Washington County Enterprise-Leader

Park Restores 25-Year-Old Diorama

- By Lynn Kutter

PRAIRIE GROVE — Bart Taylor, park interprete­r for Prairie Grove Battlefiel­d State Park, was a boy when he first saw a diorama of the Prairie Grove battle at at the park’s visitor center.

Today, Taylor is leading an effort to restore the 25-year-old diorama to bring it back to share with the public.

“It’s one of those things that got me hooked on Civil War history when I saw it when I was 10 years old,” Taylor said, marveling at the journey of his life that brought him back to the diorama as an adult.

“It’s weird that I’m working on it. That’s full circle,” he said. “It got me into buying my own soldiers, which got me into where I am today.”

The diorama had four panels, each one about 71 inches by 46 inches. Three of the panels have been disassembl­ed and placed in storage for now.

One was left intact and this is the panel that Taylor, three college interns and several volunteers are restoring in a maintenanc­e building located in another area on park property.

When the diorama is finished, it will be placed in Hindman Hall Museum at the state park as a new temporary exhibit. Eventually, Taylor said, the state park plans to find a permanent spot for the diorama. One idea is to place it in the Borden House. Another idea, he said, is to place the structure on wheels and use it as a program in schools.

The long-term plan, Taylor said,

is to restore the other three panels, and all will be on display at some point in the future. The timing of this will depend on time and money.

Taylor said he believes the diorama is important for several reasons. For one, it is nostalgic. Another reason is to continue to tell the story for future generation­s.

The new display will have a 1 to 72 scale and show the scene of the Battle of Prairie Grove about mid-morning during the first run up the ridge to the Borden House. Taylor said about 50 percent of the casualties occurred during this time.

There will be some changes in the diorama to make it more historical­ly correct, Taylor said. One change will be to add the First National Flag of the Confederac­y. Other work will include filling in the ground cover and adding more trees.

This diorama first was created by former park interprete­r David Shepherd of Fayettevil­le but Shepherd said it is not the first one that was at the park. The original diorama had been completely disassembl­ed when former park Superinten­dent Ed Smith asked Shepherd if he was interested in making a new one.

Shepherd said he was given the go-ahead to create the project however he wanted to do it.

“This one was completely from scratch,” Shepherd said during a recent phone interview. “It had all new figures and new landscapin­g.”

Shepherd said he worked for the park from 1989 to 1994 and was a part- time employee working on the weekends. He had a full-time job during the week.

He worked on the diorama as he had time on the weekends and if he had a chance during the week. He said it took him more than three years to complete all four panels.

Shepherd ordered the figures — soldiers, horses, artillery and wagons — and these were made of soft metal. He sprayed primer on the figures and then painted each by hand using “very, very” small paintbrush­es and a circular lamp with a magnifying glass. Shepherd’s work shows such minor details as the buttons on the uniforms.

He guesses there were more than 300 figures on the diorama and the majority of his time was spent painting the figures.

The foundation of the diorama is foam, covered with a thick type of modeling paint. Shepherd then used anything he could find to make the soil for the ground cover, including pencil shavings, dirt and sawdust. For trees, he used weeds and flowers scavenged from the park and from his home. The buildings, such as the Borden House, were made from balsa wood.

The scale for Shepherd’s four-panel diorama was 10 to one for soldiers and horses.

“The scale was a compromise,” he said. “I couldn’t do a total number of soldiers in each unit. There wouldn’t have been room for anything else.”

Shepherd said the project was a “labor of love” for him, and he was happy to hear the Battlefiel­d State Park was restoring the diorama for the public. He’s been to the park to see some of the work.

“I would hate for it to be stored forever so I’m glad they are doing it,” he said. “It’s really nice to see these guys directing this and it will be nice to see it finished.”

Taylor said he hopes the project will be ready by the end of February. The original diorama was enclosed. The restored panel will have Plexiglas around the edges but will be open on the top.

 ?? LYNN KUTTER ENTERPRISE-LEADER ?? Jim Spillars, a Civil War re-enactor and also band director for Farmington High School Band, is volunteeri­ng his time, along with his son Jacob, to work on the Battle of Prairie Grove diorama.
LYNN KUTTER ENTERPRISE-LEADER Jim Spillars, a Civil War re-enactor and also band director for Farmington High School Band, is volunteeri­ng his time, along with his son Jacob, to work on the Battle of Prairie Grove diorama.
 ?? LYNN KUTTER ENTERPRISE-LEADER ?? Bart Taylor, park interprete­r with Prairie Grove Battlefiel­d State Park, is leading a project to restore a diorama of the Battle of Prairie Grove.
LYNN KUTTER ENTERPRISE-LEADER Bart Taylor, park interprete­r with Prairie Grove Battlefiel­d State Park, is leading a project to restore a diorama of the Battle of Prairie Grove.
 ?? LYNN KUTTER ENTERPRISE-LEADER ?? One of the scenes from a diorama of the Battle of Prairie Grove. The figures are made of soft metal and were handpainte­d by David Shepherd of Fayettevil­le, a former park interprete­r.
LYNN KUTTER ENTERPRISE-LEADER One of the scenes from a diorama of the Battle of Prairie Grove. The figures are made of soft metal and were handpainte­d by David Shepherd of Fayettevil­le, a former park interprete­r.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States