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<channel><title><![CDATA[Mt. Tabor - Danby Historical Society - News Clippings]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings]]></link><description><![CDATA[News Clippings]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 07 Feb 2026 10:39:44 -0800</pubDate><generator>Weebly</generator><item><title><![CDATA[Nora Rubinstein demonstrating on a spinning wheel.]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/nora-rubinstein-demonstrating-on-a-spinning-wheel]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/nora-rubinstein-demonstrating-on-a-spinning-wheel#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Thu, 26 Sep 2024 22:59:09 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/nora-rubinstein-demonstrating-on-a-spinning-wheel</guid><description><![CDATA[ 																											Nora Rubinstein demonstrating on a spinning wheel.																																						Nora Rubinstein demonstrating on a spinning wheel.																																						Nora Rubinstein demonstrating on a spinning wheel.															 				 [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div><div style="height: 20px; overflow: hidden;"></div> 				<div id='829173006122798136-gallery' class='imageGallery' style='line-height: 0px; padding: 0; margin: 0'><div id='829173006122798136-imageContainer0' style='float:left;width:33.28%;margin:0;'><div id='829173006122798136-insideImageContainer0' style='position:relative;margin:5px;'><div class='galleryImageHolder galleryCaptionHover' style='position:relative; width:100%; padding:0 0 100%;overflow:hidden;'><div class='galleryInnerImageHolder'><a href='https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/uploads/1/4/8/9/148972966/spinning2_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox[gallery829173006122798136]' title='Nora Rubinstein demonstrating on a spinning wheel.'><img src='https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/uploads/1/4/8/9/148972966/spinning2.jpg' class='galleryImage' _width='600' _height='800' style='position:absolute;border:0;width:100%;top:-16.67%;left:0%' /><div class='galleryCaptionHolder partialImageGalleryCaption' style=''>					<div class='galleryCaptionHolderInnerBg'></div>					<div class='galleryCaptionHolderInner'>						<div class='galleryCaptionInnerTextHolder'>							<div class='galleryCaptionInnerText'>Nora Rubinstein demonstrating on a spinning wheel.</div>						</div>					</div>				</div></a></div></div></div></div><div id='829173006122798136-imageContainer1' style='float:left;width:33.28%;margin:0;'><div id='829173006122798136-insideImageContainer1' style='position:relative;margin:5px;'><div class='galleryImageHolder galleryCaptionHover' style='position:relative; width:100%; padding:0 0 100%;overflow:hidden;'><div class='galleryInnerImageHolder'><a href='https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/uploads/1/4/8/9/148972966/spinning3_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox[gallery829173006122798136]' title='Nora Rubinstein demonstrating on a spinning wheel.'><img src='https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/uploads/1/4/8/9/148972966/spinning3.jpg' class='galleryImage' _width='600' _height='800' style='position:absolute;border:0;width:100%;top:-16.67%;left:0%' /><div class='galleryCaptionHolder partialImageGalleryCaption' style=''>					<div class='galleryCaptionHolderInnerBg'></div>					<div class='galleryCaptionHolderInner'>						<div class='galleryCaptionInnerTextHolder'>							<div class='galleryCaptionInnerText'>Nora Rubinstein demonstrating on a spinning wheel.</div>						</div>					</div>				</div></a></div></div></div></div><div id='829173006122798136-imageContainer2' style='float:left;width:33.28%;margin:0;'><div id='829173006122798136-insideImageContainer2' style='position:relative;margin:5px;'><div class='galleryImageHolder galleryCaptionHover' style='position:relative; width:100%; padding:0 0 100%;overflow:hidden;'><div class='galleryInnerImageHolder'><a href='https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/uploads/1/4/8/9/148972966/spinning-1024x768_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox[gallery829173006122798136]' title='Nora Rubinstein demonstrating on a spinning wheel.'><img src='https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/uploads/1/4/8/9/148972966/spinning-1024x768.jpg' class='galleryImage' _width='1024' _height='768' style='position:absolute;border:0;width:133.33%;top:0%;left:-16.67%' /><div class='galleryCaptionHolder partialImageGalleryCaption' style=''>					<div class='galleryCaptionHolderInnerBg'></div>					<div class='galleryCaptionHolderInner'>						<div class='galleryCaptionInnerTextHolder'>							<div class='galleryCaptionInnerText'>Nora Rubinstein demonstrating on a spinning wheel.</div>						</div>					</div>				</div></a></div></div></div></div><span style='display: block; clear: both; height: 0px; overflow: hidden;'></span></div> 				<div style="height: 20px; overflow: hidden;"></div></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[THE TROUT INDUSTRY]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/the-trout-industry]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/the-trout-industry#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Tue, 11 Jun 2024 20:20:23 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Business & Industry]]></category><category><![CDATA[Griffith]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/the-trout-industry</guid><description><![CDATA[ 	 		 			 				 					 						  Sen. Griffith of Danby Has Made a Large Addition to His Fish Hatchery and Lumber Industry.(Special to the Free Press.)Montpelier, Dec. 1.&mdash;Senator S. L. Griffith of Danby, a member of the Legislature of 1898, has just completed the purchase of a very valuable piece of property in Groton, Vt. The J. R. Darling mill, one of the largest in eastern Vermont together with 2700 acres of timber land, and about $3000 worth of personal property used in operating the prope [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div><div class="wsite-multicol"><div class="wsite-multicol-table-wrap" style="margin:0 -15px;"> 	<table class="wsite-multicol-table"> 		<tbody class="wsite-multicol-tbody"> 			<tr class="wsite-multicol-tr"> 				<td class="wsite-multicol-col" style="width:50%; padding:0 15px;"> 					 						  <div class="paragraph">Sen. Griffith of Danby Has Made a Large Addition to His Fish Hatchery and Lumber Industry.<br /><br />(Special to the Free Press.)<br /><br /><span>Montpelier, Dec. 1.&mdash;Senator S. L. Griffith of Danby, a member of the Legislature of 1898, has just completed the purchase of a very valuable piece of property in Groton, Vt. The J. R. Darling mill, one of the largest in eastern Vermont together with 2700 acres of timber land, and about $3000 worth of personal property used in operating the property have been&rsquo; transferred to him and he is now managing the property. The price has not been made public.</span><br /></div>   					 				</td>				<td class="wsite-multicol-col" style="width:50%; padding:0 15px;"> 					 						  <div><div class="wsite-image wsite-image-border-none " style="padding-top:10px;padding-bottom:10px;margin-left:0;margin-right:0;text-align:center"> <a> <img src="https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/uploads/1/4/8/9/148972966/photo-feb-10-5-26-58-pm-1-768x588_orig.jpg" alt="Picture" style="width:auto;max-width:100%" /> </a> <div style="display:block;font-size:90%"></div> </div></div>   					 				</td>			</tr> 		</tbody> 	</table> </div></div></div>  <div>  <!--BLOG_SUMMARY_END--></div>  <div class="paragraph">&#8203;On this property there is estimated to be from five to eight million feet of spruce timber and as Senator Griffith is already one of the largest, if not the largest, manufacturers of spruce lumber in Vermont, it is safe to say that the lumber business in Groton will not grow dull for a time at least, as the force of men already employed and the mill are capable of produce in 3,000,000 feet of lumber annually.<br /><br />But it is not the lumber business alone that Senator Griffith had his eye on. When the mill was built a dam was put in which formed a pond 38 acres in extent. This has proved to be one of the best places in the State for the production of trout and good judges say there are from three to , five tons of wild trout already in the pond. It has already been used by the government for propagating fish. A small building has been erected there by the government where they strip the trout and another building where the eggs are kept until they are &ldquo;eyed&rdquo; when they are sent to the St. Johnsbury hatchery. The securing of fish here for stripping trout is an easy matter. Two small streams empty into these ponds up which the trout run at spawning time and before they come back traps are put in and then the trout are easily caught with nets.<br /><br />This is without doubt the best place for the cultivation of trout to be found in Vermont. Senator Griffith acknowledges himself that it is better than his fish hatchery at Danby and it will be remembered that experts call that the largest trout hatchery in the world. So knowing that Senator Griffith never goes into a business except to make it the greatest success possible it will be seen that the development of this property for fish culture will be an event of much importance Groton and vicinity.</div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[JAMES EDWIN NICHOLS]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/james-edwin-nichols]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/james-edwin-nichols#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Tue, 30 Apr 2024 16:18:20 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Portraits]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/james-edwin-nichols</guid><description><![CDATA[ 	 		 			 				 					 						  &#8203;A SUCCESSFUL FARMER.  For More Than Three-Score Years Mr. James Edwin Nichols Has Lived an Industrious Life in the Town of Danby, Honored and Respected by Every One.  &#8203;The face of another member of the noted &ldquo;Boys&rsquo; Club&rdquo; graces the MIRROR&rsquo;S first page this week, and it is with much pleasure that we present it and this brief sketch of the gentleman whom it represents to each subscriber, many of them to be filed away with previous a [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div><div class="wsite-multicol"><div class="wsite-multicol-table-wrap" style="margin:0 -15px;"> 	<table class="wsite-multicol-table"> 		<tbody class="wsite-multicol-tbody"> 			<tr class="wsite-multicol-tr"> 				<td class="wsite-multicol-col" style="width:68.241758241758%; padding:0 15px;"> 					 						  <h2 class="wsite-content-title">&#8203;A SUCCESSFUL FARMER.<br></h2>  <div class="paragraph"><em>For More Than Three-Score Years Mr. James Edwin Nichols Has Lived an Industrious Life in the Town of Danby, Honored and Respected by Every One.</em></div>  <div class="paragraph">&#8203;The face of another member of the noted &ldquo;Boys&rsquo; Club&rdquo; graces the MIRROR&rsquo;S first page this week, and it is with much pleasure that we present it and this brief sketch of the gentleman whom it represents to each subscriber, many of them to be filed away with previous and succeeding copies of the MIRROR and handed down to future generations.