Two Houses, Wool and Dyeing
By Concubhar Ó Laoire
The following house plans compare two old houses in
Ballingeary. One house is now in ruins, the other is now an outhouse.
Following the plans are some interesting items of information on building,
wool and dyeing.
House A
(late 1700’s)
A = goat house attached to main house
B = chimney breast
C = two storage holes either side of chimney measuring
10"x 10"
D = hole in south gable measuring 19"x 17" probable
only light source into the house,
(apart from an open door). It had a wooden shutter
open by day if the weather conditions permitted.
This internal measurements of this house are 18 feet
3" x 10 feet 3"
(try comparing this with the largest room in a modern
house).
The whole family lived and slept in the one room.
The main food source was potatoes and goats milk
Neighbours supplied cows milk if needed.
House B
(late 1800’s)
A = bottom room. A modern house design would make this
a bedroom.
However at the time an animal house would be of more
importance.
B = stream diverted to house then put in a covered
drain into well (D)
The stream then flowed on top of a ditch to make an
aqueduct to bring
it to another yard
C = three or four slabs approx. 2 feet high to lift
goats to a comfortable
milking height.
D =well
E =potato garden
F =meadow
G =drainage hole at bottom of wall to let out any
water.
H = elderberry tree. These were planted near every
house to provide dye for home dying of clothes.
Even though house B is much older than house A by
fifty to a hundred years
it is over double its size. House B was built on a
slope and the floor was not level
so the floor sloped from top to bottom.
Both houses were built with a dry stone wall. House B
had a flag floor which
survived until recently. As all the interior decor
magazines now show quarry slate
floor tiles in all the best houses it is nice to
realise that our ancestors were two
hundred and fifty years ahead of us on that point.
House building in times past
The wind was a major problem for the 19th century
builder so ash trees were often
planted as a windbreak before the introduction of
conifers.
However when the people started adding another floor
in height they built the houses against
a bank for support. Turf sheds had to be built against
a bank as the weight of turf was
thought to push the walls out.
Most houses were narrow usually one room wide because
of the shortage of suitable lengths of roofing timber to cover a longer
span.
Wool
Most families in Ballingeary had some sheep running on
the hills regardless of land ownership, as sheep were needed for wool. The
wool was used to make cloth or lining for quilts. The sheep would be
gathered down from the hills and dipped in a pool of water to clean the wool
. The wool dried faster and easier on the animals back. The sheep were then
shorn and if used for quilting the wool was washed again. If used for
clothes it was then carded and then taken to Ronan’s Tuck Mill in Kilmore,
Ballingeary. One of the most important raw ingredients used in the tuck
house was urine, which was collected from the village houses. (Dying in a
urine bath is an ancient way of using indigo dye as stale urine two weeks
old
is an alkali and the bacteria remove oxygen) . The
thread was then spun and woven. Sullivans from Gurteenakilla were the local
weavers. The cloth then went home for the travelling tailor’s annual visit
or to the local tailors house if he lived in the area.
Dyeing
ELDERBERRY -- elder was planted next to most houses.
It is the only native tree rabbits find distasteful. The leaves bark and
berries can be used with the colour ranging from green (leaves)
brown\pink (bark) to purple from the berries. Children
also made fop guns from the hollow stem. A fop gun is like a pea shooter.
You block both ends with chewed paper etc and ram a T shaped holly twig in
and one plug is shot out. To get the Ballingeary show water pistol effect it
could be filled with water before the shot.
MOSS; moss was used to get a brown colour. However the
garment faded fairly rapidly.
GORTAFLUDDIG was known for its muddy hole which
allowed clothes to be coloured black which was one of the hardest colours to
achieve