Often it can be quite difficult to move and carry items between the floors of a home.
This is true of most multi-level homes, but especially true of larger homes.
Not only can it be hard to move things like groceries or laundry up the stairs, but for individuals who are mobility challenged, it can actually be dangerous.
This is one of the reasons that so many people use electric dumbwaiters in their homes.
The dumbwaiter is not a new device, with roots that date back many thousands of years.
Pretty much since the beginning of time, people have used some form of a dumbwaiter when faced with the task of moving items between areas of different elevation.
They have been used in homes, castles, and even in nature, such as on cliffs, to allow good to be easily and safely transported.
These early dumbwaiters often made use of simply a rope, pulley, and some sort of wooden tray.
Animal power and water power were also often used.
By the end of the nineteenth century, many more advances had been made, including steam powered and electric dumbwaiters.
Now, most homes utilize electric dumbwaiters, because they are much more efficient and have many built in safety features.
These lifts can be installed into new homes easily, but they can also be incorporated into most existing structures.
The advantage of an electric unit, as opposed to a manual one, is that it can be moved between floors effortlessly.
A manual dumbwaiter, on the other hand, will require a good deal of effort and most will not be able to support as much weight as their electric counterparts.
These devices not only have a very rich history in residential uses, but they are also very common in commercial settings.
During the eighteen-hundreds they were used in almost all processing plants and factories, especially those in big cities like New York, which frequently have large multistory buildings.
It was in commercial settings that most innovations took place in regards to dumbwaiter technology.
The advances would then slowly make their way into homes.
This is true of the electrical dumbwaiter, which was used extensively in manufacturing, but would not become common in homes for some time after the first electric lift was created.
In homes, the manual dumbwaiter remained very popular up throughout the nineteen-twenties.
They were also very commonly used in apartment buildings in large cities.
These buildings would seldom have an elevator, but would be many stories high.
As a result, tenant living in the buildings would have to carry their goods up and down the stairs, which was not only inconvenient, but could also be dangerous.
To help the tenants, building owners would install dumbwaiters, which were found in virtually every building.
The dumbwaiter of today still provides a very large commercial service.
It is found in many hotels, hospitals, restaurants, and manufacturing plants.
Many homes also make use of these devices and they have helped increase efficiency and safety in millions of residences across the country.
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