Country Zest & Style Winter 2022 Edition

Page 12

The Ice Was Nice and Thick in the Mid-1800s

T

by the size of the ice house at Oatlands, it took quite a few. (The Oatlands ice house is the stone structure with a slanted roof at the end of the brick bank barn known as the “Carter Barn”.)

By Lynne Kaye

alk about climate change.

A new book, “The Diary of Elizabeth O. Carter, Loudoun County, Virginia, 1860-1872,” offers a new and very different understanding of one of the hot button issues of 2022.

Ice harvests were dangerous, 24-hour-a-day, allhands-on-deck affairs. Elizabeth Carter recorded that the 1861 ice harvest began on February 8, a day that was “3 degrees below zero at 6:30 A.M.” The harvest continued through February 11. Ice sheets periodically cracked and broke, plunging men and horses into the freezing water. Prior to the Civil War, enslsaved men provided much of the labor for Virginia’s ice harvests.

The entries in Elizabeth Carter’s diary paint a picture of a Virginia climate back then that more closely resembles that of New England today, particularly her descriptions of the annual ice harvests in the mid-19th century. On December 22, 1862, Elizabeth Carter described the first step in harvesting ice— checking the ice on the family’s “ice pond.” That day, she recorded “getting ice about 4 inches thick.” By January 8, 1863, the ice had thickened enough to be harvested, probably at least eight inches thick and sturdy enough to hold several tons of weight. That depth of ice is astounding considering that, today, local ponds rarely freeze thick enough to support the small amount of weight of even one ice skater. Back then, pond ice was thick enough to harvest. A grid was etched in the ice using a specially designed, horse-drawn “ice plow.” Workers, usually enslaved men, used the grid as a guide for cutting blocks of ice using single-handled, five-foot long hand saws. Sawed blocks were pried out of the ice sheet using thick, metal

The ice house at Oatlands in Leesburg. “breaker bars.” A typical block of ice was a 22-inch square that could weigh between 250 to 300 pounds. Individual ice blocks were floated on top of the water to the shoreline, where they were hoisted out of the water. The blocks then were loaded onto a waiting horse or ox-drawn wagon. Wagon loads of ice were driven from the ice pond to the ice house. There, the blocks were unloaded and stored, surrounded by straw for insulation. The ice house at Montpelier, for example, required 70 wagon loads to fill. While Elizabeth does not say how many wagon loads it took to fill her family’s ice houses, judging

Heat was the greatest enemy of an ice house. Luckily, Virginia summers were cooler in the 1860s than they are today. Imagine living in a Virginia where 90-degree summer days were rare. That’s the climate Elizabeth Carter recorded. During the 13 summers covered by her diary, she only recorded seven days with a high of 90 or above. Surely, it kept the ice nice in ice houses all around. Lynne Kaye is a member of the Middleburg Sustainability Committee and has been instrumental in developing the town’s cigarette butt recycling agenda as well as the recently passed EV (electric vehicle) charging station program. She serves as the treasurer on the executive committee at Oatlands.

Local Leadership. Local Assets. Local Needs.

Won’t You Join Us? CommunityFoundationLF.org | (703) 779-3505

12

MIDDLEBURG SUSTAINABLE COMMITTEE| Winter 2022


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Articles inside

A Letter From Paris: The Wedding Rehearsal From Hell

5min
page 66

PROPERTY Writes - Willwyn Farm: History and Horse Heaven

3min
pages 64-65

At Wakefield, a Scholarship Made All the Difference

3min
page 63

Middleburg Mayor Off to a Great Start

3min
page 62

TIRTHAS-The Thin Places Where Earthly and Divine Meet

2min
pages 60-61

Two Brave Men Honored as Civil Rights Stalwarts

4min
pages 58-59

Tremelo: A New Bar With a Musical Touch

3min
page 56

Hardly the Retiring Type Advocating for Children

4min
page 54

PATH Foundation Paves the Way

3min
page 53

At Cupcakes and Lace, It’s Sew Perfect

3min
page 52

The Potter’s House Making a Comeback

3min
page 51

A FIELD TRIP FOR THE BIRDS

3min
page 50

Profiles in1962 Courage: Integrating Loudoun’s Public Schools

7min
pages 48-49

Vineyard VIEW: Tasting the Wide World of Wine in Leesburg

3min
page 47

Foxcroft Student Just Keeps Zooming Along

3min
page 46

It’s Home Sweet Home for Miss “Issy”

3min
page 44

Country Zest & Style Winter 2022 Edition

3min
page 43

A Field of Dreams for Bernadette Boland

3min
page 42

Montana and Middleburg: A Perfect Fit

4min
page 41

At Home in the Countryside

3min
page 39

It’s Sophie’s Choice toHelp Save the Land

3min
page 38

It’s Family, It’s Horses, It’s Home

3min
page 37

NOBODY HERE BUT US CHICKENS

2min
pages 34-35

New Technology: BRINGS BLACK HISTORY TO LIFE

5min
page 32

Keeping Traditions Alive to a Tea

3min
page 31

A Music Man with the Touch of an Artist

3min
page 30

STUDIO LUXE: A Welcoming Boutique for One and All

4min
page 29

At Hill, It’s The Path

4min
page 28

MODERN FINANCE - Electric Vehicles: Driving Toward the Future

2min
page 27

Leesburg’s Glenfiddich House Has Some History

3min
page 26

CARRY ME BACK: Hold Your Horses, It’s All Mush for the Dogs

3min
page 25

Land Trust of Virginia Had a Very Good Year

3min
page 24

Moonstruck Geologist Played a Vital Role at NASA

3min
page 23

Physical Therapist Mary Wilson Making a Wheel Difference

3min
page 22

CELEBRATIONS

1min
page 20

For the Bowersock Family, A Final Chapter

6min
page 18

A Vintage Shop Blends Wine, Art and Antiques

3min
page 17

Bluewater Market Has Survived and Thrived

3min
page 16

Cup of COFFEE: A New Year, a New Approach

5min
page 14

The Ice Was Nice and Thick in the Mid-1800s

3min
page 12

Crafted With Old World Care

3min
pages 8-9

Young Musicians Will Take Center Stage

3min
page 6

of NOTE - IT’S FABULOUS FEBRUARY

3min
page 4

For Chef Pete, Cruising to a Delicious Destination

3min
page 3

Straight Shooter Teresa Condon Right on Target

4min
pages 10-11
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