II.
A CHRISTIAN HOUSE.
IN the Divine Word it is written, "The wise woman buildeth her
house." To be "wise," is "to choose the best means for accomplishing the
best end." It has been shown that the best end for a woman to seek is
the training of God's children for their eternal home, by guiding them
to intelligence, virtue, and true happiness. When, therefore, the wise
woman seeks a home in which to exercise this
ministry, she will aim to secure a house so planned that it will provide
in the best manner for health, industry, and economy, those cardinal
requisites of domestic enjoyment and success. To aid in this, is the
object of the following drawings and descriptions, which will illustrate
a style of living more conformed to the great design for which the
family is instituted than that which ordinarily prevails among those
classes which take the lead in forming the customs of society. The aim
will be to exhibit modes of economizing labor, time, and expenses, so as
to secure health, thrift, and domestic happiness to persons of limited
means, in a measure rarely attained even by those who possess wealth.
At the head of this chapter is a sketch of what may be properly
called a Christian house; that is, a house contrived for the express
purpose of enabling every member of a family to labor with the hands for
the common good, and by modes at once healthful, economical, and
tasteful.
Of course, much of the instruction conveyed in the following pages
is chiefly applicable to the wants and habits of those living either in
the country or in such suburban vicinities as give space of ground for
healthful outdoor occupation in the family service, although the general
principles of house-building and house-keeping are of necessity
universal in their application--as true in the busy confines of the city
as in the freer and purer quietude of the country. So far as
circumstances can be made to yield the opportunity, it will be assumed
that the family state demands some outdoor labor for all. The
cultivation of flowers to ornament the table and house, of fruits and
vegetables for food, of silk and cotton for clothing, and the care of
horse, cow, and dairy, can be so divided that each and all of the
family, some part of the day, can take exercise in the pure air, under
the magnetic and healthful rays of the sun. Every head of a family
should seek a soil and climate which will afford such opportunities.
Railroads, enabling men toiling in cities to rear families in the
country, are on this account a special blessing. So, also, is the
opening of the South to free labor, where, in the pure and mild climate
of the uplands, open-air labor can proceed most of the year, and women
and children labor out of doors as well as within.
In the following drawings are presented modes of economizing time,
labor, and expense by the close packing of conveniences. By such
methods, small and economical houses can be made to secure most of the
comforts and many of the refinements of large and expensive ones. The
cottage at the head of this chapter is projected on a plan which can be
adapted to a warm or cold climate with little change. By adding another
story, it would serve a large family.

Fig. 1 shows the ground-plan of the first floor. On the inside it is
forty-three feet long and twenty-five wide, excluding conservatories and
front and back projections. Its inside height from floor to ceiling is
ten feet. The piazzas each side of the front projection have
sliding-windows to the floor, and can, by glazed sashes, be made
green-houses in winter. In a warm climate, piazzas can be made at the
back side also.
In the description and arrangement, the leading aim is to show how
time, labor, and expense are saved, not only in the building but in
furniture and its arrangement. With this aim, the ground-floor and its
furniture will first be shown, then the second story and its furniture,
and then the basement and its conveniences. The conservatories are
appendages not necessary to housekeeping, but useful in many ways
pointed out more at large in other chapters.
 
The entry has arched recesses behind the front doors, (Fig. 2,)
furnished with hooks for over-clothes in both--a box for over-shoes in
one, and a stand for umbrellas in the other. The roof of the recess is
for statuettes, busts, or
flowers. The stairs turn twice with broad steps, making a recess at the
lower landing, where a table is set with a vase of flowers, (Fig. 3.) On
one side of the recess is a closet, arched to correspond with the arch
over the stairs. A bracket over the first broad stair, with flowers or
statuettes, is visible from the entrance, and pictures can be hung as in
the illustration.

