| GRINDSTONE
HISTORY compiled and edited by Herbert
C. Read (1990, 1991 and revised in 1995)
(The following is the history of the Read Grindstone dynasty
as dictated to Dr. George Stanley by my father, Herbert William
Read, at Mount Allison University, Tuesday, 20 July, 1971 with
other information gleaned from notes of R.C. Read, younger brother
of Herbert W. Read).
My name is Herbert William Read. I was born in Frederick,
Kansas, because my mother's people were living there at that time.
I am a Canadian. My father was Henry C. Read. He married Maud
Olive Skiles in Pittsburgh. My grandfather was Joseph Read of
Minudie, Nova Scotia, and my great-grandfather, who started the
Read Grindstone business, also lived in Minudie. My father was
born in Minudie just before grandfather moved some two miles to
Barronsfield where he had built a large house,
"Glenburn", which is now (1971) vacant and going to
ruin.
My family has had a long association with the grindstone
business. It was not a large business in Canada. I suppose one
could say that the Canadian grindstone industry was of negligible
importance from a national point of view. Probably it was
negligible from a provincial point of view also. I do not think
the annual output ever exceeded $100,000 about the same as the
silver market. But it was very very important in the early days to
the people at the head of the Bay of Fundy and, later on, to
communities such as Stonehaven in Gloucester County, Woodburn and
Pictou Island in Pictou County and Quarryville in the Miramichi
area. The Reads came into the picture about 1810 when my great
grandfather leased a shore property at Lower Cove, near Joggins
Mines, from Amos Seaman, more popularly known as "King"
Seaman.
To go back to the beginning, perhaps I should define what a
grindstone is, because a lot of people these days just do not know
- some folks remember one of their grandfather's farm where they
were sometimes asked to turn the Grindstone while Grandpa
sharpened an axe or a mower cutter or a scythe. Actually,
grindstones were a scarce article, although they never commanded
the price of a rare commodity. For example, in Canada the only
grindstones came from the Maritime Provinces and only a very few
places in the Maritime Provinces. A grindstone is simply a
sandstone, usually turned round on a lathe, in which the particles
are sharp, and the sharp particles are bonded in nature so that
the bond will break down under pressure and sharpen whatever is
pressed against it as it is turned or moved. A sandstone with
round particles would not make a grindstone!
In Canada, the grindstone business probably started in a local
way in the 1600s by the Acadian French whose only concentration of
any size in the Maritimes was based in the huge areas of marshland
they had dyked at the head of the Bay of Fundy. With the twice
daily ebb of the famous 30' - 60' tides of the bay, the countless
sandstone ledges were laid bare for four hours or more. Thus it
was possible to go out on the rocks, knock off a piece of stone
and shape it with hand tools into a rough grindstone. Most people,
when they think of grindstones, see the small ones still to be
found on the occasional farm, or they remember people saying they
should put their nose to one! However, the stones that produced
the high and profitable tonnage were from four to seven feet in
diameter and anywhere from three to fifteen inches in thickness -
the largest of these weighing 4 tons. So the small grindstones
that the commercial quarries made were, in effect, a by-product of
the production of the larger stones which were used extensively
for industrial production purposes. Historically, grindstones must
go back pretty well into the year one. After all, when you rub two
hard substances together, you get abrasion. When pre-historic men
sharpened their first bronze and iron tools, they probably did it
on a flat stone. But the wheel goes back a long way too, and it is
reasonable to think that the grindstone goes back almost as far as
the wheel - about 5000 years!
From a world point of view, the first and most important place
for making grindstones was, I believe, England, although
grindstones were also produced in France and Germany around the
same period. In the United States, most grindstones were produced
in Ohio, although some stones were produced in Michigan and West
Virginia. So the grindstone was really a scarce article but was
not really a big business. It was important to the people I
mentioned and to the industries that developed in New England
during the eighteenth century.
There was no stone in New England suitable for making
grindstones so, for a century or more, the grindstones needed for
industrial production had to come either from the Maritimes or
from England.
The grindstone business in Canada probably began around the
head of the Bay of Fundy, on a local farm-use basis, during the
"Ancien Regime". The stone there had the necessary
abrasive quality. When the New Englanders moved in after 1755,
they too began to quarry grindstones for their own use. My
great-grandfather founded the Read Stone Company in Minudie, Nova
Scotia, about 1809, but the grindstone business had been well
established in the export trade before then.
Grindstone makers on the shore of Baie des Chaleurs (c.1890).
