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Simply defined,
tanning is a process by which the hide
or skin
of an animal cured through the removal of the flesh, fat, moisture and
bacteria that cause putrification; thereby converting the hide or skin
into a stable, pliable material called leather. Basically, there two kinds
of tanning processes: vegetable
tanning
and chemical tanning. Vegetable tanning consists of soaking clean hides
or skins in an acid solution prepared from the bark, roots, leaves, or
nutshells of plants that are rich in tannic acid. Although
dozens of different kinds of plant materials can be used in the manufacture
of vegetable tanned leather, nineteenth century American tanneries commonly
used only three organic sources of tannic acid: sumac bark, oak bark and
hemlock bark. Sumac bark was used primarily by morocco makers for tanning
goatskins while oak bark and hemlock bark were used for tanning other
kinds of hides and skins. Many tanneries combined oak and hemlock bark
to produce what is called union or union crop leather.
Chemical tanning or mineral tanning consists of substituting various inorganic
substances for the plant materials used in vegetable tanning. Substances
such as aluminum salts, ferric salts, chromium sulphate, and chromic oxides
were used. Chemical tanning was introduced into a few American tanneries
in the 1890s but it was not widely adopted for many years because the
resulting leather was considered to be inferior to vegetable tanned leather.
The vegetable tanning process has been used for thousands of years, and
the basic technology remained largely unchanged from the late medieval
period to the mid-nineteenth century. The industrilization of the tanning
industry in the second half of the nineteenth century included no remarkable
changes in the tanning process but was accomplished chiefly by expanding
the physical size of the tannery
,
decreasing the amount of time that was necessary to lay away hides or
skins, and mechanizing virtually all of the traditional hand work of the
tanner. The tanning processes, tools
,
and buildings utilized during the mid-eighteenth century would be immediately
recognized by anyone working in a large industrial tannery of the late
nineteenth century.
Although there is no evidence to indicate what kind of leather was produced
at the first Philipsburg tannery, "union crop sole" was the
only type of leather that was produced at the second Philipsburg tannery.
Except for the location of the bark storage sheds, the pattern of processing
steps at the first Philipsburg tannery (1870-1876) is unknown. However,
the layout of the second Philipsburg tannery (1876-1912) is well documented
and permits an opportunity to examine the tanning process at
this late nineteenth century industrial site.
The tanning operations at the second Philipsburg tannery were arranged
in a roughly circular pattern commencing and terminating at the railroad
siding. Hides were unloaded from railroad cars into the hide house on
the south side of the siding where the hides were probably cleaned and
limed. These hides were then transferred to the beam house on the north
side of the siding yard where they were de-haired, fleshed and bated.
The hides were cut into sides before tanning, and the actual tanning took
place in the tan yards. When tanning was completed, the hides were taken
to the drying and finishing houses on Thirteenth (Water) Street where
the sides were oiled, dryed, and rolled. After rolling, the sides were
probably taken to be dried in the smaller dry house at the west end of
the hide house, and then loaded directly onto the same railroad cars which
had been emptied of hides at the hide house. The leach house and ancillary
buildings (i.e., blacksmith and carpenter shops, storage and hair drying
facility) were located outside this processing circuit at the east end
of the tannery complex.
The following narrative and photo/glossary links
will allow you to learn more about the details of the leather tanning
process, its techniques, systems, and history of the industry and of the
Philipsburg tannery.
The vegetable tanning process, whether undertaken by hand in a small colonial
tannery or in a largely mechanized industrial tannery, can be broken down
into six basic steps: FLOW CHART
Procurement and Storage of Raw Materials
Cleaning and Preparation of the Hides.
The Preperation of the Tanning Solution.
Tanning
Finishing
Storage and Shipping.
Procurement
and Storage of Raw Materials
A list of the basic raw materials required to operate a tannery is relavively
short and consists of a steady supply of hides or skins, a dependable
supply of tree bark rich in tannin
,
a plentiful supply of clean water, lime for dehairing hides, and oils
for treating the finished leather. For an industrial tannery, access to
a railroad and fuel for steam power were additional requirements.
