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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThis wood sat in storage for 100 years. Now it's being used to fix Capitol riot damage
Only a few people on Earth know where to find a stash of century-old rare mahogany that can be used to repair priceless furnishings damaged on Jan. 6 by a pro-Trump mob that stormed the Capitol.
Robert Bob Ross is one of those people.
The acting assistant director of the U.S. Forest Services Forest Products Laboratory in Madison, Wis., knew the exact location of a 3,000-pound stack of the wood that was collecting dust. The 78 mahogany boards, likely brought to the Badger State as part of research into airplane propeller materials during WWI, sat in a basement storage stall for a century waiting for a purpose.
We actually had an allocation from the War Department to put together a propeller research laboratory, he said. And I believe these specimens were used in the research.
While the origin of the wood is hazy, Ross said hes confident of several facts. The lab originally got it through a New York supplier called I.T. Williams & Sons, which harvested mahogany from places in Central America, Africa and Asia.
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A flatbed truck hauled it 850 miles last month to Washington, where it will be used to repair doors and other parts of the Capitol damaged on Jan. 6, according to the Architect of the Capitol. The work to plane, cut and repurpose the wood is expected to begin in June.
That same old-growth wood, prized for its durability, straight grain and reddish-brown color, cant be purchased today. The trees have protected international conservation status.
The old-growth mahogany that the Forest Products Laboratory has had in their safekeeping since the early 20th century and has now transferred to us is truly invaluable and is unavailable at any price, anywhere in the world, said Mary Oehrlein, the AOCs historic preservation officer.
The boards, each measuring 11.9 inches by 12 feet, will be used to restore historic millwork in the nations temple of democracy, said Architect of the Capitol J. Brett Blanton. Our skilled woodworkers will use both traditional and modern carpentry techniques to create new millwork and doors using this repurposed wood.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/this-wood-sat-in-storage-for-100-years-now-it-s-being-used-to-fix-capitol-riot-damage/ar-BB1fGcZJ?ocid=mailsignout
Turbineguy
(37,362 posts)MyOwnPeace
(16,937 posts)I kept telling the wife and kids that the pile of wood I'd saved would come in handy some day!
I know - MUCH larger scale and far more important - but it's the same idea!
Really glad to see that there are people that care about the TRUE monuments of our American Democracy.
bucolic_frolic
(43,254 posts)Priceless irreplaceable wood to fix what the deplorables willfully destroyed. Willfully. Subhuman cretins. If they did this to their neighbor's house they'd be in jail already. And they'd be made to pay restitution.
Go after them. Get judgments against them. Garnish their wages and retirement benefits. The only place where that is not fair is when it impacts their families who didn't participate.
FailureToCommunicate
(14,020 posts)niyad
(113,518 posts)They should all have to pay.
Response to niyad (Reply #6)
Chin music This message was self-deleted by its author.
blueinredohio
(6,797 posts)fierywoman
(7,688 posts)SheltieLover
(57,073 posts)UpInArms
(51,284 posts)+1
CaptainTruth
(6,600 posts)exboyfil
(17,865 posts)and work your way down.
KS Toronado
(17,299 posts)pandr32
(11,602 posts)Those "cretins" are also traitors.
spudspud
(511 posts)the people's building!
Hestia
(3,818 posts)niyad
(113,518 posts)SheilaAnn
(9,709 posts)MineralMan
(146,324 posts)in front of our couch as a coffee table. It's 6-feet long, and the seat is 2 inch thick solid mahogany, 14" wide. The entire bench is made of the same wood, including the rails and turned legs. It shows considerable wear from usage in the church it came from, but it's all part of its history.
I bought it over 20 years ago at a rummage sale at that church, which had remodeled its sanctuary. The price sticker said $5.
It's a prized possession of ours. It gets a rub-down with furniture oil from time to time, but all of its wear and scars are left alone.
secondwind
(16,903 posts)AZ8theist
(5,487 posts)I'd love to see it!!
CaptainTruth
(6,600 posts)paleotn
(17,939 posts)Wow! Lucky find. Congrats!
lostnfound
(16,189 posts)Do they live in flatland?
robbob
(3,537 posts)Lets hope not or itll take an infinite # of them!
MLAA
(17,318 posts)certainot
(9,090 posts)jaxexpat
(6,843 posts)Reporters these days don't seem to understand a thing about what the world really is. The fact that there are finite quantifications for literally everything in existence just passes, unscathed, right over their little journalist major heads. That inaccuracy is a form of fraud doesn't have any cerebral hang time with them either.
Grumpy me.
Blue_true
(31,261 posts)They just blind and go on as if nothing happened. No call out of the lie, no fact check, it is like the Journalist has zero sense of right and wrong.
Backseat Driver
(4,394 posts)buffet, and game table just went up. My dog chewed through the chair rungs in 1971.
AndyS
(14,559 posts)he did business world wide. Customers would take the engine off the plane, pack it on a pallet and ship it to him for re-build.
The engines coming from S. America came on pallets made of mahogany. They were routinely discarded after use.
Brother Buzz
(36,456 posts)to an untrained eye, looks just like mahogany.
Spanish cedar (Cedrela odorata) is a plentiful utility wood from Central and South America, and is easily mistaken for mahogany. A knowledgeable blindfolded woodworker can tell the difference just by picking up the two woods and comparing the weights.
