The Lath and Paster is very much part of the house we live in. They can be seen along a wallspace of the basement stairwell. Some is exposed. Last I heard, renovations were done in the 1970's. An extension to side of house was made to add a place for mainfloor laundry and for hot water heater. Also a bathroom to side of kitchen was added. 😬 I've no idea where previous bathroom may've been then. *That one image that shows a hole in some brick, we have something exactly that shape in the living room! It extends up to our upstairs bedroom, floor to ceiling. Last year while getting a new roof, and new beams it looked like, we were asked if the top of the chute should be closed/removed. I'm like, it's been open this whole time? As it was removed, I heard a loud crack and a thud, and stuff came down the chute. On other end of house, same thing extends down some, and goes upstairs, also floor to ceiling, however top of that chute is already gone. The sandstone foundation dates this house to the years of 1900-1903 for when it may've been built, as I found a standstone quarry in the county records, and there's 5 standstone "sheds" within our area. There's a rumor they may've been slave quarters, or a tiny home used until the house was built. No one knows for sure. Still has original wooden shingles underneath the metal sheet roofing.
I have a Victorian home and it broke my heart that the previous owners bragged that they had removed the original pass-through china cabinet between the kitchen and dining room. It allowed clean dishes to be placed in it that could then be accessed directly from the dining room. They left a huge, gaping hole in the wall where it used to be! They also cut up some of the original, solid-wood panel doors to make corner shelves for paint cans in the garage! Philistines. At least there is a lot of original moldings and hardware left that they didn’t get to.
A unique US house feature from the 1970's and 1980's is the kitchen wall phone with a "mile long" cord, that could reach into the living room or garage.
@@KoldingDenmark I was just mentioning it. The long cords were not common when my mother had hers. We had a large house and there were many old ladies -- friends of my grandmother's -- who loved to talk and talk and talk. My mother felt sorry for them, so she got a gadget to hold the receiver up to her ear and did most of her housework while on the phone. She had a 40-foot cord on the downstairs and the upstairs extension. The men who installed them were sure she was going to trip, but she never did.
If you're 70 today, you must have been born around 1953/1954. Didn't most people by the 1960ies already have fridges? Considering that even the Nazis already mass-produced electric fridges by 1940.
@@mikaelb.2070 I was born in -53 and all city homes had refrigerators, but I remember going to summer cottages that we rented, just a hundred miles north of the city, and ice boxes and ice delivery were still very common.
@@mikaelb.2070 not if you grew up in the rural areas! Hell when we moved to a smaller place in the early 1990s we had to wait about a month to get a landline! And this place wasn't in the back of beyond, it was 1 kilometre from a major highway.
I made a dutch door for our nursery when our first child was born. Could leave the top half of the door open at night, so the baby's cries could be heard, but kept our dog out of the baby's room at night.
My house was built in the early 1960s and has a laundry chute. I love it! The clothes drop into a tall wicker basket which is close to my washing machine.
They went away because of fire investigation and science that shows the chutes didn't fully separate the floors of a house during a fire. Provides an oxygen source and place for flames to reach to the next level before burning through the ceiling/ floor.
@@quincekreb6798 Yes, it was the fire code that killed laundry chutes. In the event of a fire, they acted like a chimney, causing the flames to quickly spread to the upper floors.
@@samanthab1923 Good call. It'd definitely be nice to have something like that for packages to help deter porch pirates. In my case I have packages delivered to my work.
problem is getting the delivery drivers to follow instructions and use them. well that and amz's box to item size mis-match. order something the size of a man's fist and it arrives in a box so big a rottwiler can sprawl nap inside of
I could definitely see a version of the milk door making a comeback, unfortunately it would cost more than the old way because you would want a secure door on the inside also, but if you had a airlock style setup with a modern smart lock that you could have the delivery driver unlock the outside portion
Neighbor had a laundry chute and she showed me we could slide down it, and one i did, i didn't want to stop. I just kept going and going. I was about 7 and friend was about 10. Oh the good old days.(1960s).
The house I moved out of in 2020 had picture rails, knob and tube wiring, claw foot tubs, lath and plaster walls, and a laundry chute. It was so cool living there.
I just had to rewire and entire house with knob and tube wiring. What a pain. The wiring was still functional in most places, but was so deteriorated that it was a serious fire hazard. Because of the way knob and tube was run, we couldn't use the old runs as pathways for the new wiring on the upper floors, either. We had to run entirely new chases using the old laundry chute as a starting point.
Had a funny a few weeks ago! A friend was visiting and had her two teen kids along. I have an old house and have many antiques, including a phone nook in the hall with an old dial phone sitting there. One of the kids was staring at it and asked, "What is that thing?" She had never seen one of the old phones, not living in an old house. They are rare even on TV.
Didn't think you could still get service for those, we had one when I was a kid, I remember my parents being pissed at the phone company for mandating all the hookups be rewired for touch tone, that was... 1987 I think.
It's pretty easy to make one. Add two more hinges then cut the door in half, but it has to be a solid door. Nothing a reasonably handy person can't do,.
Lived in many older homes in my 73 years. In Michigan all older homes had fruit cellars . They could store fruit, preserves, wine, 2nd set of cookware, anything . A lot of fun for kids playing,too.
But people preffer other types of material for bathtbus, this if they still want a bathtub. Talking at least of the country where I live. But there is nothing like bathtubs and radiators made from cast iron.
Yes, the claw foot tubs are still around and very trendy, but the tubs and their fixtures are now very expensive compared to modern tubs. I acquired and removed two cast iron claw foot tubs for free from an old Victorian home. I had them professionally refinished for $600 each and sold them for $2,000.00 each. They sold in 2 days after listing them for sale.
My first house in Missouri had lath & plaster walls throughout, a phone nook, and a laundry chute built into the underside of the phone nook. Most of the houses in the neighborhood also had coal chutes left over from decades ago.
