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"Union Barber Supply washing machine circa 1920." All I can say here is watch your fingers. National Photo Company Collection glass negative. View full size.
Industrial Design was in its infancy in those days, the same with consumer lobbies. Imagine one of these things coming today to the market, possibly it won't endure even a day (not to speak of the company that produces it, it would bankrupt instantly with demands).
[This is not a store-bought washing machine -- it's a laundry tub with a motor kit attached. - Dave]
You could set the wringer rolls for different spaces between them. How do I know this? Because I too was a member of the Curious Kids Klub who put an arm through the wringer. Luckily it was set wide, no harm done. The rollers turned from the power of the washer, so they were hypnotic to watch.
This wringer was a modern and up-to-date model, with an electric motor. I remember that my grandmother made do with a hand-cranked one.
Some time later they put the wringer on the washer. In the 1970s I had a friend that had an older wringer washer and a newer spin-washer. She liked the wringer-washer more than her spin-washer.
I believe I was selling Both Maytag and Easy wringer/washers well into the 1960s.
In 1960 in France my family had a wringer washer. My oldest sister, who was 2, was "helping" Mom with the wash. She got her arm caught in the wringer. Dad took her to the base hospital, where the doc said without really looking at it that they would have to take her arm off. Dad threw a fit and took her to a French hospital, where they saved her arm, of which she has full use to this day.
A side story is that Mom was pregnant. The stress from the accident put her in labor and my brother was born the next day.
My father-in-law calls it a mangle. Apparently mangle is what the English call a wringer. Sounds more in line with the fingers and toes theme.
My folks have one of those "wire chairs." The exact same thing.
It's the most uncomfortable thing ever invented to sit on. I've always imagined it must have had a cushion originally but I see from your photo that maybe it never did.
According to the legends I always heard, fingers weren't the part of human anatomy most commonly caught in a wringer.
Having nearly lost my fingers to just such a contraption at age 9, I can verify the great danger in these. It's like a siren call to little kids.
... in fact, I feel the pull now ...
I'd love to have a few of those. The local soda fountain had those when I was a kid. They weren't comfortable, but it kept us kids from hanging out there too long!
She's flat as a board! Guess she's been through the wringer.
Some recent posts have me hoping for a new tag category for photos. Maybe we can get an "appliances' tag like we have the "cars and trucks", "kids", "storefronts" type tags. Waddaya say?
[It is a good idea. The problem is the time it takes yours truly to go through the thousands of pictures already on the site to find the ones that would fit the category. - Dave]
Looks like she hanged herself rather than face using that contraption again. Wouldn't that make her a dead wringerer?
...and toes! I like the disembodied feet right above the washing machine. I wonder what the rest of that poster looked like--it must have been almost life-sized.
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