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  • Object number
    2006/23
  • Description
    This jigger drawknife is one of a set of cooper’s tools used by the donor during his apprenticeship and career as a cooper at Reading Brewery from 1948. A cooper uses a jigger drawknife to pare down the surface of the chiv in repair work. The chiv is a smooth, shallow depression around the inside of the staves at each end into which a groove, known as the 'croze', is cut.
  • Physical description
    drawknife: metal, wood
  • Archival history
    MERL Miscellaneous note from conversation with Alistair Simms (Master Cooper), 3 September 2014 – While a chiv plane can be used in both making casks and repairing casks, a jigger is only used in repair work., Mr McCarthy started his coopering apprenticeship at Reading Brewery on 10 June 1948, aged 17, and finished in March 1952. No members of his family were coopers but he started because his friend’s father was a cooper. He worked 40 hours a week during his apprenticeship doing piecework with a trained cooper who was his master. Up to the age of 18 all earnings went to the master cooper; aged 18-20 half went to the apprentice, a quarter to the master and a quarter to the brewery; aged 20-21 two thirds to the apprentice, one sixth to the master and one sixth to the brewery.
  • Object name
    Drawknife, jigger
  • Material
    Metal, Wood
  • Technique
    Turned
  • Associated subject
    CRAFTS : wood-working
    Coopering
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University of Reading | Archive and Museum Database
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