@@fox1ed Older houses were never built with the mindset unlike today to be torn down in a few years which is why houses over a century old are still livable today. New houses today will never last that long. With that said in placing razors inside walls it was done they would remain there forever.
@@fox1ed Unless and until the house was remodeled or demolished, razors were place there to remain that way. The area behind the walls were never otherwise cleaned out.
I grew up in late 1940’s-early 1970’s in a post-WWII home. We had most of these. My dad made a Dutch door with my brother’s bedroom door so I couldn’t get in and play with his toys. Great memories! We built a house in 2005 and put in a laundry chute from the upstairs hall right to the top of the washing machine. So convenient!
A couple of upsides of plaster-and-lathe walls and ceilings: 1. If you're putting in a wall hook or something like that, you're far more likely to get your screw into something more solid than drywall. 2. If you damage the plaster, it's easy to patch up with some spackle.
My house was built in 1951, and has many of the things here. It also has a tall narrow drawer n the kitchen for hanging towels, and a built in cutting board or hot pot board. Looks like it was used for both.
My parent's house (built in the 1950's) had several of these old features. The laundry shoot, telephone nook, razor blade slot in the medicine cabinet, lath and plaster walls, etc.
There used to be an intercom/radio built into the walls so you could just call someone anywhere in the house. Used to love those things.i personally never had one, but a friend of mine did and it was a lot of fun to play with 😂😂😂
The classic foursquare home that i grew up in had lath and plaster, a laundry shoot and a boot scraper. When i renovated my own old home i added a laundry shoot. A recent house guest managed to drop his cell phone down it
Thank you for this wonderful video! Never heard of the California cooler, but love the concept and will be adding it to my “want list” for our forever home. Already have Dutch doors on that list! I only learned of witch windows a few years ago when visiting Vermont. What I was told was that when folks added on more space to their original homes they would reuse any windows and doors and place them where needed. The old windows were strategically placed in areas that needed natural light, mostly near staircases thus having them placed however they could fit which led to the odd angles. 🧙🏻♀️
A cooler is very simple. It is just a kitchen cabinet that has screens instead of shelves and a screened hole into the space beneath the house. And of course a vent at the top! I grew up in two houses that had them, built in 1907 and 1923. The 1923 house had a drawer for eggs!
@@stephenlee5929Interesting. Do they have the shelves made of screen? I have read of "drying closets" in English books. Is that something similar, only connected with the heating system to move warm air instead of cold?
@@dorothywillis1 Hi, A Larder is cold, Not sure how they work (but they do), I think there is a vent at the top to allow air out, they are normally either stone or concrete, with stone or concrete shelving. I would expect this to be on an outside wall. The 'drying closets', I would normally call an 'airing cupboard' (unless I misinterpreting), these have wooden shelving with , a little like a picket fence, so gaps in the shelf. They are normally in a cupboard (closet) that contains the hot water tank, the door would be wood (but most are) and might have a vent. I would expect hot water pipes to line the back of this closet (not extra pipes just pipes that need to go between floors, are likely to go through this cupboard) I might expect any (water) cut off valves to be here too. I would expect this to be in the core of the house not on an outside wall.
@@Bobrogers99 they are not usually used by people as dual purpose bathroom fixtures like a shower too and people who have the authentic types don't care about maintenance or cleaning up when they likely have a maid. for them it is about the look and style.
@Bobrogers99 I'm taking showers in a classical bathub. But I live in a commie made apartament and they where walled, they wheren't like in the picture.
We had a razor blade slot in the back our medicine cabinet. Many of these things are still used today... Dutch doors, boot scrapers. This Old House show just showed how to make a regular door into a dutch door.
I had that tub in my old house and that door is in my childhood house. The laundry chute was great. Child hood home. Had all but windows and razor blades. Always lived in old homes
When I was growing up one of my favorite things to do at my dad’s parents’ house was to slide down their giant clothes chute with my sibs and cousins. We’d make sure that there was plenty of clothes at the bottom to cushion the fall at the end. On a rainy day there was nothing more entertaining to do than slide down the chute!
When I was a child, we lived in a tenement in New York City. Each unit had what was called a 'dumbwaiter', a vertical chute in the wall that had a door, and behind it a platform with a pulley rope or chain. You would put your garbage on it and release the pulley. After a while, when the concierge in the basement had removed the garbage, you could pull the rope or chain and the platform would come back for the next load.
Our NYC apartment had a dumbwaiter in the kitchen too. But there hadn't been a concierge to handle the trash in a long time, so they ended up just sealing up and painting over the dumbwaiter door.
@@stevenlitvintchouk3131 I'll bet that's what's happened just about everywhere. A concierge would now be called a maintenance guy, but in our gentrified world so many maintenance guys are on call rather than stationed at the premises.
In the 1970's, central vacuum cleaner systems were quite popular. The vacuum cleaner resided in the garage or basement, the home had a network of plastic vacuum tubes distributed throughout, and each room or living area had a special vacuum port, where you'd connect a flex hose.
We had one of those in the '70s. It didn't work very well -- all the "sockets" for the hose and the sheer extent of the piping meant lots of opportunities for lost suction.
Last time we saw a phone nook was in Santa Monica in 2011 in a house before it was renovated. We have always nicknamed them Stan & Ollie holes, as we mostly know them from old movies.
My grandfather's house (built in the 1930s) had a laundry chute and it was nice, although I would have preferred something that took the laundry back up LOL! I wonder if the people who bought and totally remodeled the house kept it.
My parents' house in Huntington, L.I. was an old Craftsman. It had a butler's pantry, the slanted metal lift up door from the outside into the basement and built in cupboards in the bathrooms, as well as a room in the stone basement for storing home canned stuff and root veggies. Also had the huge old hot water radiators until they swapped them out for hot water baseboard heating. That made me sad. 🥺
The house I grew up in had several of these--a couple Dutch doors, blade slots, and a phone nook. The phone nook had a sliding panel on the back so that it could be accessed from either the living room or the bedroom (office?). The house I lived in during college had a laundry chute, though we didn't use it.