<br /><br /><span>James Edwin Nichols was born October 20, 1829, in the town of Hubbardton, Vt., where his parents&mdash;Thomas and Hannah Wait Nichols&mdash;then resided. When six years of age, however, his parents removed to Danby, and settled on the farm now owned by Daniel Harrington. After residing there for seven years Mr. Nichols&rsquo; father purchased what was then known as the Deliverance Rogers farm, situated in the central part of the town of Danby, and where the subject of this sketch now lives.</span></div>   					 				</td>				<td class="wsite-multicol-col" style="width:31.758241758242%; padding:0 15px;"> 					 						  <div><div class="wsite-image wsite-image-border-none " style="padding-top:10px;padding-bottom:10px;margin-left:0px;margin-right:0px;text-align:center"> <a> <img src="https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/uploads/1/4/8/9/148972966/james-edwin-nichols-768x999_orig.jpg" alt="Picture" style="width:auto;max-width:100%" /> </a> <div style="display:block;font-size:90%">James Edwin Nichols</div> </div></div>   					 				</td>			</tr> 		</tbody> 	</table> </div></div></div>  <div>  <!--BLOG_SUMMARY_END--></div>  <div class="paragraph">With the exception of two months after attaining his majority, during which time he peddled tin about the country for the then wellknown firm of Graves St Root of Bennington, and the first thirteen years of his life, Mr. Nichols has lived on the farm above referred to. In 1850, his father died, at the age of fifty-six, and Mr. Nichols settled up the estate and purchased the farm.<br /><br />In January, 1854, Mr. Nichols was married to Louisa, daughter of Silas Hulett, and four children have blessed the union. The two older boys, Silas and Joel, are now dead, the latter dying only a few weeks ago at South Wallingford, where he was in the mercantile trade, conducting a general store. The third son, George, resides in Rutland. The only daughter and youngest child, Ella, married Mr. R. H. Clark and resides in Boston.<br /><br />Mr. Nichols held the office of Selectman and Overseer of the Poor successfully for nine years, 1865 to 1872, during five years of which time he was chairman of the board. His townsmen also honored him by sending him to the legislature in 1866 as their representative, in which capacity he served with much credit to himself and satisfaction to his constituents. Mr. Nichols was also one of the Listers and Assessors for three years, from 1861 to 1864, and was appointed to fill the unexpired term as Town Treasurer upon the death of the late Albert Bucklin, and served in that capacity in a very creditable manner till a successor was duly elected.<br /><br />Mr. Nichols has, in fact, held all the different town offices with the exception of Town Clerk, Justice of the Peace and Collector of Taxes. He has also been honored with many other positions of trust and responsibility in the settlement of estates and in other matters of a semi-public and private nature. He has been very successful in operating the farm which he still owns, though now letting it on the share basis to others who are younger and more active, and is looked upon as one of the substantial citizens of the town.<br /><br />As will be noticed by the portrait which appears on our first page, Mr. Nichols bears his age remarkably well &mdash;in fact, he appears little older than twenty or twenty-five years ago. He is universally respected by all who know him, and is considered a man of the strictest integrity and sound judgment. May he and his estimable wife pass many more years enjoyably among their many friends here below before being called to their reward in the better land above.</div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[PUBLIC WHIPPING AT DANBY 4 CORNERS]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/public-whipping-at-danby-4-corners]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/public-whipping-at-danby-4-corners#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Mon, 25 Mar 2024 16:34:47 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/public-whipping-at-danby-4-corners</guid><description><![CDATA[By Netanel CrispeDuring a hot, summer day in Danby, Vermont, a surveyor en route from New York took respite in the confines of Mr. Abraham Chase&rsquo;s tavern, situated one mile south of Danby 4 Corners. His decision to do so would ultimately be one he was soon to regret. Having had his fill of refreshments, he made his way to the exit with the intention of continuing on his mission to survey the town and its neighbors.&nbsp;      It was during his attempted withdrawal from this establishment t [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph">By Netanel Crispe<br /><br />During a hot, summer day in Danby, Vermont, a surveyor en route from New York took respite in the confines of Mr. Abraham Chase&rsquo;s tavern, situated one mile south of Danby 4 Corners. His decision to do so would ultimately be one he was soon to regret. Having had his fill of refreshments, he made his way to the exit with the intention of continuing on his mission to survey the town and its neighbors.&nbsp;</div>  <div>  <!--BLOG_SUMMARY_END--></div>  <div class="paragraph">It was during his attempted withdrawal from this establishment that he was confronted with hostility and unrest. With the end of a barrel unwaveringly presenting itself only a few feet from his head, he was inclined to submit himself to arrest and restraint. Local Danby inhabitants soon rushed to the place of commotion to understand the events that had transpired and to be witness to those that were to come.&nbsp;<br /><br />That ominous day, Danby&rsquo;s committee of safety gathered to employ legal action against the man from New York. Tensions were high as he pleaded his case knowing the potential severity of his punishment were he to be deemed guilty. In the eyes of Danby&rsquo;s residents, he stood there accused as a defiler of all that they held dear. The New York surveyor had been sent with the intention of exploring the land and providing an estimate to its worth for New York&rsquo;s governor to examine before selling it off. This, of course, outraged the local Danby inhabitants for they had toiled long and hard for the betterment of the land they now called home and they had acquired their meager properties through purchase from the State of New Hampshire, purchases that in their eyes were of the highest legality and as such defended their claims to the property they now possessed. Consequently, the argument presented by the defendant as to his legal standing in the town fell upon deaf ears and his sentence was soon proclaimed and executed without hesitation. The New York surveyor was escorted outside where a post, perfectly applicable for use in his punishment. stood. Alongside his compliment of guards proceeded a relatively large procession of local residents from around town, eager to witness this exciting deployment of justice by their elected officials and respected peers. The New York surveyor was stripped of his shirt and tied to the post in full view of all to see. On his naked back were laid 100 stripes with no sparing of the beech rod. Such punishment was of the most painful caliber and was sure to exact vengeance on his vulnerable flesh. With the conclusion of his punishment, he was released and sent forthwith from this town with a thunderous warning that any return would result in his death.&nbsp;<br /><br />Events like these are hard to believe and yet they can be found in every corner of our State&rsquo;s remarkable history. It is truly fascinating to see how the occurrences I have just described took place at such a precarious time in American history and how they so perfectly reflect the values and determination of Vermont&rsquo;s early settlers and the atmosphere of its young frontier towns. The whipping at the tavern of Abraham Chase, (a soldier of the American Revolution), took place in the summer of 1774. Placing its conclusion no more than a year before such tensions over the rights of man would reach a climax at the Battles of Lexington and Concord, battles that define the beginning of America&rsquo;s War for Independence. Such conflict between the New Hampshire&rsquo;s grantees and those of New York raged throughout Vermont and did not fully subside until after the war when Vermont stood as a sovereign nation. This episode is one of the thousands of unbelievable local stories that all speak to Vermont&rsquo;s early history and which forms the fabric of our collective memory.&nbsp;</div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[TOWN OF DANBY ANGERED OVER LOSS OF PET DEER]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/town-of-danby-angered-over-loss-of-pet-deer]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/town-of-danby-angered-over-loss-of-pet-deer#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Mon, 25 Mar 2024 16:32:19 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/town-of-danby-angered-over-loss-of-pet-deer</guid><description><![CDATA[The destructive force of the hunter hit the townspeople of Danby, October 28, especially the John Corey family, with tremendous impact when the town pet, Bambi, a deer named for the storybook counterpart, was killed by the bow and arrow of an out of state hunter.&nbsp;             The tale of Bambi began one early summer day in June, 1961 in the sugar woods behind the old Corey farm house where 17 year old Harris John Corey was all set to threw his dated fishing line into a stream. Suddenly he n [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph">The destructive force of the hunter hit the townspeople of Danby, October 28, especially the John Corey family, with tremendous impact when the town pet, Bambi, a deer named for the storybook counterpart, was killed by the bow and arrow of an out of state hunter.&nbsp;<br></div>  <div>  <!--BLOG_SUMMARY_END--></div>  <div><div class="wsite-image wsite-image-border-none " style="padding-top:10px;padding-bottom:10px;margin-left:0px;margin-right:0px;text-align:center"> <a> <img src="https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/uploads/1/4/8/9/148972966/bambi_orig.jpg" alt="Picture of a fawn standing on a stone walkway in front of a home" style="width:auto;max-width:100%" /> </a> <div style="display:block;font-size:90%"></div> </div></div>  <div class="paragraph">The tale of Bambi began one early summer day in June, 1961 in the sugar woods behind the old Corey farm house where 17 year old Harris John Corey was all set to threw his dated fishing line into a stream. Suddenly he noticed a short distance away a baby deer curled up in the middle of the moving brook. He lifted the deer up, set the animal on his legs on the, bank, hoping it would run off.&nbsp;<br /><br />But like a newborn calf, the deer couldn&rsquo;t stand on its legs which were thin as a pencil, and he sank to the ground with a cry.&nbsp;<br /><br />Harris also noticed that the hooves were soft as a new-born calf&rsquo;s and decided&nbsp;<br /><br />that the deer had been born that day. He had no choice but to carry the fawn home in his arms.&nbsp;<br /><br />Running from neighbor to neighbor, Mrs. Corey finally found a baby&rsquo;s bottle.&nbsp;<br /><br />She soon fed Bambi warm cow&rsquo;s milk. She presumed it was his first feeding of the day.&nbsp;<br /><br />&ldquo;Bambi licked the neck and arms of my son that day; he seemed so pleased that he was in friendly hands and taken care of. Bambi was never frightened, not even in the beginning. He weighed nine pounds.