Servants' Hall: A Real Life Upstairs, Downstair... Page

Powell describes the servants' hall as having tiny windows where you could only see the legs of people passing by outside.

If you have ever binged Downton Abbey and wondered if a kitchen maid could really snag the Earl’s son, Margaret Powell has the true story for you. In her witty and sharp-eyed memoir, , Powell pulls back the heavy velvet curtain of 1920s England to show us what life was actually like for the people who kept those grand houses running. The Scandal That Rocked Redlands

The sequel to New York Times bestseller Below Stairs, Servants' Hall tells a gripping real-life tale reminiscent of Downton Abbey' Servants' Hall: A Real Life Upstairs, Downstair...

Employers were often obsessed with a servant's "moral welfare"—strictly banning "followers" (boyfriends)—while ignoring their physical exhaustion from 15-hour workdays. Go to product viewer dialog for this item. Servants' Hall: A Real Life Upstairs, Downstairs Romance

Mr. Wardham was so incensed by the match that he cut off all contact with his son. Powell describes the servants' hall as having tiny

Scandals and Soufflés: A Real Look at Life in the Servants' Hall

Despite the sensational elopement, Powell doesn’t let us forget the daily grind. She describes a world of and exhausting labor , where: The Scandal That Rocked Redlands The sequel to

Servants were expected to be "less than dusty," navigating a house where they were seen but never truly heard.

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