"Following where my camera leads me!"

"Following where my camera leads me!"

Sunday, October 11, 2020

Eliza


Driving along the old plantation
The old plantation house:



Visiting Eliza's House

This house was named "Eliza's House", in memory of Eliza Leach. She was an African-American born around 1891 and was the last person to live here. She lived here until she was 94 years old. The plantation history says that the original people to live here were former slaves, a married couple, named Ned and Chloe. They belonged to William and Susan Middleton. Chloe was one of many slaves that Susan brought in her dowry when she got married in 1849. Ned and Chloe had three children over the years.

The space was divided into two rooms, a "general" room, like a living room, and a bedroom.

There is a loft area upstairs which was probably used to store food, although children often slept up there as well. There were no windows, so it was very hot up there.
This is Eliza:
The slaves that lived here had handmade furniture and household items, and cast-offs from the big house. The house is made of mill-sawn weatherboard and both the outside and the inside were white washed. The families shared the porch.




Cooking was done over a big hearth indoors, or sometimes outside.



Certain brooms were used for the floors inside the house and a different one for the porch. There was also a "yard broom" used specifically for the yard. The yards were swept neat and clean, and grass wasn't allowed to grow, because snakes could hide in the grasses.




I peeked in here and yes, there were lots of chickens!

The duplex housed two families, and in most months except winter, the windows were open for the breezes. There were no screens.



Living here was not easy. The house was open to the extreme heat and humidity of the South Carolina summers, and most likely leaked when it rained. There was no electricity or plumbing, no water from a faucet. Water had to be carried pail by pail, from down at the Spring house. Wood had to be chopped year round, not only in the winter for heat, but all summer long to use to cook with. Chloe and her daughter did all the washing and ironing for the Middleton family, and Chloe was a nursemaid for Susan Middleton's son. Ned was a driver and a field supervisor. 
Below is a picture of wash day.
Sure makes me appreciate my washer and dryer. We do have a clothesline though....and I LOVE to hang wash out to dry on a hot windy day, especially sheets and pillow cases!
I remember playing underneath clean wash on the line at both home and both my Ma-Maw's houses--darting under towels, aprons, and heavy blue jeans and overalls my Grandpa worked in. And when my own children were babies, I hung out freshly washed diapers to dry in the hot sun.
How bout you--clothesline or not?

6 comments:

  1. Yes when I was young we had a clothesline but haven't for years now. This was so interesting and yes what a hard life.

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  2. I have both the dryer and the line. When it is nice I really love hanging things out. But when its cold or rainy I use the dryer down in the basement. I think I would have had to make paper clothes to wear and throw out (haha) so I did not have to wash like that. Things have come a long way. Thanks for the tour.

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  3. I no longer have a clothesline, but wish I did to use for sheets especially. I had one at our last house and enjoyed it so much. I used to hang out diapers too many many years ago, but mostly dried them in the dryer so they would be softer. That looks like a very interesting place to visit. I would like to see it sometime. Yes, they had a very hard life. Is the big plantation house open to visitors or is it occupied still? Thank you for sharing with us. Such an interesting story.

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  4. My mom always had a clothes line and what I remember the most was her taking clothes off the line that were often frozen in the winter. After begging her for years to let us buy her a dryer, she finally relented in her late 70s. Her hands were so riddled with arthritis, she had no choice. She appreciated it greatly, but would always complain that the laundry always smelled better when they dried outside.

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  5. there is nothing better that sheets that have been dyed on a clothesline. i had a clothesline when i was first married, not since then, i use a dryer for everything!!

    this was super interesting, i really like the brick on the house and the old front porch!! life and washing laundry back in the day was hard. my grandmother (chucks grandmother) had a washboard, she shared her laundry routine with me before she passed!!! these poor ladies!!

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  6. Fascinating!! I would love to visit this place! Thank you for taking me!

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