Loosely
speaking,
thatching is the use of straw or grasses as a building material. Using
thatch for roofing goes back as far as the Bronze Age in Britain. At Shearplace Hall in Dorset there are remains of a round hut that shows signs of
thatching.
Thatched cottages and farm buildings were the norm in rural Britain for a millennium or more. Why the
attraction to
thatch? First of all, the building practices of bygone Britain ran to lightweight,
irregular materials, such as wattle and daub walls, and cruck beams. These walls were simply not made to take much weight, and
thatch was by far the lightest weight material available.
The study of materials used in
thatch buildings can get pretty obscure, but basically, people used whatever was available locally.
This meant materials as
diverse as broom, sedge, sallow, flax, grass, and straw. Most common is wheat straw in the south of England, and reeds in East Anglia. Norfolk reed is especially prized by
thatchers, although in northern England and Scotland
heather was frequently used.
Although
thatch was
primarily used by the poor, occasionally great houses used this most common of materials. In 1300 the great Norman castle at Pevensey (Sussex) bought up 6 acres of rushes to roof the hall and chambers. Much later, in the late 18th century
thatched cottages became an extremely popular theme with the "picturesque" painters, who tried to
portray an idealized (Romantic/sanitized)
version of nature.
Churches also used
thatch frequently. In one
humorousepisode the
parish church at Reyden, near Southwell, was roofed in 1880 with
thatch on the side of the church hidden from the road, and with tiles on the side facing the road. Presumably the tiles looked more
elegant than the more
commonplacethatch.
What caused the decline of
thatching? Primarily better transportation. The growing railway
network in the Victorian era meant that cheap slate from Wales became easily available all over Britain. Agricultural machinery, particularly the combine harvester, had the unfortunate effect of making wheat straw unusable for
thatching. This made Norfolk reed all the more prized, and now the latter material is grown specifically for use in
thatching.
So how does one
thatch a cottage? First the
thatch is tied in bundles, then laid in an underlayer on the roof beams and pegged in place with rods made of hazel or withy.
Then an upper layer is laid over the first, and a final reinforcing layer added along the ridgeline. It is at the ridgeline that the individual
thatcher leaves his personal "signature", a
decorative feature of some kind that marks the job as his alone. One lovely cottage I saw on a
bicycle tour near Glastonbury (Somerset) has a row of
thatch birds marching proudly along the ridge of the roofline!
Although
thatching, like many rural crafts, has suffered from the encroachment of "civilization", many property owners today recognize the value of keeping their cottages
thatched, if for no other reason than that
thatched cottages fetch a prime price on the real estate market!
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