Boot Scrapers From The Days Before The Automobile

SeaBreeze

Endlessly Groovin'
Location
USA
There's been times when I could have used one of these for my home, after a muddy walk in the park with the dog. Different styles in link.
https://www.amusingplanet.com/2021/03/boot-scrapers.html
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In the days before automobiles, when streets were meant for horses and their carts mostly, walking through mud and excrement was an unavoidable part of life in the cities. However, what was unacceptable then, and is still now, is treading into homes with muddy boots. But a simple doormat was not enough to get rid of the filth that stuck to ones shoes. What was needed was a shoe scraper. These were made of cast iron or wrought iron and were attached at the entrances of many decent homes, churches and hospitals in cities across Europe and the Americas. Visitors would scrap the mud off their shoes on these simple devices before stepping into the building. The French called them ‘décrottoir‘. Others called them simply ‘boot scraper.’
 

I can honestly say that until now, I have never before seen cast iron versions of.

Here are the two I'm most familiar with.

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Where Ì grew up, it was common to see a car radiator core laying flat on the ground outside an entry door. Most men wore caulked boots in the the timber and the fins of the radiator served to scrape mud and debris from around the individual steel caulks. They also did a good job cleaning regularly soled footwear.
 
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On the family farm, there was one just to the side of the porch. Men weren’t expected to take off their shoes when they came in for lunch/dinner. I can’t remember if they did at supper time.

Probably washing the floor at the end of the day was just the norm.
 


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