School: Carley (roll number 5332)
- Location:
- Crooked Wood, Co. Westmeath
- Teacher: Brigid Cooke
Open data
Available under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
- XML School: Carley
- XML Page 314
- XML “Old Crafts - Dyeing”
- XML “Old Crafts - Rope-Making”
- XML “Old Crafts - Tanning of Leather”
- XML “Old Crafts - Woodwork of Certain Kinds”
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On this page
- (continued from previous page)People used blossoms of fruze for dyeing clothes yellow. Logwood for dyeing articles purple, froughans for blue dye, pig's gaul for green dye. The also used "Bee Moor", "Tansey", heather, briar roots and the bark of oak trees.
- Ropes were made of horse hair, hemp, tow, flax and hay and straw. The hay and straw ropes were called "sugans".
- The bark of oak trees was used for tanning leather. There is a place in Knockdrin wood where the bark was taken of the trees. This place is called the "Bark Yard" to this day. The bark was then loaded on to carts and taken to a tanyard in Cullion. This tanyard was called "Keenagh's Tanyard". The tanyard was afterwards moved into Mullingar. Some people tanned their own leather and made their own boots at home. A piece of wood was made to shape of a boot and the boot was made round this. The boots were sewn with hemp which was also made at home. As the people only used wooden lasts at that time they could not put nails in the soles of the boots. So they put wooden pegs in the soles of the boots instead.
- Long ago most of the vessels used were made of wood.(continues on next page)