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Cooper (profession)

A cooper is a person trained to make wooden casks, barrels, vats, buckets, tubs, troughs and other similar containers from timber staves that were usually heated or steamed to make them pliable.

Cooper readies or rounds off the end of a barrel using a cooper's hand adze.
Assembly of a barrel, called "mise en rose" in French.

Journeymen coopers also traditionally made wooden implements, such as rakes and wooden-bladed shovels. In addition to wood, other materials, such as iron, were used in the manufacturing process. The trade is the origin of the surname Cooper.

Etymology edit

The word "cooper" is derived from Middle Dutch or Middle Low German kūper 'cooper' from kūpe 'cask', in turn from Latin cupa 'tun, barrel'.[1] Everything a cooper produces is referred to collectively as cooperage. A cask is any piece of cooperage containing a bouge, bilge, or bulge in the middle of the container. A barrel is a type of cask, so the terms "barrel-maker" and "barrel-making" refer to just one aspect of a cooper's work. The facility in which casks are made is also referred to as a cooperage.

As a name edit

In much the same way as the trade or vocation of smithing produced the common English surname Smith and the German name Schmidt (see occupational surname), the cooper trade is also the origin of the English name Cooper.

It is also the origin of the French Tonnelier and Tonnellier; Greek Varelas (Βαρελάς); Danish Bødker; German Binder, Fassbender or Fassbinder (Faßbinder, literally 'cask-binder'), Böttcher ('tub-maker'), Scheffler, and Kübler; Dutch Kuiper and Cuypers; Lithuanian Kubilius; Latvian Mucenieks; Armenian Տակառագործյան; Hungarian Kádár, Bognár and Bodnár; Polish Bednarz, Bednarski, and Bednarczyk; Czech Bednář; Romanian Dogaru and Butnaru; Ukrainian Bondar, Bodnaruk, and Bodnarchuk, and Bondarenko (Бондаренко); Russian and Ukrainian Bondarev (Бондарев) and Bocharov (Бочаров); Yiddish Bodner; Portuguese Tanoeiro and Toneleiro; Spanish Cubero, Tonelero, and (via Greek) Varela; Bulgarian Bachvarov (Бъчваров); Macedonian Bacvarovski (Бачваровски); Croatian Bačvar; Slovene Pintar (from German Binder) and Italian Bottai (from botte).

History edit

Traditionally, a cooper is someone who makes wooden, staved vessels, held together with wooden or metal hoops and possessing flat ends or heads. Examples of a cooper's work include casks, barrels, buckets, tubs, butter churns, vats, hogsheads, firkins, tierces, rundlets, puncheons, pipes, tuns, butts, troughs, pins and breakers. Traditionally, a hooper was the man who fitted the wooden or metal hoops around the barrels or buckets that the cooper had made, essentially an assistant to the cooper. The English name Hooper is derived from that profession. With time, many coopers took on the role of the hooper themselves.

Antiquity edit

 
Cooper's workshop, Roscheider Hof Open Air Museum.

An Egyptian wall-painting in the tomb of Hesy-Ra, dating to 2600 BC, shows a wooden tub made of staves, bound together with wooden hoops, and used to measure.[2] Another Egyptian tomb painting dating to 1900 BC shows a cooper and tubs made of staves in use at the grape harvest.[3] Palm-wood casks were reported in use in ancient Babylon. In Europe, buckets and casks dating to 200 BC have been found preserved in the mud of lake villages.[4] A lake village near Glastonbury dating to the late Iron Age has yielded one complete tub and a number of wooden staves.

The Roman historian Pliny the Elder reports that cooperage in Europe originated with the Gauls in Alpine villages where they stored their beverages in wooden casks bound with hoops. Pliny identified three types of coopers: ordinary coopers, wine coopers and coopers who made large casks.[5] Large casks contained more and longer staves and were correspondingly more difficult to assemble. Roman coopers tended to be independent tradesmen, passing their skills on to their sons. The Greek geographer Strabo records wooden pithoi (casks) were lined with pitch to stop leakage and preserve the wine.[6] Barrels were sometimes used for military purposes. Julius Caesar used catapults to hurl barrels of burning tar into towns under siege to start fires.[7] Empty barrels were sometimes used to make pontoon bridges to cross rivers.

