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The Rural Voice, 2002-05, Page 42UNCOVERING THE PAST Stripping away the years of dirt and paint becomes an excercise in remembering family history By Barbara Weiler ast summer I refinished an old washstand. It sat in the garage, where 1 applied stripper, scraped and sanded. Some urists might P g say that to remove old finishes takes away from uniqueness, the historical value, the beauty of the piece. There was nothing beautiful about this washstand. When I began, it was covered with a dark, shiny varnish unevenly applied. Under that I discovered multiple layers of white and finally a faux finish of wood - grain oak. The drawer pulls were plain wooden knobs but I uncovered additional holes where a fancier pull used to be. Visible nails marred the top. and the boards had shrunk apart to leave wide cracks. The faux finish was gone from the top, either never there or worn away with the dark water stains that spoiled the surface. A chipboard slat reinforced the back, while the bottom had been replaced by plywood. Even the history of the washstand is murky. In the late 1930s, it had already been relegated to•the back kitchen of our farmhouse. The original purpose of the stand was to provide washroom facilities in a bedroom. The pitcher and basin sat on top, while the door underneath housed the chamber pot. A small drawer provided room for other toiletries. I do not know how old the washstand is or where it came from. Dad said he may have bought it at a sale. My brother thinks it was left by the previous owner of the farm near Woodville where we moved in 1939, because at one time there was a map for the tile drainage system for the farm on the bottom of the drawer. The map has since been obliterated by paint. 38 THE RURAL VOICE In my memory, the stand was covered with oilcloth, and stood beside the sink in the corner of the back kitchen. In the '40s, before running water was installed in the house, there was a hand pump which brought rain water from the basement cistern to be used for washing when we came from field or barn. The washstand held the pail and dipper for drinking and cooking water, carried from the well a little distance from the house. That explains the badly water -damaged surface. The inside held miscellaneous items, nuts and bolts, nails, qtc. The pull on the cupboard part must have given way, as a peculiar metal device was used in place of a standard knob and to that a star-shaped dog -tag, now missing, was added for easier opening. My father was ever a pragmatist, concerned with function rather than aesthetics. When the farm was sold, many worthier pieces of furniture went to the auction barn. In the '60s, none of us were aware that some of the things Dad bought at auctions for use in summer kitchen or cellar storage might have any real worth, beauty, or historical value. We had chrome kitchen sets and formica topped coffee tables. But for some reason Dad chose to keep the old washstand, and it was perhaps then that the plywood bottom and chipboard patching were added. It took up its place in the laundry room of the new bungalow in town where my parents retired, still a repository for Dad's tools. It moved again to the three apartments my father lived in after mother died and ended up in the last apartment in his bedroom, serving once again as a bedside table. We shook our heads and wondered why he wanted that old thing. Somehow I think the washstand is oddly like my father. When he moved into his new apartment, he found it uncomfortable at first with its white walls and new flooring. He did not feel at home, as he put it, "an old farmer in all this white". Maybe the old washstand made the place seem more homelike, less strange. Or perhaps it was just a place to put the radio beside his bed. Dad was 94 years old when he died, and I think the washstand is at least that. If I searched for it in a book about antiques, I would find some reference to inexpensive furniture commonly manufactured in Ontario in the late nineteenth century. I applied a warm golden oak stain and added a clear finish, hoping to make it respectable enough to grace my guest room. Maybe I'II find a