Thread Number: 33750
First Washer/Dryer Hook-ups
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Post# 507234   3/27/2011 at 11:00 (4,750 days old) by yogitunes (New Jersey)        

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Pierre's great thread on first machines that started it all for us got me thinking....

Where was the location and setup for your parents first Automatic washer/dryer....
many homes did not have locations or hookups for these already, and had to be placed, plumbed, and electrical connections......


1964 Ours was in the kitchen......we only had a washer, no dryer, Dad tapped into the water lines under the sink, and it drained into the wall mounted sink....for years....1981 the kitchen sink was replaced and moved to the other end of the wall, allowing the washer to have its own connections and drain pipe, and also allowed space for the dryer and vent out the back wall...I actually missed seeing the water drain out the hose, and gurgle down the drain...





Post# 507239 , Reply# 1   3/27/2011 at 11:16 (4,750 days old) by CircleW (NE Cincinnati OH area)        

My Mom's first automatic washer ('55 Westinghouse) was in the basement of our old house; it was built in 1903. When I was two, we moved a couple blocks to the house I've been renovating. The washer went in the corner of a basement room, and was joined in about '62 or so by a Westinghouse dryer. I remember a small fuse box had to be added for it, and a vent installed.

Post# 507241 , Reply# 2   3/27/2011 at 11:18 (4,750 days old) by pierreandreply4 (St-Bruno de montarville (province of quebec) canada)        

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thanks me from what i can remember as a kid the very first washer dryer set that was hook up was this set but it was hook up in the basement of the very first house that my parents bought in alymer canada then it was hook up in the bathroom in the second house that i lived in as a kid it was this inglis whirlpool superb washer dryer set to be able to buy and use this set in my actual home in other word my dream vintage set lol

Post# 507242 , Reply# 3   3/27/2011 at 11:19 (4,750 days old) by DaveAMKrayoGuy (Oak Park, MI)        

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The house we first lived in that had its own washer & dryer had 'em Side-by-Side w/ a standpipe behind the washer & all the water & electric hook-ups (& maybe a gas hook-up; the dryer was electric, though) behind the appliances... This laundry room was probably a "pass-through" room to get to & from the garage to/from the kitchen & main part of the house... There were stairs leading down to the garage on a lower-level below-ground, as the house didn't have a "true basement" and was built on a hill (which I was warned not to roll off of, while eating my M&M's out of a red plastic bowl in front of the house, while Andy Williams & The Sandpipers played, probably from the house next door...)

Funny how the only bathroom was through the kitchen while I "owned" the upstairs: My bedroom & a play room across from it, but surprisingly NO BATH...

Mom & Dad slept in the bedroom that was downstairs & my younger sis (BABY sis) might have had her crib there, too...

WEIRD HOUSE! No wonder we moved...

Fast-forward to the house I did my growing up in: the washer & dryer are in an un-finished basement laundry room, in an L-Shape, adjacent to one-another... There's a double-tub that the washer drains into (and maybe the "unused" one could be for "SUDS SAVING"?) and the plumbing runs via over-head pipes behind the washer which gets plugged into an outlet on the wall behind it (some of the houses on our block--early 1950's ones like ours--have a hanging cord to plug the washers into, but most have been converted to wall outlets, more modern & safer) while the dryer has a 220V plug running off of the fuse box, w/ an unused,--unconnected even--, gas line running behind it...

While years later in my OWN house, the washer & dryer are next to each other in another unfinished basement laundry room & the washer drains into a single tub, while on the wall along-side the dryer is a 220V plug for an electric dryer, but we have gas w/ the hook-up behind it & both the washer & dryer share the same plug! Plumbing for the washer runs via pipes over-head...

The apt. we lived in before had its own laundry/utility room similar to the "first laundry room" arrangement, above...

Thank you very much for this & OTHER GREAT TOPICS!

Now who here has (or has HAD) a FINISHED laundry room???? (which I refer to--if you've seen some of those finished laundry rooms in some of those home remodeling books I have--as a "SUPER-DUPER LAUNDRY ROOM") I wish I did...!

