Read Life Below Stairs Online

Authors: Alison Maloney

Life Below Stairs

 

Life
Below Stairs

First published in Great Britain in 2011 by
Michael O’Mara Books Limited
9 Lion Yard
Tremadoc Road
London SW4 7NQ

Copyright © Michael O’Mara Books Limited 2011

Every reasonable effort has been made to acknowledge all copyright holders. Any errors or omissions that may have occurred are inadvertent, and anyone with any copyright
queries is invited to write to the publishers, so that a full acknowledgement may be included in subsequent editions of this work.

All rights reserved. You may not copy, store, distribute, transmit, reproduce or otherwise make available this publication (or any part of it) in any form, or by any means
(electronic, digital, optical, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorized act in relation to this
publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.

A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

Papers used by Michael O’Mara Books Limited are natural, recyclable products made from wood grown in sustainable forests. The manufacturing processes conform to the
environmental regulations of the country of origin.

ISBN: 978-1-84317-697-8 in hardback print format
ISBN: 978-1-84317-781-4 in EPub format
ISBN: 978-1-84317-782-1 in Mobipocket format

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Cover design by James Empringham
Designed and typeset by K DESIGN, Winscombe, Somerset

Printed and bound in Great Britain by Clays Ltd, St Ives plc

www.mombooks.com

 

In loving memory of my grandparents,

Jean and Sandy Cook and Jim and Dorothy Tripp.

With love and thanks to Sally and Gill.

 

Contents

Introduction

CHAPTER ONE

Social Background

CHAPTER TWO

Household Structure

CHAPTER THREE

Pay and Conditions

CHAPTER FOUR

A Day in the Life of a Country House

CHAPTER FIVE

Toil and Technique

CHAPTER SIX

Special Occasions

CHAPTER SEVEN

Code of Conduct

CHAPTER EIGHT

Hiring and Firing

CHAPTER NINE

The High Life

Sources and Bibliography

Picture Acknowledgements

Index

 

Introduction

I
N THE TWENTY-FIRST
century, domestic service is the domain of the few butlers, housekeepers and nannies who keep the
richest homes in the country ticking over and usually command a high wage. But just one hundred years ago, service was the largest form of employment in the UK. The 1911 census showed that 1.3
million people in England and Wales worked ‘below stairs’ and many of those would have been in average middle-class homes, employed by doctors, lawyers and office clerks, rather than
dukes and princes.

With millions of families living in stifling poverty in the Edwardian era, going into service was a sought-after alternative to near starvation but it was no easy option. From scullery maid to
housekeeper and butler, the domestic servant was at the beck and call of their master and mistress every hour of the day. Up with the lark and toiling well into the night, they were rewarded with
meagre wages and sparse, comfort-free accommodation in
the attic or basement. While their employers dined on nine-course meals, costing up to six times a maid’s annual
wage, employees were treated to the leftover cold cuts in the basement kitchen. As the Edwardian upper classes organized their busy social calendars around the London season, the shooting season
and weekend parties, the staff was lucky to get one day off a month.

But even as the more fortunate Edwardians basked in the lap of luxury, the winds of change were beginning to blow. Opportunities in shops, manufacturing and offices were offering young girls
higher wages and more free time, the suffragette movement was filling the newspapers, and the lower classes, who once ‘knew their place’, were beginning to demand more from their
middle- and upper-class employers. ‘The servant problem’ was a frequent topic of conversation in society drawing rooms and politicians anxiously discussed what could be done to
encourage more workers to choose domestic service. In 1914, the First World War saw the end of the golden age of domestic service. Life Below Stairs was soon to become a thing of the past.

Domestic service was not the only option for young women

 

CHAPTER ONE

Social
Background

D
URING THE CLASS-RIDDEN
Victorian era, the social divide between rich and poor had become a chasm. By the turn of the
century, poverty had reached shocking levels, especially in cities, and in his 1901 report on the slums of York the Quaker philanthropist Seebohm Rowntree concluded that 28 per cent of the
population of the city was living in intolerable hardship. At the same time he concluded that ‘the keeping of or not keeping of servants’ was the defining line between the working
classes and those of a superior social standing.

Domestic service, while arduous and all-consuming, provided a reasonable alternative to the slums and a certain amount of social status, and was taken up by a significant number of both sexes in
Britain. A large percentage of women who worked were in service. The 1901 census showed that they numbered 1,690,686 women, or 40.5 per cent of the adult female working population.

Children, particularly girls, also made up a significant proportion of the lower posts in a large household and the higher up the social scale the employer, the more cachet
was awarded to the positions in the house. Young girls would be looking for a post in a good home from the age of twelve or thirteen, and in some cases they started as young as ten. And while many
of these came from the city slums, employers often preferred to take the children of rural families, who were considered to be more conscientious and hard-working than those from the cities.

Work was hard but maids were an essential addition to all homes from the lower middle classes upwards. In an age of few labour-saving appliances, the mistress of the house would struggle to run
even an average-sized household on her own. An aristocratic seat or country house would require a large staff in order to run from day to day, while even a modest middle-class home would employ one
or two servants.

At the turn of the century, however, things were beginning to change, at least for the professional classes. In his 1904 publication
The English House
, German architect Hermann Muthesius
said that many middle-class families complained that, with new opportunities for working women in shops and offices, ‘£20 maids’, those who earned around £20 annually, were
hard to come by. That, along with the introduction of household appliances over the coming years, led to a decline in domestic staff and a rethink of the architecture of middle-income homes. Houses
became smaller, cosier and more manageable for a
housewife and, after the First World War, staff were to be found in the wealthier households alone.

In the years leading up to the war, a family’s social standing was heavily dependent on the number of staff it could afford to employ, as this was an obvious indication of wealth. Many of
the richer families would employ up to twenty staff and, in the larger aristocratic homes, it often increased to thirty or forty. At the Duke of Westminster’s country seat, Eaton Hall in
Cheshire, there were over three hundred servants, although this was an exceptionally large number, even amongst the aristocracy.

Eaton Hall in Cheshire

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