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Oast house

An oast, oast house or hop kiln is a building designed for kilning (drying) hops as part of the brewing process. They can be found in most hop-growing (and former hop-growing) areas and are often good examples of vernacular architecture. Many redundant oasts have been converted into houses. The names oast and oast house are used interchangeably in Kent and Sussex. In Surrey, Hampshire, Herefordshire and Worcestershire they are called hop kilns.

A traditional oast at Frittenden, Kent

They consist of a rectangular one- or two-storey building (the "stowage") and one or more kilns in which the hops were spread out to be dried by hot air rising from a wood or charcoal fire below. The drying floors were thin and perforated to permit the heat to pass through and escape through a cowl in the roof which turned with the wind. The freshly picked hops from the fields were raked in to dry and then raked out to cool before being bagged up and sent to the brewery. The Kentish dialect word kell was sometimes used for kilns ("The oast has three kells") and sometimes to mean the oast itself ("Take this lunchbox to your father, he's working in the kell"). The word oast itself also means "kiln".[1]

The earliest surviving oast house is at Golford, Cranbrook near Tunbridge Wells. It dates from sometime in the 17th century and closely mirrors the first documentary evidence on oasts soon after the introduction of hops into England in the mid-16th century. Early oast houses were simply adapted barns, but, by the 18th century, the distinctive tall buildings with conical roofs had been developed to increase the draught. At first, these were square, but around 1800 roundel kilns were developed in the belief that they were more efficient. Square kilns remained more popular in Herefordshire and Worcestershire and came back into fashion in the southeast in the later 19th century. In the 1930s, the cowls were replaced by louvred openings as electric fans and diesel oil ovens were employed.

Hops are today dried industrially and the many oast houses on farms have now been converted into dwellings. One of the best-preserved oast house complexes is at the Hop Farm Country Park at Beltring.

Hop drying edit

 
Castle Farm, Hadlow, Kent, showing fire damage

The purpose of an oast is to dry hops. This is achieved by the use of a flow of heated air through the kiln, rather than a firing process.

Hops were picked in the hop gardens by gangs of pickers, who worked on a piece work basis and earned a fixed rate per bushel. The green hops were put into large hessian sacks called pokes (in Kent) or green sacks (West Midlands). These would be taken to the oast and brought into the stowage at first floor level. Some oasts had a man-powered hoist for this purpose, consisting of a pulley of some 5 feet (1.52 m) diameter on an axle to which a rope or chain was attached.

The green hops when freshly picked had a moisture content of approximately 80%. This needed to be reduced to 6%, although the moisture content would subsequently rise to 10% during storage.

The green hops were spread out in the kilns. The floors were generally of 1+14-inch (32 mm) square battens nailed at right angles across the joists, placed so that there was a similar gap between each batten, and covered with a horsehair cloth. The hops would be spread some 12 inches (300 mm) deep, the kiln doors closed and the furnace lit. When the hops were judged to be dried, the furnace would be extinguished and the hops removed from the kiln using a scuppet, which was a large wooden framed shovel with a hessian base. The hops would be spread out on the stowage floor to cool, and would then be pressed into large jute sacks called pockets with a hop press. Each pocket contained the produce of about 150 imperial bushels (5,500 L) of green hops. It weighed a hundredweight and a quarter (140 pounds (64 kg)) and was marked with the grower's details, this being required under The Hop (Prevention of Fraud) Act, 1866.

The pockets were then sent to market, where the brewers would buy them and use the dried hops in the beer-making process to add flavour and act as a preservative.

Oasts sometimes caught fire, the damage sometimes being confined to the kilns (Castle Farm, Hadlow), or sometimes leading to the complete destruction of the oast (Stilstead Farm, East Peckham in September 1983, and Parsonage Farm, Bekesbourne in August 1996).[2][3]

Early oasts edit

The earliest description of an oast dates from 1574. It was a small building of 18 feet (5.49 m) by 9 feet (2.74 m) in plan, with walls 9 feet (2.74 m) high. The central furnace was some 6 feet (1.83 m) long, 2 feet 6 inches (760 mm) high and 13 inches (330 mm) internal width. The upper floor was the drying floor, and only some 5 feet (1.52 m) above the ground floor, hops being laid directly on the slatted floor rather than being laid on hessian cloth as was the later practice.[4]

