Chaldron
{{short description|Unit of volume}}
File:The collier.jpeg's pioneering locomotive pulling several chaldrons (1813).]]
File:Chaldron wagon, Beamish Museum, 17 May 2011.jpg.
The long brake lever is for control when running down to the staith by gravity. Note that the perspective of this photo makes the chaldron seem much larger than it is.]]
A chaldron (also chauldron or chalder) was an English measure of dry volume, mostly used for coal; the word itself is an obsolete spelling of cauldron. It was used from the 13th century onwards, nominally until 1963, when it was abolished by the Weights and Measures Act 1963, but in practice until the end of 1835, when the Weights and Measures Act 1835 specified that thenceforth coal could only be sold by weight.
Coal
The chaldron was used as the measure for coal from the 13th century, measuring by volume being much more practical than weighing low-value, high-bulk commodities like coal. It was not standardized, and there were many different regional chaldrons, the two most important being the Newcastle and London chaldrons. The Newcastle chaldron was used to measure all coal shipped from Northumberland and Durham, and the London chaldron became the standard measure for coal in the east and south of England.{{cite book | last = Ashworth| first = William |author2=Mark Pegg | title = The history of the British coal industry | publisher = Oxford University Press| date = 1986 | pages = 559–560| isbn = 0-19-828282-6}}
Many attempts have been made to calculate the weight of a Newcastle chaldron as used in medieval and early modern times. Coal industry historian John Nef has estimated that in 1421 it weighed {{convert|2000|lb|0|abbr=on}}, and that its weight was gradually increased by coal traders due to the taxes on coal (which were charged per chaldron) until 1678, when its weight was fixed by law at {{convert|52+1/2|lcwt|lb kg|abbr=on|lk=on}}, later increased in 1694 to {{convert|53|lcwt|lb kg|sigfig=3|abbr=on|lk=on}}.
A London chaldron, on the other hand, was defined as "36 bushels heaped up, each bushel to contain a Winchester bushel and {{convert|1|impqt|L USqt|2|lk=on}}, and to be {{convert|19+1/2|in|mm|0|lk=on}} in diameter". This approximated a weight in coal of around {{convert|28|lcwt|lb kg|sigfig=3|abbr=on|disp=or}}.{{cite book | last = Hutton | first = Charles | title = A Philosophical and Mathematical Dictionary | publisher = the Author | date = 1815 | page = [https://archive.org/details/philosophicalmat01hutt/page/302 302] | url = https://archive.org/details/philosophicalmat01hutt }}
The chaldron was the legal limit for horse-drawn coal waggons travelling by road as it was considered that heavier loads would cause too much damage to the roadways. Railways had standard "chauldron waggons" which were about {{convert|10|ft|2|abbr=on}} and around {{convert|6|ft|3|in|abbr=on}} high.
The value of a chaldron of coal depended on the size of the lumps of coal and also their water content. Unscrupulous merchants would purchase their coal in lumps as large as possible then sell them in smaller sizes. This was abolished by the Weights and Measures Act 1835, which legislated that from January 1836 coal was only to be sold by weight.{{cite book | last = William J. Ashworth| first = Charles | title = Customs and Excise | publisher = Oxford University Press | date = 2003 | page = 289 | isbn = 0-19-925921-6 }}
See also
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References
{{Commons category|Chaldron wagons}}
;Notes
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{{1728|title=Chaldron}}
{{Freight cars}}
{{Mining equipment}}
{{Imperial units}}