-- Dave


Post# 507244 , Reply# 4   3/27/2011 at 11:32 (4,750 days old) by DADoES (TX, U.S. of A.)        

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House into which I was born, washer only, in a closet off the kitchen.

 

House built in 1964, same washer, dryer added ... facilities in the garage.


Post# 507261 , Reply# 5   3/27/2011 at 12:47 (4,750 days old) by KenmoreGuy64 (Charlotte, NC)        
Cool question Martin

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When my Mom got her 1961 Kenmore, they lived in Cincinnati in a two story building that was divided into four apartments. This building had a full basement underneath. The basement was considered a common area, and had storage, clothes lines, etc. for each resident to use. There were apparently four washers and dryers connected down there which were not divided privately. Would that not have been COOL to not only see your Mom's washer but those of three others too? I would have loved to see that, but I was six months old when we moved. Apparently though one of the other residents had a Lady K set.

The first installation that I remember was in our first house in Columbus, which was in the basement. That's where I learned the fascination of washer and dryer. My bike, roller skates and toys were down there too so I had many reasons to be in the basement. Our next house was in Rochester, Michigan where we moved in December 1967. New build construction, so it had a laundry room behind the garage, which was in front of our den. It was there that I remember the 1961 70 the most. That house did not have a rough-in box (as we call them here in the south) but it had a laundry sink, and the water lines for the faucet were interrupted to have valves for the hot and cold washer lines. The washer drained into the sink, and I smiled when you mentioned the gurgle of the drain water, as I remember that well. This is where we would clean the 61's lint filter, and where I saw our 74's self cleaning lint filter burp up its lint cache each drain period.

Upon our move to Denver, the house there had a sink too in the laundry room, but a standpipe in the wall and separate hot can cold tops about a foot from the floor. I used to move the drain hose to the sink, away from the quiet standpipe, but my folks would hear the splashing and come running, so eventually it was frowned upon A LOT to mess with it. Looking back, if I lived there now I could fit three belt-drives into that laundry room and still have a dryer in there! Too fun....

Gordon


Post# 507264 , Reply# 6   3/27/2011 at 13:09 (4,750 days old) by appnut (TX)        

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My parents first house was one of those post-WWII kind of starter houses somewhere between April & June of 1948, around the time my oldest sister was born-3 br, 1 ba, livng room dining room.  One of the "bedrooms" (which was mine) was paneled so it was supposed to be a "den" too (our neighbors had a similar configuration).  My bedroom had the only interior access door to the garage, otherwise garage access was out the back, through the screened-in porch to the back yard/driveway/garage door.  (That screened porch was enclosed in about 1954 or 1955 to become the den as that's how I only knew it.  Anyway, the washer & dryer connections were in the garage on the opposite wall (gee how convenient for me to crawl or walk out to the garge to the Bendix as a baby/toddler from my own bedroom).  Mind you, I didn't start walking until, what I've understood, to be about 18 to 20 m0onths of age.  It seems to me about the time I went vertical is about the time the Bendix was replaced with the GE lol.  I'm only assuming the water/drain/gas connections were provided in the garage as part of the construction.    I'll be seeing my dad for his 90th b-day celebration in a few weeks so I'll see if he remembers that fine-tune point or not. 


Post# 507284 , Reply# 7   3/27/2011 at 14:39 (4,750 days old) by polkanut (Wausau, WI )        

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My parents house was built in 1922, and they bought it in 1967.  The basement has a concrete double laundry sink with space on each end for the washer and dryer.  To vent the dryer, Dad took out one of the panes of glass in the window above the sink, and ran the pipe through a piece of plywood to the outside.  The basement also had clotheslines running the length of it to save on dryer usage.  When my parents bought the house it only had a 60amp service, so the dryer and furnace each had their own circuit, and the rest of the house ran on the other 2.  The laundry sink came in very handy with my Mom having nothing but suds-saver machines.  Almost 3 years ago now they decided to remodel 1/2 of their enclosed front porch area into a 1st floor laundry room.  Mom had her Maytag Dependable Care set moved from the basement to the laundry room rather than buy a completely new set.


