Which one? 3 test patches Curing, & 4 patinas. Daedalus at work on Bronze Tablet Stage Fort Park #GloucesterMA

Gloucester, Mass. August 9, 2023.

Part 2. “NOTABLE”. “EXEMPLIFICATION”. “ARBITRATION”.

Three test patches are visible on the commemorative bronze plaque set into Tablet Rock. Along with surface patina aesthetic choices, test patches are left to cure or age to see their impact. When considering care and protection for public art, there is no singular approach. There is no other American commemorative tablet that’s so colossal, set into a glacial outcropping in this precise angle and manner, and susceptible to its surroundings and climate over this length of time. Hence the test patches.

Daedalus is a renowned sculpture conservation firm and will approach this work with respect.

Money was raised to address the plaque and patination (some had preference for a brown finish) Gloucester Daily Times, 2016, and then that project was paused. As far as I know, funds were not returned nor redirected for restoration of the city’s art deemed in distress. At the time William Taylor addressed the verdigris:

As an antique dealer for decades who dealt many times with bronzes and patinas I completely agree that the tablet should not be restored. While I applaud…well-meaning and generous inclinations not only does natural oxidization form a protective surface it looks appropriate and should not be fiddled with. Restoration is too expensive and absolutely not necessary. Cleaning it would remove many decades of well acquired history.

William Taylor, letter to the editor, GDT

Restoration science about corrosion on bronze and copper vs. verdigris is fascinating. See Walker Hancock Comprehensive Plan 1958 related to patina. Some methods change. Some don’t.

Continue reading part one here .


Bronze tablet. Founders Plaque. Tablet Rock work 2023. Part 1 here

Daedalus crew working on Tablet Rock plaque Stage Fort Park #GloucesterMA

September 2023. Ladders up for Daedalus crew powerwashing the ‘founder’s plaque’ on Tablet Rock in Stage Fort Park.

work in progress photos: Daedalus restoration

About

The enormous 20th Century plaque on Tablet Rock in Stage Fort Park commemorating the first permanent European settlement, the “Founding of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1623”, was dedicated in August 1907. James R. Pringle was designated to write the inscription. The execution of the design and bas relief border was by Eric Pape.

โ€œThe nautical scheme of decorative framework and embellishment was the composite suggestionโ€ of various committees dating as far back as the 1880s.

Image block documenting how Tablet Rock looked pre bronze tablet through today: before the plaque, 1901 (branded Battery K still visible); 1907 dedication, Library of Congress (Hammond with his daughter Natalie Hammond); 1970s; 1974 (graffiti beneath); 2016; 2019. Note the rectangular area beneath the plaque was lightened at the time of installation. The border carving degraded. The dark streaks accelerated after 2020 (note the verdigris patina 2016, 2019, etc)

ยฉC. Ryan, 2016

ยฉ C. Ryan, 2019

part 2 | patina test patches here

PLAQUE TEXT

ON THIS SITE IN

1623

A COMPANY OF FISHERMEN AND FARMERS FROM DORCHESTER ENG.

UNDER THE DIRECTION OF REV. JOHN WHITE FOUNDED

THE MASSACHUSETTS BAY COLONY

____

FROM THAT TIME THE FISHERIES THE OLDEST INDUSTRY IN THE COMMONWEALTH

HAVE BEEN UNINTERRUPTEDLY PURSUED FROM THIS PORT

____

HERE IN 1625 GOV. ROGER CONANT BY WISE DIPLOMACY

AVERTED BLOODSHED BETWEEN CONTENDING FACTIONS

ONE LED BY MYLES STANDISH OF PLYMOUTH

THE OTHER BY CAPT HEWES

A NOTABLE EXEMPLIFICATION OF ARBITRATION

IN THE BEGINNINGS OF NEW ENGLAND

____

PLACED BY THE CITIZENS OF GLOUCESTER 1907

-transcription Founders Plaque. Tablet Rock. Stage Fort Park. Gloucester MA

Save the date! Cape Ann Symphony’s Free Pops concert in Stage Fort Park on Gloucester Harbor #GloucesterMA 400+

One month away- mark your calendars! Countdown to Cape Ann Symphony’s very own Pops concert–a preeminent 400+ celebration– at Stage Fort Park is July 28, 2023. Classical and popular music for all in a spectacular setting!

For Gloucester’s Tablet Rock dedication in 1907, momentous Gloucester Day celebrations, and the city’s 300th, the natural open air ampitheatre of Stage Fort Park and its sweeping vistas beckoned and accomodated thousands for sheer casual delight, open and accessible to all. The Cape Ann Symphony Pops in the Park event echoes this history! On a smaller scale, the city hosts the popular free Antonio Gentile Bandstand Summer Concert Series at Stage Fort Park.


