tommy cooper
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well it is a question i see alot here so i have done some googling around and found some info on this subject and wording.
i will add to it as i find more but there seems to be some conflicting arguments on the subject about the word "draught" so here is the first installment i hope you enjoy the read and the linx .
www.hooknortonbrewery.co.uk/public_visitors/Shire_horse_dray_horse.html.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Draft_(horse)
beeradvocate.com/news/stories_read/523/
so from what i have read, before the invention of the beer engine it was called cask ale which was cellared and pourered into serving jugs .but after the invention of the beer engine or hand pump ,where as the beer was drawn from the cask only then dose there seem to be a reference to calling it draft ale or draught.
okay there are litrally thousands of references to Joseph Bramah so finding the correct one where it mentions about puling beer up from the cellar using the beer engine is quite an effort in it self .but hence the word pull,pulling or moving =(haul) it is the same as the anglo saxon word draught or draft it is how ever a very open and complicated language (english) so you now now that draught or draft has a proven relationship to pulling or moving in its correct meaning .
a dray is a 2m x2m cart and it is also refered to in australian history within the cobb and co museam. the correct terminology is a dray horse or shire horse. the word draught horse is in fact used more commonly in australia from what serching i have done.
well its all anglosaxon to me.
here endeth the lesson and i hope you enjoyed the read as much as i enjoyed the research.
tc :beer:
i will add to it as i find more but there seems to be some conflicting arguments on the subject about the word "draught" so here is the first installment i hope you enjoy the read and the linx .
www.hooknortonbrewery.co.uk/public_visitors/Shire_horse_dray_horse.html.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Draft_(horse)
beeradvocate.com/news/stories_read/523/
so from what i have read, before the invention of the beer engine it was called cask ale which was cellared and pourered into serving jugs .but after the invention of the beer engine or hand pump ,where as the beer was drawn from the cask only then dose there seem to be a reference to calling it draft ale or draught.
okay there are litrally thousands of references to Joseph Bramah so finding the correct one where it mentions about puling beer up from the cellar using the beer engine is quite an effort in it self .but hence the word pull,pulling or moving =(haul) it is the same as the anglo saxon word draught or draft it is how ever a very open and complicated language (english) so you now now that draught or draft has a proven relationship to pulling or moving in its correct meaning .
a dray is a 2m x2m cart and it is also refered to in australian history within the cobb and co museam. the correct terminology is a dray horse or shire horse. the word draught horse is in fact used more commonly in australia from what serching i have done.
well its all anglosaxon to me.
here endeth the lesson and i hope you enjoyed the read as much as i enjoyed the research.
tc :beer: