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1900s Bedroom

1900s Bedroom

THEN AND NOW: How bedrooms have changed throughout the years

vintage bedroom

Bedrooms have changed dramatically over the years.
Universal History Archive/ Getty
  • Bedroom decor and designs have changed dramatically over the last 100 years.
  • In the early 1900s, bedrooms were designed with a sink or washbasin inside so people could wash and bathe. Eventually, the bathroom became its own room.
  • Today, bedrooms are filled with modern technological amenities, which started in the 1980s.
  • Visit INSIDER.com for more stories.

Today, the bedroom is considered a place for sleeping, for children's playtime, for teenage sanctuary, etc.

It hasn't always been this way, however. Going back to ancient times, beds were made of plants and raised off the ground to avoid the bugs and other pests that roamed the floor at night. Since then, the bedroom has changed dramatically from simple bed chambers to lavish hideaways.

Here's how the bedroom has evolved from the early 1900s to today.

In the early 1900s, immigrants across the US lived in tenements where their entire apartment was just a cramped bedroom.

A New York tenement in 1905.
Library of Congress/ Getty

City life was especially challenging for the poor, forcing entire families to live in single room tenements. By 1900, there were 80,000 tenements in New York with 2.3 million people living inside them.

But not everyone in America lived this way. Some were fortunate enough to have full-sized homes with individual bedrooms, often furnished with a four-poster bed.

For those who were wealthier, bedrooms often came equipped with sinks or an area to wash up in.

A bedroom in the early 1900s.
Topical Press Agency/ Getty

In the early 1900s, bedrooms were used for two functions: to sleep and to wash or groom.

Soon, privacy became an important need in bedrooms, especially in the US.

A bedroom in 1929.
The New York Historical Society/ Getty

As plumbing became more advanced, bathrooms became their own individual rooms, giving people more privacy.

The mid 20th century introduced the mid-century modern design movement, which can be seen in this bedroom.

An example of a mid-century modern bedroom in 1959.
Arthur Siegel/ Getty

The mid-century modern movement prioritized clean lines and minimal features.

In the '40s and '50s, some couples opted to sleep in separate twin beds next to each other.

Two twin beds in 1955.
Three Lions/ Getty

"There was a sense — and I actually remember this from my taking an oral history of my own grandmother — that there was something mildly disreputable about essentially advertising, even to your kids, that you might be having sex together," Stephanie Coontz, a professor of family history at Evergreen State College, told Salon.

At the time, bedrooms took on a second function as a playroom.

A child playing in their bedroom in 1957.
Allan Grant/ Getty

By 1964, 76.4 million babies were born.

The muted colors could even be seen in children's bedrooms throughout the '70s.

A children's bedroom in 1976.
H. Armstrong Roberts/ ClassicStock/ Getty

The bold patterns are also a sign of the times in this room.

During this time period, the invention of the duvet cover made its way to the US.

A teenager sits on a duvet cover in 1970.
H. Armstrong Roberts/ClassicStock/ Getty

The duvet cover was created in Scandinavia, and home goods retailer Terence Conran  brought it over to England. The duvet cover quickly caught on, eventually spreading to the US in the '60s and '70s. The duvet cover revolutionized the bedroom because people could suddenly make a bed by just shaking the blanket a couple of times.

Throughout the '80s, the decor became more muted and rooms started to fill with technology.

A girl dances in her bedroom in 1985.
Susan Wood/ Getty Images

In the picture above, the girl has a record player and stereo system in her bedroom, foreshadowing the technological bedrooms we have today.

As for teenagers, the bedroom continued to be a place to express themselves, like with posters on the walls in the early 2000s.

A teenager's bedroom in 2003.
Anne Cusack/ Getty

The computer became a popular feature in bedrooms as well.

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1900s Bedroom

Source: https://www.insider.com/bedroom-design-through-the-years-2019-6

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