Gateway to the Mountains
George
Wireman
Chapter 4: The Tanning
Industry
The manufacture of
leather by tanning
skins and hides is
probably the oldest
craft associated with
civilization itself.
Leather sandals and
other articles made
from animal hides and
showing the effects of
tanning and curing
have been found in
Egyptian tombs that
are more than 3,000
years old. According
to existing records,
the in-habitants of
China and India knew
how to make leather
before they developed
their system of
writing, thousands of
years ago.
When the early
explorers reached the
shores of the New
World, they found that
the American Indians
were well versed in
the art of tanning and
that all of the tribes
used the same method.
The proximity of the
rock oak in the
adjacent mountains and
the abundance of water
made Mechanicstown a
very favorable place
for tanning hides.
When Daniel Rouzer
came to Mechanicstown,
he brought with him
the art of tanning
leather and in 1793 he
established the Rouzer
Tannery, which became
the first major
industry in the
community.
In the early days, the
tanning industry was
mostly centered in New
York. The tanners
making hemlock leather
were located along the
line of growth of that
tree, which took them
through Pennsylvania,
lower New York,
Michigan, and northern
Wisconsin. The tanners
using oak bark and
chestnut wood followed
a line through the
mountains of
Pennsylvania,
Maryland, Virginia,
West Virginia, North
Carolina and
Tennessee. The
depletion in the
supply of oak and
hemlock bark and the
virtual extinction of
chestnut wood by
blight, curtailed many
tanneries. The early
tanneries were small
and established near
the sources of the
tanning materials.
When the local
supplies of vegetable
tannis were exhausted,
the tanneries were
dismantled and moved
to locations where
supplies were
plentiful.
Daniel Rouzer was
considered an expert
tanner and the Rouzer
Tannery flourished for
many years, providing
employment for the
citizens of this fast
growing settlement.
Plank boxes were sunk
in the ground for
vats, and oak bark,
containing tannin, was
crushed by means of
heavy stones. This was
generally the only
tanning agent used.
Tannins precipitate
solutions of gelatin
and of toker proteins,
and when uniting with
rawhide, form leather.
Treatment of the hides
with the tanning
solution changes the
protein in the hides
so that they will be
water-resistant and
will not petrify.
Rouzer then suspended
or deposited the hides
in a successive series
of vats containing tan
liquor or ooze which
was made increasingly
rich in tannin. At
first, the hides were
frequently turned over
in the vats, but this
handling became less
frequent as the
process continued,
until in the final vat
the hides would rest
for six weeks without
being disturbed. When
finally taken from the
tan bark vat, the
hides were then
drained in a heap,
then covered so as not
to let in any light.
After the draining
process was completed,
the hides were then
suspended in a loft
for drying, in which
condition they form
rough leather. When
completely dry, the
hides were then taken
from the loft and
dampened and softened
in a water bath.
Following this they
were scoured to remove
the bloom from the
surface, then oiled
and the entire surface
worked over by
pressure with a
three-sided steel
implement called a
striking pep. After
tanning, the leather
was then dressed by
the currier and
leather dresser.
Daniel Rouzer took
great pride in his
work and produced some
of the finest leather
in this part of the
country. His son, John
Rouzer, took over the
operation of the
tannery in later years
and became one of the
leading tanners and
influential citizens
of Western Maryland.
A
marble slab, used for
an entrance walk to
the property of George
W. Wireman on Carroll
Street, is without a
doubt, the last
remaining relic from
the Daniel Rouzer
tannery. This stone
was used to smooth out
the leather in the
final stages of the
tanning process and
was brought to the
Wireman property by
George Stocks-dale
during the
construction of the
house in 1874.
Although the Rouzer
tannery was the first
major industry in
Mechanicstown, it was
not the only tannery.
In 1810 the Wampler
Tannery was built and
in 1820 Richard Jones
of Baltimore
established the
Hunting Creek Tannery
which featured some
200 vats and turned
out more than
twenty-five thousand
sides of superior
leather yearly. A year
later in 1821, Samuel
Stern built a tannery
near the mountains.
Henry Rouzer
established a tannery,
located on East Main
Street on the site now
occupied by the home
of Austin Bruchey. The
bark sheds were built
along the street and
the vats were located
to the rear of the
property, which today
serves as a backyard
for the Bruchey
residence.
By 1831 there were
seven tanneries in
operation, each
producing a fine grade
of leather and
contributing much to
the economy of this
little, but thriving
community.
Chapter Index
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Chapter 5: Community
Schools
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