Conversions to oasts edit

 
Oast House at Great Dixter, East Sussex

In many cases, early oasts were adapted from barns or cottages. In 1779, St. Peter's Chapel, Frindsbury was converted to an oast.[5] A chapel at Horton, near Canterbury was also converted.[6] Part of Hastings Priory was serving as an oast in 1823.[7] The gatehouse to the Bishop's Palace, Bosbury, Herefordshire was also converted.[8]

This was done by building a kiln within the building, dividing it into three, the upper floor being used to receive the "green" hops, dry them and press the dried hops. Examples of this type of conversion can be seen at Catt's place, Paddock Wood,[9] and Great Dixter, Northiam.[10]

Later conversions of barns and cottages would be by either building an integral kiln within one end of the building, as seen at Biddenden, Kent,[11] or by adding kilns externally to the existing building, as seen at Barnhill Farm, Hunton,[12] and also at Sutton Valence,[13] or both, as seen at Ightham Mote.[14]

Purpose-built (custom) oasts edit

 
Golford oast.

An agreement for the building of an oast in Flimwell in East Sussex in 1667 gave the size of the building as 30 by 15 feet (9.1 by 4.6 m) and another to be built there was to be built in 1671 being 32 by 16 feet (9.8 by 4.9 m) or 17 feet (5.2 m), having two kilns.[15] The earliest surviving purpose-built oast is at Golford, Cranbrook, built in 1750. This small timber framed oast is 21 by 15 feet (6.4 by 4.6 m) in plan, and has a hipped tiled roof. It has one kiln, and a single cowl on the ridge of the roof.[16]

Traditional oasts edit

 
Oast with octagonal kilns, now house-converted

In the early 19th century, the traditional oast as we now know it started to be built. A two- or three-storey stowage, with between one and eight circular kilns. Kiln sizes generally ranged from 12 feet (3.66 m) to 18 feet (5.49 m) diameter, with a conical roof. Towards the end of the 19th century, square kilns were constructed. These generally ranged in size from 16 feet (4.88 m) to 20 feet (6.10 m) square.[17] An oast at Hawkhurst was built with two octagonal kilns, 15 feet (4.57 m) across the flats.[18]

Modern oasts edit

 
Bell 5, Beltring, built 1935

In the 20th century, oasts reverted to the original form with internal kilns and cowls in the ridge of the roof (Bell 5, Beltring).[19] These oasts were much larger and constructed of modern materials. Oasts were built as late as 1948 (Upper Fowle Hall, Paddock Wood),[20] or 1950 (Hook Green, Lamberhurst).

Very modern oasts bear little resemblance to traditional oasts. These vast buildings can process hops from several farms, as at Norton near Teynham in Kent, built in 1982.[21]

Construction edit

South East edit

Oasts were built of various materials, including bricks, timber, ragstone, and sandstone.[22] Cladding could be timber weatherboards, corrugated iron or asbestos sheet.[23]

Stowage

Many oasts were timber-framed buildings,[24] although some were built entirely in brick, or ragstone if this was available locally.[18] Some oasts were entirely brick except the front and floors, which were timber.[25]

Kilns

Internal kilns were built of timber or bricks.[24] External kilns were built from bricks, ragstone and bricks, flint, or sandstone.[22] A rare material usage was at Tilden Farm, Headcorn where the kiln was built from Bethersden Marble.[citation needed] During the Second World War, a few kilns were built with a basic timber framing and clad in corrugated iron (Crittenden Farm, Matfield).[24]

Kiln roofs

Kiln roofs, where the kiln was external, were generally built of a timber frame and covered in either peg tiles or slate.[26] Some oasts had conical kiln roofs built of brick, these were covered in tar or pitch to keep them weatherproof.[27] A few oasts had square kilns with brick roofs, again covered in tar or pitch.[28] The top of the roof was open, and carried a cowl or louvred vent.[29]

West Midlands edit

Oasts were generally built of bricks or local stone.

Stowage

Bricks were the usual material for building the stowage, wood only being used in floors. Stone was sometimes used too (Madley).[30] Some oasts had a cider mill on the ground floor of the stowage (Little Cowarne Court, Little Cowarne).[31]

Kilns
 
Oast at Munderfield, Herefordshire

Bricks were the usual material for building kilns. Stone was also used.[32]

Kiln roofs

Kiln roofs could be of timber, clad in tiles or slate, or bricks. Brick kiln roofs could be tarred (Little Cowarne Court, Bromyard) or left bare (The Farm, Brockhampton).[33] The roofs would be topped with a cowl (Upper Lyde Farm, Pipe-cum-Lyde),[34] or a ridge ventilator (Kidley, Acton Beauchamp).[35]

Locations edit

Oasts can be found in the UK and abroad.

