Looking back at the past, you will discover that life was completely different than the one we have now for a variety of reasons. In the home one of the biggest differences between our time and the past is in the kitchen. Today we have so many electrical appliances that will automate our dirty work but a century ago, appliances weren’t commonplace. The first dishwasher being built around the 1850s.
The dishwasher was invented by a woman named Josephine Cochran who was a very wealthy society matron from Illinois, but she was also an inventor. Ms. Cochran has hosted many dinner parties to show off her first attempts to create a dish washing machine. The first examples were hand operated but even so her staff had a much easier time washing the dishes thanks to these inventions.
Ms. Cochran actually put a lot of effort in building a smoothly operated dishwasher. Before she would start building, she would measure her dishes and then build compartments that were exactly the size of her dishes. Those compartments were placed in a wheel which was in a copper boiler.
By turning the wheel, hot and soapy water would squirt up and then it filtered through the dirty dishes, making them clean. For this genius idea, she won a lot of favor with the local restaurants and hotels. She patented her design and started producing dishwashers commercially. She quickly expanded her wealth.
A few decades later, the roaring twenties hit. It was in this decade that dishwashers were hooked up to plumbing for easy access to water. Much later, dishwashers’ functionality was expanded by adding drying elements. For more more than 50 years, the dishwasher has been commonplace in just about every household.
Another appliance that goes a long way back, is the refrigerator. The fridge was invented by a German engineer named Carl von Linde. He came up with the technology required to keep things cool. Without that, refrigerators simply wouldn’t be possible. The patent for his cooling technology dates back to the late 19th century. A few decades later, in the 1920s, lots of companies were producing fridges commercially.
However, it took a whole decade for this appliance to catch on domestically. At the end of the 1930s, only two million American homes had fridges. When the 1950s hit, around eighty percent of homes had a refrigerator. This percentage has climbed way up to almost a hundred percent in modern times.
We are living in a very modern era where a kitchen full of large kitchen appliances is the norm. We are used to having the water and the electricity we need delivered straight to our homes whenever we need them. There was a period in time where this was not the case. Instead of taking our kitchen appliances for granted, we should take the time to think about how it used to be, so we can feel grateful!
In case you liked this post, I recommend you also pay a visit to Presto 03430 Pizzazz Review. For a larger collection of editorials, click Hotpoint Kitchen Appliances.
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Topics: Kitchen Appliances