Bell pull

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File:Company-Shocked-Gillray.jpeg
In Company shocked at a Lady getting up to Ring the Bell (1805), James Gillray caricatured suitors eager to save a lady the effort of using a bell pull.

A bell pull is a woven textile, pull cord, handle, knob, or other object that connects with a bell or bell wire, and which rings a service bell when pulled. Bell pulls may be used to summon workers in homes of people who employ butlers, housemaids, nannies or other domestic workers,[1][2] and often have a tassel at the bottom.[3] The bell pull is one element of a complex interior mechanical network which, in Victorian times, typically involved a range of bell pulls in different rooms, connected to a central bank of labelled bells in a room where servants would wait to be summoned.[2]

Central bell panel

In the 19th century, some hotels also had a panel with a bell for each room, as part of a centralized bell system.[2]

Transport

File:BEST-Bell-Pull.jpg
A bell pull and bell in a bus in Mumbai, India.

A bell pull is used in some forms of public transport, mostly buses, for passengers to signal to a driver to halt at a particular bus stop.[4]

See also

References

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