SPRING CLEANING
Dear Jan,
Couple of weeks ago your mother involved me, as usual this time of year,
in SPRING CLEANING, an annual rite that she takes on with a certain grim glee. The work
was not arduous or demanding and my thoughts wandered back to SPRING CLEANING in the
days
when I was growing up. Now THAT was a major rite and a major undertaking. The reason was
coal.
Coal heated our house and cooked our food, mostly, and provided hot water
for washing up. Coal is black and readily gives off a fine black dust that floats on every
errant air current, seeps through cracks and crevices, and adheres to every surface with
which it comes in contact. Of course we only used the furnace in cold weather but the
cookstove we used just about every day of the year so coal was always with us. There was a
cellar under the main part of the house, that is, under the living room, front room, and
the first floor bedroom off the living room where my parents slept, but not under the
dining room or kitchen or of course the woodshed. The cellar was divided roughly in half
by a stone wall that was part of the house foundation and pierced by a doorway with a
stout wooden door. The far half was the Cold Cellar used for storing food and maybe some
day I'll tell you about that.

The nearer half of the cellar, as you came down the stairs from the
kitchen, was the Furnace Room. It was dominated, indeed occupied, by a large round metal
furnace with ducts that branched off in various directions and carried warmed air to the
living room, front room, dining room, and one duct wandered up an unused stairwell to the
bathroom on the second floor. The kitchen, of course, was heated, sometimes too much so,
by the cookstove. The three bedrooms on the upper floor were heated, at least in theory,
by holes cut in the floor through the ceilings below and equipped with metal "registers"
similar to the hot air heating outlets we have today. Grandma's bedroom had a round coal-oil (kerosene) space
heater. The house was old, the doors and window didn't
fit very tightly, there was no insulation in the walls or ceilings, and no storm windows
or doors. Mornings after a winter storm, it was not uncommon to find a little snow drift
on my window sills (inside) and a glass of water left on the night table might well have
ice on it.
Down in the cellar, the area east of the furnace, perhaps a third of the
room, was walled off with a wooden barrier about five feet high and that was the Coal Bin.
The wooden wall was also a handy and much-used backstop for BBs, darts, and other missiles
that were banished from the living spaces. Essential to the coal bin was an outside window
- a standard basement window, maybe two feet wide, one foot high, and removable. When
replenishment was necessary, Dad would contact one of the several coal dealers in our
town, and in due course the coal truck would roll into our yard and stop at the window to
the coal bin. Whoever was home and closest would zip down to the coal bin, remove the
window, and stow it safely way. The coal man would unship his coal chute, a steel trough
about the size and shape of a children's
playground slide, stick one end through the cellar window, hook the other end onto his
truck and with a large scoop shovel proceed to unload the ordered ton or ton-and-a-half of
coal. The householder, meantime, would zip back up the stairs, close the cellar door as
tightly as possible, and caulk the edges of the door with whatever rags or old newspapers
were handy. With the coal unloaded, the coal man shipped his coal chute, collected his
money, and drove off looking for all the world like an end man in a minstrel show. The
householder would unstop the cellar door and, with a cloth over her/his head and another
over her/his mouth and nose, zip down through the swirling coal dust and reinstall the
cellar window. The cellar door would be kept shut and caulked as long as possible.

Next, the coal had to be reduced to the proper size for burning. Some
chunks were probably a cubic foot and the proper size was about as big as two fists for
the furnace and about as big as a large egg for the cookstove. Some folks broke up coal
with a sledge hammer; we used the blunt end of an old axe. This was a chore for the boy
(me), and it went on all year.
Another chore for the boy (me) was cleaning the cookstove each evening
and "laying the fire" for the next day. The cookstove was a large,
black,
cast iron appliance with a round stove pipe connecting it to the chimney. Next to it stood
the hot water tank with pipes that ran into and back out of the firebox in the cookstove.
That was our source of hot water. There was also in the kitchen a two-burner oil
(kerosene) stove. The cookstove handled the heavy duty cooking and baking and was used to
prepare our main meal, called "dinner" that was served and eaten at noon. Dad's store was a five-minute walk away, our school
about
the same distance, so the whole family was normally present around the dining table for
all meals. The oil stove was utilized for preparing breakfast and our evening meal, called "supper"
which was a relatively light and simple repast. Except on special occasions the cookstove
fire was not replenished after dinner and allowed to die out. When the dishes were washed
and put away and the kitchen tidied up (and I would not be underfoot) I went to work.
