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Evolution of the
Beverly High School Stonewall Project
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| Dr. Scuzzarellas enthusiasm
gave us a catalyst for the creation of our stonewall.
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| Measuring the length of the
proposed wall with our homemade Gunther's chain. |
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| Mr. Carroll MacDougall was
a huge part of our success. |
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| Stone donated by Benevento
Sand and Stone. |
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| Kevin Gardner demonstrated
stone wall construction. |
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| X marks the spot! |
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| Grounds supervisor Bill Bourque's
expertise was integral to the project. |
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| Student started digging the
trench outlined by Bill Bourque. |
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| "Tamping" the pea
stone. |
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| Pea stone was used to fill
in the trench. |
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| Stones were laid one over two.
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| Students worked on the wall
in all kinds of New England weather. |
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| Students visited Robert Frost's
estate and the wall that inspired the poem "Mending
Wall" |
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| Robert Thorson was an inspiration
for the project. |
Inspired from reading Allports
Sermons in Stone, Thorsens Stone by Stone
and Gardners The Granite Kiss, the class
wondered what it would be like to actually build a stonewall.
Little did we realize at this point the trials, tribulations,
and the wherewithal it would take to bring the project
to fruition. It wasnt until the completion of the
wall that the class finally became pragmatic visionaries.
We first approached our principal, Dr.
Carla Scuzzarella, asking both for permission and support.
She chose a location in which she felt the wall would
be best suited.
Based on the length of our proposed wall
(thirty-three feet, or one half of a Gunthers chain),
we then determined how much stone we needed. As we certainly
didnt want to cannibalize existing stonewalls we
hoped that a construction company or quarry would donate
the stone necessary for the project.
Our school was unable to provide any
funding for this project as we are a poorly funded district
fighting for accreditation that is in jeopardy due to
a dilapidated high school building. One of our students,
Lillian Barres, made dozens of calls to local stone sources
using the local yellow pages in an ever-widening radius
around our area. Her diligence was eventually rewarded
when she contacted Margaret McGinnis of Bevenento Sand
and Stone in Wilmington, MA. Coincidentally Margaret is
a graduate of our high school and a former student of
mine. Through Margaret, Bevenento kindly donated ten tons
initially, and over twenty more tons of stone and pea
stone gravel over the course of the project. Her generous
commitment to our stonewall project is a major cause of
its success.
We now had ten tons of stone but only
a rudimentary idea of how to build the wall. We turned
to Kevin Gardner for professional guidance. Gardner is
the author of The Granite Kiss, a book I found
almost by accident in a bookstore in Nashua, NH. Coincidentally
Gardener was signing copies of his book when I visited
the store, and soon after learning about our project he
was already offering to visit sometime to demonstrate
to the class how to formulate a stonewall design. Our
students were thrilled and frankly surprised that the
author of one of their textbooks suddenly showed up to
offer his expertise. His visit was nothing short of sensational.
He is a true renaissance man, being an author,
teacher, public radio producer, but most importantly to
us, stone wall builder.
Kevin first used small stones on a table
to demonstrate stonewall building techniques. Students
were then asked to create their own tabletop stonewall.
Gardener is a masterful teacher who so excited the students
that they asked him outside in the rain to view our stones
and help us in the design. The plan for our thirty-three
foot wall was a semi-circular double wall approximately
three-and-a-half feet high (fourteen links on a Gunthers
chain). Kevin suggested that we mark an X for our center
point and begin to sort the stones by size and function.
Gardeners advice and direction became essential
to our success. Beverly High Schools grounds supervisor
Bill Bourque was also essential as our on-site advisor
and mentor.
Using a hand wheelbarrow and dolly (as
oxen and plows were unavailable), we began sorting the
stones by size and function. We divided the stones into
five categories:
- footing stones : the largest, thickest
and heaviest;
- cap stones: for the top;
- building stones: footstones through
capstones that have a face;
- corner stones: includes the shape
of other categories as well as a right angle; and
- rubble stones: irregular stones used
to fill in or chink between the gaps of
the larger stones.
For the sake of stability over time we
dug a trench that followed Bourques wall outline.
This trench was thirty-three feet long and approximately
three links (twenty-one inches) deep. After digging the
trench we filled the space with pea stone gravel.
Keeping Gardners and Bourques
advice in mind we began to construct the wall. We tried
to take an approach that was fairly simple, slanting the
stone to the center for stability, and laying one stone
over two. We began the wall at both ends and the middle
to ensure uniformity.
The construction began in October 2004
and was completed in the summer of 2005. This project
was a unit in a course entitled Primary Research
Through the History of Beverly. The members of the
class, Lillian Barres, Justin Desrocher, Megan Nylund,
David OBrien, Sarah OShea, and Corey Schweitzer
should be commended for a Herculean effort. The construction
of Carlas Wall (named after our principal
Carla Scuzzarella) was not the only unit in the course.
These students spent hundreds of hours researching all
aspects of the palimpsest of Beverlys rich history,
including a wonderful class project on the Merrimack
Valley style of colonial gravestone carving.
In addition to class time, the wall construction
effort took place before school, after school, on weekends,
and on school vacations in all kinds of New England weather.
Yet, these students never complained or deviated from
their self-appointed goal. We had fun along the way. We
visited Robert Frosts Mending Wall at
his family farm in Derry, NH and had the opportunity to
meet Robert Thorson, the author of another of their textbooks,
Stone by Stone, after hearing him discuss his book one
evening at the Arnold Arboretum in the Jamaica Plain neighborhood
of Boston. As was Kevin Gardener, Robert Thorson was an
inspiration to the students and their project. He even
offered to link the website component of the project to
his Stonewall
Initiative website.
The exemplary effort of these dedicated
students along with the support of enthusiastic and altruistic
people such as Gardner, Thorsen, Bourque, and Benevento
Sand and Stone shows what can be done in spite of little
or no budget, but the unrelenting pursuit of a vision.
Along the way these student learned a variety of skills
that helped shape them into intellectual decathletes.
More importantly, they demonstrated an intellectual hunger
and civic virtue that was rarely fueled by the roar of
the crowd. They became quiet leaders who got the job done,
always thinking of making their school and community a
better place without any consideration of personal gain
or recognition.
We are planning a formal dedication ceremony
of Carlas Wall in May of 2006. All are
invited.
References
Allport, Susan. Sermons in Stone: The
Stone Walls of New England and New York. New York: W.W.
Norton, 1994.
Bidwell, Percy. "The Agricultural
Revolution in New England." The American Historical
Review 26 (1921): 683-702. http://www.primaryresearch.org/stonewalls/bidwell.pdf
Foster, David R., and John F. O'Keefe.
New England Forests Through Time. Cambridge, MA: Harvard
UP, 2000. 4-19.
Gardner, Kevin. The Granite Kiss: Traditions
and Techniques of Building New England Stone Walls. Woodstock,
VT: Countryman P, 2001.
Robert, Thorson M. Stone by Stone: The
Magnificent History in New England's Stone Walls. New
York: Walker & Company, 2002.
Report of the Commisioner of Agriculture.
United States Department of Agriculture. Washington, DC:
Government Printing Office, 1872. 497-511. http://www.primaryresearch.org/stonewalls/fencesurvey.pdf
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