In Watervilleās Pine Grove Cemetery on Wednesday morning, the wind was blowing fiercely through the giant pine and maple trees that grow tall over Civil War veteran Frank W. Haskellās gravestone.
Haskell, awarded the Medal of Honor for his heroic efforts during the war, is no longer forgotten, as Alden Weigelt is right to say.
Gravestone conservator Joe Ferrannini and volunteers including Weigelt and his wife, Debora, and members of the Maine Old Cemetery Association, spent the whole day Sunday helping to clean and properly reset Haskellās stone, which was covered in lichen, leaning backward and in danger of toppling over.
Ferrannini, 54, of upstate New York, just happened to be working in a cemetery in Sidney earlier this month when he was handed a column I had written about Alden Weigelt and Pearley Lachanceās efforts to raise funds to fix the stone, which the Weigelts discovered was in rough condition when they placed an American flag there around Memorial Day.
A Benton native, Haskell was a sergeant major in the 3rd Maine Volunteer Infantry Regiment. He was awarded the Medal of Honor after he assumed command of his regiment in Fair Oaks, Virginia, on June 1, 1862, after other officers had been killed or disabled.
Ferrannini decided to help fix his stone. He contacted Weigelt and offered to do it for free, but when he and a handful of volunteers launched the work Sunday, they didnāt stop there. They also spiffed up the stone of Haskellās wife, Sara Chandler, and several others nearby marking the graves of her family members.
āThey went way beyond what I thought was going to be accomplished,ā Weigelt, 64, said Wednesday. āAnd it was nice to see the respect shown for other members of his family who are resting.ā
The family plot, near the entrance to the cemetery off Grove Street, now shines as it should, drawing attention to Haskellās legacy.
Weigelt, a Capitol police officer in Augusta and former Waterville and Oakland officer, believes it is our duty to help preserve history, including the gravestones of veterans and others who came before us.
Ferrannini is of like mind.
āWe did everyone in the family lot that we could,ā he said. āWe just kept going down the line and took care of several other stones.ā
They cleaned and reset stones that had been dislodged because people in the past had placed pieces of granite under the bases in an attempt to level them.
Haskellās stone has a granite base, another marble base and a top marble marker.
āIt wasnāt a good, strong foundation,ā Ferrannini said. It was tipping back toward the grave over time. It may have even toppled over at some point because the angle of the foundation was severe.Ā They had shimmed it. We removed all that and put in a good base of compacted sand and stone. It should sit level for a long time.ā
Ferrannini, who owns a one-man business, Grave Stone Matters, in Hoosick Falls, New York, spends about 12 weeks a year in Maine working for communities whose cemeteries need help. When I spoke to him Wednesday by phone, he was in the Getchell Cemetery off the Pond Road in West Sidney.
After leaving Sidney, he planned to workĀ in cemeteries in Whitefield, the St. George area, North Paris, South Thomaston and Martinville before returning home in mid-September. Trained volunteers, including members of the Maine Old Cemetery Association, will help with part of the work.
āIām lucky Iām here,ā Ferrannini said of being in Maine. āItās nice to be here and be appreciated and have people willing to come out and help.ā
He noted that it is important to become involved in preservation efforts, but those who do so must be trained. People may be well-meaning, but they can actually take years off stones and do irreparable harm if they do not have the correct training, according to Ferrannini, who hosts training workshops for the Cemetery Association once a year.
I asked him what Sundayās work would have cost had it not been offered free-of-charge and with no volunteers to help. Ferrannini estimated the job would have taken him two or three days to do alone and probably would have approached $2,000, give or take.
Asked why he does such work, he said it is a calling.
āI have to do this. Thereās no reason that he should be left in that condition, so it just had to be done,ā he said of Haskellās grave.
Weigelt said watching Ferrannini and the others work Sunday in the cemetery was both humbling and educational.
āThere wasnāt any down time,ā he said. āThey did what they did for, like, eight hours.ā
Weigelt and Ferrannini are humble men who would take no credit for the effort, though it would not have happened without them.
āIt was rewarding and humbling to play a part in this,ā Weigelt said, simply.
And Ferrannini ?
āItās about saving the veterans,ā he said. āItās not about any of us doing the work. Itās about the fact that itās getting done.ā
Spoken like two, true patriots.
Amy Calder has been a Morning Sentinel reporter 32 years. Her columns appear here Saturdays. She may be reached at acalder@centralmaine.com. For previous Reporting Aside columns, go to centralmaine.com.
Send questions/comments to the editors.
Comments are no longer available on this story