Post# 507326 , Reply# 8   3/27/2011 at 17:13 (4,750 days old) by cornutt (Huntsville, AL USA)        

My parents' first house had the laundry connections in the garage, which was pretty typical for suburban ranch houses in this area in the '50s and '60s. There were hot and cold taps and a standpipe for the washer, the location of which was only a few feet away from the water heater, which was in the corner. So the washer always had hot water. There was an outlet high on the wall for the washer and the 220V outlet (and back then, it was 220V, not 230V) for the dryer was down near the floor. The house was built on a crawl space but the garage was on a slab; it was two steps down from the kitchen floor through the door to the garage floor. The plumbing came out of the crawl space through the wall down low, and was all exposed within the garage. In cold weather my dad ran a portable 220V electric heater in the garage to keep the washer and the plumbing from freezing; there was an outlet wired for that.

There was no provision for venting the dryer. You just let it blow into the garage. Dealers sold a deflector which was attached to the back of the dryer at the vent exit to make the air blow upward or sideways. Every so often you had to pull the dryer out from the wall and clean all the lint up.


Post# 507328 , Reply# 9   3/27/2011 at 17:18 (4,750 days old) by Spankomatic (Ukiah,CA)        

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My parents first house had a laundry room. They bought a house that was built in 1955. My Grandparents house had the washing machine on the back porch,no dryer,and 4 rows of clothes lines in the back yard. That house was built with square nails,late 1800's?

Jim


Post# 507333 , Reply# 10   3/27/2011 at 17:26 (4,750 days old) by Unimatic1140 (Minneapolis)        
Great thread idea Yogi!

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Why here it is in late 1963 or early 1964, that's me right in the kitchen of our apartment on my grandmothers lap with my mom's relatively new 1962 BOL Kenmore  washer in the background.


Post# 507338 , Reply# 11   3/27/2011 at 17:35 (4,750 days old) by appnut (TX)        

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Robert, you were cute and adoreable even all the way back then!!!  What a future stud!!  Is that your mom in the background?  I dodn't think that Kenmore model changed essentially for almost 20 years!!


Post# 507342 , Reply# 12   3/27/2011 at 17:39 (4,750 days old) by Unimatic1140 (Minneapolis)        

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Awww, thanks Bob :-), yes that's my mom in the background.  We had that washer until the end of 1968 when my parents got tired of having it fixed.  We bought a new Kenmore at an end of year clearance sale at Sears.


Post# 507343 , Reply# 13   3/27/2011 at 17:42 (4,750 days old) by ronhic (Canberra, Australia)        
Robert...

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...very cute...

 

BUT, excuse me for saying this, your mother is gorgeous.....

 

....as is the gaze on her face...


Post# 507348 , Reply# 14   3/27/2011 at 17:51 (4,750 days old) by frontaloadotmy (the cool gay realm)        
Robert

Was there more than one clearance model available? Did you advise which would be the best selection?


Post# 507352 , Reply# 15   3/27/2011 at 17:57 (4,750 days old) by Unimatic1140 (Minneapolis)        

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Thank you Chris :-) Darrel I was five at the time and I told them they should buy a Frigidaire like grandma's because it so much more fun.  I remember my Dad saying no because washers at Sears were so much less expensive there and that "we weren't made of money" lol. I do remember the machine on clearance being up on a carpeted pedestal at the stand-alone Sears store in New Brunswick, NJ.


Post# 507366 , Reply# 16   3/27/2011 at 18:23 (4,750 days old) by whirlcool (Just North Of Houston, Texas)        

My parents had a separate section of the "finished basement" that was unfinished. And that's where the washer & dryer were placed. There was a 2 tub concrete tub next to the washer that was used with the suds saver on the washer. But I think my mom only used it a few times, the sussaver option that is.

Post# 507371 , Reply# 17   3/27/2011 at 18:27 (4,750 days old) by MikeS ()        

My parents bougth their first home a year after I was born. The utility room (with a washer only hookup) was just off the kitchen. We dried our clothes on the line in the back yard. More than a decade later, I was in charge of the weekly wash and begged my parents for a clothes dryer. My father (the mechanic that he was) ran a vent and a gas line in the garage, and that's where our frog-eye Kenmore dryer ($50 bucks!) went. With no direct door from the house to the garage, I had to take the wash through the front porch and open the garage to dry the clothes. It was still an improvement over hanging the clothes to dry.
Today, my condo has a washer/dryer hookup in the kitchen. Things sure have changed.


