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'Topping Out' Ceremonies

phi23

Gone But Not Forgotten
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At an exhibition of photographs of construction work in Manchester over the last 13 years I saw today at the Cube gallery, I was intrigued to see a photograph of a "topping out" ceremony that involved setting a sprig of yew in the concrete at the top of the (then) newly constructed Bridgewater Hall.

This struck me as a very pagan ceremony - can anyone give me an explanation and history of this strange tradition?
 
"The completion of a building is still marked by the custom of "topping out",
which dates back to Roman times. A fir tree is fixed to the topmost part
of the building to ward off evil spirits, and beer is provided for the workers.
. . . Custom decrees that if beer is not provided for topping out, workmen will
fly a black flag and solemnly curse the building so that it will never prosper."

(Readers' Digest Folklore Myths & Legends of Britain)

I was rather hoping it would involve rolled trouser-legs and the sacrifice of
a virgin. :rolleyes:
 
A friend sent me this - not sure where it's from though -

History of the Topping Out Ceremony

The beam and the tree represent one of the construction industry’s oldest customs the "topping out" of a completed project. To discover the origin of the topping out, it’s necessary to trace the development of human shelter.

At one time, Europe was covered with a vast forest. Those who inhabited the forest were dependent on trees for their survival. The full, low-hanging boughs provided shelter, the nuts and fruits furnished food, and the fallen dead wood supplied kindling for fires.

Because of this great dependence on the forest, people began to revere trees. In fact, trees were the most common deity in Europe prior to the adoption of Christianity.

Scandinavian mythology suggests that humans originated from trees and our souls returned to the trees after death, giving each tree a spirit of its own.

Humans began constructing their shelter with wood. Before cutting a tree, they would formally address the forest, reminding it of the consideration they had always shown toward the trees and asking the forest to grant use of a tree for construction of their home.

When the house was complete, the topmost leafy branch of the tree used would be set atop the roof so that the tree spirit would not be rendered homeless. The gesture was supposed to convince the tree spirit of the sincere appreciation of those building the home.

As time passed, the early conception of tree worship gradually changed. The individual tree spirits merged into a single forest god who could pass freely from tree to tree.

Trees were no longer placed atop the home to appease spirits, but rather to enlist the blessings of the forest god. The tree branches on top of the home ensured fertility of the land and the home.

The custom of placing a tree on a completed structure came with immigrants to the United States and became an integral part of American culture in barnraisings and housewarmings.

Today the custom is continued most frequently on completed structures such as bridges and skyscrapers. Ironworkers have carried on the topping out tradition and consider it their own. While others join the celebration of topping out, it is the ironworkers and their skills that make them first to reach the pinnacle of a structure, and it is around this group of workers that topping out revolves.
 
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