The sentence in bold, italicized letters - also in parentheses - is my own editorial addition. -Tim
“To know New
England well, one must know its stone walls,”
claims Robert M. Thorson, author of the definitive history Stone by Stone
(2002).”
“According to
Thorson, New England’s soil wasn’t rocky enough to support the building of
stone walls before the arrival of colonists, who clear-cut the land. That exposure, coinciding with a period of
colder, drier winters in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, caused the
ground to freeze to a greater depth. Conditions “worked together to accelerate
the heaving of stones from the soil,” Thorson writes. Combine those
circumstances with a dearth of wood for fencing—since forests had been cleared
for farms and fuel—and the stone wall was born…”
(Thorson
believes, without evidence other than folklore about Yankee Exceptionalism,
that:)
"Most of our stone walls were built between the American Revolution and the advent of the railroad, when settlers moved from the coast into the rocky uplands and property ideals shifted from the communal to the private, Thorson explains. However, some stone walls in southern Connecticut date to the colonial era. Early on, Thorson says, farmers simply rolled stones into piles in the middle of their fields…The strongest kind, “disposal walls,” were constructed of two parallel walls with stone fill between them. Then there were “walking walls” with “broad capstones… laid flat, like a sidewalk,” Thorson writes."
“Left untended, every wall will come apart,” Thorson tells
us. Some are even plundered, with or without landowners’ permission, to be sold
at rates around $200 per ton, according to an Internet search. While
Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Rhode Island have protected their stone walls
with legislation, Connecticut hasn’t, though they “may be protected under
historic preservation laws,” the General Assembly’s website says.
Facts may help us get to know the old walls, as Thorson
insists we should. But perhaps the best way is to bundle up and walk into the
woods. Rounded and flat, bramble-covered and exposed, green with moss or white
with snow, you can find them there, no longer keeping cows from corn or
neighbors from one another. It seems we may love them more than those who built
them ever did, which makes you wonder: What casual constructions of ours will
our descendants value?
Written by Kathy Leonard Czepiel. Photographed by Dan
Mims. Image features a fallen tree meeting a stone wall along Route 69. This
story was originally published on March 9, 2018.
https://dailynutmeg.com/2022/03/02/retaining-stone-walls-redux2/
ReplyDeleteThorson needs to get out of his office more often and simply look around. The next time
he goes out, he should head south to North Stonington, CT, and with a copy of
Mark Starr's excellent photo compendium Ceremonial Stonework in hand, attempt to explain why the walls and other stone features scattered throughout the town are Colonial and not Native American. A bunch of us would like to hear his answer, but it probably will never come.
You need a bizarre agenda to continue to ignore the reality of our stone walls and stone structures. Getting out of the office might not help Thorson, he is incurious and hung up on his own expertise.
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