Bark Peeling
Text: Malcolm Dick
Image: Two women stripping bark from a small tree, Wyre Forest (early 20th century)
[Image from Bewdley Museum]
Women use small irons to strip bark from a small tree on the ground. The women first cut the bark with the iron and then worked it between the wood and the bark with a back-and- forth action (see photograph). The aim was to produce strips of bark between one and three feet in length which could be easily stacked and transported.
Summary
Bark Peeling was a long-established woodland craft which used the same techniques for centuries. It contained an essential product which was used to process animal hides before they could be turned into products for sale. Several 19th and early 20th century century photographs held in Bewdley Museum record the work of bark peelers and the tools that they used.
« Previous in this sectionNext in this section »Continue browsing this section
Woodland Industries in the Wyre Forest The Wyre Forest and Bewdley Bark Peeling Bark Peeling and Leather Tanning Work and Labour Bark Peeling Tools Bark Peeling Bark Peeling Seasoning the Bark Transporting the Bark The Making of Snuff Charcoal Burning in the Wyre ForestSources and Further Reading
Bewdley Museum, Information Sheet: Bark Peeling in the Wyre Forest, Bewdley Museum, 1980