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Naval stores

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(Redirected fromNaval stores industry)
Term for resins used in shipbuilding
p-Cymene is a major component ofterpentine and related naval stores

Naval stores refers to the industry that produces various chemicals collected fromconifers. The term was originally applied to the compounds used in building and maintaining woodensailing ships. Presently, the naval stores industry are used to manufacture certain kinds ofsoaps as well as components ofpaint,varnish,shoe polish,lubricants,linoleum, and roofing materials.[1]

History

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Herty system in use on turpentine trees in the northern Floridanaval stores industry, circa 1936

TheRoyal Navy relied heavily upon naval stores from American colonies, and naval stores were an essential part of the colonial economy. Masts came from the largewhite pines of New England, while pitch came from thelongleaf pine forests ofCarolina, which also produced sawn lumber,shake shingles, andstaves.[2] In the early 1700s the British Crown was involved in the transplantation ofPalatine refuges in Great Britain to theNew York Province to produce naval stores.

Naval stores played a role during theAmerican Revolutionary War. As Britain attempted to cripple French and Spanish capacities through blockade, they declared naval stores to be contraband. At the time Russia was Europe's chief producer of naval stores, leading to the seizure of 'neutral' Russian vessels. In 1780Catherine the Great announced that her navy would be used against anyone interfering with neutral trade, and she gathered together European neutrals in theLeague of Armed Neutrality. These actions were beneficial for the struggling colonists as the British were forced to act with greater caution.[3]

Zallen tells in detail how turpentine (and rosin) are produced as naval stores.[4] Pine trees especially inNorth Carolina were tapped for sap which was doubly distilled to make turpentine and rosin (aka resin)–hence the nametar heels. The trees were scored with a ledge called a “box” to collect the sap. Large numbers ofslaves were used to score the trees, collect and process the sap. Zallen describes this as industrial slavery–different from the more common vision of slaves in agriculture. By the 1840scamphine, a blend of turpentine andgrain alcohol, became the dominant lamp fuel in the US. [Zallen prefers the camphene spelling.]

The pine trees of North Carolina were well suited to camphine production. The business also provided additional need for slaves as production expanded. Backwoods became more productive. Slaves were often leased in winter when agriculture was slower. The value of many was protected bylife insurance.Wilmington, NC became a center of the camphene industry. In cities,gaslighting was also available, but used by the upper classes. Camphine was the fuel of the average family.

Zallen reports that afterFt. Sumter, turpentine producers were cut off from major markets. Emancipation left them without manpower to collect and process turpentine. The camps were flammable. Many were burned inWilliam Tecumseh Sherman’s march fromSavannah, Georgia toGoldsboro, NC. Congress also imposed taxes on alcohol to pay for the Civil War. That made camphine more costly than kerosene. Kerosene, first produced as coal oil, became abundant after the discovery of oil in Pennsylvania.

The major producers of naval stores in the 19th and 20th century were the United States of America, and France, where Napoleon encouraged planting of pines in areas of sand dunes. In the 1920s the United States exported eleven million gallons of spirits. By 1927, France exported about 20 percent of the world's resin.[5]

Organizational aspects

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Once, large operations, known as "factors," controlled huge tracts of forests, some in the hundreds of thousands of acres, which they leased to smaller "operators," and also advanced them capital, usually in the form of tools and other equipment and goods with which to operate. The operators satisfied their debt to the factors by returning the produce, barrels of resin. The name "Factors Walk" on the riverfront inSavannah, Georgia, commemorates an area on the Savannah River harbor where thousands of barrels of produce were collected fortransshipment. Between 1880 and 1920, Savannah was the largest port for naval stores products and continued to set the world price of naval stores until 1950.[6][7]

Naval stores also includedcordage, mask,pitch andtar. These materials were used for water- and weather-proofing wooden ships. were traditionally used forMasts,spars, andcordage needed protecting, and hulls made of wood required a flexible material, insoluble in water, to seal the spaces between planks.Pine pitch was often mixed with fibers like hemp to caulk spaces which might otherwise leak.[citation needed]

After the age of wooden ships

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With the demise of wooden ships, those uses ofpine resin ended, but the former naval stores industry remained vigorous as new products created new markets. First extensively described byFrederick Law Olmsted in his bookA Journey in the Seaboard Slave States (1856),[8] the naval stores industry was one of the economic mainstays of the southeasternUnited States until the late 20th century. Despite a rapid decline of the gum naval stores industry in the last quarter of the 20th century, a few places in the southeastern United States still rely on it as a major part of their livelihood.[9]

  • Herty turpentine cup, made of clay. The hole is for nailing to a pine tree
    Herty turpentine cup, made of clay. The hole is for nailing to a pine tree
  • Pine tree with metal guides to a Herty cup
    Pine tree with metal guides to a Herty cup
  • Turpentine cup made of tin, was attached to a pine tree
    Turpentine cup made of tin, was attached to a pine tree
  • 1912 postcard
    1912 postcard