Before 1800, most leather was manufactured in small tanneries where raw
materials could be easily acquired from the local neighborhood. However,
as settlement intensified along the eastern seaboard and forests were
cut down, it became increasingly difficult for tanners to procure a steady
supply of hides and skins from local slaughter houses and enough bark
to operate a profitable tannery. Between 1830 and 1850, two major changes
took place in the leather industry. First, tanneries began to move westward
from the eastern seaboard into forested regions of central Pennsylvania
and New York where oak and hemlock were plentiful. By the mid-nineteenth
century, the construction of inland navigation systems and railroads made
these inland sites readily accessible to all major eastern markets. Second,
by 1850 new sources of hides replaced the uncertain supply from local
slaughter houses. The commercial meat-packing industry in the midwest
became a major source of hides while the import of foreign hides through
eastern seaports increased dramatically. Assured a dependable supply of
hides and tan bark, these new industrial tanneries grew to unprecedented
size.

Bark storage consumed a vast amount of space at the Philipsburg Tannery
Site. In 1879-1880, for example, the secondPhilipsburg tannery consumed
6,500 tons of hemlock bark and 750 tons of oak bark, all of which was
stored on the premises. Three large bark storage sheds as well as a large
bark pile
were located west of the main tannery buildings along the railroad sidings.
This area was also used for bark storage during the period of the first
Philipsburg tannery. It appears that the lower railroad siding was built
as part of the second Philipsburg tannery to facilitate the intra-site
conveyance of tan bark
by train
from these bark
sheds
to the leach house.
There were no special provisions made for the storage of other raw materials,
such as lime used in the dehairing process andoils used in the finishing
process. Since the power used to operate the tannery was generated from
burning used tan
bark ,
it was not necessary to set aside special areas for the storage of fuel,
furnace ash, or for spent tan bark.
Water, large amounts of which are used in the tanning process, was readly
available from Cold Stream and was probably drawn directly from the stream
as needed. There is no evidence Cold Stream was dammed or that water was
diverted into reservoirs and stored for future use. It is also very likely
that Cold Stream was used for the disposal of liquid waste from the tanning
process.
Hides
Industrial tanneries generally purchased their hides in bulk lots directly
from mid-western meat packers or foreign suppliers, often with the railroads
themselves acting as the middlemen. Traditionally, hides obtained from
slaughter houses were sold to tanneries with "old
trim" ,
that is to say, with offal such as ears, tails, shanks, snouts, and some
flesh attached. Hides generally
arrived at the tannery after minimal preservation at the slaughterhouse.
Hides from American meatpackers were usually salted while foreign hides
were often dried or dried and salted. Occasionally, hides were also pickled.
Borax was also suitable as a preservative for hides. Since slaughter house
preservation was not particularly long-term, it was necessary to deliver
hides to the tannery quickly as possible so that the tannery could to
begin processing them before they spoiled. Foreign hides were generally
more agressively preserved and required additional processing to soften
and clean them.
Bark
By 1890, the demand for tan bark was so great, that tanneries rather than
lumber merchants controlled most of the forests on the western slope of
the Alleghenies. The gathering of tan bark was a seasonal activity. An
entire years supply of bark was collected in late spring and summer.
The bark was peeled from trees or logs, cut into four foot lengths and
stored at the tannery in large bark
sheds
or ranges of large piles which were "self-roofed" so that rain
did not leach the tannic acid from the bark. As needed, bark was conveyed
to the leach house where it was ground and prepared as the tanning solution.
Cleaning and Preparation of the Hides
The way in which a hide was prepared for tanning partially depended on
the way it had been preserved by the meat packer or foreign supplier.
Dry hides
could not be mixed with salted hides, and best results were achieved when
hides were sorted by size and weight before they were put to soak. In
any case, the first step in preparing hides for tanning was to remove
all dirt and natural fluids. Once the hides were superficially cleaned,
they were soaked in water to soften them and remove any preservatives
such as salt or borox. When the hides were taken out of the initial soak,
they were often divided lengthwise into sides
.
If the hide required further softening, it was worked in a hide mill,
a device that resembled the fulling machine in a woolen factory.
After the hides were cleaned and softened, they were de-haired. The traditional
method of dehairing
was to soak the hides in a lime solution which swelled the fibers of the
hide and loosened the hair at the follicle. During the liming
process it was desirable to keep the hides in constant motion by reeling
them from pit to pit, turning them, or dragging them back and forth through
a long trough. By the late nineteenth century, depilation in a sweat pit
had become more common as an alternative to liming. Once the hairs were
loosened, the hide was washed in water and taken to the beam
house
.
The tradition method of removing hair, fat and flesh from a hide was to
beam it by spreading each hide out individually on a slanted log or beam
where the hair and flesh were scraped off manually using an array of different
knives and scrapers. By the end of the nineteenth century, this process
of dehairing and fleshing
had been completely mechanized in most of the the large industrial tanneries.
