7 Kitchen Tools Everyone Owned in 1900

  • Woman using a hand mixer
Woman using a hand mixer
Credit: © Smith Collection/Gado—Archive Photos/Getty Images
Author Tony Dunnell

May 28, 2026

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If you were to go back in time and step into an average American kitchen in 1900, it would feel both familiar and strange. A lot of items would be instantly recognizable — the pots and pans, knives and forks, plates and bowls — but you’d soon notice the lack of certain modern tools. There would be no electric mixer, no blender, no coffee machine, and no refrigerator or freezer. 

Back then, everything that happened in the kitchen was done by hand. Homemakers were expected to bake bread, preserve fruit, grind coffee, render lard, and cook hot meals on a stove that required constant attention. The luxury of pressing a single button to heat food, mill ingredients, or toast bread was nothing but a fantasy. Instead, cooks relied on a selection of manually powered devices and appliances. Here are seven such tools that would have been found in most kitchens at the turn of the 20th century. 

Credit: © H. Lefebvre—ClassicStock/Getty Images 

Cast-Iron Range

The cast-iron range was the heart of the kitchen in 1900. These wood- or coal-burning stoves were the standard method of cooking at the time (except in some rural homes, where people still used open-fire cooking). They came in many shapes and sizes, but a typical cast-iron range had an oven and a flat-top surface for pots, pans, and kettles, not unlike modern stoves. 

Using and maintaining a cast-iron range was a lot more labor intensive than using and maintaining today’s appliances, however. The fire had to be stoked well in advance to bring it up to a suitable cooking temperature, and this alone required some skill and experience. Fuel had to be added frequently, ash had to be emptied out, and the oven had to be cleaned regularly — a tall order for most home cooks today. 

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