Empty casks were used to line the walls of shallow wells from at least Roman times. Such casks were found in 1897 during archaeological excavation of Roman Silchester in Britain. They were made of Pyrenean silver fir and the staves were one and a half inches thick and featured grooves where the heads fitted. They had Roman numerals scratched on the surface of each stave to help with reassembly.[8]

Middle Ages to today edit

 
Cooper's brands from 1518 as recorded in a civic register from Bozen, South Tyrol.[9]

In Anglo-Saxon Britain wooden barrels were used to store ale, butter, honey and mead. Drinking vessels were also made from small staves of oak, yew or pine. These items required considerable craftsmanship to hold liquids and might be bound with finely worked precious metals. They were highly valued items and were sometimes buried with the dead as grave goods.[10] Churns, buckets and tubs made from staves have been excavated from peat bogs and lake villages in Europe. A large keg and a bucket were found in the Viking Gokstad ship excavated near Oslo Fiord in 1880.

There were four divisions in the cooper's craft. The "dry" or "slack" cooper made containers that would be used to ship dry goods such as cereals, nails, tobacco, fruits, and vegetables. The "dry-tight" cooper made casks designed to keep dry goods in and moisture out. Gunpowder and flour casks are examples of a dry-tight cooper's work. The "white" cooper made straight-staved containers like washtubs, buckets, and butter churns, which would hold water and other liquids but did not allow shipping of the liquids. Usually there was no bending of wood involved in white cooperage. The "wet" or "tight" cooper made casks for long-term storage and transportation of liquids that could even be under pressure, as with beer. The "general" cooper worked on ships, on the docks, in breweries, wineries and distilleries, and in warehouses, and was responsible for cargo while in storage or transit.

 
Coopering of casks on a dock for a whaling ship.

Ships, in the age of sail, provided much work for coopers. They made water and provision casks, the contents of which sustained crew and passengers on long voyages. They also made barrels to contain high-value commodities, such as wine and sugar. The proper stowage of casks on ships about to sail was an important stevedoring skill. Casks of various sizes were used to accommodate the sloping walls of the hull and make maximum use of limited space. Casks also had to be tightly packed, to ensure they did not move during the voyage and endanger the ship, crew and cask contents.[11] Whaling ships in particular, featuring long voyages and large crews, needed many casks – for salted meat, other provisions and water – and to store the whale oil. Sperm whale oil was a particularly difficult substance to contain, due to its highly viscous nature, and oil coopers were perhaps the most skilled tradesmen in pre-industrial cooperage.[12] Whaling ships usually carried a cooper on board, to assemble shooks (disassembled barrels) and maintain casks.[13]

Coopers in Britain started to organise as early as 1298.[14] The Worshipful Company of Coopers is one of the oldest Livery Companies in London. It still survives today although it is now largely a charitable organisation.

Many coopers worked for breweries. They made the large wooden vats in which beer was brewed. They also made the wooden kegs in which the beer was shipped to liquor retailers. Beer kegs had to be particularly strong in order to contain the pressure of the fermenting liquid, and the rough handling they received when transported, sometime over long distances, to pubs where they were rolled into tap-rooms or were lowered into cellars.

Prior to the mid-20th century, the cooper's trade flourished in the United States; a dedicated trade journal was published, the National Cooper's Journal, with advertisements from firms that supplied everything from barrel staves to purpose-built machinery. Plastics, stainless steel, pallets, and corrugated cardboard replaced most wooden containers during the last half of the 20th century, and largely made the cooperage trade obsolete.

