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Email Everything Pantry...
to suggest links for the
"Hoosier Cabinet" Page... we're getting much traffic for
Hoosier cabinets and we would like to provide more
resources to visitors with an interest in the Hoosier
cabinet.
Hoosier Cabinet -
Click here to visit our Hoosier Cabinet Store and
Resource Page
(you may also be interested in
Vintage Pantry Plans,
Vintage Panty
Photos or
Butler's Pantry pages)
s
First
developed in the early 1900s by the Hoosier
Manufacturing Company in New Castle, Indiana, and
popular into the 1930s, the
Hoosier cabinet and its many imitators soon became
an essential fixture in American kitchens. Often billed
as a "pantry and kitchen in one," the Hoosier brought
the ease and readiness of a pantry with its many storage
spaces and working counter right into the kitchen. It
was sold in catalogues and through a unique sales
program geared towards farm wives. The popularity of the
Hoosier would herald a gradual shift towards increased
cabinetry and workspaces in the American kitchen until
they, like the pantry, became all but obsolete. Today
the Hoosier cabinet is a much sought-after domestic icon
and widely reproduced.
A Hoosier cabinet
(also known as a "Hoosier") is a type of
cupboard popular in the first decades of the
twentieth century. Named after the Hoosier Manufacturing
Co. of New Castle, Indiana, they were also made by
several other companies, most also located in Indiana.
The typical Hoosier
cabinet consists of three parts. The base section
usually has one large compartment with a slide-out
shelf, and several drawers to one side. Generally it sat
on small
casters. The top portion is shallower and has
several smaller compartments with doors, with one of the
larger lower compartments having a roll-top or tambour.
The top and the bottom are joined by a pair of metal
channels which serve as the guide for a sliding
countertop, which usually has a pair of shallow
drawers affixed to its underside. The whole assembly,
with the counter retracted, is fairly shallow, about 2
feet deep; the width and height are generally about 4
feet and 6 feet respectively.
A distinctive feature of
the Hoosier cabinet is its accessories. As originally
supplied, they were equipped with various racks and
other hardware to hold and organize spices and various
staples. One particularly distinctive item is the
combination flour-bin/sifter, a tin hopper that could be
used without having to remove it from the cabinet. A
similar sugar bin was also common. |
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Special glass jars were
manufactured to fit the cabinet and its racks. Original
sets of Hoosier glassware consisted of coffee and tea
canisters, a salt box, and four to eight spice jars.
Some manufacturers also included a cracker jar.[1]
One distinctive form was a cylindrical jar with a ring
molded around its center, to allow it to rest in the
holes of a metal hanging rack.
On the inside of the doors,
it was common to have cards with such information as
measurement conversions, sample menus, and other
household helps.
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History
The Hoosier Manufacturing
Co. dates back to 1898 (though some sources claim 1903).
Houses of the period were not equipped with built-in
cabinetry, and the lack of storage space in the kitchen
became acute. Hoosier adapted an existing furniture
piece, the baker's cabinet, which had a similar
structure of a table top with some cabinets above it
(and frequently flour bins beneath). By rearranging the
parts and taking advantage of (then) modern metal
working, they were able to produce a well-organized,
compact cabinet which answered the home cook's needs for
storage and working space.
Hoosier cabinets remained
popular into the 1920s, but by that time houses began to
be built with more modern kitchens with built-in
cabinets and other fixtures. Thus supplanted, the
hoosier largely disappeared. They remain common on the
antique market, however, and are still used as
supplemental cabinets.
References
-
^
Hoosier Cabinet dot com
SOURCE:
Wikipedia
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