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HOME EXTENSIONS BURNLEY Acknowldge Wikipedia For The Following Information
Burnley's origins lie in prehistoric times, as indicated by the Stone Age flint tools and weapons that have been found on the moors around the town.[3] Local place names Padiham and Habergham show the influence of the Angles, suggesting that some had settled in the area by the early seventh-century,[4] but there is no definitive record of settlement until 1122, when a charter granted the church of Burnley to the monks of Pontefract Abbey.[5] In its early days, Burnley was a small farming community, gaining a corn mill in 1290, a market in 1294, and a fulling mill in 1296.[6] At this period, it lay within the manor of Ightenhill, one of five that made up the Honour of Clitheroe, then a far more significant settlement, and consisted of no more than 50 families.[7] Little survives of early Burnley - the name means 'meadow by the River Brun' [8] - apart from the Market Cross, erected in 1295, which now stands in the grounds of an annexe of Burnley College.[9] Over the next three centuries, Burnley grew in size to about 1,200 inhabitants by 1550, still centred around the church, St Peter's, in what is now known as 'Top o' th' Town'. Prosperous residents built larger houses, including Gawthorpe Hall and Towneley Hall, and in 1532 St Peter's Church was largely rebuilt.[10] Burnley's grammar school was founded in 1559, and moved into its own schoolhouse next to the church in 1602.[11] Burnley began to develop in this period into a small market town. It is known that weaving was established in the town by the middle of the seventeenth-century,[12] and in 1617 a new Market House was built.
Timber framing is the method of creating framed structures of heavy timber jointed together with pegged mortise and tenon joints (lengthening scarf joints and lap joints are also used). Diagonal bracing is used to prevent racking of the structure. To deal with the variable sizes and shapes of hewn and sawn timbers the two main historical layout methods used were: scribe carpentry and square rule carpentry. Scribing was used throughout Europe, especially from the 12th century to the 19th century, and was brought to North America where it was common into the early 19th century. In a scribe frame every timber will only fit in one place so that every timber has to be numbered. Square rule carpentry developed in New England in the 18th century and features housed joints in main timbers to allow for interchangeable braces and girts. Today regularized timber can mean that timber framing is treated as joinery especially when cut by large CNC (computer numerical control) machines.