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- Collector Jim Ross favours collectible
logging tools
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- By Jim Ross
- In this article, I would like to discuss logging and forestry
tools and log building tools.
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- Why?
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- Because they are my favorite. About 35 years ago, I used
some of them in building my own log cabin. I also had to dismantle
an old, fallen-down barn made with hewn timbers.
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- I have to confess, though: (a) I really didn't know what
I was doing - but I learned; (b) I used a chain saw and other
labour-saving devices for many tasks; (c) I gained a great deal
of respect for the loggers and builders of 150 years ago.
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- I must have done something right as my cabin in still standing.
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- Crosscut saw
- So let's start with the crosscut saw. Until about 125 years
ago, the big two-man crosscuts were not widely used as lumbering
tools. They were used mainly for bucking (i.e. for cutting felled
trees into manageable logs). That is because their design left
something to be desired - they would bind in the felling process
(cutting down).
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- In the 1870s, in Galt, Ontario, Canada, the "raker tooth"
was born, which immediately revolutionized logging. It raked
the sawdust out of the cut (positioned between a set of cutting
teeth) which made the sawing smooth and efficient.
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- The average saw in our neck-of-the-woods (pun intended) is
around five to six feet long, although they can go as low as
three feet for a one-man version. On the west coast, where they
cut the giant Redwood Cedar and Douglas Fir, they can go as long
as 20 feet or more. They were the kings of the forest until the
chainsaw replaced them just after WWII.
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- There are a multitude of shapes and tooth patterns for the
collector, together with various styles of handles. Tip: if you
want to get twice the heat out of your firewood, cut it up with
a crosscut.
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- In early days, pioneers had only trusty axes to clear their
newly acquired acres of bush - as did the professional logging
crews. There then developed a thriving axe-making industry in
Canada, which, over the years, was second to none in the world.
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- Competition for the market was fierce and the variety of
sizes, shapes and uses was legion. There are many collectors
out there who collect only axes and their displays are awesome
- from the small hatchet to the large felling axes - single bit
and double bit.
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- Unfortunately, many of the manufacturers used paper labels
on their product instead
of engraving or embossing, so after some use the label disappeared,
making it difficult to identify the manufacturer and establish
provenance (but a real expert can tell nonetheless.)
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- Axes are still being made, but there is only one known manufacturer
left in Canada. The chain saw (the marvel that it is) has taken
its toll.
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- There are also many interesting auxiliary tools in the logging
business that are highly prized by collectors.
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- Measuring devices
- There are the measuring devices, i.e. calipers to measure
the diameter of a standing tree, a log rule used to calculate
the amount of lumber in a standing tree and a board rule to calculate
the amount of board feet of sawn lumber. These can be fascinating
because there were dozens of different scales used and often
they were hand made.
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- They look like a yardstick with a handle on one end and a
hook on the other, with
hundreds of numbers etched on the sides. The lumber merchant
had to be careful, as some unscrupulous dealers used one scale
for buying and one for selling, all to his advantage.
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- Then we have the lumber stamps. Like a cattle brand, they
were used to mark a sawn log with the mark of the owner when
the log was dumped into the river, so they could be identified
as one company's property at the end of the log drive. Basically,
they were a hammer with a distinctive design on the face which,
when whacked on the end of the log, left a recognizable symbol
or initials.
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- Collectible? You bet. Over 2,000 were registered with Ottawa.
Of course, there were cheaters here too - slice off about half
an inch of the log where the stamp
appeared and put another new stamp on. Instead of using a lumber
stamp, a letter or a number or a design could be cut into the
log with a special knife known as a timber scribe or race knife.
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- They were also used in the log construction industry to mark
various pieces of the building framework, so that in raising
the building you knew which piece fitted into another piece.
The design of these knives is very intriguing and as with many
other tools of the early days, were often hand wrought.
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- Handling tools
- Of less interest, but still important, are the log handling
tools - i.e. cant hooks, peaveys, timber carriers, picaroons
and various hooks and chains.
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- Cant hooks and peaveys are basically log-rolling tools -
a long wooden handle with a movable hook on the end to grab a
log at right angles. A peavey has a long spike point at the hook
while the cant hook is blunt.
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- A timber carrier is basically a pair of ice tongs suspended
from a hefty short pole so that a man on each end can lift and
carry the log or timber (assuming the other end of the log/timber
is similarly manned).
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- A picaroon is usually an old axe which has been cut down
and ground down to form a hook or claw. Its use was twofold -
like a standard axe, you could drive it into the end of a log
and drag it to where you wanted it. The other use is to comb
logs down
from a pile. Very few of these were actually made commercially.
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- A chain is a chain is a chain, but the hooks, cleats, buckles
and tongs and other iron items were a study in early creative
blacksmithing. All were used in hauling or grappling logs in
one way or another. Beaver tails - about six inches long with
a fattened spear face on one end and a ring on the other which,
when driven into the
end of a log would hold a piece of chain to form log booms on
the river.
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- The ice tong look appears again in grappling devices to drag
logs out of the bush together with accompanying swivels, cleat
hooks and wedges cleverly designed and crafted by the resident
blacksmith.
-
- The broadaxe
- The mighty broadaxe was also used in the lumbering industry
to square up the sawn logs for transport to market (they took
up less space that way). You have undoubtedly seen them - huge,
intimidating long wide-bladed axes, beveled on one side only,
measuring from six to 12-plus inches in length, weighing in pounds
about the same number as their inch length, with a short handle
curving outward so that the user's hands cleared the surface
being worked on.
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- The squaring was done by using chalk lines drawn on the outside
length of the log, indicating a square or rectangular form. An
axe then chopped into the log to the chalk and the broadaxe would
then clean the side of the log off (hewing the line.) The hewer
stood beside or atop the log, shaving one side at a time until
all four sides were squared. It is reported that a left-handed
hewer could earn a premium pay working opposite a right-handed
hewer. Once complete, the logs were lashed together to form rafts
and for transporting and, in the early days, some were even towed
across the ocean to England.
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- Omygosh. I've run out of space and haven't room for the second
part of my topic - next time for sure. If you want to talk to
me about tools, look me up at the Tools of the Trade Show in
Pickering. And if you want to talk to a lot of other tool collectors,
why not join the tool collectors club. For info on it and how
to join, log onto www.thetoolgroupofcanada.com.
-
- Jim Ross is an unrepentant collector. He admits to collecting
antique tools of many trades and occupations of yesteryear. He
is now past president of a tool collectors' club, the Tool Group
of Canada; was president for six years. Also a past member of
the legal profession for 40 years. He lives in Toronto for most
of the week, then retreats to his country property
- .
- Other articles by Jim Ross
- The plane facts
/ Logging tools 2
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