Country images you don't see much anymore

Really fun thread. It brings back a lot of memories.

Carla, I really got sucked into this thread, too and spent a lot of time on it. I remember many of these things from my childhood.
 

Outhouses? Not many left. When we moved to the house my great grandfather built, we had one, and for water, a pump in the kitchen sink. The little guy, looking back, is me with my cousins. My uncles are clearing a path to the newly remodeled outhouse.
 

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Outhouses? Not many left. When we moved to the house my great grandfather built, we had one, and for water, a pump in the kitchen sink. The little guy, looking back, is me with my cousins. My uncles are clearing a path to the newly remodeled outhouse.

Great picture!!!

We had an old three holer on my grandmother's farm until about 1956.
 
It was also my hideout when the mean Billy goat got loose. If I couldn't get to the house, I would go into the outhouse.

My nemesis was an old rooster, he used to come after me when I went into my grandmother's chicken coop and I was scared to death of him!!! My brothers told me to swing the feed pail at him or kick at him to chase him away, it never seemed to work. Finally my grandmother got sick of all the commotion and he ended his days in the soup pot! Then there was this pair of geese...

I have great memories of living in the country but at this point in my life the city and its conveniences are perfect for me.
 
Great picture!!!

We had an old three holer on my grandmother's farm until about 1956.

Took this photo last year of a 2 holer beside the road to our cottage in Maine. The door's open so I guess all are welcome.:D
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Outhouses? Not many left. When we moved to the house my great grandfather built, we had one, and for water, a pump in the kitchen sink. The little guy, looking back, is me with my cousins. My uncles are clearing a path to the newly remodeled outhouse.

My grandparents had a bungalow in the woods that had an outhouse. I refused to go in there alone, scared I would fall through! I was quite young at the time.
 
Bushel baskets. We had dozens of these sitting around at home. Used to get apples in them every fall. Do they still make them, I wonder?

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Sounds sweet, Meanderer. :rose:

I forgot about *peck* baskets, and half-peck baskets, and quarts, and, and, .... We saved *all* sturdy containers with handles.

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And lots that weren't so sturdy.

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A bushel and a peck and a hug around the neck...My MIL used to sing that to her boys when they were growing up.

Doris Day was such a talented lady, I enjoyed her movies.
 
At the flea market this summer they had a stack of bushel basket tops for sale and the lady selling them had no idea what they were!

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We also had a few of these wooden tubs that held chocolate drops. Each layer of candy was separated in the tub by a piece of wax paper, you put what you wanted in a paper bag, weighed them, and paid by the pound

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Not much ever got thrown away at our house. When I was a kid my favorite day was Saturday when we went to the dump, we usually brought home more than we left, furniture, bicycles, dishes, etc...
 
Now that you bring it up, Pappy, I have a stoneware crock too. A small one.

Label reads: A.P.Donaghho, Parkersburg, WV

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Not sure where my parents got it, maybe a farmhouse in Marietta, OH. Very heavy glazing. I think it was for canning and used a wax seal.
 
Potter and businessman Alexander Polk Donaghho was born in Washington County, Pennsylvania, July 2, 1829, and he died in Parkersburg in 1899. It is thought that he learned his trade in the Monongahela Valley in Pennsylvania, at a pottery owned by an uncle. He came to Parkersburg in 1870 and began a pottery operation there in 1874. Donaghho crocks and other items of pottery are avidly collected today.
Probably working with a few employees, Donaghho made pottery by hand, ‘‘throwing’’ it on a potter’s wheel just as it had been for hundreds of years. The majority of his ware had a generally cylindrical shape with slightly bulging sides. Virtually all of the crocks or wide-mouth pots featured a bold top molding and two ear handles on the shoulder below the rim. Jugs had a small top opening for a plug and a one-ring handle. Pottery canning jars usually had no handles but had a deep groove in the rim for the wax seal.
The ware was dried in a steam-heated room, after which it was stenciled with cobalt oxide. The pots were marked ‘‘A. P. Donaghho,’’ or ‘‘Excelsior Pottery’’ on big pieces, and ‘‘Parkersburg.’’ Many were decorated with advertisements for retail establishments. When thoroughly dry, the ware was placed in a bottle kiln to be fired.
 
PS, Nancy. If yours is a one gallon jug, it's listed on Esty for $135.00. These crocks can demand some good prices. I've seen them on Antiques Roadshow for hundreds of dollars.

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A.P.Donaghho
 


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