A RENDERING SHOWS what the Kenneth D. Kramer Blacksmith Shop Exhibit will look like when completed.

A RENDERING SHOWS what the Kenneth D. Kramer Blacksmith Shop Exhibit will look like when completed.

BATH

When the ribbon is cut for the Kenneth D. Kramer Blacksmith Shop Exhibit during a member’s reception on Friday, August 15, it will mark the latest transformative addition to Maine Maritime Museum’s campus and will complete the curated story of the historic Percy & Small Shipyard, part of the museum’s campus and a remarkable story in Maine’s maritime heritage.

From 1894 to 1920, the Percy & Small Shipyard built an astonishing 41 four- five- and six- mast schooners. Of only 11 six-mast wooden schooners ever built in the Americas, 7 were constructed at the P& S yard including Wyoming, largest of them all. When the P&S site was donated to the museum in 1975, it was remarkably intact, the only U.S. shipyard that built large wooden sailing vessels that still had original buildings. The only one missing was the blacksmith shop.

“While it may seem surprising that a blacksmith shop would be an important part of a wooden vessel shipyard, Wyoming was built with more than 300 tons of iron and steel,” says Amy Lent, the museum’s executive director. “In addition to the anchor and usual metal fastenings and fittings present in all ships, the huge wooden ship’s hull could not have borne the incredible pressures created by the 6,000 long tons of coal in her holds without the iron strapping that kept her timbers in place.”

During the 26 years that the P&S shipyard was in business, there were two different buildings that served as the blacksmith shop. The first, which outfitted all of the six-mast schooners, was destroyed by fire in 1913 – not an unusual occurrence for wooden buildings housing open forges in an environment filled with wood shavings and sawdust. Very little information is available about the interior of that building and few clear exterior photos exist. The shop contained at least one forge and also a boiler for the yard’s steam box for making heavy planking pliable. The second blacksmith shop building was torn down in 1939, long after P&S had ceased operation.

The exhibit approximates the original building’s dimensions of 84 x 26 feet and location due east of the Paint & Treenail Shop. To preserve the integrity of the shipyard’s original historic buildings, the new structure is not an attempt at a historical recreation of the original building. Instead, the proportions, dimensions and and grounds.”

While the open design permits expansive views of the P&S shipyard and the Kennebec River, an innovative combination of corrugated weathering steel (which oxidizes to a rust-colored finish) and rough- cut wood framing was for functions and visitors. On occasion, blacksmithing demonstrations will be conducted in the building.

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A special public celebration of the exhibit opening will be held on Saturday, August 16. Admission to the museum will be free materials used evoke the original building and its purpose while clearly being a contemporary structure.

To develop the plan of how to represent the blacksmith shop building, the Arrowsic, Maine architectural firm of Theodore + Theodore was selected.

“As architects we always want our building to relate to the site,” says Steven Theodore. “With the Blacksmith Shop we attempted to use the building’s transparency to frame views from the structure to its surroundings — offering new ways to see the museum’s buildings selected to reference shipbuilding materials.

Because of building’s open design, extensive engineering was required. Zachau Construction of Freeport was the builder, Albert Putnam was the structural engineer, Crooker & Sons performed the excavation and paving, Rockport Steel provided and erected the structural framing, and Hahnel Bros. provided and installed the steel siding.

The structure houses exhibits related to the blacksmith activities that took place there while also providing a gathering place all day. Demonstrations of various types of blacksmithing will be conducted from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. along with other shipbuilding demonstrations.

Replacing the blacksmith ship was a vision of former MMM Trustee Kenneth D. Kramer, who passed away in 2009 leaving a generous bequest that included funds to construct a Blacksmith Shop building.

Thanks entirely to Ken the complete shipbuilding story of the great schooners can now be told, and so the new exhibit building bears his name.


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