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The History of Heating Houses

Posted February 19, 2013 12:00 AM by Chelsey H

I grew up in the country with a wood-burning furnace to heat the house. I think everyone in my neighborhood had one because as soon as you go off the highway for my town, everything smelled like burning wood. It's such a cozy, comforting smell. Wood has been used to heat dwellings dating back a million years. The transformation from open fire to the modern wood stove is explained in the story below.

What we would now consider a campfire was once all people had to heat the house, cook, heating water to wash, etc. The earliest evidence of a controlled fire can be found in South Africa and dates back a million years, but the first evidence of a pit of hearth was found in Israel from 750,000 years ago. This fire burned grain, bones, seed, and wood. Today, campfires are used for survival, but more commonly just for fun.

Image Credit: Inventors Digest

Open fireplaces provide ambience and romance. Although they are considered inefficient and dangerous today, open fireplaces were the standard heat sources for thousands of years. The most primitive form of a fireplace may be seen in the Orkeny and Shetland Islands between the UK and Norway. These fireplaces consisted of a central hearth and a rising lump of stone, slightly hollowed in one face to form a backing to the fire. Again the fireplace was used for almost everything in daily life. They were often put in the center of the room and smoke (a least a little bit of it) leaked out from the windows (no glass) and by holes which were poked in the walls or roof. In other places in the world, such as Mexico, devices called chimeneas were being used by Mexican tribesmen to provide heat for their family. The bulbous design, which included a "chimney" with a lid, was intended to keep rain off the fire and keep everyone warm with minimal fuel. What's weird is that some Romans warmed their houses using interior pipes laid under the floors and used flues to pipe the smoke outside, but somehow all these ideas were lost with the fall of the Roman Empire. And it wasn't until the 13th Century that there was advancement on the fireplace - the chimney.

Around 1066, the fireplaces were moved into a niche in the wall and holes were poked into the exterior wall to allow the smoke to escape. Eventually flues and stone hoods were installed to facilitate ventilation. Many homes still used a louver on their roof, which is an opening with a raised area that would allow smoke from a ventral fire to escape while preventing water or debris from coming inside. When coal became popular it became important to remove the coal smoke and more sophisticated ventilation, in the form of the chimney, was developed.

Elaborate Tudor brickwork chimneys at Hampton Court Palace. Image Credit: Apartmenttherapy.com

Good ol' Benjamin Franklin can be credited with founding what is now the modern day stove. In 1642, a Massachusetts foundry constructed the first box of cast iron plates with the intention of burning wood inside. Over 100 years later, Franklin created the Franklin stove with a hollow baffle at the rear with the intention of increasing the heat and reducing the amount of smoke that would circulate around the room. The U-shaped flue in a Franklin stove draws hot gases from the fire into a hollow baffle. This heats up cool air inside the baffle and then expels it into the room via vents near the top.

Image Credit: Popular Mechanics

At the end of the 18th Century, Benjamin Thompson suggested that chimneys feature a slanted fireback and adjustable flue damper. This became the norm for stoves in large estates and working kitchens in stately homes. This was eventually scaled down to fit in more homes by Philo Stewart, who patented his Oberlin stove in 1834. It was a totally cast-iron stove and while the designs have changed to compensate for aesthetics and increase efficiency, the basic workings have remained the same. The potbelly stove is probably the most iconic older stove design. It first appeared around 1860 and was used in train stations, cabooses, and hunting lodges. The firebox was enclosed and was able to release a lot of heat.

In the late 19th Century wood-fire cookstove systems became popular. They featured a large cast-iron surface and an elegantly enameled oven. The cookstoves were used for cooking food, warm water, and heat homes. They are still produced but have lost popularity due to the high amount of fuel required. Masonry stoves rely on fast, hot fires to store heat energy in the stove's large masonry, ceramic, or plaster thermal mass which is then released gradually over hours or even days. They have complex heat-exchange passages and are often referred to as Kachelofen (their German name).

