Tuesday 5 July 2022

My Scullery Room Box Is On Display!

For the past 15 years, I've been a volunteer at Kings Landing Historical Settlement, an open-air museum about 25 km from where I live. I started out weeding a spectacular garden, was asked to set up an in-service library, then when space restraints meant the end of the library, I went to work doing museum accessioning. That means I get to handle the artifacts, and I've been quite happy doing that.

This year, I was asked to assist the exhibition team from June until October, when the site closes for the winter. I love this opportunity, as we are able to pick and choose lovely items from the collection that rarely get seen; the mandate of the museum is featuring United Empire Loyalist settlers, most of whom were farmers and artisans, like smiths, carpenters and the like. (For those of you in the US, the United Empire Loyalists were people who came north to Canada around the time of the American Revolution, or as planters.) They tended to own the bare minimum of "stuff".

One of the full-season exhibits this year is the business of laundry; all the tools etc. for hand-washing the family's soiled clothing. The scullery room box below is part of that exhibit this year, and I couldn't be prouder!


There is a long, wide corridor that leads to the washrooms in the Welcome Centre, and that is where the washing exhibit has been placed. Something for Moms and Dads and kids to do while their families use the washrooms! The scullery room box has most of the washing tools displayed full size in it. and is being used as a narrative for the work involved in keeping your clothes and so on clean before the advent of  washing machines and dryers, and no-wrinkle fabric finishes.


A closer look at the scullery room box. Just about everything in this box was made by me; it began with the mangle in the right back corner, and then took on a life of its own. Lots to see, and a story without words.

Our first guest of the summer has headed back home, and another is arriving in August, to be followed by our third child and his wife in September. It is so lovely to see all our children in the same year; it has been 3 or 4 years, pre-Covid, that we saw the two older kids. We've missed them!





3 comments:

  1. What a wonderful way to give back and to share our history! It must have been so much fun to create the mangle and everything else for this wonderful room box!

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  2. How lovely to reunite with all the family again now that Covid is temporarely (but hopefully for good) at bay.

    Just like Jodi has said, the roombox is lovely. A wonderful depiction of the different stages of doing the laundry in olden times. It must have been a joy to work on this room.

    Huibrecht

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    1. I am pleased at punch that the scullery is being displayed. And I am definitely looking forward to seeing my family again....

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