&rdquo;&nbsp;<br /><br />From then on, Bambi was a permanent member of the Corey family as well as a familiar, beloved figured throughout the town of Danby.&nbsp;<br /><br />With a red ribbon would around his neck and bells jingling, Bambi was a friendly companion to the Corey&rsquo;s herd of cows, following them gaily in the pastures in the morning, keeping them good company throughout the day, and ambling back with them at dusk. After the first week, Bambi gained weight rapidly, almost nine pounds every week for the first month. Mrs. Corey weighed the deer by holding him in her arms on the bathroom scale and subtracting her weight. But soon he grew too large for his weekly weighing schedule.&nbsp;<br /><br />Bambi had the run of the Corey&rsquo;s first floor and took long naps on the best braided rugs in the living room. At first he had a tough time keeping his long legs from doing the split on the slippery linoleum in the kitchen, but after a while he learned the trick of holding himself upright until he could reach the safety of the braided rug.&nbsp;<br /><br />Bambi favorite companions, aside from the cows, were Pepper, the Corey&rsquo;s friendly beagle, Frisky and Lucifer, the two cats, and High Hope, the family horse.&nbsp;<br /><br />Bambi loved all the good things in life. Mrs. Corey said his favorite food were the sweet geranium, peony and rose blossoms in her neighbors&rsquo; yards, strawberries, sweetened for short cake, bananas and chocolate ice cream. Children everywhere were his companions. And with the long neck, like that of a giraffe, he often got the select items from the overflowing Christmas dinner table, until politely retreated to the outside of the house.&nbsp;<br /><br />The most exciting event of the year for him was Christmas when he took his pick of the best looking Christmas packages piled up under the tree and untied all the bows. Two packages were completely undone before he was gently led outside and not allowed inside again until the packages were distributed to their rightful owners. But throughout the unwrapping of the gifts his face was seen by everyone inside pressed against the living room window, his nose steaming the glass.&nbsp;<br></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[THE CHARCOAL BURNERS OF THE GREEN MOUNTAINS]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/the-charcoal-burners-of-the-green-mountains]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/the-charcoal-burners-of-the-green-mountains#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Mon, 25 Mar 2024 16:31:13 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/the-charcoal-burners-of-the-green-mountains</guid><description><![CDATA[It was grim Death who introduced us to the charcoal burners; and, although his presence is seldom welcomed, yet, in this instance, we were indebted to him for one of the pleasant reminiscences of our summer&rsquo;s vacation.      &#8203;There were three of us in the party, the Dominie, the Professor, and Tinto, and as these pseudonyms sufficiently define their individuality I shall offer no further introduction than to say that the first and last were sexagenarians, while the other was a man of  [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph">It was grim Death who introduced us to the charcoal burners; and, although his presence is seldom welcomed, yet, in this instance, we were indebted to him for one of the pleasant reminiscences of our summer&rsquo;s vacation.<br></div>  <div>  <!--BLOG_SUMMARY_END--></div>  <div class="paragraph">&#8203;There were three of us in the party, the Dominie, the Professor, and Tinto, and as these pseudonyms sufficiently define their individuality I shall offer no further introduction than to say that the first and last were sexagenarians, while the other was a man of forty, and all were filled with art enthusiasm, one being a professional artist, and the others amateurs of no meager ability. They had come to the Green Mountain State from afar, to spend a two-months&rsquo; vacation and by climbing its mountains, threading its valleys, following up its streams, and in filling their portfolios with sketches from nature in this artist&rsquo;s paradise.<br /><br />This was the third year that the trio had spent their vacation in the mountains, and when they stepped off the train at &ldquo;Danby and Mt. Tabor station,&rdquo; the charming scene around them was neither novel nor strange, and they knew just what to expect. It is always the unexpected, however, that happens; and, as they passed around the corner of the station on the way to their inn, they found the way barred by a group of men who were tenderly placing in a wagon an oblong pine box, evidently containing a coffin, with the intent to transfer it to one of the houses in the village.<br /><br />Reverently raising their hats in the presence of that foe whom the bravest dread to meet, Tinto inquired of a looker on the personality of the deceased, and was told that it was a man &ldquo;named Eli Moore, a sawyer, who was killed yesterday at the charcoal job on the mountain, by a log rolling onto him.&rdquo;<br /><br />&ldquo;Was he killed instantly?&rdquo;<br /><br />&ldquo;Yes, as far as I know, he must ha&rsquo; been. He had sent all his men off somewhere&rsquo; else, and, as he wanted a log for some purpose, he went out to the pile, and must have started it while standing in front of it, for when his wife went out to look for and call him to dinner, she found him with a log some sixteen feet long and two foot through lying across his chest, and he stone dead. It must ha&rsquo; crushed the life right out of him.&rdquo;<br /><br />Waiting until the little procession moved on its way, our trio gathered up their impedimenta and followed the marble sidewalk to the village inn, where they proposed to stay for a few days as a base of operation in spying out the land thereabouts.<br /><br />Little was said during the short walk; but through Tinto&rsquo;s sensorium that phrase &ldquo;The charcoal job on the mountain&rdquo; was ringing its changes, and he had not reached the inn before making up his mind to know more of its meaning and purpose.<br /><br />The artist is nothing if not observant; and our friend Tinto, in addition to this usual trait, was possessed of a full measure of curiosity, added to a persistency of purpose that had often stood him in good stead; and after an early supper, while the Dominie and Professor took a stroll in another direction in pursuit of objects of artistic interest, he followed the marble pathway back to the depot in search of someone who could post him on the &ldquo;charcoal job.&rdquo; He was not long in finding the office of the institution, in close proximity to the station, and in introducing himself to Messrs. Griffith &amp; McIntyre, the proprietors thereof, explaining to them his desire to know more of their processes and modus operandi. Four kilns, situated on a knoll just back of some sheds, which serve as a freight depot, afforded the opportunity, and in the course of half an hour the artist was deep in the mysteries of burning hard and soft wood in kilns, &ldquo;knee vents,&rdquo; &ldquo;waist vents,&rdquo; &ldquo;ankle vents,&rdquo; &ldquo;draughts,&rdquo; &ldquo;sinks,&rdquo; and all the nomenclature which goes to designate and explain a &ldquo;charcoal job.&rdquo; Before leaving, he accepted a pressing invitation for himself and friends to drive up to the &ldquo;job on the mountain&rdquo; at their earliest opportunity.<br /><br />The State of Vermont has been justly called &ldquo;the artist&rsquo;s paradise,&rdquo; remarked the Dominic, as Tinto rejoined his companions on the veranda of the tavern in the late twilight of the summer evening. &ldquo;I know of no State in the Union, and no portion of any State, that presents such a diversity of charming scenery as this favored portion of the earth&rsquo;s surface. From the most expansive view over vast and continuous mountain ranges, to the close pastoral scene, and the multitudinous and charming &lsquo;bits&rsquo; that surround us on every hand, this section is replete with pictures that would honor the easel of any painter.&rdquo;<br /><br />&ldquo;I wonder,&rdquo; said the Professor, &ldquo;that these rich artistic placers have not been discovered and utilized long ago by the artists of New York, Boston, and nearer cities. They seem, however, to have been overlooked in the furor for the more fashionable White Mountains, Coast of Maine, Yellowstone, or the Rockies; and this favored land is give the go-by by artists, who continue to paint the old scenes ad nauseam, while directly in their pathway lies a region whose every acre is a mine of artistic wealth, and every mile is filled with aesthetic rapture.&rdquo;<br /><br />&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; replied Tinto, to who these remarks were addressed, &ldquo;&lsquo;sufficient for the day is the evil thereof&rsquo;&rdquo; (at the same time holding up two finger to indicate quotation marks, a habit he had acquired when quoting scripture in presence of the Dominie, to deprecate criticism and to intimate the lack of originality). &ldquo;When other artists shall have made the discovery of this charming Switzerland, and shall have found how cheaply they can live and travel in it, they will come in crowds; the fashionable world will follow, and then adieu to the charming simplicity of its people, its reasonable rates, and unadulterated honesty. Let us enjoy it while we may, and leave the other fellows to find it out for themselves.&rdquo;<br /><br />&ldquo;By-the-way,&rdquo; said the Dominie, &ldquo;in our tramp after supper we followed up this little stream that crosses the road here by the hotel, and found some charming cascades and falls, and I propose that in the morning we go out and see them.&rdquo;<br /><br />This being readily acquiesced in, the conversation drifted to ordinary topics until bedtime, when the trio sought their respective dormitories, and slept the sleep of the just.<br /><br />It was the third day after their arrival before they were ready to accept the invitation to &ldquo;do&rdquo; the &ldquo;charcoal job on the mountain.&rdquo;<br /><br />&ldquo;Come, arouse thee! arouse thee! my merry Swiss boy,&rdquo; warbled the Dominie, as he rapped at Tinto&rsquo;s door in the morning; &ldquo;it&rsquo;s a long day before us, and we want an early start.&rdquo;<br /><br />&ldquo;What an unearthly hour for a Christian man to get out of bed!&rdquo; said Tinto, sotto voce, as he looked at his time-piece, which noted half-past five o&rsquo;clock; &ldquo;however, as we are in Turkey, I suppose we must do as the Turkeys do;&rdquo; and in the course of twenty minutes he had joined his companions at the breakfast table.<br /><br />It was a lovely July morning, and all animate and inanimate nature seemed to rejoice and pay homage to the god of day as he ascended his pathway in the east, and, peeping over the mountain, looked through a lovely pink haze down into the valley. His rays seems to kiss into life and activity all moving things, from the robin on the hillside to the superannuated old horse down in the pasture; the trees and flowers seemed to rejoice in his coming; and even the staid and sober Dominie felt the exhilarating effects of the delightful atmosphere, filled with ozone from recent showers, and was as playful as a motherly tabby with her first kitten. Tinto and he had been intimate friends for more than a quarter of a century, and the artists and his doings formed excellent butts for the shafts of his sarcastic criticism, which he would not have dared to aim at a less goodnatured man.