Yes, boar (or other animal of your choice) bristle.
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6d. Did Liz spend it, or die for it?
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Hair broom
In case anyone else is curious (lol), a hairbroom was a broom made from wood and horsehair, sometimes goat hair.
www.victorianlondon.org/.../cassells-23.htm -
c.1880s [no date] - Servants of the House - (1) Domestic Servants and their Duties ....www.victorianlondon.org/.../cassells-23.htm...:
Timespanner: Street Stories 22: The broom maker
timespanner.blogspot.com/.../street-stories-22-... -
7 jan 2012 – ... manufactured brushes and brooms, using both local (horsehair and .... in the early and the late 1880s (one of Lawrence's children, however,
or Google hair broom from 1880s.
So now we know. A little off thread but my obsessive gene kicked in here.
Best wishes,
C4
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Hello Lynn,
Missed the Mayfair crone bit on the first time round but I must protest on behalf of all crones! Mayfair matrons were picked not just for their good breeding, but for being good breeders. Once a week and think of England - never! And the chances were they were still lively up to a good old age - aided and abetted by a majestic butler or handsome footman if his lordship`s syphilis was giving him gyp, I suspect. Heard of the naughty nineties?
All good wishes,
Gwyneth/C4
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Originally posted by curious4 View PostAll depends on whether his lordship was firing blanks, of course! Which is where the butler came in....
I don't know whether that sucked more than being pregnant every couple of years or not.
Yes, I know which choice would suck more now, but I'm talking back when you had to take cultural considerations-- no, wait, considering risk of death during birth, I guess I'll go with "pregnancy every two years."
"Sorry dear, not tonight; I've got a meeting with Mrs. Pankhurst in the morning."
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Originally posted by lynn cates View PostHello Rivkah.
"Being married to an infertile peer before about 1910 would have really sucked."
That explains the infertility, then? (heh-heh)
Cheers.
LC
"Maybe next year, mother. There's lots of time; the wind just hasn't blown in our favor yet."
Then I start giggling uncontrollably, and he kicks me under the table.
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Originally posted by lynn cates View PostHello Rivkah.
"Being married to an infertile peer before about 1910 would have really sucked."
That explains the infertility, then? (heh-heh)Best Wishes,
Hunter
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When evidence is not to be had, theories abound. Even the most plausible of them do not carry conviction- London Times Nov. 10.1888
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