A previous post on 'Rolling Roads' HERE showed one way of transporting large hogsheads of tobacco to Elk-ridge and other ports. In addition to 'rolling in hoops' by hand, the large barrels were pulled by horses, put in wagons, in 'upland boats' or on two canoes.
Monday, August 28, 2017
Monday, August 21, 2017
Willow harvesting in Elkridge for baskets and furniture
Maryland was the second largest producer (NY first) of basket willow and third in
consumption (behind NY, MA), in 1919, to make willow furniture and baskets for
sale in the region. Willow cuttings (not tree, more a bush) were planted in rows, cut, sized, put in pits with a couple inches of water, put through the brakes, then peeled, dried on racks and bundled ready to ship.
Monday, August 14, 2017
Monday, August 7, 2017
Ellicott mills in 1805
"1805 8th Month, 3d. This evening I visited Ellicott's Mills, in company with J. T. and his wife. The overseer of these mills informed me they could grind and pack 300 barrels of flour per day. A barrel being 196lbs. or 14st. the annual returns, at 3s. per stone, would be nearly 200,000L. The stones were 7 feet in diameter."
Tuesday, August 1, 2017
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, strike, Vinegar Hill, gondola cars - Randolph Brandt Latimer remembers
Randolph B. Latimer (1821-1903) began working at age 15 in the B & O
Railroad engineering department, then started a store Randolph & Latimer
and flour commission. His father ran a stage line between Baltimore and Washington city.
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