<br /><br />The little hamlet of Danby, made up of not more than twenty or thirty houses, is situated in a valley between two ranges of the Green Mountains that rise some three thousand feet on either side, and extend north and south for many miles. The range on the west is composed of limestone, and in it is found marble of purest quality, which is worked to advantage, the quarries at Rutland being noted for their extent and the fineness of the material. The eastern range is granitic, and, like all the other ranges, is covered to its top with a dense growth of hemlock, spruce, beech, pine, poplar, birch, and other evergreen and deciduous trees, the former preponderating, thus giving them the right to the title of Green Mountains. Along the faces of the ranges, gorges and ravines are formed by the action of water, and are the only means of ingress and egress to and from the interior valleys, for the sides are generally so steep that nothing short of a goat, and he a very sober one, could climb them. Through these gorges there is barely room for the road and the stream, and the former is frequently blasted out of the solid side of the mountain, while the latter in spring a raging torrent, carrying with and before it massive boulders, logs, and all the debris of a vernal freshet, makes frequent and strenuous effort to wash the highway out of existence.<br /><br />It was up one of these gorges that our trio were to take their devious way to the top of the mountain, and thence over to Weston, a hamlet on West river, where they had spent their previous summer&rsquo;s vacation.<br /><br />After considerable fussiness on the part of the Dominie, and numerous commands and countermands from Tinto, who, from his having served a term in the Home Guards during &ldquo;the late unpleasantness,&rdquo; was honored with the command of the party, they were ready to start. The order &ldquo;Forward!&rdquo; was given to the driver, a pert lad of fifteen summers, the son of the landlord; and with a cheery goodbye to Boniface and several villagers who had gathered on the veranda, they were off for Weston &ldquo;and a market.&rdquo; Driving through the one street of the place to the depot, they halted long enough to appoint to meet Mr. G on the mountain in time for dinner, and to inspect his new stables recently erected by him for the accommodation of such of his horses as may be needed in the valley, or such as may not be able to get back to &ldquo;the job&rdquo; before nightfall.<br /><br />In answer to a question of Tinto&rsquo;s, they were told that the company owned one hundred horses, sixteen yoke of oxen, and frequently compelled to hire as many more during the busy season.<br /><br />&ldquo;Come, gentlemen,&rdquo; said Mr. G&mdash;&ldquo;before you go up the mountain let me show you how we ship our coal; there&rsquo;s a wagon coming in, and you can see it unloaded.&rdquo;<br /><br />Walking along a little beyond the group of kilns, the party came to a platform, attached to and in front of a freight shed, by the side of which stood a derrick and its attachments.<br /><br />&ldquo;The track is below the platform, so that the top of a freight car comes about on a level with it, and for the convenience the top of the car is open, with hinged covers, as you see,&rdquo; said Mr. G&mdash;.<br /><br />&ldquo;What is the capacity of one of these cars?&rdquo; asked the Professor.<br /><br />&ldquo;Well, from 1,150 to 1,300 bushels; we own about fifty cars, and could use many more; we frequently have to wait for the return of our cars, causing serious delays. Nevertheless we manage to ship an average of 100,000 bushels per months, which is about the capacity of the four &lsquo;jobs;&rsquo; this one here; the one on the mountain; the Black branch job, and the three kilns over by the large boarding house on the other side of the mountain.&rdquo;<br /><br />At this juncture the coal wagon drove up to the platform, and the driver made preparations to unload his cargo, while the party stepped to windward to avoid the dust.<br /><br />These wagons consist of a running gear about ten feet long, and four feet two inches wide, on which are mounted two large boxes, say three feet two inches wide on the bottom, by six feet long, and flaring upward to five feet wide by seven feet long, their capacity being sometimes extended by sideboards eight inches higher. They ordinarily carry 250 bushels to a wagon, and have hinged bottoms, which are kept in place by a simple mechanical contrivance until it is required to dump them. Straps of iron extend up the sides of the boxes, with an eye at the top, into which the hooks of the derrick chain are inserted, the windlass put in operation, one box lifted from the gear, swung over the car, the bolt drawn, and the contents dumped into the car, when it is swung back to its place, and the other box goes through the same process.<br /><br />Such was the operation which our trio witnessed; and, as the dust arose in clouds and blew away to leeward, Tinto remarked:&mdash;<br /><br />&ldquo;&lsquo;Dust thou art, and to dust shalt thou return;&rsquo; I wonder if that is the kind of dust that drakes are made of?&rdquo;<br /><br />&ldquo;Dust think so?&rdquo; queried the Dominie.<br /><br />&ldquo;Perhaps it is,&rdquo; remarked the Professor; for if the Darwinian theory is correct, the darker must be first cousin to our great progenitor the ape; and &lsquo;thereby hangs a tale.&rsquo;&rdquo;<br /><br />A volley or ohs greeted this sally, the party proceeded to climb into their vehicle, and, after bidding Mr. G&mdash;au revoir, started up the gorge. Before entering it, however, they had to pass through the little hamlet of Mt. Tabor, named for the mountain above it, and consisting of a store and post office, with some half dozen neat cottages, all with door yards in front, in which summer flowers were blooming, and all betokening the thrift and comfort so common to the New England villages. Facing mostly to the south and west, their windows command charming views down the valley, and across to Dorset mountain, which at a distance of a little over a quarter of a mile rose to an altitude of 3,300 feet.<br /><br />&ldquo;Give e a cot in the valley I love,&rdquo; hummed Tinto. What a lovely spot to spend the remnant of one&rsquo;s days, dreaming life away in the enjoyment of such delightful scenery and drinking in the rich tones of the sunsets behind you distant range&rdquo;&mdash;<br /><br />&ldquo;Do you suppose for a moment that, with your towering intellect and vaulting ambition, you would be content to settle down in such a quiet spot as this; or do you suppose that the world would allow of it?&rdquo; said the Dominie. &ldquo;There are duties one owes to society as well as to one&rsquo;s self, and duties never clash.&rdquo;<br /><br />&ldquo;There&rsquo;s a little cottage with half an acre of ground, and a nice barn that you can hire for a dollar a month,&rdquo; said the boy driver, pointing out a neat five room house they were passing, and evidently wishing to have his part in the conversation, which he took for gospel.<br /><br />That settled the matter, and the conversation dropped, for the time being.<br /><br />A hundred yards farther on they entered upon the wild beauties of the gorge, at a point where once had been a massive dam, which, having been swept away during the last spring freshet, the timbers and logs, mixed in the most inextricable confusion with the immense boulders that had caused the destruction, former, with the rushing waters that roared and swirled through and among the debris, a wild and attractive picture. In a moment the trio were on their feet and out of the wagon; scrambling about on the rocks and broken timbers; calling upon each other to admire now this view, now that vista. Crossing the stream on the slippery stones, at the risk of wet feet and broken limbs, they behaved rather like school boys on a lark, than three elderly professional men, who would have smiled at their own enthusiasm could they have seen it with their ordinary vision.<br /><br />It was evident that the boy driver had his doubts as to the sanity of his passengers, as with half open mouth and staring eyes he watched their antics and wondered what there was in so familiar a scene to call forth such demonstrations.<br /><br />&ldquo;Oh, that&rsquo;s nothing!&rdquo; said he, as they returned to the vehicle, &ldquo;to what it is in the spring; you should see it then if you want to hear roaring. There&rsquo;s no water on now of any consequence.&rdquo;<br /><br />&ldquo;What is there in the sight of falling water that should fill the artistic mind with such rapture?&rdquo; asked the Professor, as the trio resumed their seats and the upward journey.<br /><br />&ldquo;I think,&rdquo; said the Dominie, who was always ready with his theory, before Tinto had formulated the thought wit which to express his idea, &ldquo;it is because of the untrammeled grace of its movements. Now look at that little fall yonder as it pours over the immense boulder and scatters its volume on the smaller rocks below; here it sweeps boldly to the right under the pile of driftwood which is has erstwhile brought down with it, and then swirls gracefully into that eddy to the left, to plunge again and again in bow like curves over and among the rounded stones and the debris of its former rage and fury, every singing its song of freedom. What does Solomon say in his&rdquo;&mdash;<br /><br />What Solomon said remains unknown, for Tinto ejaculated in a stage whisper to the Professor, &ldquo;He got &lsquo;em again; we must find some antidote for this, or we shall be preached to death;&rdquo; and the Dominie subsided. A moment later, however, the preacher had his revenge, for his friend exclaimed, &ldquo;Oh! look there! what a charming picture that is! Stop, driver! I must have that;&rdquo; and, without waiting for the team to check its headway, he leaped to the ground, and was soon seated on a rock in midstream, sketching the scene before him, undisturbed by the Dominie&rsquo;s remark anent for the lunatic having escaped his keepers.<br /><br />They were traveling along the bottom of a V shaped ravine, in which there was barely room for the stream. The road had been blasted out of the mountain side, and a fringe of trees, left at the water&rsquo;s edge, threw a deep shadow across the bed of the stream, while, beyond the vista thus formed, the sunlight brought out in strong relief the rustic bridge where the road made an abrupt turn and crossed to the other bank; this was the scene which the artist was trying to get for a picture.<br /><br />It would be tedious to attempt to describe the beauties of this charming gorge, which in every rod of its devious ascent presented a new and attractive feature that brought forth some exclamation of surprise, admiration, or wonder, or to narrate the several incidents of passing the heavily loaded coal carts, to which they were obliged to yield the right of way, or the frequent halts to &ldquo;get this or that charming bit. Ere they reached the mountain top they found their stock of expletives exhausted; and, as they realized the beauty and extent of the scenes through which they had passed, silence seemed the only way of expressing the rapture which filled them.<br /><br />About halfway up they passed a spot where another mountain stream came in from the left, and were told by their driver that the rugged road along its banks &ldquo;led up to the Black branch job.