Day 3: April 11, 2018
Accurate Art

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When I checked into the Holiday Inn Express, the clerk clerk put me on the downtown side but told me there really wasn't much of a view. It's definitely not very scenic but the picture does show how close I was to the city center. More importantly, I was only a couple blocks from where Willie played last night. The second picture, from the sidewalk near the hotel, shows how close it was to the 10th Street Bridge.

For my last meal before leaving Pittsburgh, I walked a few blocks to this dinerish place that had caught my eye. The bacon & eggs were tasty and every customer besides me was greeted by name.

I left the big city on old US-22. The drive was enjoyable but gray skies and leafless trees made things far from photogenic. I think I was getting kind of desperate when I snapped this picture of my return to my home state.

In New Philadelphia, I stopped to photograph the Tuscarawas County courthouse in the midst of having its dome restored. I used the stop to also photograph the city's rooftop welcome sign. This version was erected in 2003 but is similar to a sign that stood from 1912 to 1946. I grabbed the Quaker Theater picture from the car and regret not coming back to get a night time shot.

The shortage of camera targets came to an abrupt end when I entered the Warther Museum in Dover, Ohio. I'd had people tell me about it and I'd driven by it a few times but I was not at all prepared for what I saw inside. Words, pictures, or videos do not do come close to describing Earnest "Mooney" Warther's creations. The tour starts with Mooney's workshop. There's an array of woodworking tools and the fireplace that provided heat for the shop and the steel for Mooney's metal work. Artistically arranged arrowheads line the ceiling and upper parts of the walls. The last photo the perfect fitting handles and 139 interchangeable blades that Mooney developed to assist him in his carving.

Because articles made of ebony and ivory had survived centuries in Egyptian tombs, those materials became his ideal. Unable to afford either, Mooney initially used other woods and bleached cow bones. Except for the 1830 labeled steam engine, every object containing bone was eventually destroyed by Mooney or its bone was replaced with ivory. This piece survives only because it was forgotten in the attic.

Mooney lied about his age to begin working in a steel mill when he was fourteen. To add a little weight to his young body he attached chains to the apron he wore. This also added protection as he slid sheets of steel into the big shear. The picture of the apron also shows the steel shoe caps he made for himself and others at 13 cents a pair. Mooney and his co-workers, including one eating his cheese and rhubarb pie lunch, are present in the working model he built of that steel mill. Working pliers, made of a single piece of wood with "10 perfect cuts", was Mooney's signature. For fun he made them from match sticks and toothpicks. The match stick in the center of the circle contains ten sets of pliers and has kept its head. Making items like this, which served no practical purpose, he called whittling. The "tree" contains 511 pliers made with 31,000 cuts in 64 days. It was something he envisioned spontaneously and he announced those numbers (511, 31,000, and 64) before he started "whittling".

Mooney made quite a few canes and several had free floating objects in them. both of these have free floating things inside free floating things. The one on the left has a ball inside a cage floating inside the bars of another cage. Certainly impressive but there enough space between all the bars to make you feel confidant that it was done with extreme skill and not magic. Looking at the cane on the right shakes that confidence just a bit. One ball is contained in another with triangular openings so small that no one, including Mooney, has ever touched the ball inside.


Mooney was a big fan of steam power and used his skills to document its history. He actually did this twice. The first time he started off with Isaac Newton's 1680 concept which is pictured. The second photo is from the second set which Mooney started even earlier with the ancient Greeks. Mooney completed Great Northern Engine #2577 in 1933 and he considered it his masterpiece. One reason he gave was the intricate pipes beneath the cab. The number 2577 identifies a real engine. It was chosen because its reverse, 7752, is the total number of parts in the model. The inlaid ivory script below the train is Mooney's own handwriting. Ivory cannot be bent or molded so every letter, and the opening to hold it, had to be carved exactly as you see it. The Union Pacific "Big Boy" was carved of burled walnut in 1953 and marked the end of Mooney's History of Steam.

Of course, he was not about to stop carving so moved from the history of steam itself to historic moments involving steam. Among these are the Driving of the Golden Spike, the Great locomotive Chase, and others. Lincoln's Funeral Train is a highlight. Every one of the models in the museum is absolutely accurate with incredible details. Among those on the Lincoln train are the engineer in his cab and a key for an internal door.


Visiting the Warther home was interesting but anti-climatic. It's set up to represent the 1920s Note one of Mooney's pliers on the cabinet by the player piano.

Mooney's wife Freda as an avid button. She arranged them in artistic patterns which are displayed in the small building behind the house. This was the original museum but was quickly outgrown. It's barely big enough for buttons let alone trains.


It was nearly eleven years ago that I visited Rascals Saloon to see Patrick Sweany. I've always intended to return but it somehow never worked out until tonight. It wasn't as hopping as it was that first time but it sure wasn't dead. It was open mic night with a small but talented set of performers and a small but attentive audience. That's Atom Lax, in the photo. Atom filled the first hour or so with some originals and covers that included Leo Kottke. That's something you don't hear every day.

I sat at the bar chatting with owner Sandra, her husband Pottsy, and a few other folk. I promised them -- and myself -- that I'd be back sooner than eleven years.


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