You’re walking down a dark, creaky hallway in an old house.
The floorboards groan.
A draft whispers from somewhere unseen.
And then—out of nowhere—there it is:
A tiny sink.
Perched on the wall.
No mirror.
No towel bar.
Not in a bathroom… not in a kitchen…
Just… there.
You blink.
“Wait… why is there a sink in the middle of the hall?”
It looks like a prank.
A plumbing mistake.
Or maybe someone’s idea of a very weird art installation.
But no.
That little sink?
It’s 100% intentional.
And it served a very real, very practical purpose in homes over a century ago.
Let’s solve the mystery of the hallway sink—and why it wasn’t weird back then at all.
Step Back to the Early 1900s: When Indoor Plumbing Was a Luxury
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