&rdquo;<br /><br />Continuing on their course, after another hour&rsquo;s climbing, they found themselves passing between two rows of buildings, and emerging into a cleared and level space about fifteen acres, which, from the kilns on the one hand, and the large saw mill on the other, with the commodious boarding house beyond, they recognized as &ldquo;the job on the mountain.&rdquo;<br /><br />This unique settlement consisted of about forty or fifty structures, bracing a large steam saw mill, forty by eighty feet, with all the appliances for converting the choicest hardwood logs into lumber, which is mainly used by a mowing machine large boarding house for the single men among the employes; a general store and office, with an adjoining residence for the chief clerk or manager ; a harness shop ; a wagon shop ; blacksmith shop, and a number of cottages for the employes, besides stables for the animals, sheds for the wagons, sleds, etc. ; and last, though not least, four large kilns for burning the coal. The houses are furnished the men rent free; the supplies at as near cost as possible ; and everything within its capacity is manufactured on the spot by the company.<br /><br />Stopping at the office, our trio were welcomed by the manager, who had been telephoned of their coming.<br /><br />Their first objective point was the group of kilns, and towards these they leisurely made their way, exhilarated by the bracing atmosphere of this elevated region, made more pungent by the pyroligneous vapor arising from two of the kilns which were in full heat.<br /><br />Arrived before one, which, by its open door and the wagon in front, was evidently being emptied, they were on the point of entering when they were startled by the apparition of a tall, gaunt, Italian brigand, which stalked out of the opening, and with the stride of giant mounted the plank, one end of which was supported on a tripod at the side of the wagon, emptied the shell like basket which he carried, and, turning upon his heel, stalked back again Without giving a look of curiosity to the trio of strangers whom he might have touched as he passed. He was a splendid specimen of man, and better fitted for the wild fastnesses of the Abruzzi, whence he probably came, than the peaceful, scenes by which he was surrounded. The surprise of the party was somewhat allayed when they learned that quite a large proportion of the employes were natives of sunny Italy,&mdash;a fact which they soon realized in the chattering of the black haired and black eyed little picturesque ragamuffins, who congregated about most of the laborers&rsquo; cottages and ran riot about the place. This brigand was too good a subject to lose, ad Tinto subsequently made a sketch of him, which he promised to copy for the Dominie.<br /><br />They did not enter the kiln, for, upon looking within, they discovered that the coal, now thoroughly charred and cooled, was being raked down, and the whole interior was filled with a fine charcoal dust in which it seemed impossible to breath. Three or four men, who looked more like imps than human beings, were breathing it, however, for they were engaged with long iron rakes in tearing down the serried ranks of charred logs, which, as they fell, crumbled and sent up showers of dust, through which the sunlight, entering at the opening above, sent athwart the picture a ray that produced a very weird and startling effect.<br /><br />While admiring this interesting scene Mr. G&mdash; drove up, and, as it was past noon, he invited his guests to dine with the boarding house opposite the kilns, promising after dinner to explain the modus operandi of burning coal.<br /><br />Now, if the Dominic has one weakness which dominates all his other weaknesses, it is a fondness for the pleasures of the table ; and, although his personal appearance would scarcely warrant such a conclusion &mdash;for he is lean and gaunt to a degree the sound of the breakfast or dinner bell has frequently been known to put an end to some of his finest lucubrations, and to check the flow of his most elaborate rhetorical efforts. Knowing his failing in this respect,Knowings companions yielded a ready acquiescence to the call, and in a few moments they were seated at one of the tables in the long dining room of the boarding house, doing ample justice to the plain but really attractive food set before them.<br /><br />An hour later, with cigars between their lips, the returned to the kilns, and their host proceeded, in his matter-of-fact way, to illuminate their minds regarding the mysteries of burning charcoal, as carried on in the precincts of the Green Mountains.<br /><br />As they walked leisurely towards the kilns, Mr. G&mdash; began by saying: &ldquo;We own about thirteen thousand acres in this immediate section, and thirteen hundred in the Black branch job. The wood is mostly spruce, which is the soft timber. Birch is harder timber, and it is the hard coal, used in the manufacturing of barbed wire.<br /><br />&ldquo;The Larger logs of spruce are sawed up into lumber, and the smaller ones are burned for coal. There are a hundred men employed in chopping at all seasons, but about the first of October we start all hands into the timber, where they remain until the first of April. They are divided into gangs of twelve to fifteen men each, with a boss for each gang.&rdquo;<br /><br />&ldquo;Do they remain in the woods night?&rdquo; queried Tinto.<br /><br />&ldquo;That depends,&rdquo; replied Mr. G.<br /><br />&ldquo;Some who are near the mill come in at night to their families or to the boarding house, while those who are far away build shanties of logs, covered with boards, many of those improvised houses being constructed with runners, and are moved about with the progress of the chopping. They have a cook, and supplies are drawn to them on sleds.&rdquo;<br /><br />&ldquo;It must be a hard and monotonous life,&rdquo; said the Dominie.<br /><br />&ldquo;On the contrary, the men look forward to the winter season with a great deal of anticipation; although our winters are ordinarily sever, and there is frequently from eight to twelve feet of snow on the mountains, they lead life of excitement and, to them, one of pleasure. They go to work as early as it is light enough for them to see, and chop until dark, when they repair to their shanties and spend their evenings &mdash; and many days together, too, for that matter, when it is too stormy to work &mdash; in singing, dancing, card playing, and thrumming musical instruments of some kind.&rdquo;<br /><br />&ldquo;How are they paid?&rdquo; asked Tinto.<br /><br />&ldquo;Some by the day, and some by the cord; and the bosses are held responsible for their proper attention to business. They are paid off on the 30th of each month, when they come in to get their money and have a quiet spree.&rdquo;<br /><br />&ldquo;Do they get intoxicated on ginger pop and birch beer?&rdquo; queried the Professor ; &ldquo;for those, I understand, are the only beverages to be had in this land of steady habits.&rdquo;<br />&ldquo;Well, no,&rdquo; replied Mr. G; &ldquo;but they mix those liquors with the water from our mountain springs, and that, you know, is very exhilarating, especially in winter.<br /><br />By this time they stood before the group of kilns, and Mr. G&mdash; continued: &rdquo; Our choice of location depends, of course, upon the preponderance of the kind of wood we want; and, having chosen a site, we proceed to cut a road to civilization, to haul our supplies and materials. We next build our houses for the accommodation of our workmen, and then proceed to build our kilns, which, you see, are of hard brick. The walls are twelve inches thick, and the kilns from twenty five to thirty feet in diameter; twelve feet high to the crown, and about seven feet crown, with a circular opening in the crown of five feet diameter. The only other opening (except the vents) is the door, which is closed by a heavy slab of No. 8 iron. The floor is of clay and well tamped, and the foundations are thoroughly grouted before the structure is commenced, as the kilns expand with the heat, and contract while cooling. There are three tiers of vents, or openings, the size of a brick, left in the walls for the purpose of drawing the fire back and forth,&mdash; one hundred and twenty vents to each kiln; and they are called waist, knee, and ankle vents.&rsquo; Now, if you will step this way,&rdquo; continued Mr. G&mdash;, &ldquo;I will show you a kiln almost ready for firing, in which you can see the construction of the pile.&rdquo;<br /><br />Climbing a steep staircase, our friends found themselves upon a platform level with the tops of all the kilns, and looking down into one of these they saw the wood piled in two tiers, filling the kiln to within, say, three feet of the top of the crown, the logs radiating from the centre, leaving an interior space of about four feet, which was filled with soft and light wood for kindling. A foundation of logs is first laid upon and covering the floor, except a fire arch from the door to the centre. Then the logs are piled as above described, until the kiln is full, when the centre is filled with kindling, and the pile is ready for firing. A rag saturated with kerosene is attached to a pole, and, being lighted, is thrust under the fire arch to the centre, igniting the kindling; the door is closed and the hermetically sealed; the thimble, or iron circular plate, placed over the opening over the top, and for ten or twelve days the charring goes on, being regulate by the vents around the base of the kiln. It is necessary that the fire should begin at top and burn downward, and for this pose two openings are left in the tilt at the top, each of which is easily with a brick. These are left open or closed, as emergency requires, the vents are opened as needed, to draw the fire downward through the pile. the wood is sufficiently charred above the vents, which is ascertained by the smell of the smoke, or by thrusting a bar Tell the vents, to feel whether it is wood coal ; the knee, or middle row of vents, and the ankle vents, are opened in succession, although the lower vents, as a general thing, are not opened ; the collier preferring to burn the lower tier of logs in another kiln, rather than run the risk of over firing.<br /><br />Mr. G having been called away for few moments, Tinto turned to the Professor for an explanation of the chemical process in the charring operation.<br /><br />&ldquo;Wood,&rdquo; said he, is composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen gases, the latter in proportions sufficient to form water. When fired in the open air it burns with a flame, freely, the carbon being consumed, leaving only a residuum of ashes, or the earthy portion. But when burned in confinement, where the oxygen of the atmosphere cannot reach it in sufficient quantity to unite with the oxygen of the wood, and cause flame, the intense heat liberates the hydrogen and oxygen gases, which go off in pyroligneous acid, which is the thin, vaporous smoke that you see rising from the kiln yonder, and issuing from the vents. The woody fiber, in the form of carbon, remains, and is the wood charcoal of commerce.<br /><br />While awaiting the return of their host, our trio watched the operations of the men about them on the platform and in the kilns.