Cape May County Herald, 17 August 1983 IIIF issue link — Page 24

24

CAPE MAY COUNTY MAGAZINE 17 AUGUST '»]

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Blacksmith Teaches Old Craft

COLD SPRING - Without raising your voice to call the family for dinner, you can strike one of Tom Turtzo’s big wrought iron triangles and your intended quarry will be alerted by a pleasant belllike sound. "There’s no electricity required,” smiled the bearded Turtzo, a blacksmith and craftsman at Historic Cold Spring Village this year. He will, with his apprentice Mary Schaeffer, be designing and producing wrought iron implements daily in the brick forge he has built next 4o his shed there. He plans to offer lessons tailored to the individual student, aud will teach blacksmithing techniques at a community college near his year-round home at Pen Argyle, Pa. this fall. HIS EQUIPMENT includes a brick forge, two functioning anvils, a restored bellows, a riveter’s forge which is portable, an old grinding wheel, a slack tub for cooling, hardening and tempering. and the many instruments used by blacksmiths down through the centuries. His brick forge burns bituminous coal which he scavenges from an old train wreck in Pennsylvania. "The price is right,” he grins. He makes decorative and ornamental ironwork, fireplace equipment, jhooks and wall hooks, weather vanes, free standing floor candle lamps, gates and raiUngs, kitchen utensils, hardware and tools. He produces the triangle dinner bell in 7 and 12-inch and 3-foot or larger sizes. INSPIRED BY a blacksmith grandfather, Turtzo was fascinated by the craft at age 5 but was urged by his family to

Tom Turtzo at Anvil

make a living through more traditional meant. He was graduated from college as a history major and, while working for the Norwich Archeological Survey in Norwich, England, became captivated by the magnificent ironwork in Europe. He had been given his grandfather's blacksmithing equipment but now made the decision to seek formal instruction. In 1975, be enrolled as an apprentice at Peter’s Valley Craftsmen, a working craft village in Layton, N.J., and was there inter-

mittently for three years to learn from various blacksmiths. During this time, he reopened a blacksmith shop in a dosed alate quarry and located a fully equipped shop, which he purchased. He has demonstrated his craft at Magic Valley Park in Bushkill, Pa., Quiet Valley Farm Museum in Stroudsburg, Pa. and at the Slate Belt Historical Society and the Jacktown Engine Show. He and his apprentice will demonstrate dally from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Cold Spring Village.

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PannUvIlU toed PIoiq, Shop pa ft Howw • Cope May Court Houao, N.J. 0*210

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