People once used animal fat to do laundry. |
Science & Industry |
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Other ingredients in proto-detergent solutions included lye and even urine. A set of 14th-century instructions in A Medieval Home Companion explains, "If there is any spot of oil or other grease, this is the remedy: Take urine and heat it until it is warm, and soak the spot in it for two days. Then, without twisting it, squeeze out the part of the dress with the spot. If the spot is not gone … put it in other urine, beat in ox gall, and do as before." Indeed, laundry was an intensely arduous process in medieval Europe, one that involved literally beating the dirt out of one's clothes, and it was carried out almost exclusively by women. So next time you find yourself dreading laundry day, take solace in the fact that it's infinitely easier than it used to be. | |
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The first commercial electric washing machine was called Thor. | |||||||||
The Norse god of thunder isn't the only notable Thor. That was also the name of the first commercially produced electric washing machine, which the Hurley Machine Company of Chicago introduced in 1908. The brainchild of inventor Alva J. Fisher, the drum-type washer had a galvanized tub and, per the patent, the "perforated cylinder is rotatably mounted within a tub containing the wash water." The Thor proved successful enough for the company to continue innovating for the next several decades; it even made a hybrid dishwasher-washing machine called the Automagic in the 1940s. | |||||||||
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