In the 21st century, coopers mostly operate barrel-making machinery and assemble casks for the wine and spirits industry. Traditionally, the staves were heated to make them easier to bend. This is still done, but now because the slightly toasted interior of the staves imparts a certain flavour over time to the wine or spirit contents that is much admired by experts. In England, the trade of master cooper is dwindling; but in Scotland there are several active cooperages that provide barrels to the whisky industry. It is thought that the last remaining master cooper in England works for Theakston Brewery in Masham.[15][16][17]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Shorter Oxford English Dictionary. 2002. 5th ed. Vol. 1, A–M. Oxford: Oxford University Press, p. 513.
  2. ^ Kenneth Kilby (1989), The cooper and his trade, Fresno, California, Linden Publishing, p. 91. ISBN 0-941936-16-3
  3. ^ Diane Twede, “The cask age: the technology and history of wooden barrels,” Packaging Technology and Science, 2005, 18, p. 253 [1]
  4. ^ Kilby, p. 93
  5. ^ Kilby, p. 96
  6. ^ Kilby, p. 98
  7. ^ Kilby, p. 99
  8. ^ Kilby, p. 99
  9. ^ Obermair, Hannes (1999), "Das Bozner Stadtbuch: Handschrift 140 – das Amts- und Privilegienbuch der Stadt Bozen", in Stadtarchiv Bozen (ed.), Bozen: von den Grafen von Tirol bis zu den Habsburgern, Forschungen zur Bozner Stadtgeschichte, vol. 1, Bozen-Bolzano: Verlagsanstalt Athesia, pp. 399–432 (415), ISBN 978-88-7014-986-9
  10. ^ Kilby, p.102
  11. ^ Thomas Rothwell Taylor, Stowage of ship cargoes, Government Printing Office, Washington, 1920, p.44.
  12. ^ Mark Howard, “Coopers and casks in the whaling trade, 1800-1850,” The Mariner’s Mirror, 82 (4) November 1996, p.438.
  13. ^ Charles Reichman, "The whaling cooper," The Chronicle of the Early American Industries Association, 41 (4) December 1988, p.75.
  14. ^ The Worshipful Company of Coopers - History
  15. ^ "Visit Theakston Brewery and the Black Bull in Paradise". 9 May 2017.
  16. ^ "England's last master cooper seeks apprentice". The Telegraph. 18 August 2015. from the original on 22 March 2016. Retrieved 23 March 2016.
  17. ^ "Are these England's last traditional craftsmen and women?". BBC News. from the original on 8 July 2015. Retrieved 23 March 2016.

Bibliography edit

  • Coyne, Franklin E. (1941). The development of the cooperage industry in the United States, 1620-1940. Chicago.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Kilby, Kenneth (1971). The cooper and his trade. London. ISBN 9780212983995.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Wagner, J.B. (1910). Cooperage; a treatise on modern shop practice and methods; from the tree to the finished article. Yonkers, NY: Yonkers, N.Y., J. B. Wagner.
  • National cooper's journal, vol. 38