Post# 507385 , Reply# 18   3/27/2011 at 19:03 (4,750 days old) by pierreandreply4 (St-Bruno de montarville (province of quebec) canada)        
my grandmother washer dryer hookup

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hello to all aw members here is a pic of my grandmother washer dryer hookup in the house she lives in when it was originaly built what is her bathroom today was where her washer no dryer was hook up and with 7 kids she had to line dry her clothes then a few years later she made some changes in her house and her washer dryer hookup was in her basement she must of bought a dryer by the time this was done and this is where her washer and dryer is hook up and still is today.

Post# 507416 , Reply# 19   3/27/2011 at 20:21 (4,750 days old) by CircleW (NE Cincinnati OH area)        
Such a cutie!

Robert, I remember you posting this pic before, and I thought the lady holding you was your mother, and the younger one your sister. Both your Mom and Grandmother are very pretty and young looking, and you look like such a sweet baby.

Post# 507418 , Reply# 20   3/27/2011 at 20:31 (4,750 days old) by bajaespuma (Connecticut)        
Enter the 'Flo's

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I already posted a picture of our first automatic washer installed, ghetto-fashion in the kitchen of the apartment I was born into in another thread.

 

My parents bought their first home when I was 4 years old, not 2 blocks away from that first apartment, on 19th Street between 1st and 2nd avenues. They bought a row-house that was built in 1860 and had been used as a neighborhood clinic with another family; they had the first two floors we had the 3rd and 4th floor. On the top floor, a large bathroom was built for us kids and there was an alcove put into it for a washer and dryer. I'll never forget, as long as I live, the day we moved in and I saw those 2 matching appliances. I had to be told what a dryer was because I was convinced that my parents, for some delightful reason,  bought 2 washing machines.


Post# 507426 , Reply# 21   3/27/2011 at 20:58 (4,750 days old) by Maytagbear (N.E. Ohio)        
Unfinished basement!!

Our house was built in 1915, my parents and sister moved in January Something 1958.
We were there until August Something 1996.....


We had a Maytag dryer and a Maytag square wringer to start with, and the lovely deep concrete tubs (OH, HOW I HAVE MISSED THEM through the years!).


The extensions for an automatic's water supply were already in place. We got our first automatic in 1964, the Whirlpool Imperial (Sometimes a POD, the twins and the exasperated mother.) For a while, Ma used the Suds Miser, but a few years down the road, not so much. I do know that our housekeeper used the Suds Miser more often (Her other gig was running/owning a college student rooming house, and she supplied the sheets for the beds.) When I started to wash, I used the Suds Miser a bit. However, when the Whirlpool died in 1978, the A208 we got was not a suds saver.


The thing that prevents the return of suds savers (besides modern squeamishness) is laundry installations that preclude the addition of a sink.


Lawrence/Maytagbear


Post# 507435 , Reply# 22   3/27/2011 at 21:26 (4,750 days old) by pierreandreply4 (St-Bruno de montarville (province of quebec) canada)        
about suds savers

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i think that its sad that they eliminated suds savers models because i can just see the saving in water if modern top loading washers or front loaders would have this feature as well as saving in detergent use since it would use the suds from the first wash

Post# 507467 , Reply# 23   3/27/2011 at 22:22 (4,750 days old) by rp2813 (Sannazay)        

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Well yeah that's Robert's mom!  The Samantha Stevens headband tells that tale!  So stylish, and I agree that her gaze is overflowing with love.

 

My parents first house was in a brand new 1949 subdivision.  The laundry pair was in the attached garage, along with a deep concrete laundry sink.

 

When they moved into a mid 20's house in 1960 with that same set, the washer (a Norge) was on the service porch next to a double concrete sink.  The gas dryer (a Norge) was in the attached garage, which was probably a total of 20 to 30 steps away from the washer, to the end of the porch and down a couple of steps toward the basement, through a door on the right to access the garage, down another step and another right, then a straight shot to the dryer.  One big U-turn with the dryer being more or less on the other side of the wall from the washer.  When I look at that service porch area now, I can't even imagine squeezing past an automatic washer and double concrete sink in there.  I also presume my dad had to pipe gas into the garage. 

