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Idaho's 'Museum Of Clean' Built As Monument To Way Of Life

Jessica Robinson
/
Northwest News Network

There's a museum tucked away in a corner of the Northwest dedicated solely to the idea of “clean.” In fact, it's called the Museum of Clean, housed in an old brick warehouse in Pocatello, Idaho. The museum serves as a  monument to one man's lifelong campaign to improve the world – one scrub brush at a time.

The Museum of Clean at first appears to be an 8,000-square foot sunlit mausoleum of bygone advances in cleaning. Here lies the pump-action vacuum cleaner. On another wall: “Milestones in the History of Washing Machines and Dryers.” As I'm looking at a display of century-old carpet sweepers, a trim, elderly man walks up to me. He introduces himself as Don. Turns out, Don is THE Don Aslett, the “King of Clean” and founder of this museum.

“I want people to come here and see a glimpse of clean and get my enthusiasm and see the stuff we have and how lucky they have it," Alsett says.

Lucky indeed. Aslett grabs a vacuum from 1890 to demonstrate.

“And don't think these old vacuums work because they wouldn't pick up a dead cockroach eyebrow," he says. "All they did was build your chest muscles and your arm muscles is all they really did.”

Credit Jessica Robinson / Northwest News Network
/
Northwest News Network
Don Aslett, founder of the Museum of Clean in Pocatello, Idaho.

If you’ve never heard of Don Aslett, a huge display in the museum tells of his almost mythic path from humble roots to sanitary stardom. After placing an ad in the local paper in 1953,  this southern Idaho farm boy rose to become the so-called “King of Clean,” operating a nationwide janitorial empire and authoring more than 30 books. One of Aslett's most popular is “Clutter's Last Stand.”

“I think junk and clutter and unclean causes tons of divorce and tons of depression,” he adds. “Nothing will change your life faster than when you throw away your junk. You have more time, you have more space, you feel better, you're healthier.”

Aslett has dubbed a section of the museum “Kids’ Clean World.” There are different stations: one where visitors can squeegee the grime off a window. Another where they get to sweep marbles into a dustpan. 

As Aslett bounds from one exhibit to the next, it becomes clear this is not so much a mausoleum of cleaning history, as a church of clean. Even the building itself is a kind of shrine to cleanliness. Passive solar keeps energy use down and a rainwater collection system provides water for toilets and landscaping. To Aslett, clean is a way of life.

“This is not a cleaning museum," he says. "It’s the museum OF clean. We’re talking about clean arteries, clean air, clean water. Anything that’s clean has value. Probably next to fire, soap is the biggest cultural achievement of man.”

Museum of Clean, plungers
Credit Jessica Robinson / Northwest News Network
/
Northwest News Network
A display of antique plungers used for washing clothes at the Museum of Clean in Pocatello, Idaho.

You might think this would make dirt Aslett’s arch enemy. But Aslett tells me in fact, the real target of his crusade of clean is wastefulness -- and the excess he sees cluttering our lives.

Copyright 2013 Northwest News Network

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