tacklehouse
English
editAlternative forms
editEtymology
editFrom tackle + house where "tackle" refers to a device for grasping and moving objects, which was used by the porters belonging to the tacklehouse.
Noun
edittacklehouse (plural tacklehouses)
- A building located at a port, and the corresponding business operated by one of the major shipping companies, that employs porters to load and unload goods from ships.
- 1977, Anne Crawford, A history of the Vintners' Company, page 167:
- The under beadle, Philip Huffa, was to be accommodated with lodgings above the tacklehouse, and the Company's cellars were built in beneath it.
- 1997, Joseph P. Ward, Metropolitan Communities: Trade Guilds, Identity, and Change in Early Modern London, page 50:
- In 1648, the officers commissioned the company's carpenter and bricklayer to design and build a new tacklehouse by the river to assist merchants in unloading ships, a project that cost more than £20.
- 2003, Peter Linebaugh, The London Hanged: Crime and Civil Society in the Eighteenth Century, page 167:
- On the other side of the Atlantic 'tacklehouse' and 'ticket' porters unloaded the ships.