 

There's now a wet bar where the dryer used to be, as the garage became a family room in the late 60's, and a new laundry room was created as part of that project.  It includes a sink, but it's just a resin type.  I'd like to find a cast iron/porcelain one that has a metal cabinet surround instead.


Post# 507506 , Reply# 24   3/28/2011 at 06:32 (4,749 days old) by mattywashboy (Perth, Western Australia)        

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The first washer and dryer hookups i experienced were when my parents renovated our British kitchen. The house i grew up in had been lived in by my father and grandmother for many years and my grandmother used a Hoovermatic Twin Tub washer. She had about three in her lifetime so was certainly fond of them!

My parents then renovated the kitchen and put in couplings for a washing machine. Alas, dad did not measure the space properly so when the Hoover EcoLogic 1100 moved in, it fitted so snugly into the space that as soon as my machine went into any kind of spin cycle it would break the cabinet next to it. My parents solution was to drag the machine out of its hole when it was being used and use it that way. Ludicrous in reflection but my earliest memories include dad on his exercise bike in the middle of the kitchen with the washer churning away barely inches from him halfway out of its nook!

The picture below is of my Grandmother in that very kitchen before renovation. When it was renovated the space for the washer was just next to where my grandmother is standing. There was extra cabinets added onto the end next to my grandmother to make room for the washer and it was on the end. Where the twintub is was fitted with cabinets and where we put our microwave. The colouring mum chose was grey, apparently fashionable in the late 80's early 90's...


Enjoy, more to come...


Post# 507508 , Reply# 25   3/28/2011 at 06:55 (4,749 days old) by mattywashboy (Perth, Western Australia)        
An Australian View

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We emmigrated to Australia in 2001. The house we moved into and where my folks live now was only 7 years old when we purchased it and it had a standard Australian laundry area situated at the back of the house with a guest toilet leading off it.

Now the house i live in now with my friends is of a much older vintage. Around 1970 i believe. Now this house has a laundry room leading off the kitchen. There is a picture below for you to follow...

You can see there is a large deep double tub 'trough' as it is known. This would have been good for Suds Saver machines of which there were a few. Where the dishwasher now sits is a built in concrete pedestal (hence why the dishwasher is raised). This was once home to the water heater system that was a tank with a fire underneath that you had to supply with wood occasionally to keep the water hot. This house was modernised in that sense quite a few years back and just outside the window you can see the top of the newer hot water system. When we moved in the pedestal was being used to support a tall cupboard to house detergents and such. I took this down and moved it in order to be able to install the dishwasher.

The water fixings for the washer are as they have been since the house was built. You can see they lead off the faucet taps for the sink. The knobs for the taps have a double connection. If you turn the smaller outside knob that controls the flow to the washing machine hoses, if you turn the inner bigger knob, it controls the faucet water. Quite neat really. Another interesting fact about this laundry is the floor drain. Invisible until it was pointed out to me. Look alongside the bottom of the sink cabinet next to the washer. There is a 'slit' in it which is actually a drain hole that leads to the outside drain where all the water from the laundry gets dumped.

Hope you enjoyed.

matt


Post# 507525 , Reply# 26   3/28/2011 at 08:05 (4,749 days old) by countryguy (Astorville, ON, Canada)        

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Our house had an unfinished basement so the washer/dryer were down there.  There was a wood platform about 8' x 4' next to the outside wall and beside the sump pump.  Originally my mom had a wringer washer so I'm assuming the platform was there to keep the washer off the cement floor in case of a flood.  There were dual laundry tubs - made of steel or cast iron I think, definitely not plastic.  When the wringer washer was replaced with a Maytag automatic, it was placed on the cement floor beside the right side of the wood platform.  The Westinghouse Dryer was located at the other end of the basement on an outside wall.  I never knew why it was not located beside the washer.  The only reason I can think of is that the electrical panel was on the other wall and perhaps it was easier to hook up the dryer.  I don't think there was an outlet box - I think the dryer wire was connected directly to the electrical panel.