South East England edit

Oasts are generally associated with Kent, and the oasthouse is a symbol associated with the county. They are also found in Sussex, Surrey and Hampshire.

West Midlands edit

In the West Midlands, the main hop-growing areas are Worcestershire, Herefordshire and Gloucestershire. In Worcestershire and Herefordshire oast houses were known as hop kilns.

Europe edit

 
This building in Spalt, Germany was used for drying hops.

In Belgium, the main hop growing area is around Poperinghe and Ypres, West Flanders. Hops are also grown across the border in Nord, France. Hops are also grown around Aelst, north west of Brussels.[36] Apart from Nord, the main hop growing area in France is around Haguenau, Bas-Rhin and around Dijon and Bèze, Côte-d'Or.[37]

In Germany, hops are grown around Tettnang, Baden-Württemberg; around Hallertau, Hersbruck, Illschwang and Spalt, Bavaria.[38] In the Czech Republic hops are grown around Roudnice, Hradec Králové Region and around Úštěk and Žatec, Ústí nad Labem Region. They are also grown around Olomouc, Olomouc Region. In Slovakia, hops are grown around Trenčín, Trenčín Region. Hops are also grown in Poland and Russia.[39]

Australia edit

See also John Terry
 
Oast houses in New Norfolk, Tasmania

Oast houses are often called hop kilns in Australia. Tasmania is a major hop-growing area, as were parts of Victoria. During the 19th century, some of the Kentish hop growers emigrated, and took hops with them. Initially, Tasmanian oasts were converted from existing buildings (New Norfolk, Ranelagh) but later purpose-built oasts were built (Valley Field, Bushy Park). These oasts had louvred ventilators instead of a cowl. The New Norfolk oast was converted from a watermill and is now a museum. Another location that has oasts was Tyenna. A modern oast of 400 by 200 feet (120 by 60 m) was built at Bushy Park in 1982.[40][41]

Conversion edit

With the increasing mechanisation of the hop-picking process, many oasts fell into disuse. Some were demolished and others became derelict. Increasing demand for housing has led to many oasts being converted into houses. Local councils nowadays are generally much stricter on the aesthetics of the conversions than was the case before the planning law came into being. Often kiln roofs have to be rebuilt, and cowls provided on converted oasts.[42]

The earliest example of an oast being converted to a house is Millar's Farm oast, Meopham, which was house-converted in 1903 by Sir Philip Waterlow.[43]

Other conversions of oasts for non-residential purposes include a theatre (Oast Theatre, Tonbridge,[44] Oast house Theatre Rainham), a Youth Hostel (Capstone Farm, Chatham,[45] another at Lady Margaret Manor, Doddington – now a residential centre for people with learning difficulties),[46] a school (Sturry),[citation needed] a bakery (Chartham),[44] a visitor centre (Bough Beech reservoir),[47] offices (Tatlingbury Farm, Five Oak Green),[48] and a museum (Kent Museum of Rural Life, Sandling,[49] Preston Street, Faversham,[47] Wye College, Wye,[50] and the former Whitbread Hop Farm at Beltring).[47]

The National Trust owns an oast at Outridge, near Brasted Chart, which has very rare octagonal cowls,[51] one at Castle Farm, Sissinghurst, converted to tea rooms,[52] and another at Batemans, Burwash which has been converted to a shop, with the cowl being replaced by a dovecot.[53]

Fake oasts edit

In recent years, a number of buildings have been erected to look as though they were oasts, although in fact, that is not the case.[54] Examples of this are:

See also edit

  • Malthouse - a similarly cowled building used for sprouting barley to make malt, also an ingredient in beer making.
  • Chunche - a building for drying raisins (using the natural hot dry wind) in Xinjiang, China.

