By Nicholas Brown Dunbarton
News Staff Writer
Thank goodness a hearse can’t feel humiliation,
for Dunbarton’s own has been degraded more
times than any is decent. Most recently, it’s
the victim of an infestation of powderpost beetles.
When the Hearse Restoration Committee was formed
in November 2004, members soon became acquainted
with some of the horse-drawn hearse’s checkered
past, but may not have anticipated more pitfalls
to follow.
The hearse was purchased by the town in 1870,
said committee member Donna Dunn.
In that time, she said, “It was the town’s
responsibility to escort the dead to their burial.”
Based on the committee’s research, Dunn
suspects the hearse was retired from use sometime
in the 1920s. But its golden years have been
far from smooth.
A fire sometime in the 1950s or 1960s, said
Dunn, destroyed much of the hearse.
What could be salvaged was then placed in a
shed – specially designed to house large,
horse-drawn rolling carriages used to compact
snow – on Robert Rogers Road.
From there, the hearse moved to the dirt floor
of the Historical Society’s blacksmith
shop and museum, where it sat for years, said
Dunn.
The hearse’s next stop was in a privately
owned barn, though there more trouble – in
the forms of a raccoon and a porcupine – awaited.
“Both of those animals not only chewed
on it, they used it as a latrine,” said
Dunn. “There’s not a very nice way
to put it.”
Last year, Dunn, along with fellow committee
member Gail Martel, went in with masks and cleaned
off the hearse enough to move it to the Gorham
Pond Road barn where it now sits.
Though moved, the hearse required some further
scrubbing.
“That’s when we found the white
powder and the little holes,” Dunn said.
A nearby exterminator made a quick diagnosis:
powderpost beetles – the rue of many a
New Hampshire barn.
Though formally known as the Lyctid beetle,
the pest earned its common name because an active
sign of infestation is a very fine powder, produced
by the larva as they destroy the wood, said Chris
Pestana, general manager of JP Chemical in Milford.
Pestana, who diagnosed the hearse, said the
beetles create pin-sized holes in a random, “bird-shot
pattern.”
“When you see the little holes, that’s
all well and good,” said Dunn. “But
there can be a huge cavity behind them.”
That cavity is where the larva then pupate,
said Pestana. Once adult in late winter or early
spring, the beetles emerge from the wood to renew
the process, with the female laying 15 to 50
eggs in the wood’s crevices.
In New England, said Pestana, this cycle generally
lasts 12 months.
“It’s pretty amazing the damage
these little buggers can do,” said Dunn.
Having faced equal challenges in the past, however,
the committee seems up to the latest challenge.
Pestana gave the hearse a heavy treatment of
pesticide, largely composed of boric acid.
Once the hearse is relieved of its latest natural
foe, committee members plan to use an advanced
epoxy compound to refurbish all the damaged wood.
“When it’s dry, you can cut it,
paint it, sand it; it’s wood,” Dunn
said of the compound.
Now that the hearse is largely dismantled, many
of the components can be fixed up and put back
together in sequence – one determined by
on old hardcover book, “Horse Drawn Funeral
Vehicles” – that outlines reassembly
for a similar model.
Dunn expects the entire hearse renovation to
be completed before 2007, quite a feat considering
it’s all being done by volunteers from
town.
Dunbarton resident Beth LaMarca has compiled
a record of every financial transaction related
to the hearse, and none of those escape the hands
of Dunbarton residents. Dunn said the committee
has maintained the spirit of a town project.
“It’s apparent to us that, through
every phase, the old Dunbarton Yankee frugality
has been at work,” said Dunn.
The hearse even has a rich family history in
Dunbarton.
Bob Boynton is a committee member whom Dunn
dubbed the “technical expert.” Boynton’s
father worked for one summer as a town employee
and was known for napping his lunch break away
in the rear of the hearse.
Committee member Nancy Frost’s grandfather,
John Bunten, was at one point the hearse’s
driver. And Bunten’s son, John D. Bunten,
was responsible for the leaf fire that ultimately
reached the hearse. Dunn said Frost was integral
in initiating the restoration project, while
her son, Bill Frost, has been leading necessary
the metal work.
“One drove it; the next one burned it;
the next one said, ‘yeah let’s do
this;’ and the next one is chipping in
with the work,” said Dunn. |