First, the ashes were shaken down into the ash basket, taking care to be
sure no live embers lingered, and the ash basket carried out the back door, through the
woodshed, down the drive, and emptied on the ash pile north of the barn. On the return
trip, I stopped in the woodshed for several sheets of old newspaper, a handful of kindling
wood, and a half-pint of kerosene in an old coffee can. The newspaper was crumpled and
placed in the firebox, the kindling laid in, a layer of coal spread on top, and the whole
thing soaked with kerosene. A trip down to the coal bin to fill the coal bucket and the
stove was ready for a fast start in the morning. In later years the old cookstove was
replaced with an electric stove, but it didn't
heat water, so alongside Dad installed a small black, cast iron "laundry stove" coal-fired, and "laying the fire" went on.
Tending the furnace was Dad's
domain and nobody else better touch it, particularly boys. First thing in the morning, he
searched among the ashes for embers that survived the night and built up the fire. He
tended it again before he left for work, and when he came home at none, and in the
evening, and the last thing before going to bed he "banked" the fire with ashes so it would last through the
night. The residue consisted of ashes, cinders, and "clinkers." Ashes and cinders were shoveled out and into a
steel
container the size and shape of a bushel basket. "Clinkers" were large, grotesque, lumps of impurities in the
coal that had melted and then solidified. Removing them from the firebox involved large
steel hook, steel tongs, and heavy leather gloves.
The furnace served another purpose, too, it heated our soapstones. I
mentioned that the second floor bedrooms were in effect unheated, but the soapstones
compensated in a fair measure. "Soapstone" is a kind of naturally occurring stone that has, on
the dressed surfaces, a sort of soapy feel and has a superior ability to absorb and retain
heat. On cold nights, sometime after supper, Dad would open the furnace door and place the
soapstones inside on the firebox apron. There they would sit and soak up heat until about
a half hour before bedtime. One at a time they would be removed (with steel tongs and
leather gloves). Each would be wrapped first in a half dozen layers of newspaper folded
into a tidy package and secured with string. That package would be folded into a layer or
two of cloth and fastened with safety pins. Then they would be rushed up to the bedroom
and slid into the space between the feather comforters and hand-made quilts where we would
shortly join them. I folded my clothes and put them in bed, too, pulled the covers over my
head, and was snug as a bug in a rug. Those soapstones would stay warm all night.
I suppose we could have tightened up the house with caulking and such to
reduce the heat leakage, but since neither the oil stove in the kitchen nor the oil heater
in Grandma's bedroom was vented outside it
was
probably just as well that the windows and doors were rather loosely fit. Both heaters
also produced a certain amount of soot that also settled wherever it landed.
Hence the need for SPRING CLEANING, which is what I started to tell
you
about. When the weather had warmed and the furnace shut down for the summer, Mother and
Grandma, sometimes aided by one or more aunts, and boys outside of school hours, set at
it. Our window "treatment" as the decorator magazines call it, consisted of
white lace curtains (no drapes). These were taken down, measured, washed, wrung out, and "stretched" to dry. The curtain stretcher was a rectangular wooden framework, nominally perhaps four
feet by eight feet in size but adjustable in both dimensions. All four of the wooden
members were lined along the inner edge with a row of sharp steel pins. In use, it was
adjusted to the proper size, either stood on edge or laid across four dining room chairs,
and the damp curtain stretched by impaling all four edges on the sharp steel pins. Those
pins were about a half inch long and spaced about three-fourths of an inch apart, just the
right spacing so that when you were carefully hooking the curtain over one, the next one
leaned over and jabbed your finger, and woe unto him/her who got blood spots on the
freshly washed white curtain. I early gained a deep and abiding distrust of curtain
stretchers.
Our floor coverings were rugs (no carpeting), and these were rolled up and
carried outdoors, there to be draped over a clothesline held up with extra wood props and
soundly beaten. Rug beaters are usually paddle-shaped affairs made of heavy steel wire,
sort of like a large flat whisk. Applied to the rugs with verve and vigor they really made
the dirt fly. The longer and harder you beat them the cleaner they became, and the beaters
(boys) were encouraged to lay on with a will.
The walls and ceilings of all the rooms were papered and all of that wall
paper had to be cleaned. For this we used commercial wall paper cleaner that came in a can
and looked like pink putty. You gouged out a handful, kneaded it to a biscuit shape, and
wiped. It was amazing how much dirt that stuff picked up. When the wiping surface became
too dirty, you kneaded it some more to expose the clean part and continued wiping.
Eventually the whole biscuit had to be discarded, and a fresh handful gouged out of the
can, kneaded, etc., etc.
Windows were washed, as were floors, doors, and woodwork. Furniture
was
washed or vacuumed as appropriate. Lighting fixtures were taken down and washed and
polished. Cupboards and closets were emptied and cleaned. Bedding and clothing was carried
outdoors and hung on the clothesline to "air
out."
In due time, the curtains were rehung, the rugs relaid, the furniture put
back in proper location, and everyone sat back to admire the results. We didn't sit very long, however, because close upon us was
the next major event of the year - PUTTING IN THE GARDEN. Maybe I'll tell you about that next.
Love,
Father
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