Once the hide was de-haired and fleshed, it was bated
to remove the lime from clean hide. Traditionally. the hide was rinsed
in warm water and placed in a rotating drum
containing a variety of substances such as dog manure, pigeon droppings,
hen manure, molasses, or bran. However, no more than a thorough washing
was often sufficient to remove the lime from hides which were intended
for use as sole
leather .
A beam house
is depicted on the 1897 Sanborn
Map
of the tannery; although, it is not on the 1887 map. The 1887 and 1897
maps illustrate a one-story structure called the "hide house"
that was located on the south side of the railroad siding between the
finishing house and the tan yard. This building was probably the point
at which hides were unloaded from the railroad
cars. However, there were five large, circular vats on the south side
of this building which indicates that some sort of processing was also
undertaken at this locus, such as cleaning, soaking
,
and liming. It is unclear whether the activities in this area included
beaming
and bating.
A description of the second Philipsburg tannery written in the Philipsburg
Daily Journal in 1877, indicates that hides were chemically de-haired
then cleaned by hand on eleven beams. Whether mechanical methods of cleaning,
fleshing, and dehairing
were
subsequently adopted could not be determined.
The leach house, where the tanning solutions were prepared, was a one-story
structure located at the east end of the hide house at the terminus of
the railroad siding. Two bark
mills
were located in the basement at the west end of the leach house. The boilers
and furnaces were located adjacent to the north wall of the leach house.
The juxtaposition of the power generation facilities and the leach house
was purposeful because the second Philipsburg tannery had adoped the practice
of burning spent tan bark as fuel for the boiler furnaces using the Hoyt
Furnace
method.
The second Philipsburg tannery utilized a highly mechanized percolation
system to prepare tanning solutions. Each leach vat was equipped with
an Allen and Warren Sprinkling System which delivered a spray of weak
tanning solution to each leach vat which was filled with seven cords of
freshly ground bark. The ground bark was delivered to each leach vat by
a conveyor system which consisted of a wooden box measuring 12 inches
wide and 8 inches deep through which a heavy iron chain was passed. This
conveyor system, which extended for a distance of 120 feet, was suspended
above the leach vats. As the chain moved through the box, the ground bark
was carried along and deposited in each vat through a hole in the bottom
of the box. Once the tanning solution had reached the desired concentration,
it was delivered to the tan yard by a system of pumps and pipes. In 1877,
the main section of the leach house contained twelve round leach vats,
each of which measured twelve feet in diameter and seven feet in depth.
A decade later, there appears to have been sixteen vats in the leach house
.
The
Preparation of the Tanning Solution
Tanning solutions were prepared by a process called leaching which is
nothing more complicated than preparing a "strong tea" from
a combination of ground-up bark and hot water. The process consisted of
passing hot water through the ground bark in a manner which achieved the
greatest density in the resulting solution. A leach tank was filled with
fresh ground bark and hot water and allowed to stand for two days. At
the end of two days, the tannic acid solution at the bottom of the vat
was stronger than the solution at the top of the vat. The solution was
manipulated through a series of the ten or twelve vats until the desired
tannic acid concentration was achieved and was conveyed to the tan
vats .
The principal tool used in this step of the tanning process was the barkometer
,
which is tanning terminology for a hydrometer, and was used to measure
the acidity of the tanning liquor.
By the third quarter if the nineteenth century, some tanneries had installed
furnaces which were specially designed to utilize the spent tan bark as
fuel in either a dry or wet state. The new furnaces solved the dual problem
of fueling the furnaces and disposing of large amounts of waste products.
Tanning
A double tanning process was commonly used for manufactuing sole leather.
Initially, the hides were placed in a
rocker
that consisted of a rectangular tanning vat fitted with a frame made of
a series of poles over which the hides were hung. This frame was pinned
into the sides of the vat so that it could move in an arc of four to six
inches causing the hides to slightly agitate the tanning solution while
remaining submerged. The rockers were generally aligned in a series which
ranged from a very weak
tanning solution in the first vat to a very strong solution in the last
vat. Green hides
were initially placed in the weak tanning solution and moved to progressively
stronger and stronger solutions over a period of approximately seven to
ten days. In some tanneries, the hides were kept in the same rocker vat
while the tanning solution was periodically replaced with a stronger one.