The large room on the left can be made to serve the purpose of
several rooms by means of a movable
screen. By shifting this rolling screen from one part of the room
to another, two apartments are always available, of any desired size
within the limits of the large room. One side of the screen fronts what
may be used as the parlor or sitting-room; the other side is arranged
for bedroom conveniences. Of this, Fig. 4 shows the front side; covered
first with strong canvas, stretched and nailed on. Over this is pasted
panel-paper, and the upper part is made to resemble an ornamental
cornice by fresco-paper. Pictures can be hung in the panels, or be
pasted on and varnished with white varnish. To
prevent the absorption of the varnish, a wash of gum isinglass
(fish-glue) must be applied twice.
Fig. 5 shows the back or inside of the movable screen, toward the
part of the room used as the bedroom. On one side, and at the top and
bottom, it has shelves with
shelf-boxes, which are cheaper and better than drawers, and much
preferred by those using them. Handles are cut in the front and back
side, as seen in Fig. 6. Half an inch space must be between the box and
the shelf over it, and as much each side, so that it can be taken out
and put in easily. The central part of the screen's interior is a
wardrobe.
This screen must be so high as nearly to reach the ceiling, in order
to prevent it from overturning. It is to fill the width of the room,
except two feet on each side. A projecting cleat or strip, reaching
nearly to the top of
the screen, three inches wide, is to be screwed to the front sides, on
which light frame doors are to be hung, covered
with canvas and panel-paper like the front of the screen. The inside of
these doors is furnished with hooks for clothing, for which the
projection makes room. The whole screen is to be eighteen inches deep at
the top and two feet deep at the base, giving a solid foundation. It is
moved on four wooden rollers, one foot long and four inches in diameter.
The pivots of the rollers and the parts where there is friction must be
rubbed with hard soap, and then a child can move the whole easily.
A curtain is to be hung across the whole interior of the
screen by rings, on a strong wire. The curtain should be in three parts,
with lead or large nails in the hems to keep it in place. The wood-work
must be put together with screws, as the screen is too large to pass
through a door.

At the end of the room, behind the screen, are two couches, to be
run one under the other, as in Fig. 7. The
upper one is made with four posts, each three feet high and three inches
square, set on casters two inches high. The frame is to be fourteen
inches from the floor, seven feet long, two feet four inches wide, and
three inches in thickness. At the head, and at the foot, is to be
screwed a notched two-inch board,
three inches wide, as in Fig. 8. The
mortises are to be one inch wide and deep, and one inch apart, to
receive slats made of ash, oak, or spruce, one inch square, placed lengthewise of the couch. The slats being small, and so near together,
and running lengthwise, make a better spring frame than wire coils. If
they warp, they can be turned. They must not be fastened at the ends,
except by insertion in the notches. Across the posts, and of equal
height with them, are to be screwed head and foot-boards.
The under couch is like the upper, except these dimensions: posts,
nine inches high, including castors; frame, six feet two inches long,
two feet four inches wide. The frame should be as near the floor as
possible, resting on the casters.

The most healthful and comfortable mattress is made by a case, open
in the centre and fastened together with buttons, as in Fig. 9; to be
filled with oat straw, which is softer than wheat or rye. This can be
adjusted to the figure, and often renewed.
Fig. 10 represents the upper couch when covered, with the under
couch put beneath it. The coverlid should match the curtain of the
screen; and the pillows, by day, should have a case of the same.