References edit

  1. ^ Oxford English Dictionary
  2. ^ Walton 1984, p. 110.
  3. ^ Walton & Walton 1998, p. 163.
  4. ^ Walton 1984, pp. 5–6.
  5. ^ Coles Finch 1925, p. 248.
  6. ^ Jerrold 1907, p. 40.
  7. ^ Jones & Bell 1992, p. frontispiece.
  8. ^ Grattan 2021, p. 33.
  9. ^ Walton 1984, p. 44.
  10. ^ Walton 1984, p. 14, 76-77.
  11. ^ Walton 1984, p. 42.
  12. ^ Walton 1984, p. 43.
  13. ^ Jones & Bell 1992, pp. 28–29.
  14. ^ Grattan 2021, p. 119.
  15. ^ Jones & Bell 1992, pp. 20–21.
  16. ^ Walton 1984, p. 45.
  17. ^ Walton 1984, p. 8.
  18. ^ a b Walton 1984, p. 55.
  19. ^ Grattan 2021, p. 157.
  20. ^ Walton 1984, pp. 114.
  21. ^ Walton 1984, p. 116.
  22. ^ a b Walton 1984, p. 13, 15, 18.
  23. ^ Walton 1984, pp. 8, 11, 13.
  24. ^ a b c Walton 1984, p. 13.
  25. ^ Walton 1984, p. 11.
  26. ^ Walton 1984, pp. 22–23.
  27. ^ Walton 1984, p. 25.
  28. ^ Walton 1984, p. 26.
  29. ^ Walton 1984, p. 27.
  30. ^ Hopkinson 1988, p. 87, 100.
  31. ^ Hopkinson 1988, pp. 90–91.
  32. ^ Hopkinson 1988, p. 91, 97.
  33. ^ Hopkinson 1988, pp. 91–92.
  34. ^ Hopkinson 1988, p. 86.
  35. ^ Hopkinson 1988, p. 93.
  36. ^ Grattan 2021, pp. 132–34.
  37. ^ Grattan 2021, p. 135-37.
  38. ^ Grattan 2021, p. 137-39.
  39. ^ Grattan 2021, pp. 137, 139–41.
  40. ^ Walton & Walton 1998, pp. 183–87.
  41. ^ "Places to Visit – The Oast House Hop Museum, New Norfolk". newnorfolk.org.
  42. ^ Walton 1984, p. 103.
  43. ^ Walton 1984, p. 105.
  44. ^ a b Walton 1984, p. 106.
  45. ^ Rutter, Clem (25 January 2008). "ChathamCapstone". Wikimedia Commons. Retrieved 11 April 2022.
  46. ^ "Doddington Historic Buildings: No. 13 Lady Margaret Manor". doddington-kent.org.uk.
  47. ^ a b c Walton 1984, p. 107.
  48. ^ Oast House Archive (March 2003). "TQ6345: Tatlingbury Oast, Five Oak Green Road, Five Oak Green, Kent – During conversion to offices". www.geograph.org.uk.
  49. ^ Walton 1984, p. 108.
  50. ^ Walton 1984, pp. 48, 106.
  51. ^ Walton 1984, p. 56.
  52. ^ Walton 1984, p. 109.
  53. ^ White, Richard (1 May 2005). "Out building at Batemans". flickr.com.
  54. ^ Walton & Walton 1998, p. 182.
  55. ^ Kiss, Miklos (5 March 2006). "Remains of a pub, North Harrow". flickr.com/photos/thesixthland/.

Sources edit

  • Filmer, Richard (1982). Hops and Hop Picking. Princes Risborough, Aylesbury: Shire Publication Ltd. ISBN 0-85263-617-2.
  • Grattan, Patrick (2021). Oasts and Hop Kilns, a History. Liverpool and Swindon: Liverpool University Press for Historic England. ISBN 978-1-78962-251-5.
  • Hopkinson, Jean (1988). A Pocketful of Hops. Bromyard: Bromyard Local History Society. ISBN 0-9502068-4-9.
  • Walton, R; Walton, I (1998). Kentish Oasts. Burnt Mill, Egerton: Christine Swift. ISBN 0-9506977-7-X.
  • Walton, Robin (1984). Oasts in Kent. Maidstone: Christine Swift. ISBN 0-9506977-3-7.
  • Jerrold, Walter (1907). Highways and Byways in Kent. London: Macmillan.
  • Jones; Bell (1992). Oasthouses in Sussex and Kent. Chichester: Phillimore. ISBN 0-85033-818-2.
  • Coles Finch, William (1925). In Kentish Pilgrim Land. London: C W Daniel.

