hammer pond
English
Etymology
From Middle English hamer, Old English hamor, and Middle English pond
Noun
hammer pond (plural hammer ponds)
- (historical) The millpond of an iron forge, especially in the Weald.
- 1866, Charles Kingsley, chapter 25, in Hereward the Wake, London: Nelson, page 342:
- [T]hroughout the Southern Weald, from Hastings to Hind-head, every copse glared with charcoal-heaps, every glen was burrowed with iron diggings, every hammer-pond stamped and gurgled night and day, smelting and forging English iron[.]
- 2009, Clive Chatters, “The Enclosed Countryside”, in Flowers of the Forest: Plants and People in the New Forest National Park, volume 52, Princeton University Press, pages 190-207:
- In later years the waters were converted into a hammer pond to power the furnaces and hammers of an ironworks.
Related terms
- hammer wood
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