Traditional Muzzleloading on the Cheap

Member’s General Interest => Where can I get it? => Topic started by: Bulldog lady on February 18, 2010

Title: Burlap bag
Post by: Bulldog lady on February 18, 2010
Need info please- found a good deal on new burlap bags- what time frame are they correct for?  Or when was burlap used?  thanks  Di
Title: Re: Burlap bag
Post by: heatherhistorian on February 18, 2010
You can get burlap at Hancocks and make a bag. :)  Just an idea if you can't find a bag.
Title: Re: Burlap bag
Post by: Hanshi on February 18, 2010
Burlap makes good underwear as long as you're "frontier tough".  'SNTY"
Title: Re: Burlap bag
Post by: sean drake on February 18, 2010
di do not know how long they have ben around but I would think quite a long time and the coop over in blackwell is still putting feed in them or at least last time i went over to get any I would think they would fit a lot of years but that is only my wag at it
                                                         (Wilde, --- gees)
Title: Re: Burlap bag
Post by: Hanshi on February 18, 2010
When I was young (and not so young) way, way down South we called them "croaker sacks".  Anybody still call them that?  I still do to this day.
Title: Re: Burlap bag
Post by: beowulf on February 18, 2010
I have one from a local feed mill thats marked with the company name and the date 1885 ! so I`d be willing to bet they`ve been around a lot longer than that !
Title: Re: Burlap bag
Post by: bull frog on February 18, 2010
Don't know how long, but I will be willing to bet a very long time........and as far as burlap under wear....I don't know how long I would last in those.
Title: Re: Burlap bag
Post by: DandJofAZ on February 18, 2010
Back to your basic question--------1830  to present....started in Africa--to India, where most is still grown--to England in 1790's and Scotland in 1830 at the Dundee mills which turned out burlap for used world wide..Before that only hand woven cloth available from India...German Hesse soldiers uniforms in early 1800's.
Name from Indian city of Burlap??  Lots of uses for about the last 180 years in the Americas.  Cheap, strong, biodegradable.  Great stuff but not for my underwear--I like cotton..
Doug
Title: Re: Burlap bag
Post by: Hanshi on February 18, 2010
Back in the late '50s some of the girls wore skirts made of burlap; not a fad exactly but they were around the school.
Title: Re: Burlap bag
Post by: redhawk on February 18, 2010
Hanshi,   my father called them " croaker sacks".  I think he got it when he live on the NC coast.
Title: Re: Burlap bag
Post by: Red Badger on February 18, 2010
OK so after 1830 - so much for that idea my persona is 1800 - 1820....

Thanks for the info though I am sure someone else can use it!
Title: Re: Burlap bag
Post by: Bulldog lady on February 19, 2010
 strpot  Clarification please  so if for example your persona is 1800-1820    at midnight on Dec 31, 1820 do you diss-a- pers ?   Serious guys thanks for all the info  found it very interesting       If burlap or nutin only  choice for underware think have to go with the latter !!!   
Title: Re: Burlap bag
Post by: Hanshi on February 19, 2010
Dandjofaz, I'll have to disagree with you on that "1830" date and I'm sure some of our older members can back me up.  I seem to recall using burlap/croaker sacks when I was a kid in the early 1820s.  I know they were around long before I ever saw my first percussion cap.  I remember unloading wagons for my daddy that contained vegetables packed in croaker sacks.  (susp)
Title: Re: Burlap bag
Post by: old salt on February 19, 2010
I can not find the source but I think I read that the fur co. wrapped fur bundles in burlap, so that being said it would not take much imagination
to make a tote bag out of it. I do know that burlap is acceptable at all of
roundys I have been to.
We called them a tote sack or a gunny sack back in the 1750s when I was pup
Title: Re: Burlap bag
Post by: Hanshi on February 19, 2010
Hey, Old Salt, did you serve in the Rev war along with my grandpa?  That would be neat!
Title: Re: Burlap bag
Post by: old salt on February 19, 2010
hanshi
I think I may have been his Drill Sgt ROFL ROFL ROFL
Title: Re: Burlap bag
Post by: DandJofAZ on February 20, 2010
What I ran across as "burlap" was first readily available in 1830's as that was when mass production began with mechanized looms.  Hand woven course material was made earlier in India and used for some shipping as early as the 1760s.  If you get some coffee bean or cocobean sacks which like 'croaker bags' are very course material, it would approximate the old pre-burlap hemp bags..no way will I use that rough course material for my undies..

Doug