External links edit

  • Geograph Oasthouse Article Comprehensive online article on Oasts and photo-record of Oasts
  • Earth Terminal Recording Studio An Oast House converted into a music recording studio in Hampshire.
  • Tonbridge Oast Theatre website.
  • Oasthouse Theatre Rainham Oast Theatre website
  • Are oasts icons?
  • About oasts
  • Sites & Monuments Record (SMR) Herefordshire oasts.
  • An oast in Herefordshire.
  • SMR hop picking & oasts in Herefordshire.
  • Hop Museum Hopfenmuseum Tettnang website German
  • American Hop Museum American Hop Museum website.
  • Invectis Hop Gardens, Oast Houses & Farming, hopper huts are illustrated.
  • how an oast works An interactive game showing an oast at work.
  • Oast and hop kiln history website.

oast, house, oast, oast, house, kiln, building, designed, kilning, drying, hops, part, brewing, process, they, found, most, growing, former, growing, areas, often, good, examples, vernacular, architecture, many, redundant, oasts, have, been, converted, into, h. An oast oast house or hop kiln is a building designed for kilning drying hops as part of the brewing process They can be found in most hop growing and former hop growing areas and are often good examples of vernacular architecture Many redundant oasts have been converted into houses The names oast and oast house are used interchangeably in Kent and Sussex In Surrey Hampshire Herefordshire and Worcestershire they are called hop kilns A traditional oast at Frittenden KentThey consist of a rectangular one or two storey building the stowage and one or more kilns in which the hops were spread out to be dried by hot air rising from a wood or charcoal fire below The drying floors were thin and perforated to permit the heat to pass through and escape through a cowl in the roof which turned with the wind The freshly picked hops from the fields were raked in to dry and then raked out to cool before being bagged up and sent to the brewery The Kentish dialect word kell was sometimes used for kilns The oast has three kells and sometimes to mean the oast itself Take this lunchbox to your father he s working in the kell The word oast itself also means kiln 1 The earliest surviving oast house is at Golford Cranbrook near Tunbridge Wells It dates from sometime in the 17th century and closely mirrors the first documentary evidence on oasts soon after the introduction of hops into England in the mid 16th century Early oast houses were simply adapted barns but by the 18th century the distinctive tall buildings with conical roofs had been developed to increase the draught At first these were square but around 1800 roundel kilns were developed in the belief that they were more efficient Square kilns remained more popular in Herefordshire and Worcestershire and came back into fashion in the southeast in the later 19th century In the 1930s the cowls were replaced by louvred openings as electric fans and diesel oil ovens were employed Hops are today dried industrially and the many oast houses on farms have now been converted into dwellings One of the best preserved oast house complexes is at the Hop Farm Country Park at Beltring Contents 1 Hop drying 2 Early oasts 2 1 Conversions to oasts 2 2 Purpose built custom oasts 3 Traditional oasts 4 Modern oasts 5 Construction 5 1 South East 5 2 West Midlands 6 Locations 6 1 South East England 6 2 West Midlands 6 3 Europe 6 4 Australia 7 Conversion 7 1 Fake oasts 8 See also 9 References 10 Sources 11 External linksHop drying edit nbsp Castle Farm Hadlow Kent showing fire damageThe purpose of an oast is to dry hops This is achieved by the use of a flow of heated air through the kiln rather than a firing process Hops were picked in the hop gardens by gangs of pickers who worked on a piece work basis and earned a fixed rate per bushel The green hops were put into large hessian sacks called pokes in Kent or green sacks West Midlands These would be taken to the oast and brought into the stowage at first floor level Some oasts had a man powered hoist for this purpose consisting of a pulley of some 5 feet 1 52 m diameter on an axle to which a rope or chain was attached The green hops when freshly picked had a moisture content of approximately 80 This needed to be reduced to 6 although the moisture content would subsequently rise to 10 during storage The green hops were spread out in the kilns The floors were generally of 1 1 4 inch 32 mm square battens nailed at right angles across the joists placed so that there was a similar gap between each batten and covered