Call & Times

After 76 years, statue to be finished

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BARRE, Vt. (AP) — The Vermont city defined by the stone pulled from within its surroundin­g hills is hoping to use that granite to commission a piece of art conceived more than seven decades ago honoring one of the nation's first Boy Scout troops.

A local Boy Scout historian is leading the effort in Barre, a city known as "the granite center of the world," to complete the project — a granite statue of a scout carrying a person on his shoulders. The original project ceased following the 1941 death of Italian-born artist Carlo Abate, who helped train generation­s of Barre artists.

The Boy Scout sculpture would join three existing works of art that commemorat­e the city's heritage as a granite center made famous by its immigrants.

"We've erected monuments throughout America and even the world and we only have three within the city," said Steve Restelli, a Barre native and former Boy Scout.

On the north side of Barre sits a 1985 statute of the same Abate who was working on a model of what was to have become the Boy Scout statue at the time of his death. At the city's main park sits the 1924 statue known as "Youth Triumphant," a kneeling warrior, which became part of the Barre city seal. There is also a statue of Robert Burns, erected by Scottish immigrants.

Restelli is leading a committee seeking to raise the money for the Boy Scout statue, which will be carved out of the area's signature gray granite by local artist Giuliano Cecchinell­i II.

"It wasn't easy to find someone to take on the project," Restelli said. "Artists are pretty reluctant to take over somebody else's work and then finish it. It's not really their own."

But Cecchinell­i agreed to do it.

"It touches on all sorts of little things that make up Barre," Cecchinell­i, a third generation granite carver, said of the project.

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