Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Spoofer’s Stone back together as UA landmark

- nwadg.com/ arkansas/northwest/ JAIME ADAME

FAYETTEVIL­LE — Not everything in pieces can be put back together, says Jean Pierre Jacquet, a master stone carver with Wiscon- sin-based Quarra Stone.

Jacquet was called upon to examine Spoofer’s Stone — one of the oldest landmarks on the University of Arkansas campus — after it broke apart when hit by a work truck Feb. 25.

“Everybody was upset,” said Matt Bodishbaug­h, a vice president for CDI Contractor­s, the company overseeing the subcontrac­tor that damaged the stone.

The university announced the damage while also vowing to study repairing the landmark, which is known as a spot for many a marriage proposal over the years.

The hunk of limestone’s unique place in campus lore began almost with the founding of the university. The rock came to rest on the lawn of Old Main after a broken oxcart dumped its load during the constructi­on of what’s now the oldest building on campus, according to the university’s website.

The Old Main academic building, whose exterior was completed in 1875, three years after UA first held classes, may be far more recognizab­le to most. But the nearby Spoofer’s Stone, in UA’s early years, served as an important drop-off point for romantic notes between students in an era when the men and women of the student body weren’t allowed to mix freely on campus.

Jacquet, a craftsman who studied historic restoratio­n in France, said he had to see for himself before understand­ing whether he could make the stone whole again.

“It did take some inspection from us; we were not sure,” Jacquet said. “We went down to look at the stone. When I looked at it, I was pretty confident I could.”

Jacquet and a helper from Quarra Stone, which is based in Madison, Wis., spent a week working in what was basically a tent on the Old Main lawn, he said.

CDI — which hired Quarra Stone and paid for the repair — provided the shelter and a small crane to lift the stone, which Jacquet estimated to weigh about 3,800 pounds.

“It is still a very, very hard stone, very strong and very dense. So it’s very brittle, in a way,” Jacquet said, explaining “the more dense the stone is, the more easy it is to shatter like glass.”

Normally, Jacquet works on larger-scale projects, including Longwood Gardens, an estate in Pennsylvan­ia that in recent years has been extensivel­y restored.

Bodishbaug­h, the constructi­on company vice president, declined to say how much the repair cost.

The project wrapped up March 6, said UA spokesman John Thomas.

Techniques used in other projects also can be used when repairing something like Spoofer’s Stone, Jacquet said, referring to what’s technicall­y called anastylosi­s, a type of reassembly.

“It’s a little bit like when you have pottery broken and you put all of the pieces back together,” Jacquet said. “You have to find out where the pieces were fitting and catalog them, see how they were fitting together, and put them back together with very strong epoxy glue and some pins.”

The goal is “to conserve as much of the original as possible,” Jacquet said.

Spoofer’s Stone had been set on a concrete slab, and examining the broken rock revealed how its underside was damaged from humidity, Jacquet said.

“I think it turned out great,” he said of the finished product.

Thomas, the UA spokesman, said the stone is back in its original location but in recent days has been boxed up for protection from the wet weather.

Fencing keeps the public away as CDI Contractor­s continues with the work that was going on when Spoofer’s Stone was damaged — a project involving another UA landmark.

CDI is overseeing the replacemen­t of the universi- ty’s oldest sections of Senior Walk, a tradition that began with senior students inscribing their names in the concrete sidewalk by Old Main.

Bodishbaug­h said after the damage happened on a Tuesday, the restoratio­n team was flown in the following Monday. The repair was done in 10 days, he said.

Bodishbaug­h described how Spoofer’s Stone was also damaged early on, with students chiseling away portions of it as keepsakes. He said repair work had been done on the stone in the 1930s.

The most recent repair is an improvemen­t on the work done decades earlier, Bodishbaug­h said.

“While we regret the incident happened, we are certainly pleased to be able to remedy the damage,” he said.

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