming a long gone "chore" (like banging clothes on rocks in the river) and other things. Sure clothes dryers make things easier, but they aren't as "personal" and interesting as a clothes line.

Sign of the changing times......there are kids growing now who will never know the joy of playing hide and seek in the clothes on that line.
Who have never used a rotary dial telephone, or had a television with "rabbit ears"......never sat on a Sunday morning on the den floor reading comics from one of those "old fashioned" things called newspapers.........they do not know the world B.C. (before computers) and most 20 somethings would be hard pressed to even know how to mail much less properly write (egads WRITING whats that?!?!?!?!) a letter, as they type and send email, facebook, twitter instead.

Not so certain all technological advances are good ones. SAD
 
Showing our age? Don't you know you are only as old as the one you feel? Oh wait, maybe that was as young as you feel. I keep getting it confused, must be a case of CRS.


Posting with Tapatalk for iPhone.
 
I grew up on a farm in the 1940's and remember very well the clothes line propped up with a pole so the sheets wouldn't drag on the ground.
There was no electric washer then and I can't really remember how the clothes were washed, but I seem to remember an hand operated washer.
It was a half-moon shaped tub on a pivot with a vertical handle and you pushed the handle side to side to slosh the tub back and forth. Very physical work.
At the time, as a kid, we didn't realize how much hard work by our parents went into day-to-day chores.
My mother is coming up for 93 and is hale and hearty so I guess it the hard work didn't hurt her any.
 
We still have a (rotary)washing line although I personally have little to do with the operation thereof....
I do, however,have fond memories of the local laundromat back in my twenties when it was a great place to meet girls!:y2:
 
I still use a clothes line now and then. If fact, I recently had to restring it. I went into a brand name hardware store and asked for clothes line. The young female clerk had no idea what I was talking about. Another guy came up and told her I wanted a solar dryer something or or other and she went right to it. :y2:




SidecarSallysmall.jpg
 
I must be Amish! I have a clothe's line and ALL the rules apply! I don't even own a tumble drier her in Jhb - the weather is mostly sunny, especially in the winter - Jhb has a very dry winter. I have a drier down at the coast - rain & humidity down there, nothing dries properly!
 
I must be age defined, I remember clothes lines.
I remember how fresh everthing smelled from being dried outside. I also remember frozen clothes in the fall and winter!
Only thing bad was the sheets, t shirts, and underwear could be a little stiff!
 
I remember my mother using a mangle to squeeze the water out of the clothes. Not sure if our washing machine didn't have a spin cycle or she washed by hand, but this was in the early 70s. She still uses the clothes line to this day though.
I remember having 3 TV channels and going to my cousin's house to watch big sporting events because we only had a B&W TV.
When you tell the kids of today that we used to walk 5 miles to school, uphill, both ways, they just don't believe us :y35:
 
I remember a hand operated "wringer" that was used to squeeze the water out of the clothes before they were hung out.
Very often my mother would feed the clothes into the wringer while one of us kids wound the handle around.
I have an electric clothes dryer, but we still have a clothes line and put it to good use in fine weather.
There is a big push here to use clothes lines rather than dryers to cut down on electricity use.
Some snobby subdivisions have "rules" againt so-called "unsightly clothes lines" and they aren't allowed.
That makes me smile as some of the designs of the modern homes are unsightly - to me :y2:
 
Everything Rocky said! I remember the wringer/wrangler thing and I remember how my mom would curse when the clothes got knotted up in the wringer then - then threaten us with pepper in the mouth if we repeated her choice words! :y2:
 
I remember my mother using a mangle to squeeze the water out of the clothes.


Not to sound like a know-it-all here, but a "mangle" was a clothes press type thingy used to put amazing creases in pants and stuff. It had large heated rollers that you ran the clothes through. They took some practice to master them.

The WRINGER was the roller thing that squeezed the water out of clothes after washing....some were hand cranked and some were electric with a foot button to activate them.
 
I found an old photograph of me getting my first haircut back in the '50's......LOL! That's my Mom and Dad and the barber is my Uncle (my Grandfather owned a barber shop and 6 of his Sons became barbers while my Dad was the only one who didn't):

Scanned at 2-15-2012 14-03 PM.jpg
 
I always smile when we use words that mean something else in other places.
I never heard of a mangle (?)
I use the word in the same vein as "tangled up mess" or "destroyed (mangled) beyond recognition."
Thanks for the lesson though - and geat period pic TUP
 
This is a MANGLE:

5410_f260.jpg



They were made by a company called Ironrite. My Mom had one and they ironed clothes better and faster than you could do it with a regular iron and ironing board. It put creases in pants that you could cut your finger on and it was especially good at doing woman's pleated skirts.


However, the word mangle still means the same here as you're familiar with Rocky.....it's just when used as a noun, it is a ironing machine.
 

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