 

Gary


Post# 507569 , Reply# 27   3/28/2011 at 11:15 (4,749 days old) by turquoisedude (.)        

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The first laundry 'room' I remember was in a house in Hudson, Quebec where I spent the first few years of my life. We had a reasonably modern automatic washer and dryer set - GE V12's - and they were installed in a 'service porch' off the kitchen. The hookup was pretty bad, though. I remember my mother frantically running to find a mop when the standpipe drain for the washer backed up. The dryer was rarely, if ever, used. The wiring in that house was downright scary. The entrance was a mere 60 amps, so there was no way you could use the range and dryer (There was a box called a Load-Miser to connect the two and this must have had some kind of fuse or breaker that would blow if you turned both on). I remember the washer would dim the house lights when it started and blew a number of fuses if you happened to be using a few lights or the TV set! And get this, the service porch was unheated! I remember the water lines to the washer freezing up in January much to the dismay of my mother... Hence why she gave up and used the old Whirlpool wringer that was happily installed in the basement, hooked up to the old slate laudry tubs and plugged into the light socket.
I remember the sigh of relief that my mother let out when we moved into a house in the suburb of Pointe-Claire with 100-amp wiring and a dedicated dryer circuit, a permanent laundry room in the basement and plumbing that actually worked!!


Post# 507624 , Reply# 28   3/28/2011 at 13:52 (4,749 days old) by franksdad (Greenville, South Carolina)        

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The first house I lived in the Frigidaire and later 1961 Lady Kenmore were on the back porch which was screened in. When my parents moved in 1963 the washer was in the kitchen beside the refrigerator. In 1974 my father converted the back porch of this house into a laundry room complete with shelves, a wire clothes line for non-machine dryables, and the freezer. My first house had the washer and dryer closed behind louvered doors in the breakfast room. The next two had separate laundry rooms.

Post# 507637 , Reply# 29   3/28/2011 at 14:13 (4,749 days old) by turnamat (Germany)        

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My first experience is the old Constructa washer,my parents bought in 1965,shortly after I was born!I loved to sit in front of the glass door when mom was washing!This washer had a real boiling cycle,I still remember the "bubbles"came out of the rich foam when using this cycle.After 3 years of use,the washer broke down and was replaced by a Zanker which lasted 20 Years!

Post# 507641 , Reply# 30   3/28/2011 at 14:22 (4,749 days old) by turnamat (Germany)        

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...and this was the Zanker,that took place after this Constructa!


My mom always said,this Zanker has been the best of all the washers,she ever had!


Post# 507655 , Reply# 31   3/28/2011 at 15:39 (4,749 days old) by golittlesport (California)        
56 Westy

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My mom's first automatic was a mid-line 1956 Westy Laundromat with black and gold control knobs. It went in the basement where she had done washing in cement stationary tubs with a Dexter wringer washer. (The Dexter was rolled into a corner and saved.) A plumder had to add hot and cold faucets in the water lines behind the cement sinks.

I was about 3 years old and have a few vivid memories of that machine. I loved the fact it had a window that I could look into and see all the splashing and waterfall fill/spray. One thing I recall was, probably the first load, that the force of the pump was so strong that the water flew out of the sink and rained on us kids. My mom tied an old nylon stocking around the hose to remedy that. I remember the stocking would fill up with water and suds and it looked like a dismembered leg lying in the sink.

Another memory: One day as I was standing there watching, a load became unbalanced and the machine jumped and banged and then the shut-off kicked in and it stopped and buzzed loudly. I took off about 100 miles per hour! I remember flying up the wooden basement stairs on all fours, passing my mom half way as she was running down the steps to see what was going on with her new washing machine.

I remember in the 50's that getting an automatic washer was quit a big deal. All the neighbors would come over to see and the ladies would talk about their machines over coffee. My grandmother had gotten a 1955 Frigidaire set the year before and kept telling my dad that he needed to buy my mom an automatic since he had produced four kids by that time. The Westy was my mom's pride and joy. With two of the four kids in diapers, it was a life-changing purchase.



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