I was thinking of some of the other features my first few apartments had, which were in buildings from the early 1900’s. There were pocket doors, which disappeared into the wall, a great space saver, since no room for swinging doors was needed. There were two stained glass windows set high, flanking the fireplace. There was a large wooden hall tree just inside the front entrance, where one could hang their coat, hat, bag, etc, and perhaps remove their shoes. And there were radiators with these “keys”, with which you needed to occasionally release steam or “bleed” the radiators.
One of the reasons you don't see laundry shoots more often in newer homes is first of all some townships and municipalities don't allow them anymore because of fire issues and also more and more people are putting the laundry room on the second floor. However with the growth in residential fire sprinkler systems I could see laundry shoots making a comeback, put fire-rated doors at each access and put a sprinkler with a protective cover at the top of the shaft.
Actually phone nooks became less common when the wall phone (a landline telephone that attached directly to the wall) came out, with long cords. These were often placed in the kitchen, allowing a woman (mostly) to talk while she worked. Not sure when they first became available. I looked it up and according to the various sites, wall phones were available anywhere from 1879-1899. The modern kitchen wall phone was definitely available in the 1950's-1960's, as I remember having them when I was young. I've lived in old houses most of my life and remember many of these features. In one house, not only was there a laundry chute, there was a built-in ironing board in one kitchen wall, with a special outlet inside for the iron. It also had a wonderful walk-in pantry, the two side walls having shallow shelves 18" apart and was big enough to place the washer and dryer at the back, under the window. It also still had the original coal burning cook stove sitting right next to the newer stove and, of course, a baked enamel kitchen sink. I loved it.
Well, I never lived in a home with a California cooler. I have lived in homes with all the others. I still have a sleeping porch and a boot scrape. I’ve had at one point or another a coal chute, laundry chute, phone nook, grandmothers had laundry chutes, witch windows, Dutch doors, vegetable cellars, and a room with a big sink and workbench for skinning and rending fish and animals before cooking or storage.
My house was built in 1912. It still has its lath and plaster walls. You can’t drive a nail in it! I also still have a blade bank in the upstairs bathroom!
In big houses back in the '60s and '70s to go with the phone, a lot of times you had a set of external ringer bells mounted in an area where you wouldn't otherwise be able to hear the phone ring like outside on the back deck or in the basement or in the garage.
My grandmother's house had a laundry shoot, but it was very basic. Just a hole in the bottom of the linen closet with a metal tube that went straight down to the basement. The place I live in still has lathe and plaster walls and ceilings. We replace it only if/when it needs a major enough repair to warrant it. And when we redid the bathroom we absolutely found razors in the wall. We also had/have counter-weighted windows (and have left the ones on the three-season porch alone).
My apartment is 105 years old. For years I wondered what the cabinet in my kitchen was use for. Today I found out it’s “California Cooler.” It is made exactly as described in this video. Something told me it was a refrigerator but I thought it used a block of ice. I thought the wire shelves were to let the water drain to the outside. I keep cleaning supplies and pot and pans in it, but I am going to give it a through cleaning and use it as it was intended to be used. My apartment has a lot of its original fixtures. I am always amazed and continue to find built ins and hidden objects of yesteryear. There is a drawer lined with tin next to the California cooler. I have never seen anything like it. Now I must do my research on it. 😊
I always liked Dutch doors. My GF and me want to put a Dutch front door on when we ultimately get a house together. Her current house also has a phone nook and even laundry chute. Always makes me jump when one of her daughters hucks a load of laundry down it as I'm walking right by where it empties out 🤣 I have a combination boot scraper and brush that I mounted to the deck just outside my back door. While their existence in architecture may have been pretty much gone away, their usefulness hasn't!
Here in Australia when I was a kid before electricity in rural areas where there was no ice factory, we had Coolgardie safes to keep food cool especially in summer with repeated100°F/38°C days and pretty warm nights. It was invented by McCormick in 1890 and named after the outback West Australian mining town which necessitated its invention to keep precious fresh meat, veg and dairy safe from heat as well as freeloaders. It was basically a large shelved box on legs with a shallow metal dish as a top, with canvas strips draped from it over all its canvas sides and door, either sitting in a shallow metal dish or having a gutter around the bottom of the box. The top dish was filled with water which the canvas strips by osmosis wet the canvas sides and door. Evaporation lowered the temperature somewhat inside. Any excess water which reached the bottom of the canvas was either caught in the gutter or in the bottom tray. The only issue if there was no water in the bottom tray or there was just a gutter was invading ants and other creepy crawlies; the usual deterrent adopted by Mum was to stand the safe's legs in old golden syrup (cocky's joy) or other tins full of water. We had a Coolgardie safe for years until we could afford a kerosene refrigerator and a backup ice chest.
My house was built in around 1960, there was a small hatch door between the living room and kitchen you could pass things through. On my street there’s about 5 different styles of house and similar in other streets, they had them too. Once the local council was updating the heating, we got radiators, woo hoo, no more ice in the inside of windows. To my point 😂 they also installed the same gas, coal or electric fires to the homes, you could go to friends homes if relatives and the mum might ask you to tyrn off or adjust the heating or fire 😂 Now we don’t have a fire at all. We had to wear cardigans to bed over nighties because it would be so cold.
Ah, yes; the colonial Dutch's fondness for using PVC in doors and windows. 😐It's one thing to have AI read these scripts, it's another to let it WRITE them.
I don’t know. When our kids were young, we enjoyed recreating artifacts from the local PVC Indians. The bows and tomahawks were particularly authentic.
Shoe scraper where installed in some apartament building where I live. They where not as fancy as those. There where rods connected to a frame and a small space bellow. Good for scraping ice of too. Some more fancy prewar buldings had ones like in the clip.
Clawfoot tubs are still popular with people doing renovations, usually people with more money due to costs. We sell many of them made by Elizabethan Classics which offer many foot deigns as well as hand held sprayer etc..
