Woodworkers
Bill Lucas at his Sawmill (date and photographer unknown) |
As I’ve continued working on the Perkins Folklife Project, I’ve been able to pursue a longstanding interest in the various woodworking traditions of the
South Jersey region. I’ve already reported
in this blog on the decoy carving traditions of South Jersey, and on various related traditions. I’ve maintained an interest in
wood (as natural resource) and woodworking (as cultural activity) for a number
of years now, in South Jersey and elsewhere.
In recent months I’ve been working with individual
woodworkers and artisans, in order to refine my knowledge and
understanding of woodworking traditions in the project region. In May, I recorded an interview with Bill
Robbins, a furniture maker and designer in Southampton, in which we explored
his development as a woodworker, the sources of his design ideas, the varied influences
on his work, and the South Jersey area as context for that work, among other
topics. (Bill maintains a website at williamrobbinsfurniture.com, where you can see many examples of his fine woodworking.) I also paid a visit to Tom
Lederer at his shop in Columbus, to take another look at his work and continue what I hope will become an ongoing discussion with him. (You can see more of his work at ledererstudiofurniture.com.)
Bill Robbins Working on Chair Components; photo by Tom Carroll |
Tom Lederer and Bill Robbins
are part of a larger community of artisans working in various modes and genres, who have adopted wood as their chosen material. In addition to these two furniture makers,
this group, broadly conceived, would also include the decoy carvers I've mentioned, and people like Dick Toone,
who expertly reproduces Colonial era artifacts for museums and collectors in his Arneys Mount workshop (livinghistoryshop.com). In future fieldwork I plan to continue
investigating these and other woodworking traditions, within the wider framework of South Jersey artisan
wood traditions per se. I plan to look for
linkages between the work of all of these individuals, and understand them as part of the ongoing dynamism and historical development of south Jersey culture.
Bill Robbins Assembling a Chair; photo by Tom Carroll |
Bill was a longtime sawmill operator, craftsman, and above
all, conservator of wood that he milled from trees harvested or salvaged throughout
the Pine Barrens region. I had a number
of conversations with Bill Lucas in the past couple of years, and since the
time of his death in December 2011, have spoken with a number of people in the
region to explore and try to understand his legacy. My
plan for the coming year is to initiate an oral history project to document and
record memories of Bill Lucas and link these with ongoing wood-related artisan activity in the project region.
Bill Lucas’s work dovetails in interesting ways with that of
the woodworkers mentioned in this post.
For example, Bill Robbins purchased wood from Lucas, and visited him
occasionally over the years. Dick Toone
also bought wood from Lucas. Both he and
Robbins know of other woodworkers who bought wood -- or tried to buy wood -- from Bill Lucas (he didn’t readily let go of his wood in later years), or who had other sorts of
business or personal dealings with him. I’ll
be reporting on the progress of this work in future posts as the new fiscal
year gets underway.
Long Rifle by Dick Toone; photo by Tom Carroll |
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