Skip to content
You are not logged in |Login  
     
Limit search to available items
Book Cover
book
BookBook
Author Hardyment, Christina.

Title Home comfort : a history of domestic arrangements in association with the National Trust / Christina Hardyment.

Publication Info. Chicago, Ill. : Academy Chicago in association with the National Trust, 1992.

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 Manchester, Main Library - Non Fiction  392.36 HARDYMENT    Check Shelf
 Portland Public Library - Adult Department  392.36 HAR    Check Shelf
Description xvii, 229 pages : illustrations ; 26 cm
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 211-217) and index.
Summary 'I must frankly own that, if I had known beforehand the labour which this book has entailed, I should never have been courageous enough to commence it.' So begins Mrs. Beeton's Book of Household Management, and so perhaps should run the first line of this book. The subject of the book is probably best described as domestic archaeology, a quest for establishing exactly how our ancestors kept themselves clean, warm and well-fed. Christina Hardyment has visited over a hundred houses, most belonging to The National Trust: stately mansions and humble farmhouses, medieval manors and terraced town houses. She has squirmed through medieval drains, poked into cellars and dilapidated sculleries, clambered down ice houses and up chimneys in the interests of establishing where domestic tasks took place and how they were done. Besides offering detailed chapters on the history of the kitchen, bathroom and laundry, she investigates bakehouses and breweries, kitchen gardens and orangeries, the lamp room and the larder, the poultry yard and the still-room. Her descriptions are illuminated by much lore about the operation of mangles, the management of dovecotes and the workings of water closets that has been gleaned from housecraft manuals through the centuries, National Trust archives, diaries and novels, advice given by architects and tradesmen and the reminiscences of those who were once part of the upstairs/downstairs world that we have lost. She concludes by asserting that even these days, when machines and supermarkets seem to provide all we need in the home, we would do well to take more seriously the traditional assumption that skilled household organization is a vital element of domestichappiness.
Contents 1. The Domestic Plan -- 2. Men at the Top -- 3. The Housekeeper's Domain -- 4. The Living Larder -- 5. The Dairy -- 6. Brewhouse and Bakehouse -- 7. Preservation -- 8. The Cook's Quarters -- 9. Mrs. Beeton's Kitchen -- 10. Light and Heat -- 11. Waterworks -- 12. Laundry Work -- 13. Conclusion.
Subject Dwellings -- Great Britain -- History.
Architecture, Domestic -- Great Britain -- History.
Home economics -- Great Britain -- History.
Material culture -- Great Britain -- History.
Great Britain -- Social life and customs.
Added Author National Trust (Great Britain)
ISBN 0897333756: $34.95
9780897333757
-->
Add a Review