Remodeled a home once in Waco Texas that had thousands of razor blades in a wall we took down I told this to my father he asked was a bathroom on the other side I said yeah he told me why then made hella sense
I grew up in houses that had laundry chutes and coolers. I always wondered why the laundry chute was not also set up to be a dumb waiter. It would be handy to move something heavy or awkward from one floor to another.
Boot scrapers are still around, but mainly seen in the military. You'll see them outside public buildings with a lot of foot traffic. They're either thick brushes or made of metal
My current home's medicine cabinet over the sink has a razor slot on one side. My old home in Akron was plaster and lathe, had once been heated by coal (based on the amount of coal dust that blackened me as I had to tear down and replace plaster and lathe walls and ceilings that had fallen into disrepair before I bought the house). It also had (no longer connected) gas pipes for the gas lighting... Electric was installed when the house was built about 1919 but it also had the gas lighting pipes.
We still have the dutch door in our home and a sleeping porch. Our house have two back doors. One at the kitchen leading into the backyard and one from the sleaping porch, both backdoors are dutch doors
we had claw foot foot tub back in the 60s at my grandparents house & cottage . there cottage had a split door . we had medicine cabinets with blade slots also . LTh & plaster was used used in My parents first home they rented back in the 60s we lived in Gananoque Ontario
Clawfoots aren't totally dead yet. Last one we installed was 2018. The slipper tub is the new version of the clawfoot and those are very popular now. Come across 1 house with a CA cooler, many with the phone niche, and medicine cabinets with the razor slot. Another bath feature that disappeared was the dental sink.
Sleeping porches were common in the neighborhood where I grew up. I had one neighbor who slept on his screen porch year round, in northern New England with winter nights getting well below zero.
What other old home features do you remember?
Coffin corners, coal chutes, milk doors, ice delivery door, flip down ironing boards, bowl and pitcher.
The Lath and Paster is very much part of the house we live in. They can be seen along a wallspace of the basement stairwell. Some is exposed. Last I heard, renovations were done in the 1970's. An extension to side of house was made to add a place for mainfloor laundry and for hot water heater. Also a bathroom to side of kitchen was added. 😬 I've no idea where previous bathroom may've been then.
*That one image that shows a hole in some brick, we have something exactly that shape in the living room! It extends up to our upstairs bedroom, floor to ceiling. Last year while getting a new roof, and new beams it looked like, we were asked if the top of the chute should be closed/removed. I'm like, it's been open this whole time? As it was removed, I heard a loud crack and a thud, and stuff came down the chute. On other end of house, same thing extends down some, and goes upstairs, also floor to ceiling, however top of that chute is already gone.
The sandstone foundation dates this house to the years of 1900-1903 for when it may've been built, as I found a standstone quarry in the county records, and there's 5 standstone "sheds" within our area. There's a rumor they may've been slave quarters, or a tiny home used until the house was built. No one knows for sure. Still has original wooden shingles underneath the metal sheet roofing.
My Grammy used to call the front porch the davenport--and there was no couch out there. (This was in Iowa; I wonder if it's just an Iowa thing?)
Murphy beds
A kitchen. I hate the open concept trend.
I have a Victorian home and it broke my heart that the previous owners bragged that they had removed the original pass-through china cabinet between the kitchen and dining room. It allowed clean dishes to be placed in it that could then be accessed directly from the dining room. They left a huge, gaping hole in the wall where it used to be! They also cut up some of the original, solid-wood panel doors to make corner shelves for paint cans in the garage! Philistines. At least there is a lot of original moldings and hardware left that they didn’t get to.
😭
I don’t understand why people who want new modern homes but old homes.
A unique US house feature from the 1970's and 1980's is the kitchen wall phone with a "mile long" cord, that could reach into the living room or garage.
I wish people would step into the hall to use their phone instead of annoying everyone with their conversations.
@@Bobrogers99
That is exactly why we have "quiet sections" in our trains.
You cannot do phone calls in there.
My mother had a long cord on her phone long before that!
@@dorothywillis1
Well, my first visit to the US was 1980, so I was kind of guessing. 😉
@@KoldingDenmark I was just mentioning it. The long cords were not common when my mother had hers. We had a large house and there were many old ladies -- friends of my grandmother's -- who loved to talk and talk and talk. My mother felt sorry for them, so she got a gadget to hold the receiver up to her ear and did most of her housework while on the phone. She had a 40-foot cord on the downstairs and the upstairs extension. The men who installed them were sure she was going to trip, but she never did.
This 70 year-old Canadian remembers MANY of these things. The blocks of ice, the coal, and the milk door. Great memories..😊😊
If you're 70 today, you must have been born around 1953/1954. Didn't most people by the 1960ies already have fridges? Considering that even the Nazis already mass-produced electric fridges by 1940.
@@mikaelb.2070 I was born in -53 and all city homes had refrigerators, but I remember going to summer cottages that we rented, just a hundred miles north of the city, and ice boxes and ice delivery were still very common.
@@mikaelb.2070 Not poor people..
@@mikaelb.2070 not if you grew up in the rural areas! Hell when we moved to a smaller place in the early 1990s we had to wait about a month to get a landline!
And this place wasn't in the back of beyond, it was 1 kilometre from a major highway.
My dad was born in 1920, and he remembered chasing the ice man for ice chips on hot days.
I always liked dutch doors. The phone nook would still be a great design to have by a front door so you put your keys and whatnot when you come home.
Nordhavn and Selene trawler yachts both offer dutch doors even today.
I made a dutch door for our nursery when our first child was born. Could leave the top half of the door open at night, so the baby's cries could be heard, but kept our dog out of the baby's room at night.
They suck scissors.
My house, built in 2000 was designed with a laundry chute. I added it as the 40’s era home I grew up in had one.
My house was built in the early 1960s and has a laundry chute. I love it! The clothes drop into a tall wicker basket which is close to my washing machine.
They went away because of fire investigation and science that shows the chutes didn't fully separate the floors of a house during a fire. Provides an oxygen source and place for flames to reach to the next level before burning through the ceiling/ floor.