Local residents and merchants made and sold grindstones along the
shores of Baie des Chaleurs from the late 1700s until the 1930s (PANB
photograph P93/G32)
The legendary Amos "King" Seaman was the big man in
the grindstone business in those first days. His main quarry was
at Lower Cove, three miles north of Joggins. My grandfather,
Joseph Read, joined his father in the early years of the 19th
Century, and by 1824 they had a "stoneyard" and sales
office in Boston. In 1829, grandfather married King Seaman's
sister Abigail which brought the two grindstone families together
and they operated under the name of "Read and Seaman"
for some time. Grandfather also bought a home in Boston so that
each of his fourteen children could be educated in that city's
schools and colleges.
Grandfather also bought a home in New York. Earlier, these
children received their schooling from a teacher employed by the
Reads to live with them to teach the children how to "read
and write and figure". Stones were picked up by schooner
along the shores of the Bay of Fundy from the local people who
made them and were taken to Boston for distribution.
This trade soon became world wide because the Clipper ships
went everywhere. During the first quarter of the 19th century,
there were two big names in the grindstone business in Canada --
King Seaman was the first and my grandfather Read became the
second. For the next one hundred years, the Reads were the
dominant people in this small industry. In 1860, my grandfather
bought the grindstone property at Stonehaven, New Brunswick, which
was opened in 1830 and sold by the founders, who were Boston
people, Sprague, Soule and Company. This operation, located on the
Baie de Chaleur, was the most important quarry in the Industry's
final one hundred years. It was closed in 1930. The basic reason
for closing was the fact that the quarry was worked out, although
a secondary reason was the decline in the demand for natural
grindstones by industry.
Stonehaven was not the only Read quarry. The Reads dug holes
all over the Maritime Provinces and at one time operated more than
40 quarries with varying degrees of success. In the earlier years,
the Reads were both producers and dealers in grindstones. They
bought from farmers and others who made good grindstones as a
sideline and from operators of small quarries and shipped the
stones along with their own. These stones, you must remember, were
all made by hand, using picks and hand drills and mauls and stone
chisels, all hand-forged, tempered and sharpened by the
blacksmiths in the quarry. There was no machinery other than the
block-and-tackle and perhaps a winch and a few horses for
horsepower. The Bay of Fundy stones were quarried at low tide. If
the blocks were large they were chained under a boat and were
pulled to shore with the tide and were reduced in size and shaped
at low tide, and kept re-floating ashore until finally the
finished big grindstones could be brought ashore on rollers, one
by one. From there they were loaded onto scows and from there onto
off-shore schooners and taken to Boston.
The first on-shore quarry that could be worked all day
regardless of the tide, was opened at Slack's cove in Rockport,
below Sackville, in 1827. This was accomplished by constructing
coffer dams of timber and clay to enclose the areas to be
quarried. The sea water was then pumped out of the dam and left
the stone bare. From that day onward, quarries quickly supplanted
the under water reefs that got the grindstone business in Nova
Scotia off to a start. Stones were made at Lower Cove, Downey's
Cove, Ragged Reef, Sand River, Apple River. I think a few were
made on the Windsor shore. Sites on the New Brunswick side of the
Bay of Fundy included Wood Point, Rockport, Grindstone Island,
Mary's Point, Beaumont and Fox Creek.
Mrs. Esther Clark Wright, in her history of the Steeves family,
says that making grindstones was their cash crop. That was in the
18th century. Around 1804, there was a storekeeper in Moncton by
the name of Harper. I think it was his grand-daughter who wrote a
book "Moncton's First Storekeeper". In that book she
tells how, when her grandfather paid his bills to the whole-salers,
he paid them three quarters in grindstones and one quarter in
cash.
This was before the lumber trade got going. Thus the
grindstones at the head of the Bay of Fundy were the
butter-and-egg business of the early settlers. Later on, power
came to the grindstone industry - sometime in the seventies and
eighties. By that time, there were Read Grindstone Mills at
Stonehaven, N. B., Quarryville on the Miramichi, Wood Point near
Sackville, N.B., and Lower Cove, near Joggins, Nova Scotia.
As I mentioned earlier, a grindstone is a piece of quarried
sandstone, and you have to take it as you find it. Therefore, the
grindstones that come from different locations have different
qualities. One will do a certain kind of job while another will
not, but will handle other jobs. You cannot change the rock in a
quarry. For example, the stones that came from Wood Point were
very coarse and could only be used for industrial purposes. They
were not suitable for farmer's use, but were excellent for hogging
off metal, such as grinding plows and rough grinding of axes. But
the stones from Stonehaven, I can say without bragging, were
probably the best grade in the world for grinding a tempered-edge
tool. That is why the Stonehaven quarry was able to survive longer
than any of the others.