with a horsehair cloth The hops would be spread some 12 inches 300 mm deep the kiln doors closed and the furnace lit When the hops were judged to be dried the furnace would be extinguished and the hops removed from the kiln using a scuppet which was a large wooden framed shovel with a hessian base The hops would be spread out on the stowage floor to cool and would then be pressed into large jute sacks called pockets with a hop press Each pocket contained the produce of about 150 imperial bushels 5 500 L of green hops It weighed a hundredweight and a quarter 140 pounds 64 kg and was marked with the grower s details this being required under The Hop Prevention of Fraud Act 1866 The pockets were then sent to market where the brewers would buy them and use the dried hops in the beer making process to add flavour and act as a preservative Oasts sometimes caught fire the damage sometimes being confined to the kilns Castle Farm Hadlow or sometimes leading to the complete destruction of the oast Stilstead Farm East Peckham in September 1983 and Parsonage Farm Bekesbourne in August 1996 2 3 Early oasts editThe earliest description of an oast dates from 1574 It was a small building of 18 feet 5 49 m by 9 feet 2 74 m in plan with walls 9 feet 2 74 m high The central furnace was some 6 feet 1 83 m long 2 feet 6 inches 760 mm high and 13 inches 330 mm internal width The upper floor was the drying floor and only some 5 feet 1 52 m above the ground floor hops being laid directly on the slatted floor rather than being laid on hessian cloth as was the later practice 4 Conversions to oasts edit nbsp Oast House at Great Dixter East SussexIn many cases early oasts were adapted from barns or cottages In 1779 St Peter s Chapel Frindsbury was converted to an oast 5 A chapel at Horton near Canterbury was also converted 6 Part of Hastings Priory was serving as an oast in 1823 7 The gatehouse to the Bishop s Palace Bosbury Herefordshire was also converted 8 This was done by building a kiln within the building dividing it into three the upper floor being used to receive the green hops dry them and press the dried hops Examples of this type of conversion can be seen at Catt s place Paddock Wood 9 and Great Dixter Northiam 10 Later conversions of barns and cottages would be by either building an integral kiln within one end of the building as seen at Biddenden Kent 11 or by adding kilns externally to the existing building as seen at Barnhill Farm Hunton 12 and also at Sutton Valence 13 or both as seen at Ightham Mote 14 Purpose built custom oasts edit nbsp Golford oast An agreement for the building of an oast in Flimwell in East Sussex in 1667 gave the size of the building as 30 by 15 feet 9 1 by 4 6 m and another to be built there was to be built in 1671 being 32 by 16 feet 9 8 by 4 9 m or 17 feet 5 2 m having two kilns 15 The earliest surviving purpose built oast is at Golford Cranbrook built in 1750 This small timber framed oast is 21 by 15 feet 6 4 by 4 6 m in plan and has a hipped tiled roof It has one kiln and a single cowl on the ridge of the roof 16 Traditional oasts edit nbsp Oast with octagonal kilns now house convertedIn the early 19th century the traditional oast as we now know it started to be built A two or three storey stowage with between one and eight circular kilns Kiln sizes generally ranged from 12 feet 3 66 m to 18 feet 5 49 m diameter with a conical roof Towards the end of the 19th century square kilns were constructed These generally ranged in size from 16 feet 4 88 m to 20 feet 6 10 m square 17 An oast at Hawkhurst was built with two octagonal kilns 15 feet 4 57 m across the flats 18 Modern oasts edit nbsp Bell 5 Beltring built 1935In the 20th century oasts reverted to the original form with internal kilns and cowls in the ridge of the roof Bell 5 Beltring 19 These oasts were much larger and constructed of modern materials Oasts were built as late as 1948 Upper Fowle Hall Paddock Wood 20 or 1950 Hook Green Lamberhurst Very modern oasts bear little resemblance to traditional oasts These vast buildings can process hops from several farms as at Norton near Teynham in Kent built in 1982 21 Construction editSouth East edit Oasts were built of various materials including bricks timber ragstone and sandstone 22 Cladding could be timber weatherboards corrugated iron or asbestos sheet 23 StowageMany oasts were timber framed buildings 24 although some were built entirely in brick or ragstone if this was available locally 18 Some oasts were entirely brick except the front and floors which were