Oak swill baskets are traditional to the southern Lake District and have been made for centuries. Their origins are unclear, but it is likely that they evolved as a cottage industry which then expanded after the industrial revolution into a trade in its own right. Swills were used on coal steamships, in mines, mills, ironworks and many other industries. They also had farm and domestic uses, but declined rapidly in the post-war years with the rise in mechanisation and plastics.
Swill making became semi-industrialised, i.e. moved from a cottage industry into larger swill shops, during the Industrial Revolution, to satisfy new needs for baskets in the industrial revolution, such as moving large amounts of charcoal from woodland to ships and trains and to help with the local iron ore industry. Swills were also used in bobbin mills, as well as in agriculture.
The craft started to decline after the wars with the rise of wire and plastic replacements and as woodspeople no longer valued their craft and encouraged their offspring into new vocations. Approximately thirty years ago three people learnt the craft from the last of the swillers – Stella Kenyon (now deceased), Mary Ullrich (then Mary Barrett, wrote a booklet on swill that is now out of print), and Owen Jones.
The following have made swills but do not do so for their main living:
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