Fig. 11 is an ottoman, made as a box, with a lid on hinges. A
cushion is fastened to this lid by strings at each corner, passing
through holes in the box lid and tied inside. The cushion to be cut
square, with side pieces; stuffed with hair, and stitched through like a
mattress. Side handles are made by cords fastened inside with knots. The
box must be two inches larger at the bottom than at the top, and the lid
and cushion the same size as the bottom, to give it a tasteful shape.
This ottoman is set on casters, and is a great convenience for holding
articles, while serving also as a seat.
The expense of the screen, where lumber averages $4 a hundred, and
carpenter labor $3 a day, would be about $30, and the two couches about
$6. The material for covering might be cheap and yet pretty. A woman
with these directions, and a son or husband who would use plane and saw,
could thus secure much additional room, and also what amounts to two
bureaus, two large trunks, one large wardrobe, and a wash-stand, for
less than $20--the mere cost of materials. The screen and couches can be
so arranged as to have one room serve first as a large and airy
sleeping-room; then, in the morning, it may be used as sitting-room one
side of the screen, and breakfast-room the other; and lastly, through
the day it can be made a large parlor on the front side and a sewing or
retiring-room the other side. The needless spaces usually devoted to
kitchen, entries, halls, back-stairs, pantries, store-rooms, and
closets, by this method would be used in adding to the size of the large
room, so variously used by day and by night.
Fig. 12 is an enlarged plan of the kitchen and stove-room. The
chimney and stove-room are contrived to ventilate the whole house, by a
mode exhibited in another chapter.
Between the two rooms glazed sliding-doors, passing each other,
serve to shut out heat and smells from the kitchen. The sides of the
stove-room must be lined with shelves; those on the side by the cellar
stairs, to be one foot wide, and eighteen inches apart; on the other
side, shelves may be narrower, eight inches wide and nine inches apart.
Boxes with lids, to receive stove utensils, must be placed near the
stove.
On these shelves, and in the closet and boxes, can be placed every
material used for cooking, all the table and cooking utensils, and all
the articles used in house work, and yet much spare room will be left.
The cook's galley in a steamship has every article and utensil used in
cooking
for two hundred persons, in a space not larger than this stove-room, and
so arranged that with one or two steps the cook can reach all he uses.
In contrast to this, in most large houses, the table furniture, the
cooking materials and utensils, the sink, and the eating-room, are at
such distances apart, that half the time and strength is employed in
walking back and forth to collect and return the articles used.
[Illustration: A detailed illustration of a section of the kitchen,
showing the placement of various cooking implements and ingredients in
the cupboards and along the walls. The shelves above the sink and
counter area are empty.]
Fig. 13 is an enlarged plan of the sink and cooking-form. Two
windows make a better circulation of air in warm weather, by having one
open at top and the other
at the bottom, while the light is better adjusted for working, in case
of weak eyes.
The flour-barrel just fills the closet, which has a door for
admission, and a lid to raise when used. Beside it, is the form for
cooking, with a moulding-board laid on it; one side used for preparing
vegetables and meat, and the other for moulding bread. The sink has two
pumps, for well and for rain-water--one having a forcing power to throw
water into the reservoir in the garret, which supplies the water-closet
and bath-room. On the other side of the sink is the dish-drainer, with a
ledge on the edge next to the sink, to hold the dishes, and grooves cut
to let the water drain into the sink. It has hinges, so that it can
either rest on the cook-form or be turned over and cover the sink. Under
the sink are shelf-boxes placed on two shelves run into grooves, with
other grooves above and below, so that one may move the shelves and
increase or diminish the spaces between. The shelf-boxes can be used for
scouring-materials, dish-towels, and dish-cloths; also to hold bowls for
bits of butter, fats, etc. Under these two shelves is room for two
pails, and a jar for soap-grease.
Under the cook-form are shelves and shelf-boxes for unbolted wheat,
corn-meal, rye, etc. Beneath these, for white and brown sugar, are
wooden can-pails, which are the best articles in which to keep these
constant necessities. Beside them is the tin molasses-can with a tight,
movable cover, and a cork in the spout. This is much better than a jug
for molasses, and also for vinegar and oil, being easier to clean and to
handle. Other articles and implements for cooking can be arranged on or
under the shelves at the side and front. A small cooking-tray, holding
pepper, salt, dredging-box, knife and spoon, should stand close at hand
by the stove, (Fig. 14.)
 
The articles used for setting tables are to be placed on the shelves
at the front and side of the sink. Two tumbler-trays, made of
pasteboard, covered with varnished fancy papers and divided by wires,
(as shown in Fig. 15,) save many steps in setting and clearing table.
Similar trays, (Fig. 16,) for knives and forks and spoons, serve the
same purpose.
The sink should be three feet long and three inches deep, its width
matching the cook-form. Fig. 17 is the second or attic story. The main objection to attic
rooms is their warmth in summer, owing to the heated roof. This is
prevented by so enlarging the closets each side that their walls meet
the ceiling under the garret floor, thus excluding all the roof. In the
bed-chambers, corner dressing-tables, as Fig. 18, instead of projecting
bureaus, save much space for use, and give a handsome form and finish to
the room. In the bath-room must be the opening to the garret, and a
step-ladder to reach it. A reservoir in the garret, supplied by a
forcing-pump in the cellar or at the sink, must be well supported by
timbers, and the plumbing must be well done, or much annoyance will
ensue.
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Fig. 17
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Fig. 18
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The large chambers are to be lighted by large windows or glazed
sliding-doors, opening upon the balcony. A roof can be put over the
balcony and its sides inclosed by windows,
and the chamber extend into it, and be thus much enlarged.
The water-closets must have the latest improvements for safe
discharge, and there will be no trouble. They cost no more than an
out-door building, and save from the most disagreeable house-labor.
A great improvement, called
earth-closets, will probably take the place of water-closets to
some extent; though at present the water is the more convenient. A
description of the earth-closet will be given in another chapter
relating to tenement-houses for the poor in large cities.
The method of ventilating all the chambers, and also the cellar,
will be described in another chapter.
Fig. 19 represents a shoe-bag, that can be fastened to the side of a
closet or closet-door.

