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I know a person in their 40s who grew up with live-in servants: a nanny plus a housekeeper (2 different servants) at their primary residence plus different servants (housekeeper and caretaker (a couple)) at their primary vacation home. Now their parents just have one live-in servant at their primary residence. They have old school wealth (think: Rockefeller).
I know other families in the dc metro area with live-in servants. Most have foreign-born servants from their home country (and get access to special visas through employment at places like the World Bank). I know a run of the mill white American family who live in a totally average million dollar colonial in the burbs who have had a live-in housekeeper/cook for decades. Kids are launched, mom never really worked, but they’ve always had an immigrant woman (same one for decades) live in their basement guest suite and handle all household duties. She eats dinner with them, watches tv with them, etc. It’s like having a grandma live with you, but she’s paid to scrub the toilets and grocery shop. |
They live in a house, like most royals. And even better is that it would be considered UMC here. It’s not that big or fancy, just a house. |
What does this even mean? Which caste? There are many. Do some treat help better than others? Because then you go right into saying the middle class do. And yes, I guess being help for the rich is better than living in a slum but those shouldn't be the choices, as you rightly point out in your last sentence about taxes/safety net. |
Central Park Tower, above the Nordstrom in Manhattan, has full floor apartments with a maid's suite with a separate entry. This is within the kitchen and laundry area. This is not pre-war as it was built around covid times. |
+1 Most rich people have retro fitted key pads. My parents did this all the way back in the 90s when I was growing up. |
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My grandmother grew up in NYC with 11 live-in servants, all European immigrants. Both their city and country houses were built with servants in mind -- 12 small bedrooms segregated from the family, a servants hall, etc. Some people may still live that way, but few of those fifth ave mansions remain in private hands for reasons.
- labor costs are so much higher - being a "servant" -- or "in service" as the English used to say -- has lost whatever appeal it may once have had. - who wants one constantly under foot? - people have other options for food than having someone serve them three meals a day at home - modern conveniences eliminate so much of the drudgery that used to be required to run a household But in countries with cheaper labor -- India, China -- household staff is still common. |
Yes, built as a luxury building, and it's an exception. The vast majority of post-war builds in NYC do not have that feature. 15 CPW offered maids' suites that many original owners bought and then resold or rented out for exorbitant prices. |
I haven’t read it or seen it. So what’s the reason, as presented in this? |
Where did you grow up? |
| My great grandmother had a lot of live in help. She lived in Boston. When my grandmother (her daughter) started having babies in quick succession, my great grandmother SENT one of her housemaids to SC (where my grandparents had settled) to take care of the babies. I cannot imagine ordering another human being to move multiple states away to take care of children. This was in the late 1940s. The housemaid stayed several years and then went back to Boston. Wtf. |
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My friend married a billionaire. They both grew up UMC and her day to day is surprisingly normal. She picks up her kids from (private) school, she hosts play dates, she cooks dinner. Shes actually extremely normal except for the fact that she has no idea how much anything costs and she really doesn’t know how to do anything beyond cook basic meals for her family and shop.
No live in help at their main house nor at their 2 vacation homes. They have a personal assistant who does all the bills, scheduling, appointments, etc. But their yacht, which is typically docked in the Bahamas, is fully staffed at all times. I guess maintaining the yacht requires full time attention. It’s very nice - when we go, the crew cook all the meals, do our laundry, clean the rooms and basically cater to your every need. The crew are typically not US. They are typically young and from places like South Africa. They usually stay 2-ish years and then new ones cycle in. They also have a pilot on standby at all times for their private plane (the husband - ie the billionaire - is also a pilot but his plane is big enough they like to have 2 pilots for every trip). |
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I know several people with live in help, but most of them actually aren't rich. One is a family with a live in au-pair from another country. The other families I know with live-in help are people from the Middle East or India (or at least one of the couple has parents from there). Culturally, they are way more used to having live-in servants.
Personally, I wouldn't want someone in my space all the time and I don't want anyone touching my underwear! But I'm that person who avoids being home while my housecleaners come because I find it awkward, and I also heavily pre-clean (not just declutter, but I'm talking scrubbing the stove, vacuuming, wiping up dust and hair in the corners of the bathroom...) before they come every 2 weeks. |
No, it started to change in the roaring 20s. Just watch Downton Abbey - it was a phenomenon across Europe too. |
Then why the heck to they keep coming here! |
Sure, theres always those who pretend to have some kind of self imposed and invented moral guilt. If servants were as inexpensive here as in many other countries, far more people would have live in help. It is just a step up from nannies that many people go through with for a few years. Or a combination of nanny and cleaners. Live in help faded away because it just got too expensive and impractical, but we still have millions of cleaners and Uber eats as substitutes for having cooks and maids. |