Further reading edit

External links edit

cooper, profession, cooperage, redirects, here, 1976, documentary, film, cooperage, film, other, uses, cooperage, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sour. Cooperage redirects here For 1976 documentary film see Cooperage film For other uses see Cooperage disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Cooper profession news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message A cooper is a person trained to make wooden casks barrels vats buckets tubs troughs and other similar containers from timber staves that were usually heated or steamed to make them pliable Cooper readies or rounds off the end of a barrel using a cooper s hand adze Assembly of a barrel called mise en rose in French Journeymen coopers also traditionally made wooden implements such as rakes and wooden bladed shovels In addition to wood other materials such as iron were used in the manufacturing process The trade is the origin of the surname Cooper Contents 1 Etymology 1 1 As a name 2 History 2 1 Antiquity 2 2 Middle Ages to today 3 See also 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 Further reading 7 External linksEtymology editThe word cooper is derived from Middle Dutch or Middle Low German kuper cooper from kupe cask in turn from Latin cupa tun barrel 1 Everything a cooper produces is referred to collectively as cooperage A cask is any piece of cooperage containing a bouge bilge or bulge in the middle of the container A barrel is a type of cask so the terms barrel maker and barrel making refer to just one aspect of a cooper s work The facility in which casks are made is also referred to as a cooperage As a name edit In much the same way as the trade or vocation of smithing produced the common English surname Smith and the German name Schmidt see occupational surname the cooper trade is also the origin of the English name Cooper It is also the origin of the French Tonnelier and Tonnellier Greek Varelas Barelas Danish Bodker German Binder Fassbender or Fassbinder Fassbinder literally cask binder Bottcher tub maker Scheffler and Kubler Dutch Kuiper and Cuypers Lithuanian Kubilius Latvian Mucenieks Armenian Տակառագործյան Hungarian Kadar Bognar and Bodnar Polish Bednarz Bednarski and Bednarczyk Czech Bednar Romanian Dogaru and Butnaru Ukrainian Bondar Bodnaruk and Bodnarchuk and Bondarenko Bondarenko Russian and Ukrainian Bondarev Bondarev and Bocharov Bocharov Yiddish Bodner Portuguese Tanoeiro and Toneleiro Spanish Cubero Tonelero and via Greek Varela Bulgarian Bachvarov Bchvarov Macedonian Bacvarovski Bachvarovski Croatian Bacvar Slovene Pintar from German Binder and Italian Bottai from botte History editTraditionally a cooper is someone who makes wooden staved vessels held together with wooden or metal hoops and possessing flat ends or heads Examples of a cooper s work include casks barrels buckets tubs butter churns vats hogsheads firkins tierces rundlets puncheons pipes tuns butts troughs pins and breakers Traditionally a hooper was the man who fitted the wooden or metal hoops around the barrels or buckets that the cooper had made essentially an assistant to the cooper The English name Hooper is derived from that profession With time many coopers took on the role of the hooper themselves Antiquity edit nbsp Cooper s workshop Roscheider Hof Open Air Museum An Egyptian wall painting in the tomb of Hesy Ra dating to 2600 BC shows a wooden tub made of staves bound together with wooden hoops and used to measure 2 Another Egyptian tomb painting dating to 1900 BC shows a cooper and tubs made of staves in use at the grape harvest 3 Palm wood casks were reported in use in ancient Babylon In Europe buckets and casks dating to 200 BC have been found preserved in the mud of lake villages 4 A lake village near Glastonbury dating to the late Iron Age has yielded one complete tub and a number of wooden staves The Roman historian Pliny the Elder reports that cooperage in Europe originated with the Gauls in Alpine villages where they stored their beverages in wooden casks bound with hoops Pliny identified three types of coopers ordinary coopers wine coopers and coopers who made large casks 5 Large casks contained more and longer staves and were correspondingly more difficult to assemble Roman coopers tended to be independent tradesmen passing their skills on to their sons The Greek geographer Strabo records wooden pithoi casks were lined with pitch to stop leakage and preserve the wine 6 Barrels were sometimes used for military purposes Julius Caesar used catapults to hurl barrels of burning tar into towns under siege to start fires 7 Empty barrels were sometimes used to make pontoon bridges to cross rivers Empty casks were used to line the walls of shallow wells from at least Roman times Such casks were found in 1897 during archaeological excavation of Roman Silchester in Britain They were made of Pyrenean silver fir and the staves were one and a half inches thick and featured grooves where the heads fitted They had Roman numerals scratched on the surface of each stave to help with reassembly 8 Middle Ages to today edit nbsp Cooper s brands from 1518 as recorded in a civic register from Bozen South Tyrol 9 In Anglo Saxon Britain wooden barrels were used to store ale butter honey and mead Drinking vessels were also made from small staves of oak yew or pine These items required considerable craftsmanship to hold liquids and might be bound with finely worked precious metals They were highly valued items and were sometimes buried with the dead as grave goods 10 Churns buckets and tubs made from staves have been excavated from peat bogs and lake villages in Europe A large keg and a bucket were found in the Viking Gokstad ship excavated near Oslo Fiord in 1880 There were four divisions in the cooper s craft The dry or slack cooper made containers