timber 25 KilnsInternal kilns were built of timber or bricks 24 External kilns were built from bricks ragstone and bricks flint or sandstone 22 A rare material usage was at Tilden Farm Headcorn where the kiln was built from Bethersden Marble citation needed During the Second World War a few kilns were built with a basic timber framing and clad in corrugated iron Crittenden Farm Matfield 24 Kiln roofsKiln roofs where the kiln was external were generally built of a timber frame and covered in either peg tiles or slate 26 Some oasts had conical kiln roofs built of brick these were covered in tar or pitch to keep them weatherproof 27 A few oasts had square kilns with brick roofs again covered in tar or pitch 28 The top of the roof was open and carried a cowl or louvred vent 29 West Midlands edit Oasts were generally built of bricks or local stone StowageBricks were the usual material for building the stowage wood only being used in floors Stone was sometimes used too Madley 30 Some oasts had a cider mill on the ground floor of the stowage Little Cowarne Court Little Cowarne 31 Kilns nbsp Oast at Munderfield HerefordshireBricks were the usual material for building kilns Stone was also used 32 Kiln roofsKiln roofs could be of timber clad in tiles or slate or bricks Brick kiln roofs could be tarred Little Cowarne Court Bromyard or left bare The Farm Brockhampton 33 The roofs would be topped with a cowl Upper Lyde Farm Pipe cum Lyde 34 or a ridge ventilator Kidley Acton Beauchamp 35 Locations editOasts can be found in the UK and abroad South East England edit Oasts are generally associated with Kent and the oasthouse is a symbol associated with the county They are also found in Sussex Surrey and Hampshire West Midlands edit In the West Midlands the main hop growing areas are Worcestershire Herefordshire and Gloucestershire In Worcestershire and Herefordshire oast houses were known as hop kilns Europe edit nbsp This building in Spalt Germany was used for drying hops In Belgium the main hop growing area is around Poperinghe and Ypres West Flanders Hops are also grown across the border in Nord France Hops are also grown around Aelst north west of Brussels 36 Apart from Nord the main hop growing area in France is around Haguenau Bas Rhin and around Dijon and Beze Cote d Or 37 In Germany hops are grown around Tettnang Baden Wurttemberg around Hallertau Hersbruck Illschwang and Spalt Bavaria 38 In the Czech Republic hops are grown around Roudnice Hradec Kralove Region and around Ustek and Zatec Usti nad Labem Region They are also grown around Olomouc Olomouc Region In Slovakia hops are grown around Trencin Trencin Region Hops are also grown in Poland and Russia 39 Australia edit See also John Terry nbsp Oast houses in New Norfolk TasmaniaOast houses are often called hop kilns in Australia Tasmania is a major hop growing area as were parts of Victoria During the 19th century some of the Kentish hop growers emigrated and took hops with them Initially Tasmanian oasts were converted from existing buildings New Norfolk Ranelagh but later purpose built oasts were built Valley Field Bushy Park These oasts had louvred ventilators instead of a cowl The New Norfolk oast was converted from a watermill and is now a museum Another location that has oasts was Tyenna A modern oast of 400 by 200 feet 120 by 60 m was built at Bushy Park in 1982 40 41 Conversion editWith the increasing mechanisation of the hop picking process many oasts fell into disuse Some were demolished and others became derelict Increasing demand for housing has led to many oasts being converted into houses Local councils nowadays are generally much stricter on the aesthetics of the conversions than was the case before the planning law came into being Often kiln roofs have to be rebuilt and cowls provided on converted oasts 42 The earliest example of an oast being converted to a house is Millar s Farm oast Meopham which was house converted in 1903 by Sir Philip Waterlow 43 Other conversions of oasts for non residential purposes include a theatre Oast Theatre Tonbridge 44 Oast house Theatre Rainham a Youth Hostel Capstone Farm Chatham 45 another at Lady Margaret Manor Doddington now a residential centre for people with learning difficulties 46 a school Sturry citation needed a bakery Chartham 44 a visitor centre Bough Beech reservoir 47 offices Tatlingbury Farm Five Oak Green 48 and a museum Kent Museum of Rural Life Sandling 49 Preston Street Faversham 47 Wye College Wye 50 and the former Whitbread Hop Farm at Beltring 47 The National Trust