After processing in the rockers was completed, the hides were put in handlers
(vats in which the hides were laid flat in a strong tanning solution)
for an additional ten to fourteen days.
From the rockers and handlers, the hides were taken to the tan yard where
they were put up in the layaway
vats .
These vats were usually nine feet long, seven feet wide, and six feet
deep. The hides were laid out flat, one by one, with a thin layer of ground
bark between each hide. The vat was then filled with a tanning solution.
Periodically, the tanning solution was drained off and pumped back into
the leach house through a series of pipes where it was recharged. Meanwhile,
the layaway vats were repacked and refilled with fresh tanning solution.
This process was repeated four or five times over a period of several
months. The hides were kept in the layaway vats for an average of three
to four months.
In 1887, there were two tan yards, a large yard (located on the south
side of Cold Stream), and a smaller tan yard (located on the north side
of Cold Stream). The two tan yards were connected by a bridge over Cold
Stream. Both tan yard buildings were one-story high, and probably consisted
of little more than roughly constructed, enclosed sheds erected to protected
the tan vats from the elements. In 1877, the tan yard contained a total
of 210 vats, which included thirty rockers and one hundred and eighty
lay-away vats.
The double tanning process for making sole leather was used at the second
Philipsburg tannery. Sides (hides cut in half lengthwise) were placed
in rocker frames which held sixty sides each. The rocker frames were then
processed through a series of ten rectangular vats containing progressively
stronger tanning solutions. It took about ten days to process a frame
through the rocker vats, and at the completion of this process, the sides
were placed in layaway vats, each of which held one hundred and ten sides.
It appears that handlers were not used at the second Philipsburg tannery
unless the observer failed to distinguish them from the lay away vats.
The sides remained in the layaway vats for about one hundred days; they
were removed from the lay-away
vats and were taken to be dried and finished.
Finishing
When tanning was completed, the hides were removed from the lay-away vats.
If they had been tanned whole, they were split into sides, rinsed in the
final tanning solution, and piled to drain overnight. The sides were then
oiled on the grain side and hung on poles in a drying
loft
where the temperture was carefully regulated and no light was allowed
to enter. Exposure to light at this point in the process damaged the color
of the hide. The leather dried in about two days. When it had dried completely,
it was taken to the finishing
room
where the sides were rinsed in water and rolled in a rolling machine.
The wet sides were again hung on poles and dried for a second time. Once
dried, the sides of tanned leather were trimmed, weighed, bundled and
sent to market as "unscoured
leather" .
When sole leather left the tannery, it was ready to be cut and assembed
into shoes by the shoe maker. If further processing was required, the
leather might be sent it out to curry shops for final finishing. Traditionally
tanning and currying were considered separate crafts, and all leather
was sent to the currier
for finishing. In the late nineteenth century this distinction had blurred
and tanneries were generally expected to produce finished goods on their
premises.
Tanned hides from the Philipsburg tannery were apparently moved directly
from the tan yard to the the finishing house where they
were dried. trimmed, and oiled. Only the basement and the first floor
of the finishing house were actually used for working the finished leather
while the upper floors used for drying. The multi-storied structure would
have had latticed floors and interior partitions so that heated air could
flow evenly throughout the building. It is uncertain to what extent the
finishing process at the second Philipsburg tannery had been mechanized.
Apparently , the sole leather produced at the second Philipsburg tannery
was shipped unscoured, directly from the drying house adjacent to the
railroad siding.
Storing
and Shipping
Sole leather was traditionally shipped to the manufacturer in bundles
of sides consisting of the pack that was tanned in a single vat. However,
by the end of the nineteenth century, some tanneries were required by
shoe manufacturers
to cut soles
and insoles prior to shipment from the tannery.
No warehouse facilities were set aside for the storage of finished leather.
After the tanning process was completed, the finished leather was bundled
and loaded onto railroad cars for immediate shipment to market. There
is no evidence that soles were ever cut on the Philipsburg Tannery Site.
Non-Tannery
Buildings
Maps dating to 1887 indicate that a blacksmith shop and carpenters
shop were located northeast of the main block of tannery buildings. These
structures were presumably related to mainentance of the works. A hair
drying facility was located on the south side of Cold Stream above the
tan yards. By 1897, a grease
house
had also been erected at the northeast corner of the beam house. The necessity
for erecting a grease house may indicate either a change in the condition
of the hides which the tannery received or a change in the methods used
to degrease and flesh hides in the beam house.
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