Through the
second half of the 19th century and into the 20th, barrel makers
followed the same path taken by many other woodworkers . . . they
moved from hand tools to the large, efficient new machines that
were the products of the Industrial Revolution. They built factories
to house the machines and turned out thousands of barrels, kegs,
and similar containers a day. Kenneth Cope’s book, in the pattern
of his previous books on the American machine tool industry, provides
more than 530 illustrations of these cooperage tools, taken from
original catalogs and contemporary periodicals.