that would be used to ship dry goods such as cereals nails tobacco fruits and vegetables The dry tight cooper made casks designed to keep dry goods in and moisture out Gunpowder and flour casks are examples of a dry tight cooper s work The white cooper made straight staved containers like washtubs buckets and butter churns which would hold water and other liquids but did not allow shipping of the liquids Usually there was no bending of wood involved in white cooperage The wet or tight cooper made casks for long term storage and transportation of liquids that could even be under pressure as with beer The general cooper worked on ships on the docks in breweries wineries and distilleries and in warehouses and was responsible for cargo while in storage or transit nbsp Coopering of casks on a dock for a whaling ship Ships in the age of sail provided much work for coopers They made water and provision casks the contents of which sustained crew and passengers on long voyages They also made barrels to contain high value commodities such as wine and sugar The proper stowage of casks on ships about to sail was an important stevedoring skill Casks of various sizes were used to accommodate the sloping walls of the hull and make maximum use of limited space Casks also had to be tightly packed to ensure they did not move during the voyage and endanger the ship crew and cask contents 11 Whaling ships in particular featuring long voyages and large crews needed many casks for salted meat other provisions and water and to store the whale oil Sperm whale oil was a particularly difficult substance to contain due to its highly viscous nature and oil coopers were perhaps the most skilled tradesmen in pre industrial cooperage 12 Whaling ships usually carried a cooper on board to assemble shooks disassembled barrels and maintain casks 13 Coopers in Britain started to organise as early as 1298 14 The Worshipful Company of Coopers is one of the oldest Livery Companies in London It still survives today although it is now largely a charitable organisation Many coopers worked for breweries They made the large wooden vats in which beer was brewed They also made the wooden kegs in which the beer was shipped to liquor retailers Beer kegs had to be particularly strong in order to contain the pressure of the fermenting liquid and the rough handling they received when transported sometime over long distances to pubs where they were rolled into tap rooms or were lowered into cellars Prior to the mid 20th century the cooper s trade flourished in the United States a dedicated trade journal was published the National Cooper s Journal with advertisements from firms that supplied everything from barrel staves to purpose built machinery Plastics stainless steel pallets and corrugated cardboard replaced most wooden containers during the last half of the 20th century and largely made the cooperage trade obsolete In the 21st century coopers mostly operate barrel making machinery and assemble casks for the wine and spirits industry Traditionally the staves were heated to make them easier to bend This is still done but now because the slightly toasted interior of the staves imparts a certain flavour over time to the wine or spirit contents that is much admired by experts In England the trade of master cooper is dwindling but in Scotland there are several active cooperages that provide barrels to the whisky industry It is thought that the last remaining master cooper in England works for Theakston Brewery in Masham 15 16 17 See also editCoopers DanceReferences edit Shorter Oxford English Dictionary 2002 5th ed Vol 1 A M Oxford Oxford University Press p 513 Kenneth Kilby 1989 The cooper and his trade Fresno California Linden Publishing p 91 ISBN 0 941936 16 3 Diane Twede The cask age the technology and history of wooden barrels Packaging Technology and Science 2005 18 p 253 1 Kilby p 93 Kilby p 96 Kilby p 98 Kilby p 99 Kilby p 99 Obermair Hannes 1999 Das Bozner Stadtbuch Handschrift 140 das Amts und Privilegienbuch der Stadt Bozen in Stadtarchiv Bozen ed Bozen von den Grafen von Tirol bis zu den Habsburgern Forschungen zur Bozner Stadtgeschichte vol 1 Bozen Bolzano Verlagsanstalt Athesia pp 399 432 415 ISBN 978 88 7014 986 9 Kilby p 102 Thomas Rothwell Taylor Stowage of ship cargoes Government Printing Office Washington 1920 p 44 Mark Howard Coopers and casks in the whaling trade 1800 1850 The Mariner s Mirror 82 4 November 1996 p 438 Charles Reichman The whaling cooper The Chronicle of the Early American Industries Association 41 4 December 1988 p 75 The Worshipful Company of Coopers History Visit Theakston Brewery and the Black Bull in Paradise 9 May 2017 England s last master cooper seeks apprentice The Telegraph 18 August 2015 Archived from the original on 22 March 2016 Retrieved 23 March 2016 Are these England s last traditional craftsmen and women BBC News Archived from the original on 8 July 2015 Retrieved 23 March 2016 Bibliography editCoyne Franklin E 1941 The development of the cooperage industry in the United States 1620 1940 Chicago a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Kilby Kenneth 1971 The cooper and his trade London ISBN 9780212983995 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Wagner J B 1910 Cooperage a treatise on modern shop practice and methods from the tree to the finished article Yonkers NY Yonkers N Y J B Wagner National cooper s journal vol 38Further reading editSociety for the Preservation of Beers from the Wood CBC article on England s last master cooperExternal links editJapanese cooper from Kyoto Cooperage Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 7 11th ed 1911 p 82 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cooper profession amp oldid 1180579393, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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