Dendrochronology (tree ring dating)
Dendrochronology (tree ring dating) is a critically important tool for dating the construction of a structure. CFHS has undertaken a tree ring study for several dwellings in Catoctin Furnace however the Hoke House is the first log worker house for which we now have an absolute construction date. Oxford Tree-Ring Laboratory was able to sample eleven timbers, all of which were white oak, and compare them to more than one thousand master chronologies. The results demonstrate that the timbers in the Hoke House were felled beginning in the summer of 1816, the winter of 1816/7, the winter of 1817/8, and the winter of 1820/1. The range of dates suggests that the timbers were cut over a period of several years and stockpiled in anticipation of future construction, with the Hoke House being constructed in the winter of 1820/1.