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A tankhouse (also spelled tank house or tank-house) is a
water tower A water tower is an elevated structure supporting a water tank constructed at a height sufficient to pressurize a distribution system for potable water, and to provide emergency storage for fire protection. Water towers often operate in conju ...
enclosed by siding. Tankhouses were part of a self-contained domestic water system supplying the house and garden, developed before the advent of electricity and municipal water mains. The system consisted of a windmill, a hand-dug well and the tankhouse. The windmill pumped water from the well up into the tank at the top of the tankhouse, from where it flowed down under gravity pressure to the house and garden. The system used no
fuel A fuel is any material that can be made to react with other substances so that it releases energy as thermal energy or to be used for work. The concept was originally applied solely to those materials capable of releasing chemical energy but ...
or
electricity Electricity is the set of physical phenomena associated with the presence and motion of matter that has a property of electric charge. Electricity is related to magnetism, both being part of the phenomenon of electromagnetism, as described ...
; today it would be called green or eco-friendly.


Synonyms

The tankhouse is sometimes called a pump-house, a well-house, a well-tower or just a water tower. But whatever it is called, it is a water tower that is enclosed by siding. The siding is what makes it a "house", with usable interior space. Ordinary water towers, with a tank on top of an open tower, are not tankhouses. The term is also used for an unrelated structure in the copper-refining industry.


History

Tankhouses are an important part of
California California is a U.S. state, state in the Western United States, located along the West Coast of the United States, Pacific Coast. With nearly 39.2million residents across a total area of approximately , it is the List of states and territori ...
's historical heritage and the state's early
material culture Material culture is the aspect of social reality grounded in the objects and architecture that surround people. It includes the usage, consumption, creation, and trade of objects as well as the behaviors, norms, and rituals that the objects creat ...
. Many thousands were built in both town and country from the 1850s to the 1930s, almost exclusively of redwood — tower, water tank, siding and roof shingles — at a time when the state's abundant redwood forests seemed inexhaustible. The
windmill A windmill is a structure that converts wind power into rotational energy using vanes called windmill sail, sails or blades, specifically to mill (grinding), mill grain (gristmills), but the term is also extended to windpumps, wind turbines, and ...
, which stood over the well, was usually attached to the tower, but sometimes stood on a separate tower. Tankhouses became obsolete with the coming of deep, drilled wells and electric pumps in the countryside and water mains in the towns. Almost all of the hand-dug wells have been filled in now, and most of the windmills have disappeared. The remaining tankhouses are an endangered species, threatened by constant commercial, residential, industrial and agricultural development. Their numbers dwindle with each passing year.


Geographic distribution

There are far more tankhouses in California than in any other state, and they most probably originated in California. A tankhouse was built in Mendocino, California, in 1857 and many tankhouses in a variety of designs are still standing in that village. Tankhouses can be found in most of the state's 58 counties, wherever there was water not more than 50 feet or so below the surface. Probably after transcontinental and branch railroads were completed, tankhouses were built in other western states, the midwest, and even in the east. There is an interesting but as yet not well documented cluster of tankhouses in the Texas hill country west of Austin, where German immigrants settled in the last half of the 19th century. They found no redwood, but there was plenty of limestone, and cypress trees along the creeks: they built their towers of limestone and their tanks out of cypress wood. It is possible that the tankhouse idea traveled from California to
Texas Texas (, ; Spanish language, Spanish: ''Texas'', ''Tejas'') is a state in the South Central United States, South Central region of the United States. At 268,596 square miles (695,662 km2), and with more than 29.1 million residents in 2 ...
, but it is also possible that the early German immigrants conceived the idea themselves or brought it with them from Germany. The cypress tanks, sometimes called cisterns in Texas, were always exposed on top of the limestone towers, and the windmills stood on separate towers over the nearby well. Later, tankhouses in the same area were built of concrete with steel or concrete tanks, and a few were built of wood in the California style. In Texas the windmill always stood on a separate tower.


Types

In California, several types of tankhouse can be seen today. The supporting tower may have vertical or sloping sides. The tankroom (top floor) may also have vertical or sloping sides, and may or may not overhang the tower. On many tankhouses the redwood tank is not enclosed by siding but exposed, with or without a roof above it. In some areas one type predominates. Other variants occur, particularly among those built in the 19th century. Cooper illustrates four early examples with octagonal towers. Pitman includes drawings of six types, one of which is now rare, with the supporting structure wider than the tankroom. Manning includes drawings of five types, including the same rare type. Thorsheim also illustrates five types. Many tankhouses have lost the top (tank) level, making it hard to know the original design. Windmills were usually attached to the tankhouse, but sometimes were on their own tower. Most of the windmills have disappeared.


References


Sources

*Cooper, Thomas, ''Tankhouse: California’s Redwood Water Towers from a Bygone Era'', Barn Owl Press, Santa Rosa, 2011. This is the only published book on the subject and the primary source of information for this article. *Levy, Robert, and Louise Levy, ''Windmills, Water Towers and Tankhouses of Santa Clara County'', Bob and Louise Levy Publishing, Cupertino, 1996. A XeroxR compilation of photos and notes made by Girl Scouts of Santa Clara County as an "above-ground archeology project" for the Bicentennial in 1976. *Pitman, Leon, ‘Domestic Tankhouses of Rural California’ ''Pioneer America'' 8:84-97, 1976.{{Cite journal , last=Pitman , first=Leon S. , date=1992 , title=The Domestic Tankhouse as Vernacular Architecture in Rural California , url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41784976 , journal=Material Culture , volume=24 , issue=1 , pages=13–32 , issn=0883-3680 *Smith, Wally, ‘Water Towers and Windmills of Mendocino’ ''Mendocino Historical Review'' VIII (Winter) 1993. *Baker, T. Lindsay, ''A Field Guide to American Windmills'', University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1985. *Manning, Roger S., ''Windmills and Water Towers of California'', unpublished Masters Thesis, University of California, Davis, 1969. *Thorsheim, Katie W., ''Domestic Tankhouses in the Rogue Valley'', unpublished Masters Thesis, Southern Oregon State College, Ashland, 1991.


External links


A tankhouse blog: one family's tankhouse through the years from 1931; surveillance cameras on tankhouse owls; a champion trotting horse may date a tankhouse to before 1858; the tankhouse on a National Historic Site is sold, cut in half and moved away; an old tankhouse is restored to usable condition; a 5-story tankhouse; an octagonal tankhouse; an 1890 tankhouse owned by "The Voodoo Queen of San Francisco"; a tankhouse once "a three-story hydroponic pot farm."Offers design, engineering and contracting services for building tankhouses, and includes a collection of tankhouse photos.Paintings of tankhouses in Solano County, California.Photographs and descriptions of tankhouses in Fremont, California (some of which no longer exist), with notes on their historical background.The Patrick Ranch Museum Water Tank House Project: participating artists and photographers visit northern California tankhouses in 2011, the resulting pictures to be shown at a juried exhibition at the Patrick Ranch Museum, Chico, in 2012.
Vernacular architecture in the United States Folk art History of California Water towers in the United States Towers in California