I loved this article! My parents have two antique metal wagon wheels in the flower beds at the front door. I have always been intrigued by antique equipment and artifacts. I hope this gentleman's dream comes true!
As originally published by the Burlington Free Press
Collector asks for help with farm antiques
Published: Monday, October 15, 2007
By Lisa Rathke
The Associated Press
COVENTRY -- Fred Webster fears that when he
dies, his 1,500-piece collection of antique farm equipment will die
with him -- parceled up and auctioned off.
So he's asking the state to help him preserve it.
"When
I go, what's going to happen?" the 86-year-old says of his tractors,
carriages, sleighs, wheels and saws. "Then the buildings will start to
fall in."
Webster, a former vocational agriculture instructor, started
collecting artifacts of rural life when he retired 21 years ago. His
aim was to show how machinery had evolved, a phenomenon he witnessed
growing up on his family's farm, where he still lives today.
"I wanted something to do when I retired," he said. "So I started collecting."
Did he ever.
His
collection, which is housed in 80,000 square feet of old barns and
ramshackle buildings on his property, includes an 1896
single-horsepower machine, a horse-drawn hearse and hoards of old maple
taps.
His son helped him to record more than 300 hours of video documentation about the artifacts, so he could pass what he knows.
Still
nimble at 86, he ambles around the vast collection, stepping over and
around the equipment, across rickety barn floors and planks and up and
down stairs.
He points to a carriage he used to travel in to school and a
sleigh he said his father used for courting. Nearby, on the upper floor
of the vast barn, is a horse-drawn hearse, stacks of wooden wheels and
60 old-fashioned washing machines.
Last spring, heavy snow toppled a roof covering his prized
single-horse power drag saw. The 1896 device, now covered in plastic,
is powered by a horse running on a treadmill.
The collection draws attention -- sometimes from unlikely people.
When
the rock band Phish played its farewell concert at a nearby farm in
2004, the organizers turned to Webster for props. He liked talking to
the artists and hearing their ideas and was happy to oblige.
"They saw my horsepower drag saw and they said, 'Oh, boy. We
can use that to saw watermelons.' Saw watermelons with a drag saw? I
said, 'You guys are out of your mind.'"
They ended up renting 10 vehicle-type artifacts from Webster
to show the agricultural heritage of the area, he said. The drag saw
cut watermelons powered by people operating the treadmill, he said.
"They treated us really really good," he said. "It was a
tremendous event -- the best thing that ever happened to the future of
Coventry."
Webster hasn't sought publicity but now he's hoping
that the state will find a way to preserve his treasures, which he
doesn't want to pass on to his children because he fears it's too much
of a burden. He'd prefer to have the pieces stay on his land, anyway.
He called state Sen. Vincent Illuzzi, who contacted state
officials who eventually put him in touch with Sylvia Jensen, a
land-use planner for the state Agency of Agriculture.
"Personality-wise, he's an incredible resource and
individual," said Jensen. "His life story is one of hardship and
humor," she said. "He sees the glass half full all the time."
She envisions a learning center with exhibits and demonstrations and possibly carriage rides throughout the summer.
Jensen believes some combination of grants, state aid and private donations could help Webster achieve his dream.
She's contacting historical societies, the Vermont Trust for
Historic Preservation, the Vermont Housing and Conservation Board and
the Vermont Land Trust in hopes of drumming up interest.
"Have I created a monster which I'm begging to help me
preserve or am I just a nuisance to people?" Webster said. "It's a big
question."