
The House Servant's Directory An African American Butler's 1827 Guide
by Roberts, Robert-
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Summary
Table of Contents
Introduction to the House Servant's Directory | p. 11 |
The benefit of early rising to servants | p. 17 |
On dress suitable for their work | p. 17 |
Cleaning boots and shoes | p. 18 |
Cleaning knives and forks | p. 19 |
Directions for cleaning steel forks | p. 20 |
Trimming and cleaning lamps | p. 21 |
Directions for cleaning plate | p. 22 |
Cleaning plate with dry plate powder | p. 23 |
Cleaning silver and plated articles | p. 24 |
Setting up the candles | p. 25 |
Cleaning polished steel grates | p. 26 |
Directions for cleaning mahogany furniture | p. 27 |
Hints on taking out stains from mahogany | p. 28 |
Brushing and folding gentlemen's clothes | p. 28 |
Brushing and cleaning gentlemen's hats | p. 29 |
Regulations for the pantry | p. 30 |
Directions for cleaning tea trays | p. 31 |
Washing and cleaning decanters | p. 32 |
Trimming the cruet stand or casters | p. 33 |
To clean tea and coffee urns | p. 33 |
Mahogany dinner trays | p. 34 |
Remarks on the morning's work in winter | p. 35 |
Directions for setting out the breakfast table | p. 36 |
Regulations for the dinner table | p. 38 |
Laying the cloth, &c. | p. 39 |
Setting out the dinner table | p. 39 |
Setting out the sideboard | p. 41 |
Setting out the side table | p. 42 |
Dinner on the table | p. 44 |
Waiting on dinner | p. 44 |
The first course removed | p. 46 |
Second course removed | p. 47 |
Placing on the dessert | p. 48 |
Preparations for tea and coffee | p. 49 |
Carrying round tea and coffee | p. 50 |
Observations on supper | p. 51 |
Observations on the supper table | p. 52 |
Directions for extinguishing lamps, shutting up the house, &c. | p. 53 |
Address and behaviour to your employers | p. 55 |
Behaviour to your fellow servants | p. 56 |
Behaviour of servants at their meals | p. 58 |
Hints to house servants on their dress | p. 60 |
Remarks on answering the bells | p. 62 |
All the various receipts useful for servants to know | p. 63 |
To make the best liquid blacking for boots and shoes | p. 63 |
To make boots and shoes water proof | p. 63 |
Composition to clean furniture | p. 64 |
Furniture oil for mahogany, most excellent | p. 64 |
Italian varnish, most superb for furniture | p. 64 |
Italian polish to give furniture a brilliant lustre | p. 65 |
To take ink stains out of mahogany furniture | p. 65 |
An excellent wash for dirty tables, after a party | p. 65 |
To take the black off the bright bars of polished steel | p. 66 |
To polish the bars of a polished steel grate | p. 66 |
The best way to clean a polished steel grate | p. 66 |
For the black parts or inner hearth of a grate | p. 67 |
Another excellent black mixture for the same | p. 67 |
A beautiful mixture to clean brass or copper | p. 67 |
To give Britannia metal a brilliant polish | p. 68 |
A beautiful polish for black grates | p. 68 |
To make the best plate powder | p. 68 |
A most superb way to clean plate | p. 69 |
Another way to make plate powder, by J. R. W. of London | p. 69 |
To clean any kind of plated articles whatever | p. 70 |
To clean japanned tea and coffee urns | p. 70 |
To preserve iron or steel from rust | p. 70 |
To take rust out of steel | p. 71 |
To blacken the front of stone chimney pieces | p. 71 |
An excellent composition to blacken stove grates | p. 71 |
To clean mirrors or large looking glasses | p. 72 |
To make a beautiful black varnish | p. 72 |
To give silver a beautiful polish | p. 72 |
An excellent mastick for mending China and glass | p. 72 |
A wash to revive old deeds or other writings | p. 73 |
An excellent wash to keep flies from pictures or furniture | p. 73 |
To remove flies from rooms | p. 73 |
To render old pictures as fine as new | p. 73 |
A varnish that suits all kinds of pictures and prints | p. 74 |
To take ink spots out of mahogany | p. 74 |
A most delicious salad sauce, by J. R. W. | p. 74 |
A great secret to mix mustard, by H. B. London | p. 75 |
