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Floor
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Carpet

Floor Cloths
Entrance Hall
Family Rooms

Floor Matting

Floor Cloth

A floor cloth is a painted canvass coated in varnish. It was the linoleum of the 1800s.

Floor Cloth, and Oil Cloth Covers:

This name of floor cloth is applied to a manufacture of cloth painted over with oil colours, so as to be impenetrable to wet. . . . There is a great variety of styles in the patterns of oil cloth. Some are made to imitate marble casements; some wainscot boards, and some carpets of various kinds. Those are best which have several colours, and the pattern rather small. When the pattern is large, defects are sooner perceived; but again, in those which have a large pattern to imitate marble, defects may be repaired by a house painter. . . . Floor cloth is better for being kept for some considerable time before it is used, the paint getting harder, and it, therefore, is charged for partly according to its age; new floor cloth being cheaper than that which has been kept a year or two. . . Floor cloth is very useful in some apartments, on account of its impenetrability to water, and its drying so soon after being wetted; but water should be sparingly used in cleaning it, and still more should soap, for this latter will cause the paint to come off by dissolving the oil with which it was made. If not too much dirtied, floor cloth may be kept clean by wiping it with a damp cloth, and afterward rubbing it well with a dry cloth, and then with a brush until it shines.

From, Thomas Webster, An Encyclopaedia Of Domestic Economy
(New York, 1845), pp. 257-258.

From Eleanor Worthington’s will we know that there were floor cloths (“oil cloth carpets”) at Adena:

"The matting and oil cloth carpets that are on the floors these I give to my son James T. Worthington."

Adena restorers decided to put one floor cloth in the entrance hall and another in the family parlor.

Entrance Hall

Floor cloths were commonly used in Entrance halls because they made for a decorative first impression and because they were durable (remember: the muddy boots come here first).

The entrance hall floor cloth is a reproduction of a Chillicothe floor cloth from the same period. This portrait in the collection of the Ross County Historical Society shows a floor cloth dating from around the time of Thomas Worthington.

portrait with floor cloth, courtesy Ross
County Historical Society

Family Parlor

Adena restorers decided that the family parlor was the most likely place for another floor cloth because the room would have been used often by the family for meals and daily activities, and by servants when staging a formal dinner party. A floor cloth would have made the room attractive but also easy to maintain.



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