<br /><br />The vehicle which brought logs from the adjacent woods to the kilns of a peculiar construction, necessitated by the circumstances. It was an ordinary rack, mounted at the front upon runners, but at the back upon skids, which are meant to retard rather than to facilitate the progress of the vehicle, as it has to descend the steep wood roads of the mountains, where it would seem impossible for anything but a goat to retain its footing. Yet, habit has become so far second nature with these hardy horses that they manage to handle their loads with an elan that is very interesting to behold. The most difficult hauling is on the level ground where the roads are much cut up, and upon the platforms where the wood is unloaded.<br /><br />Mr. G&mdash;, on his return to his guests, conducted them to the interior of an open kiln, where he gave them further incidental information regarding the operations.<br /><br />&ldquo;You will understand,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;that the process is one of charring, and not of combustion, and the converting of the woody fibre into carbon; hence flame is very undesirable, as it consumes the wood. If, through the carelessness of the collier in tending vent,&rdquo; as they say in the artillery, flame should once get headway, the kiln would explode, endangering many lives. The presence of flame is indicated by that white spot on the wall there; that is an infallible detective, and tells of the carelessness of the collier.<br /><br />&ldquo;How,&rdquo; asked the Professor, &ldquo;do you judge of the progress of the charring, not being able to gain access to the interior?&rdquo;<br /><br />&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; replied Mr. G&mdash;&ldquo; we have no means of judging, except by the smell of the smoke, the heat on the door and thimble, and by prodding the vents, as I before explained. Nevertheless, although the period of ten or twelve days, during which the charring is going on, is a time of constant watchfulness and attention to business on the part of the collier, continued every day experience renders him so expert that we seldom have an accident or lose a firing.<br /><br />&ldquo;I wish,&rdquo; said the Dominic, &ldquo;that you would explain more fully the process of drawing the fire down, as I do not fully comprehend it.&rdquo;<br /><br />Taking a piece of coal from the ground, Mr. G&mdash; drew the diagram of a section of a kiln ready for firing. &ldquo;This,&rdquo; said he, &rdquo; represents the wall of the kiln. A is the kindling, and BB the wood to be charred. C is the space left for the gases, and D is the fire arch. Now when the center kindling has been thoroughly ignited and the flame extinguished by closing the door and putting on the thimble at the top, the pile of kindling is reduced to a mass of red hot embers, and this fire is drawn back and forth, now in this direction, now in that, as shown by the arrows, by opening the vents.&rdquo;<br /><br />&rdquo; Yes,&rdquo; said the Dominie, &rdquo; but how? that is what I do not understand.&rdquo;<br /><br />&ldquo;Well, the fire works against the wind. Why, I cannot explain. I leave that to more scientific men. You will see that these kilns have a northern exposure, and, when the wind is from that direction, great care is necessary not to burn too fast. When it is from other quarters the burning is more regular. Sometimes a sink occurs, which means that the fire is drawn down too rapidly, leaving a middle portion uncharred. This is to be avoided, and can only occur through the carelessness of the collier. After the charring operation is complete the vents are stopped, the body of the kiln is thoroughly whitewashed, and the crown covered liberally with coal tar, to make everything airtight, and the kiln left for two days to cool off. It is then opened, and the coal can be taken out immediately. Thus you see that it requires fourteen days at least to burn a kiln; two to fill, ten to burn, and two to cool. The secret of good coal, however, is to take time, and we prefer to give it twelve days to char, unless we are behind our orders, which, I am sorry to say, is generally the case.&rdquo;<br /><br />Turning to his companions, the Dominie found that Tinto was missing, and, as he was nothing without his friend, who was his alter ego, the party walked out into the sunlight to see what had become of him.<br /><br />It was not until after an hour&rsquo;s wandering about the precincts of the &ldquo;job,&rdquo; during which they stumbled upon many delightful little bits of scenery, that, in crossing a rustic bridge they discovered his genial face through the attic window of a tenantless house where he was engaged in sketching one of the numerous homes of the charcoal burners.<br /><br />&ldquo;Oh, you renegade I&rdquo; exclaimed the Dominic, shaking his alpen stock in a threatening manner at the artist ; &rdquo; here we have been hunting you for an hour or more, while you have been perched in an attic, redolent, I have no doubt, of onions and potatoes, having us in view all the time.&rdquo;<br /><br />&ldquo;Well, I knew,&rdquo; said Tinto, as he rejoined his companions on the bridge, &rdquo; that I could safely rely upon you to absorb the information communicated by our friend, and that all it was necessary for me to do was to squeeze the sponge and gather the residuum.&rdquo; He placated the Dominie&rsquo;s anger by showing the sketches he had got, and then added : &rdquo; It is time for us to start if we expect to reach Weston for supper,&rdquo; which fact being acquiesced in, the driver was hunted up, the team gotten ready and farewell said to their host, whose pressing invitation to spend a day or two longer with him they were reluctantly compelled to decline.<br /><br />Weston, the little hamlet where our trio had spent their previous summer&rsquo;s vacation, and to which their attention was now directed, is situated in a depression of the mountains about five miles from &rdquo; the job ; &rdquo; and although the road was less rough than that from Danby up the mountain gorge, it was wild and romantic enough to satisfy the most enthusiastic artist, and to fill the party with delightful emotions, to which they were continually giving vent in exclamations both loud and deep.<br /><br />The horses in this section of country are trained to take the most precipitous hill at a gallop, and to keep their gait when going down hill, so that, what with the exciting drive, the bracing mountain air, the wild and rugged scenery, which was now lighted by the declining rays* of the setting sun, now shadowed by fleeting clouds ; the pleasant companionship and the frequent interchange of repartee, the ride was one long to be remembered even the boy driver.<br /><br />&ldquo;I often wonder,&rdquo; said Tinto, while the three friends were admiring the tints of the sky as the sun sank behind a bank of clouds, lighting up their edges with the hues of the rainbow, &ldquo;how these men whom we meet feel, and what they think, surrounded as they are continually by scenes which excite in us emotionally that will vent themselves in words. They seem so stolid that one can hardly believe they see the beauty which encompasses them, and which we have come so far to enjoy.&rdquo;<br /><br />&ldquo;Men see with what they have to see with,&rdquo; quoted the Dominie.<br /><br />&ldquo;That&rsquo;s Kingsley,&rdquo; said the Professor, sotto voce, as his friend had failed to hold up his fingers indicating quotation marks.<br /><br />&ldquo;Two men shall stand upon the slope of a mountain looking toward the Western horizon,&rdquo; continued the preacher, without noticing the interruption, &rdquo; where the w sun is lighting up with his departing rays a rich bank of clouds sweeping grandly up to the zenith, while broken fragments of vapor catch and reflect the glow of the setting orb, their edges gilded with golden light, which shades off into cooler purple and aerial grays, until the whole atmosphere is filled with gorgeous color, making the appreciative soul leap for joy that God has made the world so beautiful. Between the observers and the sun range after range of mountains catch the glowing light, while the intervening valleys are filled with that warm purple haze which floats and glimmers in the sunlight ; and the foreground is made up of such glorious scenery as that round about us, thrown into shadow as the sun goes down, betokening the gloom of night.<br /><br />&ldquo;One of the observers shall be a farmer, born and bred near the spot where they stand; and he looks upon the scene with utilitarian eyes, seeing only the promise of fine weather tomorrow, and a chance to cut that grass down in the meadow. The other shall be an artist, who, like yourself, is accustomed to prairie like surroundings, where a hill ten feet high is a mountain, and who has traveled a thousand miles to witness and enjoy the scene before them, which his companion values so lightly. Their feelings, expressed In words, would be:&mdash;<br /><br />What a magnificent picture! How grandly beautiful; can anything be more charming and complete in picturesqueness? I envy you a life in such a land, &mdash; a land replete with all the charms which go to make up an artist&rsquo;s paradise.&rsquo;<br /><br />&ldquo;Humph! I reckon if you had to make a living out of this paradise, as you call it, you wouldn&rsquo;t think it so beautiful.&rsquo;<br /><br />&ldquo;That expresses it to a certain degree,&rdquo; said the Professor, &rdquo; but you leave out the element of training and culture. Now, I doubt if even Tinto would be so eloquent in the description, or enthusiastic in his admiration, were it not that he has cultivated his tastes to the point of appreciation.&rdquo;<br /><br />Approaching a spot vernacularly known as &ldquo;the Devil&rsquo;s Den,&rdquo; they took a short tramp into the woods until they came to a ledge of hold, overhanging rocks, covered with the primeval forest growth, whence, looking down into a chasm several hundred feet in depth, they could see the tops of trees which had never heard the sound of woodman&rsquo;s axe ; and thence up and away across a wide expanse of landscape, embracing extensive mountain ranges, bathed in all the glorious tints of the setting sun. It was a scene to fill the soul with rapture, and so apposite to the Dominie&rsquo;s recent and eloquent description, that Tinto and the Professor exclaimed with one accord, &rdquo; The Dominie&rsquo;s picture! &rdquo; It was indeed a wild and romantic spot, and one were it better known &mdash; that would become a favorite resort for the artist, the tourist, and the leisure traveler.<br /><br />After taking a hearty drink at a clear spring, whose waters percolated through a crevice in the overhanging rock by the roadside, they drove on in the fast deepening ing twilight, silent now in the presence of that calm, still, mournful beauty, which settles down upon the face of nature as she draws the veil of night across her features. Each was storing away in his sensorium bright reminiscences of a delightful day Fell spent, whose close found them domiciled at the little inn at Weston, where they received a warm and hearty welcome from simple but honest hosts.<br /><br />For four weeks our trio of artist friends remained in this delightful retreat in the heart of the Green Mountains. enjoying to the fullest extent the charming scenery, filling their books and portfolios with sketches, taking in large draughts of the pure mountain air, and laying up great stores of health with which to combat the malarial influences of their urban homes.