
Before grocery stores and refrigeration made butter an everyday convenience, it was something you made by hand– right at home.
This glass jar butter churn is a wonderful example of early 20th Century kitchen ingenuity. With a simple turn of the crank, the wooden paddles inside would agitate cream until it separated into butter and buttermilk. What feels like a novelty today was once a regular household chore!
While we don’t know the exact date of this piece, churns like this became especially popular in the late 1800s and early 1900s, when glass containers allowed families to watch the transformation happen– a small bit of kitchen “science” in action.
Imagine the patience (and arm strength!) it took to produce something as simple as butter. Next time you spread it on toast, you might appreciate it just a little more. Have you ever tried churning butter the old-fashioned way and putting it on homemade bread?
This churn was recently donated to the Botetourt Museum of History & Culture in Fincastle by Elizabeth Deisher.
~ Botetourt County Museum of History & Culture


