Harry Pristis
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Anyone here find cups similar to these terracotta vessels? These are "turpentining cups" used to collect pine resin which is fractionated to produce turpentine. Often, there will be hardened pine resin still in the bottom of the long-abandoned cup.
The Herty cup seems to be the most common. It was named after a professor who developed it at the University of Georgia, if memory serves me. It has a perforation in the rim so that it could be suspended from a nail pounded into the pine tree.
I found these cups in Florida. I'm not sure if this turpentining is a southern phenomenon, or if it was practiced in the Mid-Atlantic states. Anyone up north find such cups?
The Herty cup seems to be the most common. It was named after a professor who developed it at the University of Georgia, if memory serves me. It has a perforation in the rim so that it could be suspended from a nail pounded into the pine tree.
I found these cups in Florida. I'm not sure if this turpentining is a southern phenomenon, or if it was practiced in the Mid-Atlantic states. Anyone up north find such cups?