<br />Separated by twelve miles of mountainous country from the nearest railroad station, located seventeen hundred feet above tide water, and surrounded by mountains from two to three thousand feet in height, with no opportunity of spending money beyond the mere pittance paid for board and the hire of a team occasionally to drive to distant points, the days were spent in rambling among the glens and water courses, the evenings in dreamy discourse or mild discussion on the veranda, and the nights in sound, refreshing, and dreamless sleep.<br /><br />Sitting on the veranda on the evening previous to the day of their contemplated departure from this elysium, watching fair Cynthia as she rose from behind the mountain before them, it was proposed that on the morrow they should climb to the top of the aforesaid mountain, if peradventure they might discover where the moon came from.<br /><br />Morning came, cool, bright, and bracing, and after an early breakfast, with alpen stocks in hand, and with spirits as buoyant as those of boys let out of school, they started. Younger and less experienced men would have dashed boldly at the face of the mountain and carried the ascent by storm, but our sexagenarians chose a more circuitous, if longer route, and, following a gradually ascending road which ran around its base, found themselves, after an hour&rsquo;s pleasant ramble, with only about one third of the height to master. Taking this very leisurely, stopping now to explore the inmost recesses of a sugar house, now to &rdquo; get this bit &rdquo; of a fence corner, or that group of trees ; perchance a quiescent ruminant (cattle being Tinto&rsquo;s specialty) ; they found only the last fifty feet of climbing at all fatiguing or tiresome. Arrived at last upon the summit, they gathered upon the bare surface of a large rock, which was voted to be &rdquo; tip top,&rdquo; and looked about them.<br /><br />If one can imagine himself upon the top of an immense wave in mid ocean, surrounded upon all sides by the swelling forms of storm vexed billows, and if those forms could be suddenly congealed or rendered motionless, &mdash; he would have an adequate conception of the scene upon which our trio admiringly gazed. Away off to the north the range, upon one of the spurs of which they stood, trended away in ever changing and varied shapes, until the more distant peaks melted tenderly into the cool grays of the clouds, and it became a matter of discussion which was vapor and which solid earth. To the east the undulations were less abrupt, but the eye wandered over the contour of the billowy ranges, resting at last upon the far distant horizon, where the peaks of the White Mountains cut the skyline and stood plainly revealed against the azure of the heaven above. Looking southward, the landscape gradually assumed a more pastoral appearance, the extreme distance being bounded by the Holyoke range, sixty miles away ; while, westward, the Green Mountains surged and swelled in rocky waves, peak rising above peak, range above range, culminating in the shadowy Adirondacks, whose rugged outlines alone separated them from the blue ether about them. The middle distance in each view was made up of<br /><br />&ldquo;Hills rock ribbed and ancient as the sun,<br />With vales stretching in pensive quietness between,<br />Venerable woods, &mdash; rivers that<br />Moved in majesty, and complaining brooks<br />That made the meadows green,&rdquo; &mdash;<br /><br />with here and there the bright sheen of silver lake, the taper spire of a village church or the lazily ascending smoke of a rustic factory, making altogether a scene s! mindful of Bryant&rsquo;s grand Psalm of Nature that Tinto felt in his enthusiasm that more fitting rostrum could be found, and voiced its sonorous words, while his companions drank in the gorgeous beauties of the scene which had called them forth. &ldquo;<br /><br />Verily, our last day has been our best day,&rdquo; sighed the Dominie, as the friends, after two hours of quiet converse with nature and with each other, picked their way through the woods and followed their devious pathway back to the little inn, Could we take this to our homes, or were we able to visit it occasionally under such bright auspices, we should have no need of the Sabbath in which to worship God, for his praises would be continually upon our lips, and adoration forever welling up in our hearts for the Creator of so much beauty, of so much grandeur.&rdquo;<br /><br />And Tinto and the Professor cried &ldquo;Amen!&rdquo;<br></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[DOWN THE RIVER AND BACK]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/down-the-river-and-back]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/down-the-river-and-back#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Mon, 25 Mar 2024 16:30:25 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/down-the-river-and-back</guid><description><![CDATA[Flooded history space to reopenBy Emily CuttsAlmost five years after Tropical Storm Irene took the Mount Tabor-Danby Historical Society down the Millbrook, the organization is set to open its doors.The new space at the S.L. Griffith Library at 74 South Main St. will hold an open house from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday.      &#8203;&ldquo;We really reestablished ourselves more securely after the flood in Irene,&rdquo; said Marjorie Abbott, society secretary. &ldquo;We lost our building when it went [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph">Flooded history space to reopen<br />By Emily Cutts<br /><br />Almost five years after Tropical Storm Irene took the Mount Tabor-Danby Historical Society down the Millbrook, the organization is set to open its doors.<br /><br />The new space at the S.L. Griffith Library at 74 South Main St. will hold an open house from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday.</div>  <div>  <!--BLOG_SUMMARY_END--></div>  <div class="paragraph">&#8203;&ldquo;We really reestablished ourselves more securely after the flood in Irene,&rdquo; said Marjorie Abbott, society secretary. &ldquo;We lost our building when it went down the river with the hurricane. Since then, we&rsquo;ve become much more active.&rdquo;<br /><br />On display will be about 50 items including historic fire insurance company maps, a handbag belonging to Pearl Buck, a number of documents relating to her, and a recently purchased tiger and birdseye maple armoire which once belonged to Silas Griffith.<br /><br />Light refreshments will be served and there will be a showing of &ldquo;A Tale of Two Towns.&rdquo;<br /><br />A 25-year lease was signed between the private library and the society, according to Bradley Bender, president of the historical society. Using what funds the society had, the former gentleman&rsquo;s reading room and an unfinished space were transformed into the historical society&rsquo;s new home.<br /><br />In addition to the efforts to find and renovate a new location, the society also undertook the task of creating website.<br /><br />&ldquo;We are a virtual historical society, so nothing can be lost to floor or fire,&rdquo; Bender said.<br /><br />The society was established in 1985 and functioned for more than a decade without a permanent home, according to Bender. Following that, a portion of Buck&rsquo;s house served as the society&rsquo;s headquarters.<br /><br />Five years ago, the historical society had just helped ring in the town&rsquo;s 250th anniversary in its new location at the Millbrook House, one of the buildings formerly owned by the town&rsquo;s most famous resident, Nobel Prize-winning author Pearl S. Buck, when it tipped into the brook during Tropical Storm Irene.<br /><br />The building purchased for $45,000 10 months before the storm hit, featured a second-second-floor apartment that was used for rental income.<br /><br />Bender said at the time that many people were so happy that the society finally had a building, they were willing to donate family heirlooms.<br /><br />Among the items lost were a silver set and Bible owned by Micah Vail, one of the town&rsquo;s earliest settlers. Other items included Griffith artifacts, Buck&rsquo;s ceremonial desk, a display case from the Old Stone Store, an original pie shelf from Bonds Hotel, merchant William Pierce&rsquo;s diaries, an account ledger from a blacksmith shop once located on Burrow Hill Road, photographs, postcards and documents. No value was estimated for the historic artifacts lost in the flood.<br /><br />&ldquo;We were only in that building for a little over six months,&rdquo; Bender recalled Tuesday.<br /><br />After the storm, members of the historical society and students from Burr and Burton Academy conducted a search-and-retrieve mission in the brook.<br /><br />A Danby student from the academy found the building&rsquo;s finial, severely damaged and crumpled like an accordion, in the brook, Bender recalled Tuesday.<br /><br />&ldquo;When they were combing the Millbrook just before it flows into Otter Creek, she came upon a little bit of a metal object showing, kept excavating, here it was&mdash;the finial,&rdquo; Bender said.<br /><br />The finial, originally atop the turret at the Griffith Mansion, was manufactured in Danby and signed by its creator William Smead in 1891, Bender said.<br /><br />Also recovered was the blacksmith&rsquo;s account ledger and the society&rsquo;s safe.<br /><br />&ldquo;(We&rsquo;d) like people to see what we have done with the space, encourage people to see what we do have on hand,&rdquo; Bender said. &ldquo;Hopefully people may be inclined to join the historical society.&rdquo;</div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[DANBY VENTS ABOUT RAINBOW GATHERING]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/danby-vents-about-rainbow-gathering]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/danby-vents-about-rainbow-gathering#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Mon, 25 Mar 2024 16:28:44 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/danby-vents-about-rainbow-gathering</guid><description><![CDATA[By Dan ColtonAround 40 residents gathered at the fire department Tuesday night to discuss the influx of visitors arriving at the Rainbow Gathering of Living Light, located nearby in Mount Tabor&rsquo;s Green Mountain National Forest.      The discussion, hosted by the U.S. Forest Service, was wide ranging, spirited and included input from federal authorities, Rainbow Family representatives and local residents.There was clear frustration over the speed limit on Forest Road 10, where the gathering [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph">By Dan Colton<br /><br />Around 40 residents gathered at the fire department Tuesday night to discuss the influx of visitors arriving at the Rainbow Gathering of Living Light, located nearby in Mount Tabor&rsquo;s Green Mountain National Forest.</div>  <div>  <!--BLOG_SUMMARY_END--></div>  <div class="paragraph">The discussion, hosted by the U.S. Forest Service, was wide ranging, spirited and included input from federal authorities, Rainbow Family representatives and local residents.<br /><br />There was clear frustration over the speed limit on Forest Road 10, where the gathering takes place, and the Rainbow Family&rsquo;s refusal to sign a permit.<br /><br />The Rainbow Gathering, which started in 1972, is an annual event that travels between national forest across the United States, and draws visitors from every part of the nation for several weeks of camping and communal living.