POWERHOUSE COLLECTION

Washing machine

Washing machine

Object No. 93/170/1

Throughout the 1800s and into the first half of the 1900s washing clothes was a laborious and time consuming weekly chore which took a full day to complete, usually on a Monday. This machine was certainly an improvement on the hard work of scrubbing clothes against a washboard in a tub but it still required a considerable amount of labour. This was to fill and empty the machine twice by hand, to wash, squeeze out and then rinse and remove the heavy wet washing, wring it out again and then hang it on the line. In an effort to produce an effective washing machine that imitated hand washing, by the 1870s some 2,000 patents had been issued in the USA alone. As well as the machines themselves, there were also many wringers and mangles to squeeze out the washing water, not to mention boilers and coppers. However, the invention of the first electric washing machine, patented in 1910, was the true turning point in washing machine design, leading to washing machines eventually becoming real labour-saving devices. However, most women in Australia had to wait until the 1950s or 60s for their first electric washing machine, when there was greater prosperity and the ready availability of electricity, to release them from laundry drudgery. Margaret Simpson, Curator November 2017

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Summary

Object Statement

Electric washing machine, Hoover 0354 model, steel, made by Hoover Ltd, England, c. 1960

Physical Description

Electric washing machine, Hoover 0354 model, steel, made by Hoover Ltd, England, c. 1960

DIMENSIONS

Height

1020 mm

Width

430 mm

Depth

450 mm

SOURCE

Credit Line

Gift of Ms Jocelyn Alexander, 1993

Acquisition Date

14 May 1993

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