One of the biggest weaknesses of wood stoves in the past is that they leaked and let in air, which means the fire would burn out in an hour or two. The Airtight Stove of the 1970s and '80s allowed the user to control the airflow, and therefore the burn. The embers would glow hot for eight hours or more, but the slower burn resulted in smoky stoves that were unnecessarily pollutant. Modern stoves are highly efficient catalytic and noncatalytic airtight stoves which aim to eliminate emissions and increase efficiency through complete combustion of the wood fuel. Noncatalytic stoves feature a damper that directs smoke and creosote into a secondary combustion chamber for reignition. Catalytic combustors in stoves are similar to those in cars.

Image Credit: Popular Mechanics

My family's house uses an indoor wood furnace and I love it, even though it does require a little more work (stacking wood was torture when I was little when I lived at home.) It keeps the house cozy warm and I love the smell of wood. Indoor wood furnaces are designed to vent all the smoke and exhaust outside through a chimney. They are used to heat water circulated into a radiator that is attached to ductwork throughout the house. A blower is then used to transfer the heat into the air.

I couldn't image having a fireplace in the middle of my living room, but I'm sure some people can't even imagine loading wood into a furnace to heat their house today like I do. All I know is that I'm glad for chimneys.

What do you use to keep your house warm? Keep Warm!

Resources

Quick History: The Evolution of the Chimney

The Evolution of the Fireplace

The History of the Modern Woodburning Stove

Know Your Wood-Burning Stoves

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#1

Re: The History of Heating Houses

02/20/2013 4:56 AM

For house heating I have a methane gas central heating, 94% efficiency measured last autumn (2012) along with the maintenance.

Where I grew up I was heating the house with a wood burning masonry ceramic stove. My mother still uses it.

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#2

Re: The History of Heating Houses

02/20/2013 4:58 AM

Really interesting and informative, many thanks. I had two Franklins in my house in the UK many years ago, wood was cheap then and they supplied a massive amount of heat keeping both house halves (it had been two houses years before) really warm.

I had a few wood burning stoves here in Germany over the years, but my investment in an Italian Pellets burner was the best idea in that area that I have ever had. 7 years later it is still working really great with about 100 times less emissions than even a quality wood burning stove.....a tiny bit of smoke for about 30 seconds when firing up, after that no smoke at all......

Programmable for when and how hot, wonderful!

You should add a "Pellets" chapter to your excellent article as technically its also a wood burner!!!

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#3

Re: The History of Heating Houses

02/20/2013 7:31 AM

I modified my two oil burners to burn 100% biodiesel that I make. The house is over 200 years old and is a bit drafty (working on that). The front system is a one pipe steam unit and the back unit is conventional hot water base board. I also use about 1.5 cord of wood in an rather old box stove. I too live the smell of that.

I still go through a fair amount of fuel but at less than a dollar per gallon I can't complain too much. And it is no petro.

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#4

Re: The History of Heating Houses

02/20/2013 11:34 AM

I use a heat pump! In Phoenix, AZ the temperature extremes are so moderate that a heat pump is more efficient than GAS for heat and regular A/C. I actually saved $ 30 a month the first winter that I replaced my gas furnaces with a 14 SEAR heat pump.

The summers are no worse. It is actually pretty easy to dump heat into 40 degree C air.

Sometimes I use a video to simulate the sight and sound of a wood-burning fireplace!

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#5

Re: The History of Heating Houses

02/20/2013 2:59 PM

Though I spent a few years being "heavy-into-solar-heating" during my years in Florida ... now, working in the offshore oil-and-gas business, it "wouldn't be prudent" (in my very best Dana Carvey imitation voice) to use anything but gas.

And , it's been working quite well for me......

[. . . works MUCH better than the picture-insertion capability here anyway...(!) What's with the "Resizing_without_maintaining_aspect_ratio"...?]

No complaints here , about the cost of keeping warm ... (no more than I'd complain about the cost of electricity, divulged elsewhere on cr4 {at post #22 of linked thread})

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#6

Re: The History of Heating Houses

02/21/2013 8:07 AM

I have a large propane tank and forced air furnace, but rarely use it.