@@quincekreb6798 I built and installed one with fire protection built in. It wasn't hard at all.
@@quincekreb6798 Source? And you can easily make them fire resistant
@@quincekreb6798 Yes, it was the fire code that killed laundry chutes. In the event of a fire, they acted like a chimney, causing the flames to quickly spread to the upper floors.
My elementary school had boot/shoe scrapers at the entrances. I just remembered this. That was almost 70 years ago.
We have them still
In my neck of the woods we have boot brushes for snow in some places!
I feel like the " Milk Door " will make a comeback now that there's so many home delivery services now.
You’re right! For Amazon & such
@@samanthab1923 Good call. It'd definitely be nice to have something like that for packages to help deter porch pirates. In my case I have packages delivered to my work.
problem is getting the delivery drivers to follow instructions and use them.
well that and amz's box to item size mis-match.
order something the size of a man's fist and it arrives in a box so big a rottwiler can sprawl nap inside of
@@davidpantherchild3181 lol
I could definitely see a version of the milk door making a comeback, unfortunately it would cost more than the old way because you would want a secure door on the inside also, but if you had a airlock style setup with a modern smart lock that you could have the delivery driver unlock the outside portion
Neighbor had a laundry chute and she showed me we could slide down it, and one i did, i didn't want to stop. I just kept going and going. I was about 7 and friend was about 10. Oh the good old days.(1960s).
first thing my brother did was slide down the laundry chute lol
The house I moved out of in 2020 had picture rails, knob and tube wiring, claw foot tubs, lath and plaster walls, and a laundry chute. It was so cool living there.
I just had to rewire and entire house with knob and tube wiring. What a pain. The wiring was still functional in most places, but was so deteriorated that it was a serious fire hazard. Because of the way knob and tube was run, we couldn't use the old runs as pathways for the new wiring on the upper floors, either. We had to run entirely new chases using the old laundry chute as a starting point.
Had a funny a few weeks ago! A friend was visiting and had her two teen kids along. I have an old house and have many antiques, including a phone nook in the hall with an old dial phone sitting there. One of the kids was staring at it and asked, "What is that thing?" She had never seen one of the old phones, not living in an old house. They are rare even on TV.
Didn't think you could still get service for those, we had one when I was a kid, I remember my parents being pissed at the phone company for mandating all the hookups be rewired for touch tone, that was... 1987 I think.
I like the Dutch door, the laundry chute, i love the sleeping balcony idea, they should have built it today. ❤❤
It's pretty easy to make one. Add two more hinges then cut the door in half, but it has to be a solid door. Nothing a reasonably handy person can't do,.
The sleeping balcony is basically a modern day sunroom
@@REALPapaLagsor a screened in porch
Lived in many older homes in my 73 years. In Michigan all older homes had fruit cellars . They could store fruit, preserves, wine, 2nd set of cookware, anything . A lot of fun for kids playing,too.
My first house, built in the late 50’s had a knob at the front door that could turn on or off every light in the house, I freakin loved it!
Claw-footed tubs still exist, and are still made. So they haven’t “faded” yet. Same with “Dutch doors”, and boot scrapers.
But people preffer other types of material for bathtbus, this if they still want a bathtub. Talking at least of the country where I live.
But there is nothing like bathtubs and radiators made from cast iron.
The large boat-shaped bathtubs are trending now on many DIY shows, but they don't have the feet.
Those are special order items, not commonplace like they once were
They are certainly not the norm or even popular nowadays
Yes, the claw foot tubs are still around and very trendy, but the tubs and their fixtures are now very expensive compared to modern tubs. I acquired and removed two cast iron claw foot tubs for free from an old Victorian home. I had them professionally refinished for $600 each and sold them for $2,000.00 each. They sold in 2 days after listing them for sale.
I added a laundry chute in a house I built in 1977. VERY useful for second-story bedrooms!
Boot scrapers are still a needed and in some places popular thing.
I have one. They are still around. 😂. Great thing to have !
Shallow cupboards for a fold down ironing board, the one in the kitchen made a great spice cabinet.
My first house in Missouri had lath & plaster walls throughout, a phone nook, and a laundry chute built into the underside of the phone nook. Most of the houses in the neighborhood also had coal chutes left over from decades ago.
My 1928 home still has 60% of the walls of plaster & lathe in excellent condition. Much more sound proof than drywall.
Love clawfoot tubs and Dutch doors!
My home was built in 1959. When I remodeled in 2009, it was quite a surprise to discover rusty razor blades in the bathroom wall.
I think it would be somewhat gross too since anyone would have to touch them in order to throw them away later
@@fox1ed Older houses were never built with the mindset unlike today to be torn down in a few years which is why houses over a century old are still livable today. New houses today will never last that long. With that said in placing razors inside walls it was done they would remain there forever.
Why a surprise? That's how things were done back then.
@@naomiemoore5725 For those who never lived in an older house they will have odd features that will be surprising, it's a natural reaction.
@@fox1ed Unless and until the house was remodeled or demolished, razors were place there to remain that way. The area behind the walls were never otherwise cleaned out.
I grew up in late 1940’s-early 1970’s in a post-WWII home. We had most of these. My dad made a Dutch door with my brother’s bedroom door so I couldn’t get in and play with his toys. Great memories! We built a house in 2005 and put in a laundry chute from the upstairs hall right to the top of the washing machine. So convenient!
I'm into ALL of these old home features. Love em
Cast iron tubs still have better heat retention than any more modern material.
Plus they are deeper and the water covers more of you. Easier to grab the sides and get up and out of them too.
Only they first have to absorb the heat from the water. Fiberglass is actually an insulator.
A couple of upsides of plaster-and-lathe walls and ceilings:
1. If you're putting in a wall hook or something like that, you're far more likely to get your screw into something more solid than drywall.
2. If you damage the plaster, it's easy to patch up with some spackle.
Live in Wyoming and the boot scraper is still essential.