Then the railroads got going into the state of Ohio, where are
located what are probably the world's largest sandstone quarries
for building stone. These quarries gradually got into the grind
stone business and the Maritimes began to feel the competition.
This would have been towards the end of the 19th century. By 1900,
the only grindstone people operating in the Maritimes were the
Reads at Stonehaven and on the Miramichi in New Brunswick and at
Lower Cove, and Woodburn, near New Glasgow, in Nova Scotia. The
Pictou County stone deserves some mention. It was a soft stone
used (for example) for grinding spatulas, palette knives and
stemware like the cutting side of a chisel where there were two
kinds of steel welded together, and for pocket knives.
The Stonehaven stone was particularly valuable for grinding a
tempered edge of steel. For example, we used to ship stones as far
as west as Chicago for grinding machine knives and Indianapolis
for thinning handsaws. As you know, a handsaw tapers. Oddly
enough, we could sell stones to the Simonds Saw Company in Chicago
and Pittsburgh, but not in Montreal. The Montreal factory was
small and they had to use a softer stone that was more versatile.
We had a very select list of customers for Stonehaven stone, which
had a high silica content and was excellent for grinding edged
tools.
The Collins Company took all of the production from Wood Point.
They were the largest edged-tool manufacturers in the world I
believe. They were noted particularly for their machetes, which
had the name COLLINS stamped on the blade just below the ferrule
and there was a saying in South America: "They stuck it into
him to the COLLINS". They established in the 1770s in
Collinsville, near Hartford, Connecticut, and the plant closed in
1972 after 200 years of excellence. They shipped axes and machetes
all over the world.
We shipped Stonehaven stone to people like Brown and Sharpe who
made fine measuring tools. They claimed they could grind that flat
steel to one hundred thousandth part of an inch on a Stonehaven
grindstone! They had wonderful machines, beautifully made, for
this purpose. All the scythe and axe manufacturers used our stone
for abrasive purposes. Nicholson File and Stanley Rule and Level
Co. (Stanley Tools) were excellent customers. You see, all of our
markets were in the United States. We sold to all of the arms
manufacturers - Winchester, Remington, Savage, Colt, Marlin, Smith
& Wesson. Canadian manufacturers got their grindstones from
Ohio which was nearer, or they weren't large enough to take
carload lots from us.
In the early days, all shipment was by water - it had to be. My
grandfather, at one time, owned 51 schooners which took Read
stones mainly to ports in the northeastern U.S. but also made many
trips to South America and the Caribbean, then to England carrying
rum, there being no return cargo to Canada. They would pick up
return cargo of British woolens and such, for the last leg of the
journey back to Nova Scotia.
When 19 years of age, my father was assigned by his eldest
brother Bedford (who had become head of the firm on my
grandfather's death in 1866) to sail with one of the three-masted
schooners as "Supercargo" - business agent and trader.
This voyage took him to New England, Philadelphia, the Caribbean,
Rio de Janeiro, Buenos Aires, Bristol and Liverpool, Queenstown
(now Cobb) in Ireland, Halifax and home to Minudie.
After the railroad was built, more and more stones went by
rail. We shipped small "RED CENTRE" grindstones right
across Canada as far as Vancouver, throughout the prairies, into
northern Ontario and Quebec, everywhere in the Maritimes.
However, the small grindstone, like the even smaller scythe
stone, both for use on farms and in lumber camps, was merely a
by-product of the manufacture of large grindstones. Most were made
up to salvage a block that had faults that ruled it out for making
one of the large stones.
There is no longer any market for natural grindstones. This has
been supplanted by the bonded abrasive wheels made by Carborundum,
Norton and others, which could make up any desired grit from a
razor hone to a coarse stone for grinding wood pulp out of logs.
My son, Herbert C. Read, ran the business through the last war
when there was still considerable market. There was a RED SADDLE (T.M.
Reg.) mounted grindstone on every Corvette that came out of the
shipyards of Vancouver and Victoria. There was also a good market
for the regular grindstone and scythe stone because of the wartime
demand for farm and forest products. While the Reads had gone out
of production, the Read Stone Company Ltd. continued by
contracting with Frank Hornybrook, a Stonehaven quarryman, for
small grindstones and scythe stones. This continued, with a
declining market, for several years. We still shipped one pool car
a year to Vancouver and Winnipeg for customers like Marshall
Wells, McLenan, McFeely & Prior, Fairbanks Morse, J.H. Ashdown
Hardware Co. and Aukland's Ltd. Bissett and Webb, Manufacturers
Agents of Winnipeg, were our agents for the western half of
Canada. We handled the eastern half of Canada from Sackville. In
Ontario, we shipped to Cochrane Dunlop all over the province,
Wood, Alexander & James in Hamilton, other wholesalers in
Kingston, Ottawa, North Bay and Sudbury - all from the mining and
lumbering areas. In the province of Quebec the big names in
Montreal were Lewis Bros. (latterly F. Wragge) Caverhill Learmont,
Pascal, A. Prud'homme, Frothingham Starke Seybold. In Sherbrooke,
Mitchell, Codere; in Quebec/Levis: J.L. Demers, Chinic, L.H.
