Pronounced "Sell-LAH" in New Hampshire, the cellar is becoming a rare find. Oh, it was different in the earliest days of our state. Then a cellar was essential to any household. It was built to hold the barrels of beef and pork, salted shad, and even apple cider. Before the days of refrigeration, it was a necessity, not a luxury. The art of building these storage places, sometimes called "root cellars," may be coming back in vogue. The term cellar today frequently brings to mind temperature-controlled projects containing fine bottles of wine.
Growing up in southern New Hampshire in the 1950s, the term "cellar" was used to describe a lower level storage area that had either earthen or stone walls. A "basement," on the other hand, was the location of your school's public toilets. (You'd ask the teacher if you could "go to the basement," if you needed to use the facilities).
It's truly a shame that the naming protocol has changed. There is nothing poetic, or lovely about the word basement (it is "base," after all). The word cellar, on the other hand, actually "cellar door" reportedly is the favorite word in the English language. Or is it?
So, what do you call the whachamacallit--cellar or basement? And will my cellar become a basement, when it grows up?
Janice
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New Hampshire: Does a Cellar Grow Up to Become a Basement?
Comments
Re: New Hampshire: Does a Cellar Grow Up to Become a Basement?
by
Chris Dunham
on Sat 24 Mar 2007 01:05 AM EDT | Permanent Link
We had a cellar growing up, but since it had a poured concrete floor and cinder-block walls it was also sometimes called a basement. My father had his workshop "down cellar."
The more "finished off" a cellar was, the more likely it was called a basement. No one I knew would ever play Ping Pong or kissing games in a cellar. Re: Re: New Hampshire: Does a Cellar Grow Up to Become a Basement?
by
Janice Brown
on Sat 24 Mar 2007 12:51 PM EDT | Permanent Link
Chris,
Good point about the kissing games and ping pong.... I don't remember doing either in our cellar, basement or whatever it's called :D J Re: New Hampshire: Does a Cellar Grow Up to Become a Basement?
by
nhmind
on Sat 24 Mar 2007 04:42 PM EDT | Permanent Link
"Go down cellar and get the...(fill in the blank, wash, screwdriver, roast in the freezer, shovel, whatever) was how I grew up. Our cellar was never a basement, even though a 20x20 area was "finished" with 60's paneling and a few musty chairs. My Mother still lives in the house and whenever I visit, I'm sent "down cellar" to get something. Basement? That's for us newer generation kids. By the way, I'm getting quotes on finishing my basement....how quickly us children forget.
Re: Re: New Hampshire: Does a Cellar Grow Up to Become a Basement?
by
Janice Brown
on Sun 25 Mar 2007 07:47 AM EDT | Permanent Link
Ah, and what was it with that 60s paneling craze??!!! My parents did exactly the same thing in several upstairs rooms. I realize it was a quick fix to cover plastered walls, but it sure makes a room look dark to me.
J Re: New Hampshire: Does a Cellar Grow Up to Become a Basement?
by
Anonymous
on Sun 25 Mar 2007 05:37 PM EDT | Permanent Link
One way to tell the difference: Cellars can have dirt floors, basements can't. But that's not a foolproof test, because cellars don't *have* to have dirt floors, which means cement flooring is a necessary but not sufficient condition for basement-hood.
Re: Re: New Hampshire: Does a Cellar Grow Up to Become a Basement?
by
Janice Brown
on Mon 26 Mar 2007 05:56 AM EDT | Permanent Link
There is no better way to start the day than with a bit of cellar floor philosophy :D
J Re: New Hampshire: Does a Cellar Grow Up to Become a Basement?
by
Adam
on Tue 27 Mar 2007 08:37 PM EDT | Permanent Link
In my parents' home, "down cellar" was the location of the laundry, the soapstone sink, dad's workbench, and, of course, that other necessity: the sump pump. My parents also had nested cellars. That is, in the cellar, we had a walled off room called the "canning cellar" (which for years I thought was the "cannon cellar"), where the canning activites took place in the fall, generations before. I remember an enormous bin for vegetables, and many Mason jars. No cannons.
Basements were for fancy folks who could afford dry cellars and family rooms. Re: Re: New Hampshire: Does a Cellar Grow Up to Become a Basement?
by
Janice Brown
on Thu 29 Mar 2007 07:18 AM EDT | Permanent Link
Adam,
Your childhood cellar sounds familiar... maybe we are related!! :D j/k Canning/Cannon--don't you love the NH accent! Your mention of it made me remember that my grandmother using the word cunnin' to mean cute... as in "isn't that a cunnin' baby." I'm not sure if that is a NH slanguage word, or an Irish word she learned from her father J Re: Re: Re: New Hampshire: Does a Cellar Grow Up to Become a Basement?
by
Anonymous
on Sun 01 Apr 2007 04:41 PM EDT | Permanent Link
This post from Wordsmith.org seems to imply that "cunning" and "cute" once meant the same thing. - Dave B.
Re: Re: Re: Re: New Hampshire: Does a Cellar Grow Up to Become a Basement?
by
Janice
on Mon 02 Apr 2007 08:08 AM EDT | Permanent Link
Dave,
Thank you for this info. I also found a poem written in the late 1800s that uses the word to describe a baby. J Re: Re: Re: New Hampshire: Does a Cellar Grow Up to Become a Basement?
by
Adam
on Fri 20 Apr 2007 09:34 PM EDT | Permanent Link
Cunnin' was a favorite word of my grandmother, who spent her entire life in Massachusetts. She usually used it in reference to babies or animals.
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