The Capital

Town along I-70 hopes to restore historic blacksmith shop

- By Mary Grace Keller

A historic blacksmith shop in New Market that appeared destined for demolition may be saved and renewed as a tourist attraction after town leaders and the property’s owner dug into details of the structure’s past.

To the rear of 52 W. Main St. sits a dilapidate­d shed-like structure, roughly 50 feet back from the road. In a corner on the first floor there is a brick chimney and forge, covered with black soot. A tarp covers part of the ceiling. The stairs creak. One of the windows is boarded up with a series of signs that once pointed travelers to towns such as Harpers Ferry and Gettysburg. Two large birds that resemble turkey vultures have rented out the second floor.

The blacksmith shop’s exact history is a little hazy, but an 1873 town map shows a carpenter’s shop stood where the shed is today. The forge has a fire pot with a patent year of 1907, but town officials say that date may not be the true age of the forge, as the pot could have been replaced.

Historic District Commission member Steve Pippin’s best guess is a blacksmith at that time would have serviced horse-drawn carriages traveling the National Road (today’s Main Street) and provided everyday repairs to townspeopl­e. Census records show seven blacksmith-related craftsmen worked in New Market in 1870, according to Main Street coordinato­r and grant manager Jean LaPadula.

With some love and attention, the town hopes to make the building structural­ly sound, fire up the forge, install educationa­l signs and bring in blacksmith­s for demonstrat­ions to illustrate a period of New Market’s history.

“The idea of a Main Street is that you’re bringing new life to historic towns,” said LaPadula, who’s helping lead the charge to secure funding for the building’s restoratio­n.

Barbara Fromer, who has owned the property since 1984, says she always wanted to restore the blacksmith shop. When opportunit­ies came along in the past to fix it up, Fromer felt they were either too costly or would not have maintained the authentici­ty of the building.

She’s agreed to lease the shed’s property to the town and put up $5,000 of her own money to help with restoratio­n. The town council has committed up to $5,000 and would insure the land if they can secure 90 percent of the funding.

From her years in the antique tool business, Fromer had a sneaking suspicion there might be more to the shed than meets the eye.

“I knew this building was significan­t,” Fromer said. “Having been in the antique tool business, I just saw the value.”

She used to operate an antique shop in the brick building in front of the shed, which is now a yoga studio. In the early 1900s, the brick building served as a carriage house, Fromer said, which may have been supported by a blacksmith.

Around 2009, Fromer allowed a blacksmith to use the shed for a few years in exchange for maintainin­g the building, but for the most part, it sat idle.

In need of storage space, Fromer applied a few months ago for a demolition permit through the town so she could raze the structure and build anew.

When the demolition applicatio­n came before the historic commission, Pippin says they asked to see the building in person before making a decision.

“That’s when we saw the forge, and that kind of changed the dynamic,” Pippin said.

About two weeks later, they began talking about a possible restoratio­n. He brought the blacksmith shop to the attention of the New Market Civic Partnershi­p, of which he is chairman, and the group agreed it would like to try to save the building.

“I thought that, well, if you demolish it, it’s gone forever. Let’s take a closer look at it and see what can be done,” he said.

LaPadula is looking into possible funding from county and state agencies or any groups with an interest in historic preservati­on. One estimator suggested exterior repairs alone would cost tens of thousands of dollars, LaPadula said.

When she presented a draft memorandum of understand­ing between the town and Fromer to the town council recently, councilmen and the mayor appeared excited about the prospect.

“I think it has some historic significan­ce not only to the town, but to the old national pike as well,” Mayor Winslow Burhans III said in an interview.

The town of New Market was founded in 1793 along the Baltimore Turnpike and grew with the needs of travelers passing through on their way to Baltimore and beyond, according to an account of the town’s history on its website.

The town has more questions than answers at this early stage in the planning process, but LaPadula is hopeful this “treasure” in the town can be restored.

 ?? BILL GREEN/FREDERICK NEWS-POST PHOTOS ?? A large bird that resembles a turkey vulture flies out of a broken window on the second floor of a historic blacksmith shop in the town of New Market on April 29. The shop that appeared destined for demolition may be saved and renewed as a tourist attraction after town leaders and the property’s owner dug into details of the structure’s past.
BILL GREEN/FREDERICK NEWS-POST PHOTOS A large bird that resembles a turkey vulture flies out of a broken window on the second floor of a historic blacksmith shop in the town of New Market on April 29. The shop that appeared destined for demolition may be saved and renewed as a tourist attraction after town leaders and the property’s owner dug into details of the structure’s past.
 ??  ?? Barbara Fromer, left, who has owned the property since 1984, and Jean LaPadula, Main Street coordinato­r and grant manager, pull a tarp off the original blacksmith’s firebox and forge in a historic blacksmith shop in New Market on April 29. LaPadula is looking into possible funding from county and state agencies or any groups with an interest in historic preservati­on.
Barbara Fromer, left, who has owned the property since 1984, and Jean LaPadula, Main Street coordinato­r and grant manager, pull a tarp off the original blacksmith’s firebox and forge in a historic blacksmith shop in New Market on April 29. LaPadula is looking into possible funding from county and state agencies or any groups with an interest in historic preservati­on.

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