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Fri, 8 Feb 2002 09:16:06 -0600 |
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John's absolutely right about rolling roads. There were lots of them. I
wonder, has anyone ever tried to make up a composite map of rolling roads?
I assume many of them would fall where present day roads still exist.
-----Original Message-----
From: John Shroeder [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
Sent: Friday, 08 February 2002 9:01 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: VA-HIST Digest - 26 Jan 2002 to 28 Jan 2002 (#2002-17)
{snip}
>
> As for handling, an experienced laborer (usually a slave in Virginia)
could
> easily roll the hogshead up and down ramps, onto ships and into wagons --
> though most often the hogshead was actually rolled overland in the tow of
a
> horse.
*****Whence the reported derivation of the road named Rolling Road in
Fairfax County.
John Shroeder
******
Illustrations of this appear in Tatam's book on tobacco cultivation
> -- (published around 1800, but reprint in the 1960s or there about under
the
> editorship of Herndon).
>
> I have actually rolled a number of hogsheads when I worked at Colonial
> Williamsburg, and found them very maneuverable. Of course I was working
> with empty hogsheads, but even so, I'll stand by their inherent
> maneuverability!
>
> *********************************************************
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