Vermont Magazine Summer 19 | Page 89

companies, but the construction of the state capitol building in Montpelier (1832–1836), the first commercial building in Vermont constructed of granite brought the greatest amount of attention to the industry. Oren Wheaton furnished the granite. He learned the stonecutting trade from John Parker, the son of Vermont’s first commercial quarrier and manufacturer. Oren and his father Pliny Wheaton (1778–1869) purchased the quarry holdings of John Parker and Eliphalet Hewitt and expanded them. The Wheaton quarry on Cobble Hill provided the stone for the pillars, foundation, underpinning, window caps, sills, and cornices for the statehouse. The granite for the walls was extracted from Abijah Abbott’s quarry on Millstone Hill in Barre. Abijah Abbott had opened a small quarry on his farm on Millstone Hill in Barre in the 1810s, but Abijah died before he could witness the quarry’s full potential or his granite’s use in the Vermont State House. Abijah’s son Richard Flagg Abbott took over his father’s business and developed it into one of the largest early quarrying and manufacturing operations, where he fabricated probably the first large memorial in 1842 for Reverend James Marsh, the fifth president of the University of Vermont. The granite obelisk is 20 feet tall, weighs about 15 tons, and required 30 pair of horses and oxen to draw it the 50 miles from Barre to Burlington’s Elmwood Cemetery. The monument continues to demonstrate the quality of Barre gray granite and the caliber of the local craftsmanship in the early nineteenth century. By the early 1840s, according to Zadock Thompson’s History of Vermont, Barre’s light gray granite was considered a “source of profit to those who own it” and was “eagerly sought by those who [could] afford the expense, as a most durable and ornamental article in buildings.” In 1840, Pliny Wheaton showed the possibilities of Barre granite by building himself a house from granite Photographed in 1884, Marr & Gordon Granite Works represented a new generation of companies that specialized in producing granite products on a large commercial scale, with nearly three dozen employees. 87