Auggie
(31,179 posts)Seriously.
crickets
(25,982 posts)My latest go-to for relaxation is watching woodworking videos on YouTube. It's amazing what can be done with hand tools alone to transform a simple board or two into a work of art. I do hope someone films the process so that we can all see it and appreciate the effort and artistry that goes into the restoration.
jaxexpat
(6,843 posts)UpInArms
(51,284 posts)And so angry when the rightwing attempts to compare anything to what these horrible people did to the Capitol
pazzyanne
(6,556 posts)But so has a stockpile of mahogany and a cache of stone from a fomer capitol renovation. Thank you to all who had the foresight to keep the things we need to rebuild our Capitol and nation.
COL Mustard
(5,915 posts)This is a great example of why people like me are proud to be in Federal Civil Service. And I imagine most people didn't even know that the US Government employs artisans like woodworkers.
A big hat tip to Mr. Ross and his staff!
paleotn
(17,939 posts)Nothing else. I'd be scared to death to touch it with any tool. Absolutely beautiful stuff.
onethatcares
(16,178 posts)is tremendous.
A friend worked on Independence Hall in Philadelphia. Told me it wasn't really a job, he enjoyed it so much.
paleotn
(17,939 posts)Job? I'd pay them to do the work.
Brother Buzz
(36,456 posts)Now, the new Vice Presidential desk is another matter entirely, and if I had the opportunity to work with it, you better believe I'd be wearing my reverence cap.
https://www.architecturaldigest.com/story/the-meaningful-story-behind-kamala-harriss-new-vice-presidential-desk
paleotn
(17,939 posts)One has a storied history. The other just is. Old growth mahogany that's virtually ungetable.
soldierant
(6,905 posts)You should have provided a hanky alert. Well, I suppose the allusion to the "reverence cap" is along those lines.
exboyfil
(17,865 posts)with a sign that says "Republican morons caused this".
AllyCat
(16,215 posts)We have some great people and resources in our state. I do love Madtown!
scarytomcat
(1,706 posts)we will fix all
Snackshack
(2,541 posts)incited this, those who encouraged this, those who funded & coordinated this have not been charged. They are conveniently hiding behind the gullible people they were able to convince to break the law with them.
I hope this is only because the new USAG has just recently been confirmed, his assistant is still in process of confirmation. If the only people ever charged are the one we have seen so far charged that is going to be a horrible miscarriage of justice. Trump, Flynn, Stone, Wood, Powell, Don Jr, Boebert, Greene, Cruz, Hawley, Thomas the list goes on and on...played a part in the events of 6 Jan and must be held to account for it.
rickford66
(5,528 posts)Marthe48
(17,011 posts)We found out that the house was a Yankee frame construction, 1 layer of boards crosswise and another layer vertical. It was all walnut. We did some renovations and took a dividing wall out. The boards were about 8 or 10" wide x about 8' x about 1" We knew it was a treasure, but we didn't know what to do with it. Our brother-in-law had taught himself to carve, and he finally asked what we were going to do with it. We gave him the stack. A few months later, he gave us a mirror with a beautiful hand carved frame, leaves and roses. The wood he used to carve the frame was from one of the boards we'd given him.
He's another gone too soon, but we still have the mirror. I'm planning to give it to his son, our nephew, when I'm done with it.
We also had a decrepit barn that we dismantled. We used a lot of siding, which was oak, to panel part of the interior of the house. It was really hard to work with, burned out a saw motor, the blades sparked, nails bent. If we hadn't started using existing nail holes, we probably wouldn't have used it.
peppertree
(21,650 posts)What an anecdote - thanks for sharing that!
There's nothing quite like genuine antique material - and if its salvaged, all the better.
All this of course, means nothing to these Chumpkins: they'd buy dry rot, if it had Trump's name on it.
dianaredwing
(406 posts)DRY ROT
peppertree
(21,650 posts)Insidious, deceptively slow, and hard to get rid of.
lastlib
(23,267 posts)peppertree
(21,650 posts)Living proof that some people get much better health care than the rest of us (if we can access any at all).
Dark n Stormy Knight
(9,771 posts)The OP reminded me of a story in a book called The Guitar about a secluded supply of rare old wood prized by luthiers. Wish could recall more details about it.
WarGamer
(12,463 posts)I bet that's some beautiful wood.
BumRushDaShow
(129,341 posts)liberaltrucker
(9,130 posts)During my career, I hauled many Government loads. On some, I
parked where they told me and was *escorted* to a waiting area.
The bill of lading simply said "freight, NOIBN" (not otherwise indicated
by name). Paid VERY well.
dlk
(11,574 posts)What could be more fitting?
DFW
(54,434 posts)But that's just me................
BobTheSubgenius
(11,564 posts)I'm angrier than ever, if you can believe it. Desecration, in my mind.
Historic NY
(37,452 posts)Demovictory9
(32,468 posts)Marthe48
(17,011 posts)I buy new upholstered furniture, but my cabinets and such are antique or vintage wood. I still use a dresser that was my grandmother's and has been part of my bedroom since I was 2. I see pieces of wooden furniture set out for the trash. Such a waste. When you think about entire forests being destroyed for more wood products and see mounds of furniture set on fire, it is wasteful.
Aside from having a treasure like the mahogany stored for use, the old furniture, old siding, old cupboards could all be repurposed. Unless it is diseased, of course. I was selling a house a few years ago, and one of the people who came to look had a fondness for old furniture. He had a lot to say about quality then and quality now. If more people felt like that, forests wouldn't be in as much danger of extinction.