Fig. 20 represents a piece-bag, and is a very great labor and
space-saving invention. It is made of calico, and fastened to the side
of a closet or a door, to hold all the bundles that are usually stowed
in trunks and drawers. India-rubber or elastic tape drawn into hems to
hold the contents of the bag is better than tape-strings. Each bag
should be labeled with the name of its contents, written with indelible
ink on white tape sewed on to the bag. Such systematic arrangement saves
much time and annoyance. Drawers or trunks to hold these articles can
not be kept so easily in good order, and moreover, occupy spaces saved
by this contrivance.
Fig. 21 is the basement. It has the floor and sides plastered, and
is lighted with glazed doors. A form is raised close by the cellar
stairs, for baskets, pails, and tubs.
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Fig 20 |
Fig 21 |
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Here, also, the refrigerator can be placed, or, what is better, an
ice-closet can be made, as designated in the illustration. The floor of
the basement must be an inclined plane toward a drain, and be plastered
with water-lime. The wash-tubs have plugs in the bottom to let off
water, and cocks and pipes over them bringing cold water from the
reservoir in the garret and hot water from the laundry stove. This saves
much heavy labor of emptying tubs and carrying water.
The laundry closet has a stove for heating irons, and also a kettle
on top for heating water. Slides or clothes-frames
are made to draw out to receive wet clothes, and then run into the
closet to dry. This saves health as well as time and money, and the
clothes are as white as when dried outdoors.
The wood-work of the house, for doors, windows, etc., should be
oiled chestnut, butternut, whitewood, and pine. This is cheaper,
handsomer, and more easy to keep clean than painted wood.
In Fig. 21 are planned two conservatories, and few understand their
value in the training of the young. They provide soil, in which
children, through the winter months, can be starting seeds and plants
for their gardens and raising valuable, tender plants. Every child
should cultivate flowers and fruits to sell and to give away, and thus
be taught to learn the value of money and to practice both economy and
benevolence.
According to the calculation of a house-carpenter, in a place where
the average price of lumber is
$4 a hundred, and carpenter work $3 a day, such a house can be built for
$1600. For those practicing the closest economy, two small families
could occupy it, by dividing the kitchen, and yet have room enough. Or
one large room and the chamber over it can be left till increase of
family and means require enlargement.
A strong horse and carryall, with a cow, garden, vineyard, and
orchard, on a few acres, would secure all the substantial comforts found
in great establishments, without the trouble of ill-qualified servants.
And if the parents and children were united in the daily labors of
the house, garden, and fruit culture, such thrift, health, and happiness
would be secured as is but rarely found among the rich.
Let us suppose a colony of cultivated and Christian people, having
abundant wealth, who now are living as the wealthy usually do,
emigrating to some of the beautiful Southern uplands, where are rocks,
hills, valleys, and
mountains as picturesque as those of New-England, where the thermometer
but rarely reaches 90° in summer, and in winter as rarely sinks below
freezing-point, so that outdoor labor goes on all the year, where the
fertile soil is easily worked, where rich tropical fruits and flowers
abound, where cotton and silk can be raised by children around their
home, where the produce of vineyards and orchards finds steady markets
by railroads ready made; suppose such a colony, with a central church
and school-room, library, hall for sports, and a common laundry, (taking
the most trying part of domestic labor from each house,)--suppose each
family to train the children to labor with the hands as a healthful and
honorable duty ; suppose all this, which is perfectly practicable, would
not the enjoyment of this life be increased, and also abundant treasures
be laid up in heaven, by using the wealth thus economized in diffusing
similar enjoyments and culture among the poor, ignorant, and neglected
ones in desolated sections where many now are perishing for want of such
Christian example and influences?
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