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The Rollstone Boulder is a ten-foot-tall, 110-ton porphyritic granite glacial erratic located on a traffic island in downtown Fitchburg, Massachusetts. The boulder was exploded at its original location at the summit of Rollstone Hill and then reassembled near Fitchburg's Upper Common in 1929 from the pieces. ==History== During the Ice Age, a glacier deposited a diameter rock weighing "at least one hundred tons" on the summit of Rollstone Hill.〔Mason, Atherton P., M.D. (Fitchburg in 1885 ). Bay State Monthly. Volume 0002, Issue 6. March 1885. p. 357. Retrieved December 22, 2012〕〔Holmes, Hannah. (Pet Rocks ). ''National Geographic''. March 2012. Retrieved December 22, 2012.〕 The boulder was likely moved to Fitchburg from central New Hampshire, as there are ridges located in and near the towns of Bradford and Warner that are of the same composition as the stone.〔(Proceedings of the Fitchburg Historical Society and papers relating to the history of the town ). Volume 3. p. 150-151. Fitchburg Historical Society. 1902. Retrieved December 22, 2012.〕 Over time this boulder became a landmark where people would hike to and picnic.〔Fitchburg, p.113〕 The elements began wearing away at the boulder, and by 1899 large cracks in it were filled with cement and an iron band was added, circling the stone, to keep it from crumbling.〔 Quarrying began on Rollstone Hill and throughout the 19th century the granite from here was used throughout Fitchburg and the eastern United States. The granite was used in the construction of walls, columns, and bridges including ones across the Nashua River and five across the Hudson River including the George Washington Bridge.〔Fitchburg, p.56〕 By the late 1800s concerns began to be raised that this quarrying was encroaching upon the landmark boulder.〔〔(Proceedings of the Fitchburg Historical Society and papers relating to the history of the town ). Volume 2. Fitchburg Historical Society. p. 23. 1897. Retrieved December 22, 2012.〕 At the Fitchburg Historical Society meeting on May 18, 1896 Charles Fosdick brought up this encroachment and his concerns about it. A committee was formed to speak with the owners of the quarries to see if the boulder could be preserved.〔 Nothing came from this and another committee was appointed on April 15, 1901 to see if it was possible to save the stone.〔Proceedings... Volume 4, p.8〕 They reported over a year later, on May 19, 1902, that the boulder would be moved and not destroyed at no cost to the historical society. A vote was taken to approve the action,〔Proceedings... Volume 4, p.10〕 but the boulder was not moved until it was in immediate danger on September 2, 1929.〔Gale, Dick. (Fitchburg Boulder Stands As Monument To Historical Sentiment, Disregard Of Fact ). ''Lewiston Evening Journal''. May 31, 1951. Retrieved December 22, 2012.〕 In 1929 the two quarries on Rollstone Hill began removing the final section of the hill between them where the Rollstone boulder was perched. At the urging of state representative Louis N. M. Des Chenes, the mayor of Fitchburg, Joseph N. Carriere, forced the quarries to halt operations so the boulder could be removed. The plans for moving the boulder were fairly simple as all that seemed to be holding the stone together was the iron band encircling it. The plan was to remove this band and the subsequent pieces the boulder crumbled into were to be moved to a small triangular traffic island in downtown Fitchburg to be reassembled. Lines and numbers were painted on the Rollstone Boulder and it was meticulously photographed and drawn so that it could be reassembled exactly the same as it was before the move. After all this planning and documentation, when the iron band was removed the boulder did not fall apart. It took multiple blasts with black powder to even crack the stone. After it was broken into smaller pieces, they were all transported to its new home.〔 J. Marc Leblanc, a local stonemason, was given the task of reassembling the Rollstone Boulder. The tough job was made even tougher due to streetcars going by the work site jarring loose stones after they had already been placed. After months of work and all of the money the city had put aside for the project was exhausted, Leblanc could not reassemble it. Out of money and out of time the project was transferred to a special committee headed by U. S. Senator Marcus A. Coolidge. The committee, state representative Des Chenes, and Leblanc decided the best way to go forward with restoring the boulder would be to discard the inside and only reassemble the exterior portion of the stone. Des Chenes explains, "We just used the outside and tied the parts together with iron rods ... We drilled holes and hooked the rods to the insides of the rock. After the shell of the boulder was fixed in place, Leblanc poured in concrete and filled it up."〔 After the reconstruction, the Rollstone Boulder appeared the same as it did before and is in the same orientation as when it was on Rollstone hill.〔 It weighs and is tall.〔 In 1930 a plaque was attached to the boulder by the Fitchburg Historical society, which stated: The plaque is misleading as the Rollstone Boulder was not brought from Mt. Monadnock, just somewhere in central New Hampshire, there was no popular subscription to save it, and no citizens of Fitchburg were asked to raise money for its move.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Rollstone Boulder」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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