Stagville Peg

Dublin Core

Title

Stagville Peg

Subject

Timber Framing Material Evidence

Description

This photo shows more of the joinery at the Great Barn, joinery that mimics what went into the Horton Grove home. Like any timber frame, the tying detail is the ever-present peg in the tenons.

Creator

Hunter S. Rhodes

Source

Hunter S. Rhodes

Publisher

Hunter S. Rhodes

Date

Object: exact date unknown, likely middle 19th century

Photo: April 5, 2019

Contributor

[no text]

Rights

Hunter S. Rhodes

Relation

[no text]

Format

12.3MP
3036 × 4048
4.2 MB
JPEG

Language

[no text]

Type

Color photograph

Identifier

Timber Frame

Coverage

This picture shows a broader overview of some of the joinery methods that go into timber framing. It appears evident from the reduction in the main pegged mortise and tenon joint in the center of the photo that the enslaved builders were using square rule method, an American method of timber framing that began around 1800 and goes on the idea that within every irregular timber is a perfectly square timber ready to be worked. For example, a nominal 7x7 post may actually measure 7 1/4 x 6 3/4. With square rule, though, instead of worrying about this irregularity, the builder can simply say the square timber inside is 6 1/2 x 6 1/2 and build based on those measurements.

This is a method that, as you can well imagine, involves a lot of math on top of the skill to actually do the building. It makes due with what the builder has at hand in order to still raise a frame that is square, plumb, and level, ready to withstand the test of time.

Files

Stagville Peg.jpg

Citation

Hunter S. Rhodes, “Stagville Peg,” Building A Nation, accessed April 29, 2024, https://buildinganation.omeka.net/items/show/14.