owns an oast at Outridge near Brasted Chart which has very rare octagonal cowls 51 one at Castle Farm Sissinghurst converted to tea rooms 52 and another at Batemans Burwash which has been converted to a shop with the cowl being replaced by a dovecot 53 Fake oasts edit In recent years a number of buildings have been erected to look as though they were oasts although in fact that is not the case 54 Examples of this are Early Bird public house Grove Green Maidstone Harrietsham a group of offices The Oast House public house Normanton The Oast House public house Manchester Langley Court Beckenham built by the Wellcome Foundation now part of Glaxo Wellcome Caring Kent Houses built in the form of oasts South Harrow London a pub built in the form of an oast now demolished and rebuilt as part of new housing 55 nbsp Oast House in Tudeley Kent now in residential use nbsp Millar s Farm Meopham nbsp Castle Farm oast Sissinghurst nbsp Fake oast at Harrietsham nbsp Oast Theatre TonbridgeSee also editMalthouse a similarly cowled building used for sprouting barley to make malt also an ingredient in beer making Chunche a building for drying raisins using the natural hot dry wind in Xinjiang China References edit Oxford English Dictionary Walton 1984 p 110 Walton amp Walton 1998 p 163 Walton 1984 pp 5 6 Coles Finch 1925 p 248 Jerrold 1907 p 40 Jones amp Bell 1992 p frontispiece Grattan 2021 p 33 Walton 1984 p 44 Walton 1984 p 14 76 77 Walton 1984 p 42 Walton 1984 p 43 Jones amp Bell 1992 pp 28 29 Grattan 2021 p 119 Jones amp Bell 1992 pp 20 21 Walton 1984 p 45 Walton 1984 p 8 a b Walton 1984 p 55 Grattan 2021 p 157 Walton 1984 pp 114 Walton 1984 p 116 a b Walton 1984 p 13 15 18 Walton 1984 pp 8 11 13 a b c Walton 1984 p 13 Walton 1984 p 11 Walton 1984 pp 22 23 Walton 1984 p 25 Walton 1984 p 26 Walton 1984 p 27 Hopkinson 1988 p 87 100 Hopkinson 1988 pp 90 91 Hopkinson 1988 p 91 97 Hopkinson 1988 pp 91 92 Hopkinson 1988 p 86 Hopkinson 1988 p 93 Grattan 2021 pp 132 34 Grattan 2021 p 135 37 Grattan 2021 p 137 39 Grattan 2021 pp 137 139 41 Walton amp Walton 1998 pp 183 87 Places to Visit The Oast House Hop Museum New Norfolk newnorfolk org Walton 1984 p 103 Walton 1984 p 105 a b Walton 1984 p 106 Rutter Clem 25 January 2008 ChathamCapstone Wikimedia Commons Retrieved 11 April 2022 Doddington Historic Buildings No 13 Lady Margaret Manor doddington kent org uk a b c Walton 1984 p 107 Oast House Archive March 2003 TQ6345 Tatlingbury Oast Five Oak Green Road Five Oak Green Kent During conversion to offices www geograph org uk Walton 1984 p 108 Walton 1984 pp 48 106 Walton 1984 p 56 Walton 1984 p 109 White Richard 1 May 2005 Out building at Batemans flickr com Walton amp Walton 1998 p 182 Kiss Miklos 5 March 2006 Remains of a pub North Harrow flickr com photos thesixthland Sources editFilmer Richard 1982 Hops and Hop Picking Princes Risborough Aylesbury Shire Publication Ltd ISBN 0 85263 617 2 Grattan Patrick 2021 Oasts and Hop Kilns a History Liverpool and Swindon Liverpool University Press for Historic England ISBN 978 1 78962 251 5 Hopkinson Jean 1988 A Pocketful of Hops Bromyard Bromyard Local History Society ISBN 0 9502068 4 9 Walton R Walton I 1998 Kentish Oasts Burnt Mill Egerton Christine Swift ISBN 0 9506977 7 X Walton Robin 1984 Oasts in Kent Maidstone Christine Swift ISBN 0 9506977 3 7 Jerrold Walter 1907 Highways and Byways in Kent London Macmillan Jones Bell 1992 Oasthouses in Sussex and Kent Chichester Phillimore ISBN 0 85033 818 2 Coles Finch William 1925 In Kentish Pilgrim Land London C W Daniel External links edit nbsp Look up oast in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hop kilns Geograph Oasthouse Article Comprehensive online article on Oasts and photo record of Oasts Earth Terminal Recording Studio An Oast House converted into a music recording studio in Hampshire Oast Theatre Tonbridge Oast Theatre website Oasthouse Theatre Rainham Oast Theatre website Icons Are oasts icons Town Wards About oasts Sites amp Monuments Record SMR Herefordshire oasts Donnington An oast in Herefordshire SMR hop picking amp oasts in Herefordshire Hop Museum Hopfenmuseum Tettnang website German American Hop Museum American Hop Museum website Invectis Hop Gardens Oast Houses amp Farming hopper huts are illustrated how an oast works An interactive game showing an oast at work Oast and hop kiln history website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oast house amp oldid 1165514828, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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