jBonifacino continues practicing old-time skills of blacksmithing BY EARLINE WHITE Correspondent Since the Iron Age, blacksmiths have forged iron from the earth jisingtheir own hammers and tools |o create gadgets of necessity. tiese creations helped to till the fearthand even conquer dynasties. 31acksmiths have played an im ortant role in history by provid ig such things as nails to farmer’s blows. Using strength and an artist’s eye, blacksmiths have added touches of beauty to ordi nary objects. With those home lade tools, smiths embellish, forge and join materials in the tradition iof those before them. Each smith 'has a style of his own, thereby cre fating only originals. A Tyner [ resident, Joseph Bonifacino, is one 1 of these skillful workers still prac ticing an art form almost long for gotten. A long way from his Florida home, Joseph has been living in Edenton since October 1998. Re turning from a convention in Man hattan, he and his wife, Janice, stumbled upon the scenic beauty the natives have come to love. Looking to get away from the extreme heat and fires that ran rapid through Florida that year, Joseph and Janice looked toward Edenton to settle down. It was here that the history and ■ rich architecture brought them and their four children. . “I’ve been doing this around 12 years now,” Joseph said as he ta pered down the end of an iron rod, before rounding it to make a deco I rative hook. He never set out to be a blacksmith he explained. His interest was actually peaked by glass blowers when he was only three. Duringatripto Jamestown, the blowers fascinated him. “I left my parents and they had to come and find me watching the glass blowers.” It wasn’t until years later that he began blowing glass. “Then one day I was complaining about the price of glass blowing equipment and there was a blacksmith doing work nearby. I looked over at the blacksmith and said that it didn’t look that hard.” It turns out that a man standing near Joseph heard him and chal lenged him. This challenger was none other than the North Ameri can Master Blacksmith, Bill Epps. Epps immediately gave Joseph a job making hooks, and was paid per piece. Joseph spent about two years just making hooks. It was good work though. Because of the repetition, he became proficient, later helping him to create more challenging works. (One of these challenges would be a duck sculp ture he created out of stainless steel. The stainless is a difficult material to work with. A problem encountered by those working with the material is that it has to be cut either with a sheer or a saw.) The shop he started his career in was similar to one that would have been around in 1840. Hacksaw or chisels cut all of the metal. “I started with a coal forge and a seven foot bellow,” he said. Years passed before Joseph de cided to go out on his own. He spent years working with differ ent crews until he decided to go on by himself. “My bosses would always see what I could do then they’d Want me to do a special project. I thought, ‘hey, I could do this on my own.’” The final straw with the compa nies was an accident on site that still gives him problems today. “A steel beam hit me from about 12 feet up. It went down the slope of my head and hit my shoulder. Just as it was going to bounce back and hit me again a coworker helped to stop it.” Understandably, Joseph went solo after that. His first big job after com ing to th is area was at the Bootwright House. He was com missioned to do the front gate and many household items. Since, he has been commissioned to do a few jobs by locals. However, a signifi cant part of his work is requested over the Internet. Janice is in charge of advertising over the Net. Another large part of his work is wholesaling to markets like Leary Plant Farm and The Lost Colony in Manteo. He also takes part and sells items at craft fairs and festi vals. All of the tools used in smithing are primitive. Most of them are made by the artisan themselves. H is original shop had a forge made from a brake drum with a blower attached. (A forge is similar to a small oven. Forges are able to heat the iron to 2300-2600 degrees. Joseph Bonifacino has gone from glass blowing to mastering the skills required for blacksmithing. (Photo by Earline White) There is an opening in the front where the metal rods are stuck in side and a hole in the back in case there is a need to heat the entire piece, sections at a time.) Joseph used a piece of sawed off railroad track as an anvil. “It took me a while to find the perfect piece of track, but after walking down the line a while I found it.” The blacksmith trade has evolved since its beginning. Jo seph has his materials trucked in from Virginia by the ton. For emer gencies, Nixon’s Welding in Rocky Hock also carries metal and does welding. “Traditionally black smiths are three years behind, and they never catch up,” he said. So, whenever Joseph gets overloaded, Nixon’s is able to help. Nixon’s Welding and Cherry Welding both use high-tech machinery to get the job done. There are various types of equipment and styles used to day, compared with those of yes teryear. When I noticed the lack of high tech devices, I asked Joseph did he ever use such means. “The metal only comes in certain sizes, but with my hammer and anvil I can make anything,” he said. A lot of smiths are able to double their pro duction because of the machines that can do the work. But Joseph remains true to the trade, only making what he can form by hand. Currently Joseph has an appren tice, Wade Bunting, and the hope of passing his skill to future gen erations. Bunting owns a gallery in Williamston, Made in the Shade. Another of Joseph’s friends, an environmental attorney, sculpts metal. They can often be found together sharing tips. A lot of people in northeastern North Carolina don’t know what blacksmiths do. Joseph’s advice is to ask; you’d be surprised, he said. Joseph believes that the lack of business is because of this misun derstanding. “Most people don’t ask because they don,t think it’s possible. It used to be that mostly everything you saw in magazines like Pottery Barn or Plough and Harvest were made by blacksmiths in Western North Carolina.” Now with mass production, es pecially in countries like Mexico, handcrafted goods are harder to And. Machine shops and welding shops have taken the'place of smiths. But most of the items found in magazines like Plough and Har vest, Joseph can make. Plans to set up a new shop excite Joseph; he flashes a childlike grin. Tammy and Gabriella, stay in the area to rid it of growing shrubs until Joseph can begin construc tion. Anyone can see Joseph’s work at the shop beside his house. Run out of an old barn, the shop dis plays many pieces that are up for sale. All of his pieces are practical, but can be intricately detailed. Road, his work can also be seen at the Bootwright House, formerly known as the Castle. The front horse head gate is one of his cre ations, along with the kitchen racks, shelf brackets, cabinet hinges, and numerous things in side the house. In these modem times, it is great to see remnants of our history. A prime example of Joseph Bonifacino'expert craftsmanship can be seen at the Sandy Ridge home of Russell and Shelia Bootwright of Chowan County. Bonifacino is currently making plans to open the new Kingfisher Forge, and to offer workshops when it is completed. (Photo by Earline White) Not far off into the woods behind his 1899 two-story white house, he has big dreams for his new work station. Behind the pens filled with rabbits, chickens, and turkeys, and the vegetable garden there is a trail leading to the canopied plot soon to be known as the new Kingfisher Forge. He is planning to have two forges, a small one (about half the sizeoftheonehe works with now) gnd a big one. The shop will be big enough that the 20-foot rods he works with won’t hit the beams of the shelter. He plans to give work shops there when the shop is fin ished. So far the land is almost cleared, but he is waiting for the rain puddles to dry up before do ing anything further. The goats, To subscribe to The Chowan Herald, call 482-4418 From drawer handles, barn nails, hose holders, tomato stakes, fire place tools, and wine racks, practi cally anything you need for your kitchen and garden Joseph can make. He is partial to Greek Revival architecture, but has Baroque ex amples as well. Soon he hopes to have it fully stocked not only with his work, but homemade items Janice makes as well. 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