{"id":2235,"date":"2020-07-25T22:09:42","date_gmt":"2020-07-25T22:09:42","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/mrshunts.co.uk\/?page_id=2235"},"modified":"2020-08-19T14:56:50","modified_gmt":"2020-08-19T14:56:50","slug":"about-us","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/mrshunts.co.uk\/about-us\/","title":{"rendered":"About us"},"content":{"rendered":"
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\"\"<\/em><\/span><\/p>\n

‘<\/em><\/span>Here’s the unusual stir and bother: Nessa back tomorrow, Flossie ill: am I to go hunting?’ <\/em><\/span><\/p>\n

This was from Virginia Woolf\u2019s diary, Tuesday, 22nd November 1938. (\u2018hunting\u2019 is an allusion to Mrs Hunt\u2019s domestic employment agency)<\/span><\/p>\n

Mrs Hunt\u2019s Agency was originally set up in Duke Street, Manchester Square, London by Mrs Ellen Hunt (the same era as \u2018The Duchess of Duke Street\u2019) in 1857. The redoubtable Mrs Hunt offered domestic staff of all kinds to middle and upper-class families around London, including butlers, housekeepers, parlourmaids, footmen and cooks. From the start her agency operated a \u2018no placement, no fee\u2019 policy which we continue today (except for international bookings).<\/span><\/p>\n

Society has changed markedly in the intervening 110 years, and domestic service has changed with it. A typical client from 1899 would have require twelve full time staff to run a large house. Patrons were fairly wide ranging with records from that year including a bank manager’s family managing in Bayswater with four servants: a “Cook-General” a \u2018Between maid\u2019 (or “Tweenie”) a house-parlourmaid and a children’s nurse.<\/span><\/p>\n

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Today a similar family would be likely to manage with one nanny and part-time cleaners and gardeners \u2013 if the bank is doing very well.<\/span>
\nBack when Mrs Hunt started her agency the Ducal and Royal houses would have employed armies of staff for running the vast houses which many of them had in London. Sixty or seventy servants would have been quite usual when the family were in London for the “Season”. Now, even the royal palaces of Europe \u2013 many of which we supply \u2013 will have half that number, together with press officers, personal assistants and a few special advisors<\/span><\/p>\n

Social change after The Great War meant that from the 1920s families began employing more female parlourmaids instead of the usual footmen who were increasingly in short supply. The Agency braved even more adversity after the Second World War when it was bombed out during the blitz, destroying many of the archives. It continued however through the changing trends of the century and by the 1950s it was a thriving business, at that time specialising in live-out staff.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>

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