Wood all the way. Stove downstairs keeps the whole house warm. Aside from my labor, it's also free. I have a connection in the tree business, and he dumps truckloads of hardwood in my yard; I just have to cut and split it. It's a win-win, because he would otherwise have to pay money to bring the wood to the city dump.

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Re: The History of Heating Houses

02/21/2013 8:40 AM

Free is always good. I have been luck with that as well. you forgot to mention that you don't need a gym membership while splitting and stacking....

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Re: The History of Heating Houses

02/21/2013 8:55 AM

This is true! I'm definitely not one to hang out in a gym.

How are things in the hometown? I talked to a friend of mine near you on Sunday, and it sounds really cold. He's still using heating oil, and told me that his total winter heating cost, averages about $6000 per season.

I won't be moving back anytime soon.

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Re: The History of Heating Houses

02/21/2013 9:49 AM

Yup, Its been pretty cold. It seems like snow or just plain crap weather every weekend. Glad I do not have to buy petro, my cost for the season is about $1,200 for the biodiesel (about $0.70 per gallon). If I had to oil it would be about $5,000 and a whole lot colder in the house.

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Re: The History of Heating Houses

02/21/2013 5:57 PM

That's not bad at all.

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Re: The History of Heating Houses

02/22/2013 6:59 AM

Our house is small, just under 1,500 Sq Ft., and over the gas usage in 1986, we are saving (as far as I can tell) over €1,200 per year. We no pay around €700 (US$923) per year for gas and wood pellets for the last 5 years or so.

Our gas bill alone in 1987 was over €900 ( not counting inflation), which would be more than €2000 in today's money......so we appear to be saving around €1,300 per year, so the €23,000 we spent on insulation will be paid back (in simple terms only) in around 17 years, assuming (wrongly of course!) no further increase in inflation or gas/pellets price.....

We have already had the insulation for 5 years......and the extra degree of comfort is incredible - rooms heat up quicker, stay warmer longer over night with no heat on, stay cooler in summer, no need to switch the A/C on in summer since installation in 2008!....

Our friends with "normal" heating costs are easily exceeding €4-6,000 per year for oil for example.....plus electricity for A/C.

Please note, my savings are estimated as best I can as I was unable to get details of our actual usage, only the price paid each year.....

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#11

Re: The History of Heating Houses

02/22/2013 3:13 AM

It is wonderful to read the history of heating houses. It is something to forward to my followers to get the valuable information belongs to past.

I really give so importance to my home HVAC heating and cooling appliances. I maintain them in good and proper manner. For this I do the most. I get professional help for heating and air conditioning Toronto home heating and cooling system.

I am grateful to you for this info.

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Re: The History of Heating Houses

02/22/2013 2:41 PM

Who's following you?

If so, why?

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#13

Re: The History of Heating Houses

02/22/2013 7:45 AM

My house has a forced hot air gas furnace but I bought a foreclosure last year and went with all electric heat. Yes, there are a few drawbacks of that but there are some benefits as well.

The main benefit was that I saved $10,000 by not installing ductwork throughout the house. Second benefit is that I have absolutely no gas lines in the house which means I didn't have to put in hard wired CO2 detectors or worry about gas leaks, etc. Third minor benefit is not having the ducts take up space in all the rooms.

Yes, I know electric heat will cost a little more per month than other methods but it's not as much as one would think. The $10,000 upfront savings was well worth the extra $50-100 a month during the winter months. (Especially considering the tenants pay the heating bill, lol) Also as more renewable energy is pumped into the grid electric could become cheaper than gas.

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#15

Re: The History of Heating Houses

04/02/2014 12:12 PM

I like what I had opportunity to read here, since I didn't know the history of heating.

I am aware of how big energy consumption is going to the heating and HVAC elements at all, and I am implementing new technology on about 5 to 8 years, in consultation with Levine heating which are my HVAC installers and repairers.

I wish we could all do the same since we have only one planet and we should do our best to keep it for some future generations.

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