Elementary course in woodwork

Elementary course in woodwork - Title page of a bookELEMENTARY COURSE IN WOODWORK

DESIGNED FOR USE IN HIGH AND TECHNICAL SCHOOLS

BY GEORGE ALEXANDER ROSS

Instructor in woodwork and patternmaking

LEWIS INSTITUTE, CHICAGO

A FLANAGAN COMPANY, 1901
 

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Elementary course in woodwork

 

PREFACE.

The character and object of this book is set forth on its title page. It is a manual designed principally for the practical assistance of students in elementary woodwork in the Lewis Institute.

The author has endeavored to present the subject in such a manner as to make simple the transition from the easier to the nore difficult operations; the exercises have been selected after having had a thorough test covering a period of three years, and will be found practical in their application to the students in High and Technical Schools in elementary woodwork and turning.

Part one, the bench work, is intended to cover a period of eight weeks, two hours per day, and part two, wood turning, four weeks, two hours per day, thus making a course which will be found to touch the principal points in elementary work, at the same time giving practice in the uses of the tools most commonly used in carpentry, joinery and wood-turning. Disston & Sons' Handbook for Lumbermen has furnished many of the facts presented under "Care of Saws."

It has been the author's aim in this course to give just enough instruction in the work so that the student might be led to study out the problems for himself; by this means he is able to study the course of work that follows the second part of this book, i. e. Pattern Making.

A cursory perusal of the work will disclose many features which the author feels sure will commend themselves to instructors and others interested in this department of school work, and with the hope that these pages may prove a valuable aid to students and teachers alike, this work is presented to the public.

George A. Koss.


TABLE OF CONTENTS

Care of Saws and Equipment
Exercise in Sawing and Planing
The Halved Joint
The Mortise and Tenon Joint
Keyed Mortise and Tenon with Brace
Exercise with the Bench, Bead, Rabbet, and Molding Planes
Blind Mortises and Tenons with Beading and Rabbeting
Dovetail Corner Joint (Common)
Glass Panel Door Frame
Bench Hook Use of Shellac
Box with Sliding Top
Problem in Truss Work
Problem in Stair Building
Problem in Stair Railing
To Prepare Shellac
To Prepare Glue and How to Use It
To True Oil Stones


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