Oakum
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Oakum is a preparation of tarred fibre used in shipbuilding, for caulking or packing the joints of timbers in wooden vessels and the deck planking of iron and steel ships, as well as cast iron plumbing applications. Oakum was at one time made from old tarry ropes and cordage of vessels, and its picking and preparation has been a common penal occupation in prisons and workhouses. In modern times it is made from virgin hemp fibers. White oakum is made from untarred materials. The fibrous material used in oakum is most commonly a hemp or jute fiber impregnated with tar or a tarlike substance. This "tar" is not the tar used on streets and roofs, which is really asphalt, but rather pine tar, also called Stockholm tar, an amber-colored pitch made from the sap of certain pine trees.
The word oakum is derived from Middle English okum, from Old English Acumba tow, from A- (separative & perfective prefix) + -cumba (akin to Old English camb comb) - literally "off-combings".
While discussing the appropriate attire for American Supreme Court justices, Thomas Jefferson was once famously quoted as saying, in reference to traditional court dress: "For heaven's sake, discard the monstrous wig which makes the English judges look like rats peeping through bunches of oakum."[1]
[edit] Use in plumbing applications
Until plastic (ABS, PVC or CPVC) drain pipes were used, oakum was one of two materials used to seal cast iron drain piping. After setting the pipes together, oakum was packed into the joints, then molten lead was poured into the joint, creating a permanent seal. The oakum swells and seals the joint, the "tar" in the oakum prevents rot and the lead keeps the joint physically tight.
[edit] Oakum in Oliver Twist
Oliver Twist, a novel by Charles Dickens, mentions the extraction of oakum by orphaned children in the work house where Oliver utters the famous words 'Please sir, I want some more'. The oakum extracted was to be used by the navy ships, and the instructor says that they were serving the country by extracting the oakum.
[edit] References
- This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica, Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.
- ^ Procter, I.B. "John Jay and Other Chief Justices of the Supreme Court." pp.153-154 Michigan Law Journal, Volume 5 1896. Dennis & Co., Inc. 1963 (accessed via Google Books May 4, 2008)
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