I am in Montana, they are here too
I never heard of the "Witch/Coffin Windows" although I lived next to a people's cemetary for over six great years!
My house was built in 1951, and has many of the things here. It also has a tall narrow drawer n the kitchen for hanging towels, and a built in cutting board or hot pot board. Looks like it was used for both.
Yes the slide out wood cutting board is great!
I have two of those in my kitchen. They're great for extending counter space as well!
Did he really say the old Dutch Doors were made with PVC & Fiberglass?????
Yes... he did.
Probably in the '50's they could made such things.
Also claimed plaster protects timber from firw
I have a feeling this narrator is AI-generated.
Yep more AI generated misinformation.
Yep he did. Or should I say, it did
How about a built-in breadboard in the kitchen? Your California Cooler segment showed one.
lol my grandparents had a dutch door off their kitchen and i thought it was so kool as a kid 😂
they also had a laundry shoot and idk why we ever got rid of them lol
A phone nook would be a great Drop Zone, where you could put your purse, keys and mail when you come into the house.
My parent's house (built in the 1950's) had several of these old features. The laundry shoot, telephone nook, razor blade slot in the medicine cabinet, lath and plaster walls, etc.
I have a house built in the 1920's, has all these features. And will not remodel them out either.
Another one is the heavy cast iron weights that were hooked to the lower sash of a window to act as a counter weight.
In UK these weights are lead.
I have 50 windows with lead weights. Many of my rooms have 4-5 windows.
My house is full of those double hung windows with the pulley weights. My house was built in 1927 and has a lot of old features!
I could use some of these today
There used to be an intercom/radio built into the walls so you could just call someone anywhere in the house. Used to love those things.i personally never had one, but a friend of mine did and it was a lot of fun to play with 😂😂😂
I have a PA system in my house although we haven't used it for years. I'm going to go play around with it now lol
@@kolonarulez5222 that’s so awesome! I was thinking about having one installed in my house, but haven’t found it yet lol
The classic foursquare home that i grew up in had lath and plaster, a laundry shoot and a boot scraper. When i renovated my own old home i added a laundry shoot. A recent house guest managed to drop his cell phone down it
The correct word is "chute". A laundry chute.
@@gramethyst2920 thanks I knew that but chances are typed it during a sleepless stretch of night. Lol
I’m actually in the process of putting a claw-foot tub in my master bathroom. 😁 We also have a laundry chute.
I live in Stockholm, Sweden and we still use boot scraper during winter.
Thank you for your video, I love architecture and I am happy that it found its way to me!
Thank you for this wonderful video! Never heard of the California cooler, but love the concept and will be adding it to my “want list” for our forever home. Already have Dutch doors on that list! I only learned of witch windows a few years ago when visiting Vermont. What I was told was that when folks added on more space to their original homes they would reuse any windows and doors and place them where needed. The old windows were strategically placed in areas that needed natural light, mostly near staircases thus having them placed however they could fit which led to the odd angles. 🧙🏻♀️
A cooler is very simple. It is just a kitchen cabinet that has screens instead of shelves and a screened hole into the space beneath the house. And of course a vent at the top! I grew up in two houses that had them, built in 1907 and 1923. The 1923 house had a drawer for eggs!
In UK these are larders
@@stephenlee5929Interesting. Do they have the shelves made of screen? I have read of "drying closets" in English books. Is that something similar, only connected with the heating system to move warm air instead of cold?
@@dorothywillis1 Hi,
A Larder is cold, Not sure how they work (but they do), I think there is a vent at the top to allow air out, they are normally either stone or concrete, with stone or concrete shelving. I would expect this to be on an outside wall.
The 'drying closets', I would normally call an 'airing cupboard' (unless I misinterpreting), these have wooden shelving with , a little like a picket fence, so gaps in the shelf.
They are normally in a cupboard (closet) that contains the hot water tank, the door would be wood (but most are) and might have a vent. I would expect hot water pipes to line the back of this closet (not extra pipes just pipes that need to go between floors, are likely to go through this cupboard) I might expect any (water) cut off valves to be here too. I would expect this to be in the core of the house not on an outside wall.
We had apartment in Long Beach CA with California cooler basement to roof vent next to it a cabinet w it’s a folding down ironing board
I had a laundry chute in my house in Las Vegas. It was really handy. I miss it. I also miss the indoor pool. 😢
claw foot baths are definitely making a comeback
They're awkward if you want a shower, and they're a pain to clean under and behind.
@@Bobrogers99 they are not usually used by people as dual purpose bathroom fixtures like a shower too and people who have the authentic types don't care about maintenance or cleaning up when they likely have a maid. for them it is about the look and style.
@Bobrogers99 I'm taking showers in a classical bathub.
But I live in a commie made apartament and they where walled, they wheren't like in the picture.
They are beautiful.
We had a razor blade slot in the back our medicine cabinet.
Many of these things are still used today... Dutch doors, boot scrapers. This Old House show just showed how to make a regular door into a dutch door.
I had that tub in my old house and that door is in my childhood house. The laundry chute was great. Child hood home. Had all but windows and razor blades. Always lived in old homes
My grandma in Brazil had Dutch doors, I never understood why until now haha great video
I used to bath and play with toy boats in a bathtub that looked like the one with feet. Memories :)
When I was growing up one of my favorite things to do at my dad’s parents’ house was to slide down their giant clothes chute with my sibs and cousins. We’d make sure that there was plenty of clothes at the bottom to cushion the fall at the end. On a rainy day there was nothing more entertaining to do than slide down the chute!
When I was a child, we lived in a tenement in New York City. Each unit had what was called a 'dumbwaiter', a vertical chute in the wall that had a door, and behind it a platform with a pulley rope or chain. You would put your garbage on it and release the pulley. After a while, when the concierge in the basement had removed the garbage, you could pull the rope or chain and the platform would come back for the next load.
Our NYC apartment had a dumbwaiter in the kitchen too. But there hadn't been a concierge to handle the trash in a long time, so they ended up just sealing up and painting over the dumbwaiter door.
