Amongst the quirkiest items to be found in the
house are four leather buckets. What on
earth were they originally used for? The
Haywards used them as waste paper baskets and two of them are designed for this
as they bear a modern leatherworker’s manufacturing label; so probably made for
the purpose but modelled on an original.
The two originals may well date from the late eighteenth or early nineteenth century and were probably from an English country house where such receptacles were used as fire buckets. They would be hung in rows in servants corridors filled with sand ready to dump on carpets or floorboards when the open fires spat sparks or candles tipped over causing small conflagrations. Water would have caused too much damage although leather buckets and other receptacles made from this material were commonly used for carrying liquids in households long after the Middle Ages. After the industrial revolution metal buckets were more cheaply produced and became common.
The two originals may well date from the late eighteenth or early nineteenth century and were probably from an English country house where such receptacles were used as fire buckets. They would be hung in rows in servants corridors filled with sand ready to dump on carpets or floorboards when the open fires spat sparks or candles tipped over causing small conflagrations. Water would have caused too much damage although leather buckets and other receptacles made from this material were commonly used for carrying liquids in households long after the Middle Ages. After the industrial revolution metal buckets were more cheaply produced and became common.
Carrick Hill has an interesting metal bucket,
which is coated with black paint and bears a coat of arms on the outside. Quite whose they are we have not yet
deciphered to date and it looks like the bucket was used for fuel for the
fires.
The whole of Carrick Hill house was heated with open fires mostly with wood grates. The threat of fire was always great in any country house in Britain and the Haywards did not take any chances either. However; rather than rely on their bucket collection they had a beautiful copper fire extinguisher ready to do the job which is now a collection item reflecting the working side of the house’s history.
The whole of Carrick Hill house was heated with open fires mostly with wood grates. The threat of fire was always great in any country house in Britain and the Haywards did not take any chances either. However; rather than rely on their bucket collection they had a beautiful copper fire extinguisher ready to do the job which is now a collection item reflecting the working side of the house’s history.
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