The dinning room has a plug in the middle of the room, which is under the table. The room always had a chandelier and sconces on the wall. Why do you think this plug was needed? What so important to plug in there in early 1900's? I am just wondering. Next to it there is another weird plug I ll have to take pictures to post later.
The pictures.
The one is a traditional Fullman floor plug. The other I have no idea. I took the cover off so you can see the thing under. Ideas?
Last edited by Vaso7 on Tue Dec 21, 2010 9:52 pm, edited 1 time in total.
1902 Shingle
Designed by Wales&Holt for Mr and Mrs W. A. Cary
Yeah, I agree. The house has several servant buttons so it has to be the maid/butler button so the "master" does not have to get up from the table (or yell!) Still though I can not imagine what else they would plug under the table. And they would have to make a hole in their expensive handmade rug, right?
1902 Shingle
Designed by Wales&Holt for Mr and Mrs W. A. Cary
I have a table with an electric line running from the buzzer (at the head of the table) down to the hole in the center of the room, with a quick scissor clip between them. We'll reconnect them someday. I'd love to ring a bell til someone shows up...mind you it will likely be my husband with a pot to hit me in the head with for ringing the damn bell...but still, it sounds fun.
depending on when your house was built, it was fashionable when electricity was first used for portable appliances to have them at the table so you could show off the latest technology."look at me I can make toast at the table!" The other one is almost certainly a servants call button like the other posters are saying
Steven R.
muskegon MI
Charles E. Johnson house
1916 prairie style
visit my new profile at http://www.wavyglass.org
Vaso7 wrote: Still though I can not imagine what else they would plug under the table. And they would have to make a hole in their expensive handmade rug, right?
Yes, yes... but well worth it for the Nacho Cheese Fountain!
at the fountain!
Ok, I guess now I have seen it all!!!
My theory is that the outlet was a novelty and absolutely useless. I am thinking that the contractors of the era told everybody that they *need* a plug under the table because in the *future* everything on the table will run on electricity. Of course it never happened so they stop installing those outlets.....
1902 Shingle
Designed by Wales&Holt for Mr and Mrs W. A. Cary
I recognize the style of outlet - thats all that was in my house when I bought it...
as to the use of the under dining room table plug, perhaps a vacuum? or just failed future proofing? who knows.
Uh, an outlet for table lamps? My 1927 house and another on the street built by the same people, have this outlet in the center of the dining room floor. Nice!
-Rod