Date: Fri 10-Oct-1997
Date: Fri 10-Oct-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: DOTTIE
Quick Words:
Booth-Library-McEvoy-Hudiakoff
Full Text:
Finishing Touches: Cabinetmaker Uses `Hudiakoff Wood' In Library Circulation
Desk
BY DOROTHY EVANS
When three large trees were felled behind the Cyrenius H. Booth Library on
March 25, 1996, to make room for the new addition, there was a loud outcry
from residents who hated to see them go down.
The two biggest were sugar maples 50 and 75 feet high, each boasting a full
canopy of leaves to shade the parking lot and frame the view out back to the
open field.
The third tree, an English horse chestnut, had been planted at least 25 years
ago as a young sapling sometime toward the end of the 20-year period that
Sarah Mitchell was head librarian at the Booth Library.
It was given to the library just prior to Ms Mitchell's retirement in 1971 by
Russian artist Andrei Hudiakoff.
Mr Hudiakoff was a longtime resident of Newtown, who lived with his wife,
Doris, on Pocono Road. Also a dedicated gardener, he had transplanted the
young chestnut tree by himself, after selecting it from several others he had
been tending on his property, the offshoots of a mature horse chestnut that
was growing nearby.
When the tree was planted, Sarah Mitchell commented on its small size saying
she didn't ever expect to be able to sit in its shade.
Yet by 1996 when the horse chestnut was cut down, it had grown to 35 feet and
its leaves cast a respectable shadow.
One consolation for those who loved the trees was the vision of a new library
addition soon to fill that space. They also shared a conviction that in
response to the town's burgeoning growth, an expanded, updated library
facility was absolutely necessary.
The new Cyrenius H. Booth Library would be something the whole town could take
pride in. It would be a resource for Newtowners present and future.
Still, they hated to see Mr Hudiakoff's tree sacrificed to progress. They
hoped a part of it could somehow be salvaged and used to benefit the library
project.
Artistry In Wood
Several community members stepped forward in succession to help make this wish
come true.
By overseeing the cutting process, as well as the preparation, drying and
storing of the wood, they were able to hand the next stage over to Gregory
McAvoy, a skilled cabinetmaker and 20-year Newtown resident.
When Mr McAvoy agreed to accept the circulation desk commission, he also
agreed to try to incorporate as much of the wood into the desk as possible.
After months of preliminary planning in consultation with the Booth
librarians, including Beryl Harrison, and the library board's Long Range
Planning Committee member, Kathy Geckle, Mr McAvoy began working in his
Hundred Acres Road workshop.
On October 2, he assembled the desk in its final form, a completely new design
from what library patrons may remember in the old library.
"Beryl helped me with the idea for the handicapped access bench at one end,
also with the book drop. She knows what they need," Mr McAvoy said.
Another task was to incorporate grommets and grooves into the top surface to
accommodate computer wires, also a project undertaken in consultation with Mrs
Harrison.
The various sections of the 30-foot desk were constructed in stages over
several months. After assembly last weekend, several finishing coats were then
laid on.
Mr McAvoy said he used as much wood from the maples and the horse chestnut as
possible, though it had been difficult to salvage pieces that were large
enough to complete the massive project.
The four pillars alone each measured 12x12x53 inches and were made of wood to
completely enclose the supporting steel posts on all four sides.
"When necessary, I used wood from other sources to finish the job," Mr McAvoy
said.
The maple went into the wainscoting and a file drawer, and the horse chestnut
was used for inlays, he said.
"They're all in there - at least in spirit if not totally in fact."
"When people ask me what this desk is made of, I say `Hudiakoff wood.' Not
because there is such a lot of the chestnut in the desk itself, but because
the spirit behind the artist's gift will live on in its new form," Mr McAvoy
said.
The Hudiakoff Connection
By a strange coincidence, it turns out that Mr McAvoy once knew Mr Hudiakoff.
At least, he knew of him, having met the artist long before the horse chestnut
was cut down.
Mr McAvoy's good friend, Jim Omalyev, a graphic artist, had been working for
Mr Hudiakoff on commission to help complete a painting job on the inside dome
of a basilica.
"Once or twice I dropped Jim off at Mr Hudiakoff's house," Mr McAvoy said,
adding he might have shaken the Russian artist's hand once or twice.
Little did he know then that his friend, Mr Omalyev, would eventually die of
brain cancer, or that a tree growing in Mr Hudiakoff's garden would provide
wood for a circulation desk he'd be building for the new Cyrenius H. Booth
Library in 1997.
"I thought it was an interesting connection," Mr McAvoy said.
Mr McAvoy specializes in custom woodworking and furniture design, as well as
in restorations and reproductions that feature period detailing.
Although he had presented the library's Long Range Planning Committee with an
estimated bill for completion of the circulation desk project, Mr McAvoy said
he was glad to contribute extra hours beyond the basic estimate to complete
the work in the best manner possible.
It turned out to be a time-consuming project, he said, but he didn't begrudge
the extra effort it took.
"I believe that a library means more to a town than just a place to check out
books," Mr McAvoy said.
"It's as important as a school or a town hall. People use a library for many
reasons. You can't always put a dollar and cents value on that."
