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Animal pound

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Place where stray livestock were impounded
"Pinfold" redirects here. For the surname, seePenfold (surname).
For the modern facility that houses homeless, lost, or abandoned animals, seeAnimal shelter.

North Elmham village pound,Norfolk

Ananimal pound is a place where stray livestock were impounded. Animals were kept in a dedicated enclosure, until claimed by their owners, or sold to cover the costs of impounding.[1]

Etymology

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The terms "pinfold" and "pound" are Saxon in origin.Pundfald andpund both mean an enclosure. There appears to be no difference between a pinfold and a village pound.[2]

The person in charge of the pinfold was the "pinder", giving rise to the surnamePinder.

Village pound or pinfold

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Thetown pound ofGlocester, Rhode Island in New England, US, c. 1748
Capenhurst pinfold,Cheshire. A pinfold has existed on this site since the 10th century.
Circular village pound inStanton Prior,Somerset. (Above the pound arehot-air balloons taking off from Bath (6 miles or 9.7 km to the north-east.)

Thevillage pound was a feature of mostEnglishmedieval villages,[citation needed] and they were also found in theEnglish colonies of North America and inIreland.

A high-walled and lockable structure served several purposes; the most common use was to hold stray sheep, pigs and cattle until they were claimed by the owners,[citation needed] usually for the payment of a fine or levy.[3] The pound could be as small as 20 square metres (225 sq ft) or as big as 0.20 hectares (12 acre) and may be circular or square. Early pounds had just briar hedges, but most were built in stone or brick, making them more stock-proof.[citation needed]The size and shape of village pounds varies. Some are four-sided—rectangular, square and irregular—while others are circular. In size they vary from a few square metres (some square feet) to over 0.5 hectares (1.2 acres). Pounds are known to date from the medieval period. By the 16th century most villages and townships would have had a pound. Most of what remain today would date from the 16th and 17th centuries. Some are listed buildings, but most have fallen into disrepair.[4]

TheSussex County Magazine in 1930 stated:

Nearly every village once had its pound for stray cattle, pigs, geese, etc. to be driven into and there kept at the expense of the owner, till such time as he should pay the fine (the amount claimed by the person on whose land they had strayed, for damage done), and the fee to the pound keeper, man or sometimes woman, for feeding and watering the same.

If not claimed in three weeks, the animals were driven to the nearest market and sold, the proceeds going to the impounder and pound-keeper. An ingenious form of receipt was sometimes used. The person who found the animals on his land cut a stick and made notches, one for every beast, and then split the stick down the centre of the notches so that half each notch appeared on each stick; one half he kept, the other he gave to the pound-keeper.

When the owner came to redeem his property and had paid for the damage done, the impounder gave him his half stick. He took this to the pound-keeper, and if the two pieces tallied, it proved he had paid and his beast was freed. Hence the word tally-stick and the pound-keeper being referred to as thetallyman.[citation needed]

Although pounds are most common to England, there are also examples in other countries. InAmericans and Their Forests: a Historical Geography, authorMichael Williams writes: "There was hardly a town in eighteenth-centuryNew England without its town pound..."[5]

The animal pound at Finchdean, Hampshire, England.
The animal pound at Finchdean, Hampshire, England

In some mountainous areas of northern Spain (such asCantabria orAsturias) some similar enclosures are traditionally used to protectbeehives from bear attacks.[6]

Milton Malsor village pound,Northamptonshire, England, dating from at least 1686

Cultural references

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The artistAndy Goldsworthy has produced a series of sculptures in several of the pinfolds in Cumbria.[7]

See also

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Notes

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This articleneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Animal pound" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR
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  1. ^Hubka 2004, p. 84.
  2. ^An alternative spelling/pronunciation of pinfold was "poundfield", which implies a relation to the modern English word "(im)pound" (Plaque on pinfold site inHigham, Lancashire)
  3. ^In Brompton the fine was called a "mulct". ("Patrick Brompton church and village" magazine; text by Jane Hatcher)
  4. ^Plaque at Tockholes Pinfold, LancashireTockholes Pinfold
  5. ^Williams, Michael (1992).Americans and their Forests: a historical geography. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 68.ISBN 9780521428378.
  6. ^Naves, Javier; Ordiz, Andrés; Fernández-Gil, Alberto; Penteriani, Vincenzo; Delgado, María del Mar; López-Bao, José Vicente; Revilla, Eloy; Delibes, Miguel (28 November 2018)."Patterns of brown bear damages on apiaries and management recommendations in the Cantabrian Mountains, Spain".PLOS ONE.13 (11): e0206733.doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0206733.PMC 6261554.PMID 30485290. Retrieved3 June 2020.
  7. ^"Sheepfolds & Pinfolds, Cumbrian sculpture project by Andy Goldsworthy"

References

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  • Hubka, Thomas C. (2004),Big House, Little House, Back House, Barn: The Connected Farm Buildings of New England (20, illustrated, annotated ed.), UPNE, p. 84,ISBN 9781584653721

External links

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toHistoric animal pounds.
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