I'm guessing Pargyle is descended from the second son!
Just to illuminate a misconception about skeps: they weren't necessarily a destructive form of beekeeping. About half the references I've found refer to sulfuring (killing) the bees for the honey and half to drumming them out into another skep. In The Bee Master of Warrilow written around 1910, the Bee Master (who converted to famed hives at the end of the 19th century) discusses this and says "looking back I have no idea why we sulfured them, it was unecessary and just what we'd been taught."
To put this in context, I'd heard various references to Canadian beekeepers routinely killing their colonies as it was easier and simpler to buy new packages from the USA than try to overwinter them in Canada. You can find a couple of hits on this if you google it, but there is more detail in Steve Donohoe's recent book Interviews with Beekeepers. He asks American bee farmers about this and they confirm it was common until the US-Canadian border was closed to bee traffic due to varroa around 1992. (The Canadian authorities thought this would prevent varroa reaching them over the land border...) I think it was just the Canadian beekeepers in the coldest, central plains who did this but it was common. After this they had to figure out how to overwinter bees successfully. My point is - it's not the hive type that determines whether the bees are harvested destructively, it's the beekeeper.