In
great houses,
scullery maids were the lowest-ranked and often the youngest of the female
servants and acted as assistant to a
kitchen maid. The scullery maid reported (through the kitchen maid) to the
cook or
chef. Along with the junior kitchen-maid, the scullery maid did not eat at the communal servants' dining hall table, but in the kitchen in order to keep an eye on the food that was still cooking. Duties included the most physical and demanding tasks in the
kitchen, such as cleaning and scouring the floor, stoves, sinks, pots and dishes. After scouring the plates in the
scullery, she would leave them on racks to dry. The scullery maid also assisted in cleaning vegetables, plucking fowl, and scaling fish.
The Book of Household Management
"The duties of the scullery-maid are to assist the cook; to keep the scullery clean, and all the metallic as well as earthenware kitchen utensils.
The position of scullery-maid is not, of course, one of high rank, nor is the payment for her services large. But if she be fortunate enough to have over her a good kitchen-maid and clever cook, she may very soon learn to perform various little duties connected with cooking operations, which may be of considerable service in fitting her for a more responsible place. Now, it will be doubtless thought by the majority of our readers, that the fascinations connected with the position of the scullery-maid, are not so great as to induce many people to leave a comfortable home in order to work in a scullery."
—Mrs. Beeton, The Book of Household Management, published 1861
Additional duties
The
scullery room provided hot water for the scullery, kitchen tasks, and household. In addition to her other tasks, the scullery maid had to keep the scullery clean by clearing away meat and vegetable garbage, scrubbing work tables, and swilling the floors. The water was carried through a drain outside the house. Scullery maids would rarely have handled fine
china, stemware,
crystal or plate
silver; these are cleaned by
housemaids and
footmen. Before the advent of central heating systems, scullery maids were required to light the fires on the kitchen stove and supply hot water for tea and washing. She performed these tasks in the morning before the cook came down to the kitchens.
In a household with no between maid, the scullery maid may also have waited on staff in the Servants' Hall, although this may have been assigned to another maid or a junior footman. In the days before the indoor water closet she may have been required to empty and clean the servants' chamber pots as well.
This work has in modern times primarily been performed by women, but in medieval households female domestics were relatively rare. A male servant performing the tasks described above would be called a scullion. In 1386, when the English Parliament requested the removal of certain of Richard II's ministers, the king famously responded that he would not dismiss as much as a scullion from his kitchen at parliament's request.
The root of the word scullery is the 1300–50 French word "escuelerie" (pronounced squillerye < equivalent to escuele -dish (< L scutella, dim. of scutra pan) + rie -ry.
Fiction
The father in Nanny McPhee, played by Colin Firth, married Evangeline, a scullery maid, played by Kelly Macdonald.
Snow White and Cinderella both worked as scullery maids at some point during their stories.
In Les Misérables, Cosette is treated as a scullery maid for the duration of her stay in Montfermeil.
In the song Dead Man's Chest, the scullion is "stabbed times four".
In an episode of the television show Frasier, the Crane brothers learn that their great-grandmother was a scullery maid.
In Frances Hodgson Burnett's A Little Princess, the character Becky is a scullery maid.
The titular subject of
The Beatles song was found to have a corresponding historical person in
Eleanor Rigby, a Liverpool scullery maid.
In PBS's
Manor House, Ellen Beard (and a few others) was the scullery maid.
In an episode of the television show Family Guy, (Season 3, episode 4, 9:12 minutes in) Stewie is invited to an English girl's birthday. Stewie asks, "You mean that girl who talks like a scullery maid? I didn't realize she had been born, I assumed she had simply congealed in a gutter somewhere."
In Upstairs, Downstairs, Emily was the first scullery maid until she committed suicide; then Doris and for the briefest time, Sarah until Ruby was later considered to be the permanent scullery maid.
Maria, of the story "Clay" in the Dubliners, is widely considered to be a scullery maid.
In the 2009 Guy Ritchie film Sherlock Holmes, Dr. John Watson (Jude Law) scans the paper for potential cases of mystery to solve, reading out loud, "There's a letter here from Mrs. Ramsey of Queens Park. Her husband's disappeared." Sherlock Holmes (Robert Downey, Jr.) simply retorts, "He's in Belgium with the scullery maid."
In Downton Abbey 'Daisy' fulfills both the duties of the kitchen maid as well of the scullery maid. Her duties contain lighting the fires and helping Mrs. Patmore, the cook. (Also: staying out of sight of the upstairs family.) In the series though, all the servants eat in the kitchen.
In "You Rang M'Lord", Mabel was the scullery maid/ charwoman in the House of Meldrom.
References
External links
Daily tasks according to PBS.
The Book of Household Management, Mrs. Isabella Beeton, originally published in 1861, this web edition published by eBooks@Adelaide, some rights reserved.
Edwardian Life at Hitchingbrooke House: The Servant's Rules
House Tour: The Scullery
The Olveston Experience: Images of a Scullery
Victorian Scullery or Back Kitchen
Image of a Scullery Maid With Fish and Fowl
Scullery
Category:Domestic work