To extract oil from boards | p. 75 |
To colour any kind of liquor | p. 76 |
To make liquid currant jam of the first quality | p. 76 |
A secret against all kind of spots on silk or cotton | p. 76 |
To make all kinds of syrups of all sorts of flowers | p. 76 |
To make excellent currant jelly | p. 77 |
A most delicious lemonade, to be made a day before wanted | p. 77 |
Lemonade that has the appearance and flavour of jelly | p. 78 |
To make raspberry vinegar most delicious | p. 78 |
To make the best wine vinegar in one hour | p. 78 |
An excellent preparation for vinegar | p. 79 |
A dry portable vinegar, or vinaigre en poudre | p. 79 |
To turn good wine into vinegar in three hours | p. 79 |
To restore that same wine to its former taste | p. 80 |
To correct a bad taste or sourness in wine | p. 80 |
To preserve good wine unto the last | p. 80 |
To recover a person from intoxication | p. 80 |
To make raspberry strawberry, cherry and all kinds of waters | p. 81 |
Lemonade water of a most delicious flavour | p. 81 |
Another excellent lemonade, by R. R. | p. 81 |
To whiten ivory that has been spoiled | p. 82 |
A cooling cinnamon water in hot weather | p. 82 |
An excellent good ratifia, by F. N. | p. 82 |
A strong aniseseed water | p. 83 |
To take off spots of any sorrt, from any kind of cloth | p. 83 |
A great secret against oil spots, &c. | p. 83 |
To restore carpets to their first bloom | p. 84 |
To restore tapestries to their former brightness | p. 84 |
To revive the colour of cloth | p. 84 |
To take spots out of white cloth, &c. | p. 85 |
A composition of soap that will take out all sorts of spots | p. 85 |
Turkey cement for joining all metals, glass, china, &c. | p. 85 |
To preserve the brightness of fire arms, &c. | p. 86 |
To remove ink stains from cloth, plaid, silk, worsted, &c. | p. 86 |
To preserve milk for sea that will keep for six months | p. 86 |
To preserve apples for the year round | p. 87 |
To loosen stoppers that are congealed in decanters | p. 87 |
To take stains out of black cloth, silk, or crape | p. 87 |
To know whether a bed is damp or not, when travelling | p. 88 |
To make the best ginger beer | p. 88 |
To make excellent spruce beer | p. 88 |
To make a beautiful flavoured punch | p. 88 |
To cement any kind of broken glass | p. 89 |
A black varnish for straw or chip hats | p. 89 |
Blacking for harness that will not injure leather | p. 89 |
To make a strong paste for paper | p. 90 |
A water that gilds copper and bronze | p. 90 |
A wash for gold, silver, silk, or any other kind of embroidery | p. 90 |
To make iron as beautiful and white as silver | p. 91 |
To preserve furs or woollen clothes from moths | p. 91 |
To dye gloves so as to look like York tan | p. 91 |
To reform those that are given to drink | p. 91 |
To prevent the breath from smelling, after liquor | p. 92 |
A wash to give lustre to the face | p. 92 |
A wash for the hair most superb | p. 92 |
Excellent paste for the skin | p. 92 |
A beautiful corn poultice | p. 93 |
To make the best corn plaster | p. 93 |
A safe liquid to turn red hair black | p. 93 |
To refine cider for one barrel | p. 93 |
To clarify strong or table beer, or ale | p. 94 |
A cheap and wholesome beer | p. 94 |
Excellent jumble beer | p. 94 |
To make excellent ginger beer, for ten gallons | p. 94 |
A wash to give a brilliant lustre to plate | p. 95 |
Water proof varnish of the best quality | p. 95 |
Chinese varnish for miniature painting | p. 95 |
To make a cement for bottles | p. 96 |
Directions for putting dishes on table | p. 96 |
Directions for placing all kinds of joints, fowls, fish, &c. on table | p. 97 |
Directions for carving | p. 98 |
Going to market | p. 104 |
How to choose poultry | p. 108 |
How to choose fish | p. 109 |
A few observations to cooks, &c. | p. 111 |
A word to heads of families | p. 122 |
Directions how to make a fire of Lehigh coal | p. 126 |
Miscellaneous observations, compiled for the use of house servants | p. 136 |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
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