Western Female Seminary Living History Society

Western Female Seminary Living History Society The Western Female Seminary Living History Society began as a privately-run club for girls ages 14 and up who were interested in Civil War re-enacting.

Although the group no longer holds regular meetings, watch this page for research and special events. The Western Female Seminary Living History Society is a privately-run club for girls ages 14 and up who are interested in Civil War re-enacting. The WFSLHS holds meetings for its members to learn about the era, and attends local and national Civil War events as a group. Our name is borrowed from a

local school for young ladies that was founded in 1853 in our local area. This group was formerly known as the Young Ladies' Living History Society of Greater Cincinnati.

Here's your myth-busting post of the day. Many of the stories that we hear passed down at small historical sites are myt...
06/28/2026

Here's your myth-busting post of the day. Many of the stories that we hear passed down at small historical sites are myths that have crept into volunteer interpretation. This year, during the 250th, I see many small sites wanting to create more content, and they are making videos that spread these online. If you are a volunteer at a site, double check your stories so you don't pass these things on.
(And if you run a social media page, don't hit share until you so some research.)

Myth-Busting History Moment: Don’t Throw the Baby Out with the Bathwater

We’ve seen this one making the rounds again—and no, it’s still not true.

The phrase “don’t throw the baby out with the bathwater” did not come from some grim tale of historic bathing habits gone wrong. No murky tubs. No lost infants.
So where did it come from?

The expression actually traces back to a 1512 German satire by Thomas Murner. One of the illustrations shows a woman tossing out bathwater—with a baby still in it. It was meant to be absurd—a visual joke about making foolish decisions, not a reflection of real life.

What about bathing practices?
It is true that in many households, people might share bathwater—especially when hauling and heating water was labor-intensive. But the oft-repeated story that everyone bathed in the same water, in order, until in was so dirty the baby “disappeared” is pure fiction. That tale has been layered onto the phrase much later and has nothing to do with its origin.

While bathing practices varied depending on time and place, people in the past absolutely cared about cleanliness. They washed regularly using basins, changed linens, and made use of the resources available to them. And no one was casually losing—or tossing—babies in the process.

Why it matters
This myth sticks around because it’s vivid—but it also reduces the past to something careless and absurd. In reality, people were practical, attentive, and far more thoughtful than these stories suggest.

So go ahead and use the phrase—but now you can gently correct the story when it comes with it.

Image: 1512 woodcut, Public Domain

We have talked about this before, and this is a great visual. When looking at the outfits and fabrics in 1860s CDV image...
04/25/2026

We have talked about this before, and this is a great visual. When looking at the outfits and fabrics in 1860s CDV images, it's tempting to assume the lights and darks in the images reflect the way modern black and white film (or a black and white filter in an editing app) would portray colors. But tintypes reflect colors differently--in ways that we can find unexpected. That CDV that shows a "light-colored dress" might actually be of something dark blue. Thanks to Charleston TinTypist for sharing these images.

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