@@stevenlitvintchouk3131 I'll bet that's what's happened just about everywhere. A concierge would now be called a maintenance guy, but in our gentrified world so many maintenance guys are on call rather than stationed at the premises.
In the 1970's, central vacuum cleaner systems were quite popular. The vacuum cleaner resided in the garage or basement, the home had a network of plastic vacuum tubes distributed throughout, and each room or living area had a special vacuum port, where you'd connect a flex hose.
We had one of those in the '70s. It didn't work very well -- all the "sockets" for the hose and the sheer extent of the piping meant lots of opportunities for lost suction.
My last house had a laundry chute. Wish my current house did. Such a great feature.
Last time we saw a phone nook was in Santa Monica in 2011 in a house before it was renovated.
We have always nicknamed them Stan & Ollie holes, as we mostly know them from old movies.
I’ve noticed a few in CO. I watch a house flipper.
@@samanthab1923
What is a house flipper?
@@KoldingDenmark Guys buys homes, fix them up & resell for a profit.
@@samanthab1923
OH we love watching
Good Bones
Home Town
and other programs like that.
Laundry shoots are still legit useful
They are also a BIG fire hazard if not properly constructed.
“Chute”
As well children would use them as slides, and sometimes get stuck or hurt.
My grandfather's house (built in the 1930s) had a laundry chute and it was nice, although I would have preferred something that took the laundry back up LOL! I wonder if the people who bought and totally remodeled the house kept it.
Chutes. Not shoots.
I have a laundry chute and it is great, I use it every week. My house was built in 1960.
My parents' house in Huntington, L.I. was an old Craftsman. It had a butler's pantry, the slanted metal lift up door from the outside into the basement and built in cupboards in the bathrooms, as well as a room in the stone basement for storing home canned stuff and root veggies. Also had the huge old hot water radiators until they swapped them out for hot water baseboard heating. That made me sad. 🥺
The house I grew up in had several of these--a couple Dutch doors, blade slots, and a phone nook. The phone nook had a sliding panel on the back so that it could be accessed from either the living room or the bedroom (office?). The house I lived in during college had a laundry chute, though we didn't use it.
I was thinking of some of the other features my first few apartments had, which were in buildings from the early 1900’s. There were pocket doors, which disappeared into the wall, a great space saver, since no room for swinging doors was needed. There were two stained glass windows set high, flanking the fireplace. There was a large wooden hall tree just inside the front entrance, where one could hang their coat, hat, bag, etc, and perhaps remove their shoes. And there were radiators with these “keys”, with which you needed to occasionally release steam or “bleed” the radiators.
One of the reasons you don't see laundry shoots more often in newer homes is first of all some townships and municipalities don't allow them anymore because of fire issues and also more and more people are putting the laundry room on the second floor. However with the growth in residential fire sprinkler systems I could see laundry shoots making a comeback, put fire-rated doors at each access and put a sprinkler with a protective cover at the top of the shaft.
🙋 It's spelled chute, not shoot 😊
Actually phone nooks became less common when the wall phone (a landline telephone that attached directly to the wall) came out, with long cords. These were often placed in the kitchen, allowing a woman (mostly) to talk while she worked. Not sure when they first became available. I looked it up and according to the various sites, wall phones were available anywhere from 1879-1899. The modern kitchen wall phone was definitely available in the 1950's-1960's, as I remember having them when I was young.
I've lived in old houses most of my life and remember many of these features. In one house, not only was there a laundry chute, there was a built-in ironing board in one kitchen wall, with a special outlet inside for the iron. It also had a wonderful walk-in pantry, the two side walls having shallow shelves 18" apart and was big enough to place the washer and dryer at the back, under the window. It also still had the original coal burning cook stove sitting right next to the newer stove and, of course, a baked enamel kitchen sink. I loved it.
Well, I never lived in a home with a California cooler. I have lived in homes with all the others. I still have a sleeping porch and a boot scrape. I’ve had at one point or another a coal chute, laundry chute, phone nook, grandmothers had laundry chutes, witch windows, Dutch doors, vegetable cellars, and a room with a big sink and workbench for skinning and rending fish and animals before cooking or storage.
The only thing i hadn't heard of were the witch windows. One house I lived in as a kid had a cooler cupboard; it was used as a pantry.
Laundry chute is the best thing ever, fun to slide down😂
I love clawfoot tubs. That and a big water heater.❤
My house was built in 1912. It still has its lath and plaster walls. You can’t drive a nail in it! I also still have a blade bank in the upstairs bathroom!
Curious, how do you hang pictures and such? Do you have a picture rail?
When I was 10, I went to a cabin with a clawfoot tub that had a showerhead attached and it was the most painful bath of my life
In big houses back in the '60s and '70s to go with the phone, a lot of times you had a set of external ringer bells mounted in an area where you wouldn't otherwise be able to hear the phone ring like outside on the back deck or in the basement or in the garage.
My grandmother's house had a laundry shoot, but it was very basic. Just a hole in the bottom of the linen closet with a metal tube that went straight down to the basement. The place I live in still has lathe and plaster walls and ceilings. We replace it only if/when it needs a major enough repair to warrant it. And when we redid the bathroom we absolutely found razors in the wall. We also had/have counter-weighted windows (and have left the ones on the three-season porch alone).
Chute
My apartment is 105 years old. For years I wondered what the cabinet in my kitchen was use for. Today I found out it’s “California Cooler.” It is made exactly as described in this video.
Something told me it was a refrigerator but I thought it used a block of ice. I thought the wire shelves were to let the water drain to the outside.
I keep cleaning supplies and pot and pans in it, but I am going to give it a through cleaning and use it as it was intended to be used.
My apartment has a lot of its original fixtures. I am always amazed and continue to find built ins and hidden objects of yesteryear.
There is a drawer lined with tin next to the California cooler. I have never seen anything like it. Now I must do my research on it.
😊
I always liked Dutch doors. My GF and me want to put a Dutch front door on when we ultimately get a house together.
