Many cattle producers managed herds with nothing more than a race (alley) and a headgate (or a rope) until tagging requirements and disease control necessitated the installation of crushes. In the past the principal use of the crush, in England also known as a trevis, was for the shoeing of
oxen. Crushes were, and in places still are, used for this purpose in North America and in many European countries. They were usually stand-alone constructions of heavy timbers or stone columns and beams. Some crushes were simple, without a head bail or yoke, while others had more sophisticated restraints and mechanisms; a common feature is a belly sling which allows the animal to be partly or wholly raised from the ground. In Spain, the crush was a village community resource and is called
potro de herrar, or "shoeing frame". In France it is called
travail à ferrer (plural
travails, not
travaux) or "shoeing trevis", and was associated with
blacksmith shops. Although the word
travail derives from Latin , "three beams", all surviving examples but that at
Roissard have four columns. In central Italy it is called a
travaglio, but in
Sardinia is referred to as , or "the machine for shoeing the oxen". In the United States it was called an ox sling, an ox press or shoeing stalls. In some countries, including the Netherlands and France, horses were commonly shod in the same structures. In the United States similar but smaller structures, usually called horse shoeing stocks, are still in use, primarily to assist farriers in supporting the weight of the horse's hoof and leg when shoeing
draft horses. Image:2008.04.18.VorrichtungZumBeschlagenVonOchsen.DorfmuseumMoenchhof.33.JPG|Ox shoeing sling in the Dorfmuseum of
Mönchhof, Austria; a pair of ox shoes is attached to the near left column. File:Travaglio.jpg|Roofed ox shoeing crush of three-column construction in
Pievasciata,
Castelnuovo Berardenga, Siena, Italy Image:Potro villar de corneja.jpg|In
Villar de Corneja (Ávila), Spain, the community
potro de herrar includes a piece of the
yoke used to limit movement of the animal's head. Image:Potro_egido.jpg|In
Navamorales (Salamanca), Spain, the community
potro de herrar has a stone belly block to further limit the animal's freedom of movement. Image:Méharicourt maréchal-ferrant et travail à ferrer.jpg|Historic French
travail Image:StSulpice2..JPG|A
travail in
Saint-Sulpice-de-Cognac (Charente), France Image:Puits-Bérault maréchal-ferrant et travail à ferrer.jpg|A French
travail is in the background, between buildings, of this 1905 blacksmithy. Image:Travail à ferrer (LAROUSSE éd. 1925).jpg|Illustration in a 1925 book from France Image:Noe klauenstand.jpg|A
Klauenstand in a
living history museum in
Neuhausen ob Eck (
Baden-Wuerttemberg, Germany) ==References==