BRUCE Viewpoint, The Ballon Frame, George Snow, Augustine Taylor, An All That
BRUCE Viewpoint, The Ballon Frame, George Snow, Augustine Taylor, An All That
BRUCE Viewpoint, The Ballon Frame, George Snow, Augustine Taylor, An All That
A View from
Abroad
Author(s): IAIN BRUCE
Source: Buildings & Landscapes: Journal of the Vernacular Architecture Forum, Vol. 16, No. 1
(SPRING 2009), pp. 1-8
Published by: University of Minnesota Press
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/27804893 .
Accessed: 11/01/2014 16:24
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
.
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of
content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms
of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].
University of Minnesota Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Buildings
&Landscapes: Journal of the Vernacular Architecture Forum.
http://www.jstor.org
It is common currency among architectural his Edwardian Forest Lodge in the depths of the
torians that Scotland's high style and vernacu Abernethy forest. Although the cladding of these
lar building is characterised by stone-and-lime buildings varies from timber board and batten
technology with timber verymuch confined to to corrugated iron and roughcast cement render,
themargins. As a result of the fieldwork and the the common denominator is that they are all
unexpected evidence of balloon frame construc framed buildings inwhich a timber structure is
tion in Scotland, this perception now requires themeans of transmitting both dead and super
r??valuation. The strong similarities between imposed loads to the foundations.
posthole, braced, stud, and post-and-rail frames As there isno body of literature on the subject,
that the study revealed provided sufficientmate the study attempted to bring into focus the dispa
rial to offer this contribution to the debate on the rate elements by comparing and contrasting the
origins of the balloon frame. varying approaches to building timber frames on
The study is based on a taxonomic methodol both sides of theAtlantic. Figure i,which was con
ogy using a comparative analysis inwhich frame structed from the variety of sources,1 places these
typologies and their characteristics are examined differing forms of construction on the same page
with a selection of case studies. Prompted by a for the first time. In addition, the study seeks to
professional inquisitiveness about the concen demonstrate Sigfried Gideon's idea that "History
tration of timber buildings in both Deeside and is not simply the repository of unchanging facts,
Speyside, two of Highland Scotland's significant but a process, a pattern of living and changing
river valleys, initial assumptions were based on attitudes and interpretations."2 In so doing, the
the association of timber construction and the study simultaneously contradicts Gideon's asser
history of timber extraction in the respective river tion that George Snow was the inventor of the
systems. Predominately but not exclusively of balloon frame.
lateVictorian vintage, the buildings in the survey As American economic development spread
range from the esoteric Swiss Cottage of 1837 at west in the early nineteenth century, successive
Fochabers on Speyside to a former aircraft han waves of emigrants from the northeast of Scot
gar near Aberdeen built one hundred years later. land were in the vanguard and consequently had
Apart from the unexpected extent of tim access to the continuing development and refine
ber-framed buildings, diversity is a feature of ment of American frame techniques, culminat
the fieldwork: diversity of frame type and size, ing in Chicago in 1834. Individuals of particular
and of both history and geography. There are note are George "Chicago" Smith and Alexander
railway buildings, sports buildings, commer White. With this background of two-way connec
cial buildings, as well as dwellings, a range tions between the communities in Scotland's
that encompasses single-chamber bothies? northeast and the development of American
with remarkable similarities to slave quarters frame technology, the studywas able to demon
in Virginia?family houses, and the imposing strate that the apparent lack of a timber frame
Figure i. Comparative tradition in Scotland was not founded on the conduit for the knowledge for timber frame
illustration of frame lack of knowledge. techniques being developed contemporaneously
types in Scotland and Smith first set foot in Chicago in 1834, in America, however no evidence was found to
America. This composite
2
I BUILDINGS &l LANDSCAPES 16, no. 1, SPRING 2009
2. Swiss Cottage
Figure
near Fochabers.
Photograph by author.
:A
* -
.
..s ss -~~ - s- .A ~ ~~~.r. -.-a.s..,.-I ,s
:* -
,AA ** ..
R,
....... ....
.eO
IAIN BRUCE, THE BALLOON FRAME, GEORGE SNOW, AUGUSTINE TAYLOR, AND ALL THAT 3
|
Photograph by author.
*m- .;.i
a. -M
"QP.
*M.
Amp-.
. . Yt- - . -
.. --. --4n
-c -
-..*.
--.-.....-".-.
IAIN BRUCE, THE BALLOON FRAME, GEORGE SNOW, AUGUSTINE TAYLOR, AND ALL THAT 5
|
D6 F e 12 Comt H
Smaon 9 16
HaCrahes
Public J
1E
at
6" x2"elude
6"x 2ustuds
at23"centres - Wlm 21d Is x3 studat3 cnres
4" x 1W trnge 4"x 2ufOes~e Wux2Wstrigerchocked
to
cheSkd tuads asd
Figure 6. Comparative can only be appreciated within the context of the would fill such excavations to the surface;drainage
illustration of frame
generality of timber frame buildings. By bringing was out of thequestion owing to the low and level
types found in field study.
Illustration by author for
together the detailed knowledge available on the surface of the ground and owing to thewatertight
American side of theAtlantic with themuch more stratum of the blue clay, alreadymentioned. The
a PhD thesis submitted
to the Robert Gordon fragmented information on timber construction only
recourse was to wait until the ground became
University.
in Scotland, the study postulates that, far from dry and firmby the slow process of evaporation. In
being invented, the balloon frame emerged consequence of these difficulties,buildings were
merely in the continuum of the development and sunk into the ground and restingon thehard clay,
refinement of construction techniques. which under the circumstances furnished thebest
In greater consideration of Gideon's source foundations to be had."
as to occupy the place of a header brickwhich is and County of Philadelphia, 1976). Balloon frame:
insertedwhen the scaffolds are struck after the reproduced fromRaymond P. Jonesand JohnE. Ball,
work is finished.13
Framing, Sheathing, and Insulation (Albany, N.Y.: Del
ofBuilding(1995edition)defines
guinDictionary and PracticesofCarpentry, Masonry
Joinery,Bricklaying,
ledgeras "a horizontal framing member, either (London: J.Taylor, 1812). Cruck frame: Cruck-framed
balloon frame being "invented" in Chicago on a 3. There are a number of land parcels attributed to
specific site in a specific year by either George a George Smith entered or patented between 1828 and
Snow orAugustine Taylor, the balloon frame was 1836 on theplan attached to the Book ofOriginal Entry
merely an expedient adaptation of the scaffolding for Chicago.
techniques used for the construction ofmasonry 4. Entry for George Smith, February 10,1806-Oc
drawing by Cary Carsen and Ching Hoang, repro 6. SigfriedGideon, Space, Time, and Architecture,
duced fromWinterthurPortfolio16,nos. 2/3 (Summer/ 83.
Autumn 1981). Great or English frame: reproduced 7. Ibid.
from Abbot Lowell Cummings, The Frame House
IAIN BRUCE, THE BALLOON FRAME, GEORGE SNOW, AUGUSTINE TAYLOR, AND ALL THAT 7
|
1977)- 5-"5
1884), 505.
12. Ibid.