• Skip to main content
  • Skip to site footer
seacoasthistory-logo-official-cut

SeacoastHistory

Notes from America's Smallest Seacoast

  • Home
  • About
  • Features
  • Vintage Pics
  • As I Please
  • My Books
  • Contact
  • Home
  • About
  • Features
  • Vintage Pics
  • As I Please
  • My Books
  • Contact

Every Seacoas Home Needs a Blanchard Ash Sifter

Vintage Pics
Category: Vintage Pics

Coal is GOLD! Don’t waste a lump.

An illustration of the labor saving Blanchard Ash Sifter from Concord, NH as advertised in the 1886 “Ladies Handbook” published in Portsmouth, NH.  (Author’s Collection)

“Do you ever lose your temper? If you do, it is when you have to sift the ashes. Isn’t that so? But instead of spoiling your clothes as well as your disposition, you will find it much better to buy a Blanchard Ash Sifter.”

That’s the opening pitch of an advertisement in a little book I discovered last week. Patented in 1884, the Blanchard Ash Sifter “is a new and most excellent thing,” according to a full-page ad. No handle, no crank to turn. You simply dump your ashes into the top, shut the cover, and–bingo–your ashes are deposited instantaneously in one lower drawer while your recycled coals appear in the other drawer. Manufactured in Concord, NH, the Blanchard is no bigger than a barrel.

How does this miraculous device operate? Traditional ash sifters were little more than a square grate with a handle or a slotted spoon like the one used to clean your cat’s litter box. With the Blanchard, gravity does most of the work as the ashes tumble down through a patented array of grates and chutes. But why? According to the Blanchard Company, fully 20 percent of coal used in heating and cooking is wasted, thrown away with the ashes removed from your stove and fireplace. 

At $5 for the stove-sized sifter or $7.50 for the furnace-sized unit, the Blanchard Ash sifter was guaranteed to pay for itself in a single winter. “You cannot afford to do without one,” the ad proclaims, and Blanchard & Sons shipped their products anywhere in the USA for free. With no moving parts, the ash sifter would never wear out. 

Another Blanchard ad includes an illustration of a clearly frustrated woman sifting her ashes into a barrel in the open air. The ash sifter, the ad promises, greatly cuts down on the use of profanity. The New Hampshire Historical Society in Concord includes one in their collection. 

The competing “Hustler Ash Sifter” was made in Worcester, MA, but included a cranking mechanism. The Hustler ad features a well-dressed girl operating the machine with the bold headline “COAL IS GOLD.”

Copyright J. Dennis Robinson, all rights reserved

Previous Post:Baptismal Font Honors Scottish Hero
Next Post:Tom Thumb Wedding Still Inspires Mock Marriages

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sidebar

Categories

As I Please

Features

General

My Books

Vintage Pics

Please Visit Our Sponsors

Portsmouth Historical Society

Strawbery Banke Museum

Wentworth by the Sea

NH Humanities

The Music Hall

Piscataqua Savings Bank

Portsmouth Athenaeum

Seacoast Science Center

  • Home
  • About
  • Blog
  • Contact

Blog Categories

  • Features
  • Vintage Pics
  • As I Please

Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions

Contact
Find on Facebook

Copyright © 2026 · J.Dennis Robinon/Harbortown Press · All Rights Reserved