BYGONE INDUSTRIES OF THE PEAK: COOPERAGE
This is one of a series of articles published in
The Peak Advertiser, the Peak District's local free newspaper, on 28th February 2000 (p1 & p7), and
reproduced by kind permission of its author, Julie Bunting.
The series is now available as a fully-illustrated paperback, published in 2006
by
Wildtrack Publishing of Sheffield (ISBN 1-904098-01-0) See also this
Review by Alan Jacques.
BYGONE INDUSTRIES OF THE PEAK: COOPERAGE
Cooperage is the craft of making and repairing wooden casks, or
barrels, a trade which according to Pliny had originated amongst
inhabitants of the Alpine valleys by at least Roman times. As a
means of transporting produce, a cask is easy to control by
rolling even when heavy. The familiar barrel-shape is obtained by
enclosing a circlet of identical vertical curved staves within
horizontal hoops, narrower at each end and reaching the greatest
diameter in the middle.
Wooden pails - known in the Peak as kits, tubs and churns come
together under the term 'white cooperage', while casks are
described as either tight or slack. Well-seasoned oak has always
been preferred for making tight casks as used for wine, cider,
ale, oil, and liquid chemicals. Over the course of the centuries,
slack casks have been used for transporting and storing a vast
variety of produce from fish, china or fruit to cement. Slack
casks have tended to be made from softer woods, mainly fir, and
require less accuracy to assemble.
By contrast, tight casks have to be perfectly watertight as well
as being capable of withstanding internal pressure produced by
fermenting liquids. To this end, the edges of each stave are
bevelled to form tight joints with those adjacent. During
manufacture by traditional methods, the bevelled staves are first
steamed or heated to make them flexible before being arranged in
an upright position inside a circular frame. Encircled with
temporary hoops, the upper ends are drawn together, formerly by a
rope attached to a windlass, then permanent truss hoops -
generally made from iron - are dropped into place. The cask is
upturned and the process repeated, each end having been shaped
with a croze or groove to provide a tight fit for the flat
'heads'.
Early trade directories list coopers as being in business in
numerous villages and towns of the Peak. In 1857, for instance,
Ashbourne, Wirksworth and Cromford each had two, while single
coopers were at work in Youlgreave, Bakewell, Bonsall,
Hartington, Tissington, Elton, Stoney Middleton and Wensley. Half
a century later their number had been reduced dramatically with
only nine in the whole of Derbyshire, including one each at
Wirksworth and Ashbourne.
Progress has seen the manufacture of barrels without separate
staves, using instead a sheet of wood sawn from a log in one
continuous strip. By cutting V-shaped wedges around the ends, the
barrel can be shaped to bulge at the centre. In more recent times
steel has been used to make both straight-sided and
barrel-shaped casks.
One historical anecdote refers to wooden casks put to treasonable
use on the outskirts of the Peak District. Secret messages hidden
in Burton beer barrels were sent to Mary, Queen of Scots, held in
captivity at Wingfield Manor. This desperate tactic was part of
the conspiracy which led to the execution of Anthony Babington of
Dethick and ultimately of Mary herself in 1587.
From Haddon comes the later story of a massive tree known as 'My
Lady's Oak', felled in Haddon Park in 1728. The bark was sold to
a Bakewell tanner for £5.15s. then four cords (one cord = 128
cubic feet) of top wood were removed. The remainder, an estimated
960 feet of solid wood, was purchased by Henry Green of
Whittington and Thomas Gardom of Baslow for £5.16s. They sold a
couple of lengths and the rest was hewn into cooper's ware by
Robert Jenkinson, who managed to produce '914 large bottoms, 500
kit bottoms, 460 each of pannel piecings and short ware, 160
piggin bottoms and 3360 kit staves'. After paying Jenkinson
almost £6 for his labour, Green and Gardom were hardly left
scraping the barrel, financially speaking, as they pocketed a net
profit of around £74.
© Julie Bunting
From "The Peak Advertiser", 28th February 2000.
© Copyright Julie Bunting, GENUKI and Contributors 1995-2008, &c.
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[Created 8 May 2003. Last updated 24 Oct 2008 - 11:23 by Rosemary Lockie]