16 March 2026

Wash Day?

 Is Monday still washing day?

This is one of the pages in my scrapbook--------------


I came across some old sayings about wash day

They that wash on a Monday
Have all the week to dry;
They that wash on a Tuesday
Are not so much awry;
They that wash on a Wednesday
Are not so much to blame;
They that wash on a Thursday
Wash for shame;
They that wash on a Friday
Wash for need;
And they that wash on Saturday
Oh, slovens are indeed.

Wash your clothes on New Years Day and you'll be 'Washing for the dead' or washing a loved one away, meaning someone in your household will die in the coming year!

Why is wash day on a Monday? One story says "the Pilgrims disembarked from the Mayflower on a Sunday and the first priority of the women after the voyage was to wash all the clothes, thereby setting a schedule from that day forth that continued for centuries".


I was reminded of this old song that used to be on children's radio 'Listen with Mother' in the late 1950s



Back Tomorrow

15 comments:

  1. I never knew that Monday was washday because of the Pilgrim Fathers!

    I think these days when we all just wash as per need, the old routines have been lost. We had good friends from Yorkshire, transplanted to Dorset, and poor Mary was not allowed to leave the washing line up after she had taken her washing in. No, it had to come down. Not sure why, but I think her husband might have been from strict Chapel lines . . .

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    1. My grandmother would not do laundry or peg it out on a Sunday, because she 'honoured the Sabbath Day'. I think most of her generation did washing on a Monday. That ensured you had enough time wash, dry and iron your best clothes for church the following Sunday. Not sure I believe the Pilgrim Mothers Story - that doesn't explain behaviour patterns in the uk.

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    2. Colin's Mum and Dad would do no housework on a Sunday and certainly no washing! Sunday main meal was prepared on Saturday. Mum-in-law didn't do knitting on a Sunday either only reading was 'allowed'

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  2. I'm just about to switch my washing machine on. Although, I usually end up with washing most days :) Can't wait until I can peg out again. Xx

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    1. Just about to peg out washing this morning - looks like a fine day here in Suffolk

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  3. Listening to that song I can understand why the tale says that they need all the week to dry - washing Monday, starching Tuesday, hanging out Wednesday, ironing Thursday, folding Friday (I didn't listen to see if there was any more).
    Thank goodness for clothes that don't need starching or ironing. Working in the office 5 days a week, my washing gets done on Saturday/Sunday and is folded as it comes off the line (or out of the dryer). At most an extra step is dividing into piles to go to the correct person. Very little gets ironed now, and that usually hangs in a wardrobe until required and then is ironed as needed.

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    1. Airing on a Saturday and Wearing on a Sunday!
      What a palaver washing clothes was.

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  4. My Mum always did the family washing on a Monday. We had two wooden airers, the kind you open up at a 90 degree angle. When not in use, my sister and I would often use them to make tents. I remember the washing song well, imagine washing hanging around all those days before being worn on Sunday!

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  5. I've always assumed it was about spreading the load. In the days when meat was cheaper, a joint cooked on Sunday would leave plenty for cold on Monday, possibly with fried-up leftover veg and pickles, therefore very little cooking needed doing at the same time as the washing.

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  6. At certain times of the year my wash days are chosen according to the weather forecast, much prefer hanging laundry outside.
    Penny

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  7. Monday was always wash day in my childhood home, come rain or shine, mum did laundry.

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  8. Washing was always done on a Monday when I was growing up. I do washing on a Sunday because we get cheap electricity from our provider on that day. I think my Gran would faint with shock washing on a Sunday! Regards Sue H

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  9. My mother would never wash on either New Year's Eve or New Year's Day because she said it would wash someone in or wash someone out. The only time she broke with the superstition was when I was a toddler, she was expecting her second child and had washing that really needed to be done. That year my Dad's Mum died, my baby sister died shortly after birth (and Mum almost died giving birth) and we had a housefire in which my Mum's Mum was badly injured. She used to remind me not to do any washing towards the end of every year and I still don't now, even though she died several years ago.

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  10. My washday has turned into Sunday because it's the day when electricity is half price from 11am to 4pm. Too good to miss.
    And, yes, I've hung soft toys up by the ears in the past!!

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  11. My friends had a covenant of their house, along with the other houses in the close, prohibiting hanging out washing on Sundays. In Hertfordshire, not anywhere like the Hebrides!

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