In a book of this kind there is no
particular need for dwelling at length on the desirability
of having a fireplace. That will be taken for
granted. It is enough to say that in these days
a home can scarcely be considered worthy of the name
if it does not contain at least one hearth. There
is some inexplicable quality in a wood fire that exerts
almost a hypnotic influence upon those who eagerly
gather about it. The smoldering glow of the logs
induces a calm and introspective mood that banishes
all the trivialities and distractions of the day’s
work and gives one an opportunity to replenish his
store of energy for the coming day.
The open fire, unlike most of the
comforts that we demand in a modern home, has been
associated with the race as far back almost as the
home itself. At first, of course, it was as a
necessity and the development from that to a luxury
has been an exceedingly slow one extending over the
years down to the present time.
There are two forms of the open fire a
possible third one, the gas log, being a subject on
which the less said the better. We have, therefore,
a choice between the open fireplace designed for wood
and the basket grate in which to burn coal, preferably
cannel coal. This latter fuel is not nearly so
well known in this country as in England where the
scarcity of wood necessarily makes coal the more commonly
used fuel. With our own abundance of wood, however,
there will perhaps be little hesitancy in choosing
the open fireplace rather than the basket grate for
coal, although in certain cases, for example an apartment
where the flue has been built too small, or in a house
where an available chimney offers only a small flue
area for fireplace use, the basket grate will prove
a welcome solution of the problem. Of course
there is no excuse whatever for building a modern
home with a chimney too small for the sort of fireplace
you want, but where the chimney has already been built
without this provision it may possibly be found that
a small terra cotta flue lining may be inserted
in the larger flue without seriously damaging the
latter’s power of draft. In that event the
addition of a basket grate fireplace to an old house
would be an interesting possibility.
However fully we may appreciate the
desirability of some sort of fireplace, there seems
to be a rather widespread impression that the attainment
is largely a matter of chance. Too many home-builders
have instructed their architects to provide a fireplace
or two in the fond hope that the matter was then practically
closed a mere matter of time until they
might be sitting before the fire’s cheerful glow.
Too frequently the result has been a disappointment
when the first few trials introduced into the room
more smoke than heat or cheer. The reason for
this is that there is a scientific basis for fireplace
building which is frequently ignored absolutely by
an over-confident and stupid mason. Where the
work of building the home has been entrusted to an
architect’s hands the latter usually appreciates
the fact that the building of the fireplaces is liable
more than any other part of the house to be taken
into the mason’s own hands with, if he is not
watched, disastrous results. Undoubtedly every
mason would resent most strongly any insinuation as
to his lack of knowledge regarding fireplace construction.
Each mason not only thinks that he knows how a fireplace
should be built, but it is almost as general a rule
that he feels that his particular method is the only
correct one.
In view of this it might be well for
any man building his own home to give some attention
to the matter of his fireplaces, to insist on knowing
how they are designed and to follow their construction
throughout so that there is no chance for a blunder;
and this chance is not so slight as might be supposed.
In a house in which the author had carefully shown
every detail of construction in the drawings, it was
found when the building was nearly completed that the
cast-iron throat flues, which ordinarily prevent any
possible mistake of construction on the mason’s
part, had been put in reversed and it was necessary
to tear down the whole face of the chimney breast
in each case to replace them properly.
The matter of construction is not
at all a complicated affair, as the next chapter will
aim to show.