Sussex_trug

Sussex trug

Sussex trug

Wooden basket


A Sussex trug is a wooden basket. It is made from a handle and rim of coppiced sweet chestnut wood which is hand-cleft then shaved using a drawknife. The body of the trug is made of five or seven thin boards of white willow, also hand-shaved with a drawknife.[1] They may have originated in Sussex because of the abundance of chestnut coppice and willows found on the marshes. Nails or pins used are usually copper, to avoid rust.

A Sussex trug

Shapes and sizes became standardised, the most well-known shape being the "common or garden" trug ranging in volume from one pint to a bushel. However, there is a diverse range of traditional trugs from garden and oval trugs to the more specialised "large log" and "walking stick" trugs.[2]

History

The trug industry is believed to date from the 1500s[3] with active trade in Horsham,[4] although Richard Acres of Rotherfield in Sussex is recorded as a trug maker in a 1485 document.[5]

Thomas Smith of Herstmonceux, displaying his trugs at the Great Exhibition of 1851, gave the basket wider renown:[3] he was rewarded when Queen Victoria purchased several for members of the royal family.[6] Further appearances at international exhibitions followed at the 1855 Universal exhibition in Paris; the First International Forestry Exhibition in Edinburgh 1884; and the International Inventions Exhibition in London.[6]

By the 1970s, Herstmonceux remained as a significant centre of trug production, with four firms operating in or near that village: Greens of Hailsham, R. Reed, R.W. Rich and Sons, and Thomas Smith and Sons.[7]


References

  1. "Peter Marden | Sussex Trug Maker". countrylovers.co.uk. Archived from the original on 6 March 2017.
  2. "WALKING STICK (walking stick and trug in one!)". The Trug Store. Retrieved 1 July 2022.
  3. Henley, Jon (2 October 2009). "How to make a trug". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 July 2022.
  4. T. P. Hudson, ed. (1986). "A History of the County of Sussex: Volume 6 Part 2, Bramber Rape (North-Western Part) Including Horsham". British History Online. London: Victoria County History: 166–180. Retrieved 1 July 2022. Already by the 16th century there were representatives of more specialized trades, reflecting the high social and economic status of many of the town's residents: an armourer, a barber, a cutler, a foyster or maker of saddle trees, a hat dresser, a last maker, a painter, and makers of buckets, pins, points (i.e. fastenings for clothes), scythes, baskets or trugs, and shovels.
  5. "Anglo-American Legal Tradition". O'Quinn Law Library. University of Houston. Retrieved 1 July 2022. (4th entry, with Kent in the margin)
  6. "A STEP BACK IN TIME | Sussex Garden Trug". The Green Chronicle. Archived from the original on 19 March 2012.

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