Building The Oak Tree School
The 7th
tapestry in the San Juan Ridge Tapestry Project, “Building the Oak Tree School”,
illustrates some of the events
surrounding the building of the Oak Tree School in the 1970’s. Conceived as a
community school, the architects and school boards members wanted the new
school, a consolidation of three smaller schools on the Ridge, to reflect
community ideals, using local labor and local materials. The emblem in the upper left hand corner
is the final plan with the various buildings and rooms clustered together, yet
separate in identify.
The second
frame from the left in the bottom row of the tapestry has the five school board
members, Syd Hall, Gene Stewart, Ida Belle Covert, Shelley Dachtler, and Richard
Sisto, studying building plans.
The Shady
Creek Construction company, Bruce Boyd, Jeff Gold and Holly Tornheim bid and
were accepted to build the school. Bruce Boyd and Jeff Gold, both architects, are shown in the middle left side of the
main tapestry, studying plans.
In order to
pursue the Board’s plan for local people to be involved in the building
process, a group of artists-craftsmen from the Padma City cooperative gallery
formed the nucleus for a local union. The worker in the foreground with his back to us, modeled
after Joel Goodkind, is wearing a white T-shirt with the Padma City logo.
Striking
carpenter union members at the entrance to the work site are in the 3rd
frame on the lower left side of the tapestry. Since no commercial company would cross the picket line to
pour the foundation for the school, the contractors organized several all
community work days to pour the foundation by hand. Hundreds of community
members answered the call. They arrived with hard hat, boots and a wheelbarrow.
Each wheelbarrow was numbered and coded with the type and amount of raw
material it would carry. Steve Sanfield’s wheelbarrow is depicted in the middle
of the tapestry.
Workers,
modeled after community members, are depicted with various kinds of dress, from
Stefani Freydont’s eye catching minimal outfit, to Bill Crosby’s bare upper
torso, Chuck Dockhams’s head band, Clearwater’s loin cloth, Gloria’s overalls,
and Shelly Dachtler’s straw hat.
At the left
side of the tapestry, a load of cement bags has arrived in a l946 Diamond T
Rio, driven by Tom Walsh and loaned for the job by Steve Beckwitt and a
consortium of local folks.
In the main
scene, wheel barrows of raw materials are transported from piles at the right
rear to Shelley Dachtler’s weighing station with a scale loaned by the
Coughlans.
The wheelbarrows with raw materials emptied their contents into a
trough at the front of one of a pair of one-third ton cement mixers at the
right edge of the tapestry. Wood
barriers protect the wheelbarrow workers from getting too close to their
troughs.
One of the
machines in service at the far right of the tapestry was found in a vacant
field and resurrected by Steve
Beckwitt, Gene Stewart and other local mechanics. While serviceable, this “vacant lot” machine did
occasionally drop its trough, hence the wooden barrier at the front of the
machines. It’s radiator was also
beyond repair, so a hose of running water was put inside all day.
The second
cement mixer, built by the
Milwaukee Koehring Company in the 1930s, was tended each day by its two
owners, brothers Ron and Richard Merkens
from Graniteville. The previously
mentioned 1946 Diamond T Rio transported this machine, the” Dandee”, from
Graniteville to the Oak Tree site.
The concrete
was poured into wheelbarrows at the rear of the machines, trundled to the open
trenches, dumped with the help of two or three other people and then spread by
hand. Stefanie Freydont,
stitched in the lower middle, is working the
.
In the background
of the tapestry, other stages in the construction of the school are shown. In a tree former high steel worker
Peter Blue Cloud has rigged ropes to assist in pushing up the trusses safely.
The bottom
row continues with more parts of the Oak Tree story. In one scene, the weekly Wednesday lunch local history event,
Jimmy Coughlan and Father McGarrity
visited to talk about the old days on the Ridge.
Next in the
bottom row, the architecture of the lodge and Chuck Dockham’s hand carved door were
just two of the many unusual features for public school.
Less than a
year after its completion in 1976, the Oak Tree School burned down. Children, parents and community members
were shocked by the loss of their beautiful new school. The school was soon
rebuilt, with a new stained glass window of a phoenix, the final section of the
bottom panel.
Stitchers of this tapestry included: Nici von Kriedt, Tamara Sindorf,
Laughter Medicine, Starlight Kompost, Mary Moore, Ryah Zelli Souverville, Carol
Meals, Hank Meals, Barbara MacQuiddy, Cicada Nikohl, Pat Smith, Greta Broda,
Susan Moser,
Holly Cheatum, Tai Smith, Simi Tecklin, Josh Tecklin, Allison Schell, Catherine
Hogan, Annalinde, Masa Uehara, Jane Price Hill , Autumn Blackshear, Becky
Smith, Luke Graddel, Marsha Stone and many visitors to the Resource Center
where the tapestry was stitched.
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