Heidi Dallin shares the details from Cape Ann Symphony:

CAPE ANN SYMPHONY RETURNS TO STAGE FORT PARK

Celebrate Gloucester’s 400+ at

POPS IN THE PARK

FREE ORCHESTRA CONCERT SET FOR JULY 28 at 8 PM

Cape Ann Symphony has partnered with the Gloucester 400+ to bring Cape Ann’s 70-member professional orchestra to Stage Fort Park for Pops in The Park, a special concert to celebrate Gloucester’s 400+, on Friday, July 28 at 8 PM.

“Over the last 6 months weโ€™ve been raising the funds needed to put the symphony on stage and I am delighted to share that we just reached our goal. We are so appreciative of our corporate sponsors and all the individual donors who contributed to make this marquee event of the 400th celebration a reality! So, save the date of July 28th on your calendar and come join us at Pops in the Park, a glorious evening of symphonic music free to the public.โ€

Jodi Nedrow-Counihan, CAS board member and coordinator of the Pops event

Set against the majestic backdrop of Gloucester Harbor, this FREE outdoor all ages event will be a special evening of music. The program includes Rossini’s Barber of Seville Overture; Anderson’s Selections from Irish Suite; Copland’s Hoedown; William’s Adventures on Earth; A Tribute to Henry Mancini; Tchaikovsky’s Finale of The 1812 Overture and the world premiere of Celebration Overture by acclaimed Gloucester composer Robert J Bradshaw.

“The Pops in the Park Concert on July 28th is a celebration not only of the 400+ years of Gloucester history but of the 70+ years of the Cape Ann Symphony” adds Nedrow-Counihan. The Cape Ann Symphony began in 1952 as a volunteer group of thirty or so individuals calling themselves the โ€œGloucester Civic Symphony Orchestraโ€. On July 10th, 1952 the symphony performed their inaugural concert in the Gloucester High School auditorium and wowed the audience of over 800 concertgoers with their performance of Beethovenโ€™s First Symphony.

Today, the Cape Ann Symphony has evolved into an all-professional orchestra of more than 70 members from throughout the New England area with a performance level to rival any regional Symphony in the country. For more than 20 years Maestro Yoichi Udagawa has been the CAS Music Director and Conductor and his artistry and passion have made him an audience favorite. Maestro Udagawa is at home in popular and contemporary music as well as the standard symphonic repertoire. He is known for his relaxed manner and ability to speak from the podium which has helped new audiences as well as enthusiasts gain a greater appreciation for symphonic music.

The Cape Ann Symphonyโ€™s Pops in the Park Concert, a preeminent event to celebrate Gloucester’s 400+, is Friday, July 28, 2023 at 8:00 pm in Stage Fort Park, 24 Hough Avenue, Gloucester, MA. Admission to this outdoor concert on the harbor is FREE. For information, call 978-281-0543 or visit pops.capeannsymphony.org

aBOUT Stage Fort Park Tablet Rock

*โ€œIn 1623, 14 English fishermen set up the first European colony on Cape Ann here in what was then Fishermanโ€™s Field and is now Stage Fort Park. These ramparts overlook the harbor, first built during the Revolutionary War, renewed for the War of 1812, the Civil War and the Spanish American War.”

Alas, those first settlers, sent across the ocean by the Dorchester Company, were unable to live off the sea and these rock-bound fields. They moved a few miles south to what is now Salem in 1626. Then, within a decade, there were enough permanent settlers on Cape Ann to incorporate the town of Gloucester. The first meetinghouse was built on the Town Green in 1642 near what is now the Grant Circle rotary of Route 128. The City set this land aside as a public park in 1898 and its Tablet Rock was dedicated by Henry Cabot Lodge in 1907.

– David Rhinelander see Gloucester HarborWalk Stage Fort Park marker #42, 2011 photo on marker ยฉSharon Lowe.

Reposting history I wrote about Stage Fort Plaque / Tablet Rock:

See also Stage Fort Park then/now photos in prior GMG post

James R. Pringle was designated to write the inscription for the bronze plaque. The execution of the design was by Eric Pape. โ€œThe nautical scheme of decorative framework and embellishment was the composite suggestionโ€ of various committees dating as far back as the 1880s. Bronze tribute plaques embedded in Tablet Rock at Stage Fort Park detail the siteโ€™s history and were commissioned and unveiled at different times. The monumental and stunning Founders plaque from 1907 on Tablet Rock itself is in fantastic condition. Two DAR plaques were inlaid on the glacial outcroppings past half moon beach on the way to the cannons. The Fishermanโ€™s Field (1934) which I attributed to Harriet Hyatt is so worn itโ€™s nearly indecipherable, though thatโ€™s part of its charm**. The plaque compels close inspection, lingering and discovery. Itโ€™s a fun family activity for anyone who likes a challenge. For those who want help reading the content, I transcribed it back in 2010. Harriet Hyatt designed the Meeting House Plain plaque across from Cape Ann near Washington and Poplar. – 2015, 2027 **Update 2020: Cape Ann Museum acquired the original drawing for the plaque design in 2020!

Click here to enlarge:ย  transcription of Fishermanโ€™s Field tribute plaque Tablet Rock Stage Fort Park Gloucester MA