Beside the street opposite Chipping Campden’s 17th-century almshouses is this unusual feature. It now looks like a stretch of paved road that dips below the normal street level and it was originally full of water. This is a cart wash, and it dates to the early-19th century. Back then, mud could build up badly on cart wheels – not only on carts that had been in the fields, but on those hauled along rough and sometimes rutted roads or tracks. So the idea of a public cart wash was to enable carters to clean the mud off their wheels before entering the centre of town.
There was another use of the cart wash and this was to stand the vehicle in it for a while, to give the wheels a good soaking. Old-fashioned horse-drawn carts had wooden wheels protected by metal tyres around the rims. If the wheels got too dry, the tyres could loosen and fall off. Soaking the wheels was a way of making them expand a little, to tighten the tyres and keep the wooden wheels properly protected.
The world of horse-drawn carts and their maintenance seems remote now, but it’s not that long ago. I never knew my great uncle, whose business involved carting goods around rural north Lincolnshire, although my mother remembered him fondly. Just over a century ago, such people played an important role in rural communities, as did the men who built and repaired their carts. The Wheelwright’s Shop, George Sturt’s evocative 1923 account of this world of craftsmanship and toil, is well worth reading. Seeing Chipping Campden’s Cotswold stone cart wash brings it all back.
Lovely when such ephemeral things hang on. This past summer we rented the banquet hall adjacent to this from the landmark trust for a lovely week and passed through this sidewalk every day so a real thrill to see this hear and remind me of our trip.
ReplyDeleteYour post was excellent! Your writing is both clear and compelling. Write more, please!
ReplyDeleteUnless I misheard, there was a mention on the radio, a day or so ago, that English Heritage (or similar) has listed a cart wash in Royston, Hertfordshire. What a coincidence.
ReplyDeleteThere was a recent report of the "carriage splash" in Royston, on Ermine Street north from London towards Lincoln and York, listed this year. And still containing its water! https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-beds-bucks-herts-67693686
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