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Eft nostalgia3/2/2023 ![]() My youngest brother and sister were both in nappies at some stage together during this time, and to think of the effort required to wash those nappies, yuck! Incomprehensible to the disposable consumers of today’s society. When I think about it now, I really don’t know how mum did it! Mum must have been a superwoman, in fact she was a superwoman! And all done with tender love, care and patience. The process of wringing and rinsing would be repeated again, often a few times. Powerful arms and hands mum must have had! The item would then be placed into the trough filled with clean, cold water for rinsing. Mum would use the paddle or pole to retrieve an item from the copper, hold it up until the excess water had drained away, fold the item in half, place the centre point around the tap over the trough and commence twisting, eliminating as much water she could until she couldn’t twist any longer. Though I do remember mum wringing out the larger items that she couldn’t complete effectively by hand or those she perhaps couldn’t fit through the wringer. Placing the washing between the rollers then turning the handle to squeeze out the excess water before the item dropped into the trough for rinsing helped to make things a lot easier.įor some reason I don’t remember a wringer in our laundry but there must have been one. Some coppers had a mangle (wringer) attached to them or to the trough making the wringing function easier. Next to the copper was the deep, double cement trough where the wringing and rinsing took place. Eventually when mum thought that step completed, the clothes then needed wringing, to be rinsed, and finally wrung again before being tossed into the cane laundry basket, and carted outside to be pegged onto the clothes line. The items would soak in the boiling sudsy water, occasionally stirred with the paddle or pole. The Lux flakes would be added to the boiling water and stirred by a wooden paddle or pole to create the suds, usually I was allowed this job, sometimes Reckitts Blue was added as a whitener, then finally the clothes to be washed would be tipped into the copper. And, as the eldest, I was mum’s helper more often than not.įirstly she’d boil the copper up, how I can’t remember but probably some heating mechanism incorporated into the machine. With seven members in our family, five of them young active kids prone to dirty clothes in their daily pursuits, there was always plenty of washing to be done. I remember watching, and helping, my mother on laundry day. It is of course, the precursor to the washing machine, and was a very common sight in most household laundries over many, many years.Ī form of copper had been used for laundry purposes since early Victorian times, and developed into the common design formulated between the World Wars to become popular in modern households until the advent of the washing machine. ![]() Unless you are someone of my vintage or older you’d be ignorant as to the purpose the machine was used. It has been a long time since I have seen one, or for that matter, even thought about one, but it fulfilled an important role in the day to day life of many families, including mine, during the early stages of my childhood in the 1950s. This image of an old copper recently came to my attention in a post on Facebook unleashing a flood of childhood memories for me. ![]()
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