Morgan, Vermont, Home of Monk Besaw - A Man Who Makes New Things Old
| by Scott Wheeler Before truck-mounted snowplows cleared Vermont’s deep winter snows from the roads, and before cars and trucks were a common sight on the roads, winter roads were made passable by horse-drawn snow rollers. Instead of plowing the snow to the side of the road, the weight of these huge, heavy wooden rollers compacted the snow into a hard surface that horses, buggies, and wagons could travel on. |
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| There isn’t much demand for snow rollers of the days of old, but don’t tell Roland “Monk” Besaw that. Earlier this year, while on his winter’s break from his job as a bucket loader operator with Pike’s Paving, the longtime Morgan resident built a snow roller. This is not a miniature roller built to scale, but a life-size one that he estimates weighs about 1,800 pounds. Although Besaw has lived in Morgan since the 1960s with his wife, Gail, he was born not far from the junction of Burton Hill Road and Creek Road in the village of Irasburg, the son of Richard and Lumina Besaw. At 64 years old, Monk Besaw remembers life in a less mechanized world, but his memories don’t extend back to the days in which snow rollers rolled the streets and roads of the state. Instead, he learned about these goliaths of the winter roads from an elderly neighbor. |
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“I used to go down and talk to Ben Cutler,” Besaw said. “He was an old guy and he used to sit there and tell me how they used to roll the roads. They could reach out and touch the telephone wires. I wasn’t very tall at the time and of course telephone wires are pretty high but back then they had the short poles so the wires weren’t very high.”
After getting the idea in his head to build a snow roller, Besaw had to find a blueprint. He found one in the pages of the fall 1995 issue of Small Farmers Journal. Using spruce and fir, he began work on the project in the early days of 2007 and completed it by early March. He figures he put about 60 hours of labor into building the snow roller. Building the snow roller isn’t the first time that Besaw has built something “old” from scratch, at least almost from scratch. In 2001, using the chassis of a 1928 Model A, he built a truck, not with metal, but out of wood. As with his snow roller, the wooden car isn’t just for looks; it can be driven.
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