Her current house also has a phone nook and even laundry chute. Always makes me jump when one of her daughters hucks a load of laundry down it as I'm walking right by where it empties out 🤣
I have a combination boot scraper and brush that I mounted to the deck just outside my back door. While their existence in architecture may have been pretty much gone away, their usefulness hasn't!
great walk-through old times.
The only one I did not know was the California Cooler.
Here in Australia when I was a kid before electricity in rural areas where there was no ice factory, we had Coolgardie safes to keep food cool especially in summer with repeated100°F/38°C days and pretty warm nights. It was invented by McCormick in 1890 and named after the outback West Australian mining town which necessitated its invention to keep precious fresh meat, veg and dairy safe from heat as well as freeloaders. It was basically a large shelved box on legs with a shallow metal dish as a top, with canvas strips draped from it over all its canvas sides and door, either sitting in a shallow metal dish or having a gutter around the bottom of the box. The top dish was filled with water which the canvas strips by osmosis wet the canvas sides and door. Evaporation lowered the temperature somewhat inside. Any excess water which reached the bottom of the canvas was either caught in the gutter or in the bottom tray. The only issue if there was no water in the bottom tray or there was just a gutter was invading ants and other creepy crawlies; the usual deterrent adopted by Mum was to stand the safe's legs in old golden syrup (cocky's joy) or other tins full of water. We had a Coolgardie safe for years until we could afford a kerosene refrigerator and a backup ice chest.
The California cooler we had was much smaller, for cooling freshly baked goods. We called it a "pie safe".
My grandparents' house has a laundry chute, and the old apartments I lived in during college had a spot for razor blades in the medicine cabinet
My house was built in around 1960, there was a small hatch door between the living room and kitchen you could pass things through. On my street there’s about 5 different styles of house and similar in other streets, they had them too.
Once the local council was updating the heating, we got radiators, woo hoo, no more ice in the inside of windows. To my point 😂 they also installed the same gas, coal or electric fires to the homes, you could go to friends homes if relatives and the mum might ask you to tyrn off or adjust the heating or fire 😂 Now we don’t have a fire at all. We had to wear cardigans to bed over nighties because it would be so cold.
Ah, yes; the colonial Dutch's fondness for using PVC in doors and windows. 😐It's one thing to have AI read these scripts, it's another to let it WRITE them.
😂😂😂
I don’t know. When our kids were young, we enjoyed recreating artifacts from the local PVC Indians. The bows and tomahawks were particularly authentic.
Shoe scraper where installed in some apartament building where I live. They where not as fancy as those. There where rods connected to a frame and a small space bellow. Good for scraping ice of too.
Some more fancy prewar buldings had ones like in the clip.
Cold boxes that would be mounted to the outside of a window in cold climates for a temporary fridge in the winter.
Unlikely that (as you state) some dutch doors used pvc in the late 1700's PVC? really?
The Dutch colonies were very advanced, don’t cha know?
Clawfoot tubs are still popular with people doing renovations, usually people with more money due to costs. We sell many of them made by Elizabethan Classics which offer many foot deigns as well as hand held sprayer etc..
Remodeled a home once in Waco Texas that had thousands of razor blades in a wall we took down I told this to my father he asked was a bathroom on the other side I said yeah he told me why then made hella sense
Boot scrapers are still common in rural areas, though a model that has brushes on the sides and bottom seems to be the most common nowadays.
Old boot scrappers are very common in New England.
Phone nooks would be a great place to use as a centralized charging station.
I use my phone nook (in the hallway) as a place for a shrine.
Ah yes I remembered that from previous life. Too bad they are gone forever.
I like the half door.
My grade school had a great big covered slide from the top floor to the ground. It was the fire escape.
I love those soaker tubs
The house in which I grew up was built in 1966 and had a laundry chute. It went from the upstairs bathroom to the basement.
Lol, I'm in my 80s. I remember all of these.
Boots scrapers are still very popular in Ireland
I think Poland needs these too😭
Still very popular on farms where people are walking in muddy fields and stepping in animal sh!t.
I grew up in houses that had laundry chutes and coolers. I always wondered why the laundry chute was not also set up to be a dumb waiter. It would be handy to move something heavy or awkward from one floor to another.
Boot scrapers are still around, but mainly seen in the military. You'll see them outside public buildings with a lot of foot traffic. They're either thick brushes or made of metal
How does the lath and plaster wooded strips, prevent the ceiling from fire spreading & fire damage? 7:05
my aunt had a clawfoot tub and I swear i lived in that tub when I visited her.
My current home's medicine cabinet over the sink has a razor slot on one side. My old home in Akron was plaster and lathe, had once been heated by coal (based on the amount of coal dust that blackened me as I had to tear down and replace plaster and lathe walls and ceilings that had fallen into disrepair before I bought the house). It also had (no longer connected) gas pipes for the gas lighting... Electric was installed when the house was built about 1919 but it also had the gas lighting pipes.
Yes… the ChatGPT generated “maid” was the feature I miss the most…
We still have the dutch door in our home and a sleeping porch. Our house have two back doors. One at the kitchen leading into the backyard and one from the sleaping porch, both backdoors are dutch doors
we had claw foot foot tub back in the 60s at my grandparents house & cottage . there cottage had a split door . we had medicine cabinets with blade slots also . LTh & plaster was used used in My parents first home they rented back in the 60s we lived in Gananoque Ontario
Clawfoots aren't totally dead yet. Last one we installed was 2018. The slipper tub is the new version of the clawfoot and those are very popular now.
Come across 1 house with a CA cooler, many with the phone niche, and medicine cabinets with the razor slot.
Another bath feature that disappeared was the dental sink.
Sleeping porches were common in the neighborhood where I grew up. I had one neighbor who slept on his screen porch year round, in northern New England with winter nights getting well below zero.
New house. Installed laundry chute, porch we have slept on, two Dutch doors. We have box elder bug boot scrapers we have painted neon green.