<br /><br />The Forest Service requires groups of more than 75 people to sign permits, according to authorities, although the Rainbow Gathering, which has attracted 20,000 people during past events, said the Constitution&rsquo;s First Amendment guarantees their right to camp in national forests without federal permission.<br /><br />One local man who spoke several times said, &ldquo;My take on this meeting &hellip; is that (the Rainbow Gathering) is an illegal gathering.&rdquo;<br /><br />&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve been to court a dozen times over this and won,&rdquo; said a Rainbow Gathering member, a man with a long gray beard and suspenders, after the meeting.<br /><br />Federal authorities said the Rainbow Gathering is illegal, technically, but is too large to effectively shut down. Many residents seemed to acknowledge that fact and applauded the Forest Service multiple times.<br /><br />Residents also applauded the Rainbow Family for an overall display of kindness, despite complaints from other locals who said harassment is common on Forest Road 10. Rainbow Family members said a small fraction of their community, who they said often congregate on the road, are spoiling public opinion.<br /><br />Forest Road 10 has a speed limit of 50 mph, which concerns locals, Rainbow Family members and authorities. The gravel and dirt road is congested with hundreds of cars parked along one side, and conditions are expected to worsen as more people arrive.<br /><br />Rainbow Family members at the meeting requested a speed limit of around 10 mph, but law enforcement said they can&rsquo;t change the speed limit and advised drivers to slow down.<br /><br />&ldquo;You have to drive according to conditions,&rdquo; said John Sinclair, resource specialist with the U.S. Forest Service.<br /><br />A Rainbow Family member, gray-bearded with a tie-dyed shirt, said a speeding local motorist struck a female Rainbow Family member last week, although William Mickle, incident commander for the U.S. Forest Service, said the claim wasn&rsquo;t verifiable. Mickle said the woman was intoxicated at the time, and her allegations aren&rsquo;t reliable.<br /><br />Rainbow Family members allegedly took the woman to Rutland Regional Medical Center, and a Rainbow representative said reports of harassment will be met with increased self-policing measures to deter future incidents.<br /><br />One local resident, wearing a baseball cap and T-shirt said, &ldquo;This is their thing: (Rainbow Family members say) everyone is speeding no matter what, just so they can stop you.&rdquo;<br /><br />One woman leveled concerns at federal Forest Service agents, who conduct traffic stops on and near Forest Road 10.<br /><br />&ldquo;Lots of local people are complaining because they&rsquo;re treated very badly by federal officers,&rdquo; the woman said.<br /><br />Last week, Herald reporters were pulled over and questioned by federal agents as they drove away from the campsite. Other traffic stops have produced scores of citations, the proceeds of which go to a federal victims&rsquo; advocate fund, Mickle said.<br /><br />The Forest Service said up to 20,000 people are expected to attend the gathering, which ends after July 4. The Forest Service said Rainbow Family members will remain behind to assists in cleanup efforts.<br /><br />Recent estimates by the Rainbow Family have downplayed the expected turnout to around 10,000. Crimes involving theft, assault and drug possession have been reported.<br /><br />The annual event is estimated to cost the federal Forest Service $500,000 annually.</div>  <div><div class="wsite-image wsite-image-border-none " style="padding-top:10px;padding-bottom:10px;margin-left:0;margin-right:0;text-align:center"> <a> <img src="https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/uploads/1/4/8/9/148972966/rainbowgathering_orig.jpg" alt="Picture" style="width:auto;max-width:100%" /> </a> <div style="display:block;font-size:90%"></div> </div></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[FUNERAL SERVICES FOR MARY ELIZABETH GRIFFITH]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/funeral-services-for-mary-elizabeth-griffith]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/funeral-services-for-mary-elizabeth-griffith#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Mon, 25 Mar 2024 16:28:02 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/funeral-services-for-mary-elizabeth-griffith</guid><description><![CDATA[&#8203;Funeral Services for Mary Elizabeth Griffith, 85, of Danby, who died Nov. 19 at her home were conducted Wednesday at the Zion Episcopal Church in Manchester Center by the Rev. Robert Clayton.Bearers were John B. Griffith Jr., Vollie T. Griffith, Edward Griffith and John Nichols of Danby, Wallace R. Falzo of Troy, N.Y. and Edward Bartholomew of Glens Falls, N.Y.Burial was in Scottsville Cemetery in Danby. [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph">&#8203;Funeral Services for Mary Elizabeth Griffith, 85, of Danby, who died Nov. 19 at her home were conducted Wednesday at the Zion Episcopal Church in Manchester Center by the Rev. Robert Clayton.<br /><br />Bearers were John B. Griffith Jr., Vollie T. Griffith, Edward Griffith and John Nichols of Danby, Wallace R. Falzo of Troy, N.Y. and Edward Bartholomew of Glens Falls, N.Y.<br /><br />Burial was in Scottsville Cemetery in Danby.<br></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[DEEP IN DANBY WORKERS MINE THE WORLD’S LARGEST UNDERGROUND MARBLE QUARRY]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/deep-in-danby-workers-mine-the-worlds-largest-underground-marble-quarry]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/deep-in-danby-workers-mine-the-worlds-largest-underground-marble-quarry#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Mon, 25 Mar 2024 16:25:31 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.mtdhistoricalsociety.org/news-clippings/deep-in-danby-workers-mine-the-worlds-largest-underground-marble-quarry</guid><description><![CDATA[By Bruce EdwardsThe back road off route 7 winds up the mountain just south of the village of Danby. A small sign that could easily be missed points the way to the destination.The road passes by a few isolated homes that at one time may have been &ldquo;company homes.&rdquo; A little bit farther a turn-off area is covered with crushed marble indicating to the visitor that he is near the end of his journey.      Past the last curve, the narrow two-lane road straightens out and is swallowed up by t [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph">By Bruce Edwards<br /><br />The back road off route 7 winds up the mountain just south of the village of Danby. A small sign that could easily be missed points the way to the destination.<br /><br />The road passes by a few isolated homes that at one time may have been &ldquo;company homes.&rdquo; A little bit farther a turn-off area is covered with crushed marble indicating to the visitor that he is near the end of his journey.<br></div>  <div>  <!--BLOG_SUMMARY_END--></div>  <div class="paragraph">Past the last curve, the narrow two-lane road straightens out and is swallowed up by the side of Danby Mountain.<br /><br />The former Vermont Marble Co.&rsquo;s Imperial Danby Quarry is the world&rsquo;s largest underground marble quarry&mdash;a 28-acre cavern that has been in operation since 1906.<br /><br />The 1-mile long tunnel snakes down some 600 feet into the bowels of the mountain, which is part of what is known as the Shelburne Formation &mdash; a 450-million-year-old marble deposit that stretches from the Massachusetts border north to Colchester. The formation is part of an ancient, continental shelf that extended from Georgia to Newfoundland, according to University of Vermont geologist Barry Doolan.<br /><br />The quarry, with its labyrinth of passageways, is damp and dimly lit. Water from underground springs drips from the ceiling and turns the marble dust underfoot into white mud.<br /><br />In the distance, the sound of a large flatbed truck echoes off the marble walls and 30-foot-high ceilings as it arrives to pick up a shipment.<br /><br />A dinosaur-sized forklift with a piercing searchlight moves into place and easily lifts and then plucks down one 45-ton block of marble onto the back of the truck that is bound for the Port of Quebec. The block&rsquo;s final destination is somewhere in Europe, says quarry master Michael Blair, a 15-year veteran of the quarry.<br /><br />Along the way into the inner recesses of the mountain, Blair&rsquo;s four-wheel-drive vehicle stops at a section that resembles a small canyon.<br /><br />Peering over the edge, one can see that the entire middle section of marble has been removed, leaving only a series of colossal marble columns on either side.<br /><br />Blair explains that this 150-block section has been earmarked for shipment to Germany.<br /><br />Inside the mountain, the quarry employs 22 workers on two shifts, a far cry from the days when nearly 200 workers would work around the clock. Today, workers use four different kinds of diamond-tipped saws to cut the stone from the mountain. The saws are cooled with water from underground wells, which is then recycled.<br /><br />Over at what is called the staging area, blocks are graded according to quality. Each block is stenciled with a number, the date, and section number indicating where the block came from. The top grade can command $40 a cubic foot while lower grade blocks go for $18 a cubic foot.<br /><br />In another area of the quarry, overall-clad workers with hard hats prepare to separate a block from the marble wall. The sides of the walls are etched with marks showing where previous blocks have been quarried leaving a brick-like impression.<br /><br />Col. Redfield Proctor&rsquo;s once might Vermont Marble Co.,which during its peak employed thousands of workers at its mill in Proctor and at its many quarries, closed its doors in February after 123 years in business.<br /><br />But the company&rsquo;s most famous quarry got a new life in January after Pluess-Staufer, the Swiss owner, lease the Danby quarry to European Granites Co., a consortium of companies that includes R.E.D. Graniti of Carrara, Italy.<br /><br />Since that time, the Italian operators of the quarry have increased production while at the same time increasing the quality of the marble quarried. To that end, the new operators have brought in $500,000 in new equipment, according to Livio Zucchini, an official with European Granites who is overseeing the Danby operation.<br /><br />The quarry&rsquo;s pristine white marble is considered the finest stone of its kind in the world. It has graced some of the world&rsquo;s most famous buildings: the U.S. Supreme Court, Jefferson Memorial, the Canary Wharf project in London, the Same Bank in Saudi Arabia, and the Chiang Kai-shek Memorial in Taiwan.<br /><br />Actually, there are several varieties of Danby marble ranging from the most popular Imperial to Mariposa, a white marble with rich veins of black and grey.<br /><br />Although in operation for nearly 87 years, there is no fear of running out of precious white stone. Asked about how much marble is left inside the mountain, Blair estimates the quarry will last at least another 100 years.<br></div>  <div><div style="height:20px;overflow:hidden"></div> <div id='318644954502613793-slideshow'></div> <div style="height:20px;overflow:hidden"></div></div>]]></content:encoded></item></channel></rss>