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NGE >> Business and Industry >> Industry >> Timber >> Naval Stores Industry |
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Naval Stores Industry In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Georgia was the world's leading producer of naval stores,
The naval stores industry in North America originated in the mid-eighteenth century in North Carolina. Before 1800 the major products of the trade were raw gum, pitch, and tar. After the American Revolution (1775-83), processes were developed for distilling spirits of turpentine from gum. By 1850, 96 percent of U.S. naval stores came from North Carolina. In the early 1870s North Carolina naval stores producers began migrating to southeast Georgia's sandy coastal plain to take advantage of the untapped virgin pine forests in that region. They brought their equipment and black laborers and established residential villages on large turpentine farms. By the mid-1880s about seven in ten turpentine workers in southeast Georgia had been born in North Carolina. The industry grew so rapidly that by 1890 Georgia was the national leader in naval stores production, a ranking that lasted until 1905. Florida was the leader from 1905 to 1923, after which Georgia regained its predominance and maintained it until the 1960s. Reliable labor was important to any successful naval stores operation. At the top of the turpentine farm hierarchy were a superintendent and a woodsrider, who coordinated the work of the laborers who boxed pine trees and chipped and dipped the pine gum. Other workers operated the turpentine distilleries, while coopers made the barrels to transport rosin and turpentine, and teamsters transported the products to the markets. The superintendent and woodsrider were usually white men, while the majority of the laborers, called woodsmen, were African American. Turpentiners'
Crude turpentine was distilled throughout the eight-month dipping season. A crop might produce as much as 83,000 pounds of crude turpentine during the first two years of harvesting. Longleaf yellow pine and slash pine produced the highest grade of turpentine. The distillation process began with log fires heating the turpentine still, while the stiller and his crew charged a copper kettle with five to eight barrels of gum. Each barrel of crude dip produced six to seven gallons of spirits of turpentine. The remaining rosin, which formed a hot residue at the bottom of the kettle, drained through a mesh into a vat and was then ladled into barrels. The peak of distilling activity occurred in the summer, when the flow of gum was greatest. Accidental fires at the stills were frequent and often seriously injured the workers. After
By 1900 the Georgia turpentine industry began to decline as the primitive harvesting methods continued to damage and destroy pine trees. At that time University of Georgia chemist Charles Herty revolutionized turpentine production by designing a clay pot known as the Herty cup, which could be suspended from a nail in the tree. This allowed shallower tree cuts to be made above the cup. Gum dripped into metal gutters tacked to the tree, and then flowed into the cup. The Herty cup-and-gutter system was patented in 1902 and quickly replaced the more primitive box method of resin collection. The turpentine industry saw renewed productivity, and Georgia regained its leading
Small-scale production of naval stores declined after 1940 due to rising competition from large chemical companies and the lack of innovation by small producers. New methods introduced in the 1930s modernized turpentine production, primarily through large-scale steam distillation processes and the vapor-condensation process, which produced sulfate turpentine. By the 1960s the small-scale production of naval stores in Georgia was very limited. Suggested Reading Carroll B. Butler, Treasures of the Longleaf Pines: Naval Stores (Shalimar, Fla.: Tarkel Publishing, 1998). Robert B. Outland III, Tapping the Pines: The Naval Stores Industry in the American South (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2004). Kenneth H. Thomas Jr., McCranie's Turpentine Still, Atkinson County , Georgia : A Historical Analysis of the Site, with Some Information on the Naval Stores Industry in Georgia and Elsewhere ([Athens]: Institute of Community and Area Development, University of Georgia, [1976]). Buddy Sullivan, Sapelo Island National Estuarine Research Reserve Published 8/4/2006 |
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