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This is the story of 70 years of the beginning of turpentine production in North Carolina from 1705 to 1774. It reviews the efforts of 18th century Plantation owners and enslaved workers to extract tar and turpentine from the southern Longleaf Pine Forest, and how his Majestry’s Royal Navy used these naval stores to waterproof their wooden vessels and gunships. It is also the story of hard work and woodworking skills that created so much full employment that residents of North Carolina were known as “Tar Heels” because of the black stain on their shoes and feet. It is estimated that 25 percent of the families of North Carolina were employed at the tar kilns and turpentine stills in the 1700s. By 1774, the plantation owners supplied 70% of the naval store needs of the Royal Navy. Most of the workers would have surface burns on their face and neck from the hot pitch and tar. Our story is a tribute to the birth of an woodworking industry, that even today supplies resin as a constituent of varnishes and lacquers and is used as a glazing agent in medicine. The video tells the history of the port of Brunswick North Carolina, and one of the first applications of naval stores on the gunship, HMS Ajax, in its new drydock. The author created James & Rufus Endwright and Eliah Boyles as fictional characters to personalize the story of thousands of workers that worked in the Longleaf Pine Forest, and worked in the wharfs owned at that time by the Royal Navy of King George II. We will let others outline the evil of slavery, the stupidity of clear cutting a forest, and working in an industry with environmental hazards. This video praises these woodworkers Timestamp 0:00 Intro 1:53 King's request for Turpentine 3:27 How to build a tar kiln 4:45 How to make turpentine 6:45 Responsibility of Naval Caulkers 8:50 Sealing holes in naval ships 9:19 Painting hull of sailing ships 10:13 Credits This Hoosierwoodcraft video praises the forest woodworkers and the ship carpenters and caulkers that waterproofed the wooden frigates and ships of the line that protected the colonies and ensured trade between North Carolina and England. Their relatives, alive today, should celebrate their skills and their productivity. The video is another in the series of Hoosierwoodcraft. Please subscribe to this channel.