Hebert, Terreau & Racine, Young, Wm. Doyle, Samson &
Fillion, Jos. E. Lemieux and others in smaller centres throughout
the province.
In the Maritimes: In Nova Scotia: Douglas Hardware and Dunlop
Bros. in Amherst; A.M. Bell, Crowell Bros., Wm. Stairs, Son &
Morrow in Halifax; T.P. Calkin in Kentville; Spinney in Yarmouth;
Thompson and Sutherland in New Glasgow and others. Prince Edward
Island had R.T. Holman, Brace McKay, Rogers Hardware and C.P.
Moore. In New Brunswick: James S. Neill and E.M. Young in
Fredericton, W.H. Thorne and Emmerson & Fisher in Saint John,
Sumners in Moncton. Some of these names are no longer around.
Scythe stones were made thus: Slabs were sawn 3/4" thick
by 10" wide, approximately, by whatever length could be
utilized from the materials available - some slabs or pieces came
from the scrap pile when sawing 3/4" grindstone slabs. These
went to the Scythe Stone Shed. They were split into 1-1/4" X
10" (approx.) pieces with what might be called an upside down
froe that is still used in BC to split shingles from a bolt of
cedar with one blow of a wood mallet. A sort of guillotine was
devised that worked reasonably well but the froe and mallet were
preferred by most workmen. Since the men worked on a piecework
basis, they used the method that produced the most money for them.
They were then ground on a six-foot convex turntable made of
vertical timbers with Gang Saw blade ends driven into the timbers
(saw blades were 4" x 12' x 1/8" low-carbon soft steel).
With running water and local sand, instead of steel shot for
marble cutting, sandstone could be sawn at 1'/hr. Blades would
last 45 - 50 hours. As with sawing grindstone slabs with the Gang
Saw, water ran over the operation continually with the high
silica, local sand being the abrasive. All of the scythe stone
production was done in Stonehaven with stone from that quarry.
There were many T.M. Reg. names: "Canada Red End", the
ones I have left (but since sold to Lee Valley Tools of Ottawa)
and "Bay Chaleur", "Eclipse", "Blue
Grit", "Challenge", "Bluenose",
"Acadian Whet Stone", "Acadian Ragg" and
"King of the Harvest". In my time, the only scythe
stones sold were the "Bay Chaleur" and the "Red
End" and these were sold by the thousands all over Canada
until the synthetically-bonded abrasives took over the market.
The last of the "Canada Red End" scythe stones were
sold to Leonard Lee of Lee Valley Tools, Ottawa, in 1993 and 1994.
I have about two dozen left!
Workers at the Read grindstone quarry in Stovehaven, Baie des
Chaleurs (c.1890s)
Editor's Note:
In the mid-1980's, Mr. Read dismantled the Grindstone Museum
which he had put together in the "Carriage House" of the
Marshlands Inn (the old family home - a Heritage Property) and
donated all its contents to the town of Sackville. In January,
1999, these articles were passed on to the Tantramar Heritage
Trust, including about 200 beautiful grindstones which likely
originated from the Stonehaven quarry. I write this to assure our
readers and the members the Read family that these articles will
be well looked after and will be used to educate the public in
Tantramar (especially if, or when, Tantramar can get its own
museum) about the important role the grindstone industry has
played in the history of this region.
CONTRIBUTIONS SOLLICITED
Just like Mr. Read's contribution in this issue, your
newsletter can only succeed with your help. I will need your
assistance for information, stories, interesting "did you
knows" (to return in the next issue) and historical events
that you may wish to present and/or debate. So please call me
during the day at 506-364-5042 or at home at 506-536-0703 or write
to me (or visit) at the following address:
Peter Hicklin
c/o Canadian Wildlife Service
P.O. Box 6227
Sackville, N.B. E4L 1G6
ATTENTION: SOME DUES STILL DUE
For some of you (with your address label in italics on the
envelope that this newsletter came in), membership dues for 1999
have not yet been received. So please send $10.00 to the Tantramar
Heritage Trust, P.O. Box 6301, Sackville, N.B. E4L 1G6 or this
will unfortunately be your last newsletter!

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