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As part of the Naval Stores
Industry the Longleaf Pine Tree was Tapped for its Sticky Resin
(bolded words in text indicate key words
and concepts)
Student
Information:
Similar to how maple is tapped from maple trees in the Northeastern
United States, thick sticky resin was also drawn off the longleaf
pine tree. However, unlike sweet maple syrup, the resins scraped
off the longleaf pine tree were used in thousands of non-edible
products from waterproofing ships, to medicines, or as paint thinner.
Teacher Information:
In the early decades of the twentieth century, the longleaf pine
region was responsible for producing 70 percent of the world's supply
of naval stores-the collective name for products such as tar,
pitch, spirits of turpentine
and rosin obtained from the
pine tree. A century earlier, the dominance of North Carolina in
the production of turpentine earned it the title of Tarheel State
(for the black gummy tar that would accumulate on the bare feet
of workers). It was the highly resinous wood (often called fatwood
or lightwood) of the longleaf
pine tree that made it so desirable and sparked the naval stores
industry throughout much of the south. The term naval
stores was originally applied to the pitch and tar needed
for caulking wooden ship planks
and waterproofing canvas sails of the seagoing vessels of the Royal
British Navy in the seventeenth century. As the industry evolved,
the distillation of fatwood shifted to the processing of pine gum
(oleoresin) extracted from the living pine tree. Around 1850, the
production of gum turpentine peaked in North Carolina and began
to spread southward through the longleaf pine belt as northerly
forest were exhausted. In fact, the movement of many families in
the South can be traced the naval stores industry.
Gum from the pine tree was distilled into rosin
and spirits of
turpentine in what has been described by many as "oversized
liquor still". The collection and processing of pine gum was
a year round ordeal and often required a large work force. Laborers
would work their way from tree to tree chipping shallow gutters
(called streaks) into the fresh wood of the tree face with a tool
called a hack. This cut face
and aluminum gutters nailed to the tree would direct the gum down
into a "box" that
was notched at the bottom of the tree by a broad axe. However, these
boxes were often very destructive-essentially girdling the tree
at its base. In the early years of the twentieth century, technology
improvements allowed gum to be collected in clay or metal cups hung
from the tree by a nail. The cut faces were sometimes called "catfaces".
A squad of workers traveled from tree to tree dipping
gum from the cups or scraping the gum from the tree face (called
scrape) and depositing it into
barrels. When a worker finished his task on a tree, he would sing
out a particular name he had chosen for himself. A talleyman
would record this song with a dot. The number of dots determined
a worker's pay. Barrels of gum were hauled to a nearby distillery
and refined. All operations were overseen by the mounted "wood's
rider".
Key Words and Concepts (click
on for glossary definition): box
cut, catface,
caulking,
dipping,
distill,
fatwood,
hack,
lightwood,
naval
stores, rosin,
scrape,
spirits
of turpentine, talleyman,
tar,
turpentine,
wood's
rider.
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