|
Long, long ago, barbers did much more than cut people's hair. Barbers performed some minor operations on people, especially blood-letting, or bleeding. This was believed to be a cure for some illnesses in which the "bad blood" was supposed to leave the body. To perform the operations, barbers had their patients hold onto a pole standing in the shop. Then the patient's blood was "let." When the pole was not being used by a patient, it stood in the barber's doorway with bandages wrapped around it. This was an advertisement that the barber was a good "bleeder." When people realized that it was unsanitary to use a pole that stood in a doorway, barbers painted red stripes around the poles as a continuing advertisement. The red stripes were to remind the customers of blood-soaked bandages. Red and white striped barber poles became so identified with barbers that the custom of having a pole outside a barber shop continues today. The world's tallest barber pole, built in 1973 outside a ...
more
|
Why Do Barber Shops Have Red and White Poles Outside?
Related Questions
- First, make sure you’ve added your child to your TotSpot account. We have two different types of accounts on ...
- During the Middle Ages, priests in France played a game called court tennis — a game that was to become the ...
- Scotch tape was invented in 1930 by engineer Richard Drew. 3M (originally The Minnesota Mining and ...
- Madame Jacques Montgolfier, the wife of a French paper manufacturer, had washed one of her petticoats and ...
- The custom of mounting a horse from the left side has really nothing to do with the horse's preference. The ...