Industry today

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The gum naval stores industry steeply declined beginning in the 1960s. As of 2001 in the U.S., only one large-scale facility (begun asFiltered Rosin Products) inBaxley, Georgia, continues in operation, serving the remaining naval stores producers in the surrounding area. Gradually, the method of tapping trees to obtain naval stores products has become overshadowed by industries which yield these products asbyproducts of other operations.[10]

Processing

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Gum naval stores cultivation

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The labor-intensive method of extracting pine resin from the trees (the raw gum)—tapping the trees—vaguely resembles that used in traditional rubber and maple syrup production. In one method, the tree is gashed with an inch-wide curved blade, called a "hack," to remove all of the bark down through the cambium layer. An angled piece of galvanized tin is then placed below the eight-inch-long, one-inch-wide gash (also known as "the streak") to direct the oozingsap into a quart-sized rectangular cup fixed to the tree. Each new "streak" is put onto the tree above the preceding one, and gradually a vertical "cat face" more than thirty inches in height was formed. Through the mid-twentieth century, a "puller," a type of hack that had a long handle, was used to extend the streak up the tree to a height of more than seven feet.

Separation techniques

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"Chipping" a pine tree inGeorgia (c. 1915) to obtain sap

Today naval stores are recovered from thetall oil byproduct stream ofKraft process pulping of pines in the US, though tapping of living pines remains common in other parts of the world. Turpentine andpine oil may be recovered by dry distillation[11] of oleoresin or bydestructive distillation of pine wood. Solvent extraction of shredded stumps and roots has become more common with the availability of inexpensivenaphtha. Rosin remains in the still after turpentine and water have boiled off.[12]

Thenaval stores industry produces and markets products derived from theoleoresin ofpine trees, includingrosin,tall oil,pine oil, andturpentine. It does this by collecting and processing organicforest products refined fromslash pine andlongleaf pine trees (genusPinus). The naval stores industry was associated with the maintenance of thewooden ships and sailing tackle of pre-20th century navies, which werecaulked andwaterproofed using the pitch (a product made withtar) of the pine tree.[13]

Pine rosin processes

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The basic raw material,pine resin, once collected, is converted into two major products —rosin andturpentine. For many years rosin and turpentine were used unprocessed in common household products such as soap, paper, paint, andvarnish. Today most rosin is altered to be used in a wide range of products that includes paper sizing, surface coatings, adhesives, printing inks, and rubber compounds. Turpentine, like rosin, has become a versatile material exploited to develop uses in fragrances, flavors, vitamins, household cleaning products, medicines, andpolyterpene resin.

See also

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External links

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References

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Notes
  1. ^Gscheidmeier, Manfred; Fleig, Helmut (2000). "Turpentines".Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry.doi:10.1002/14356007.a27_267.ISBN 978-3-527-30385-4.
  2. ^Greene, Jack P, Pursuits of Happiness, Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1988, pp. 144-145
  3. ^Crosby, Alfred W., Jr., America, Russia, Hemp, and Napoleon, Ohio State University Press, 1965, pp. 8
  4. ^Zallen, Jeremy (2019).American Lucifers: The Dark History of Artificial Light, 1750-1865. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press.
  5. ^Outland III, Robert B. (2004).Tapping the pines : the naval stores industry in the American South. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.ISBN 9780807129814.
  6. ^Outland, pp. 56-57; 147-150; 295
  7. ^Earley, pp. 136-137
  8. ^Olmsted, Ch. 5, pp. 110-173
  9. ^Outland, p. 5
  10. ^Outland, pp. 300-307
  11. ^H. Kooijman (October 2025)."Tall Oil Distillation"(PDF).chemsep.org. Retrieved2025-10-26.
  12. ^Kent, James A.Riegel's Handbook of Industrial Chemistry (Eighth Edition) Van Nostrand Reinhold Company (1983)ISBN 0-442-20164-8 pp.569-573
  13. ^Earley, p. 87
Bibliography
  • Earley, Lawrence S. (2004)Looking for Longleaf, The Fall and Rise of an American Forest. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press.ISBN 0-8078-2886-6
  • Olmsted, Frederick Law (1862)The Cotton Kingdom: A Traveller's Observations on Cotton and Slavery in the American Slave States : Based upon Three Former Volumes of Journeys and Investigations, edited with an introduction by Arthur Meier Schlesinger, 1953, reissued 1996. New York: Da Capo PressISBN 0-306-80723-8
  • Outland, Robert B. III. (2004)Tapping the Pines: The Naval Stores Industry in the American South. Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University PressISBN 0-8071-2981-X
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