Arts & Leisure

Monkton mason specializes in dry stone walls

A SOMETIMES MUSICIAN, Jamie Masefield has been a full-time builder of stone walls for 14 years. He is shown here rebuilding a fallen-down old rock wall at Miller Hill Farm in Sudbury on Monday. The farm and garden center’s owner, Nan Jenks-Jay, said Masefield was planning to stack the stones around a tree that had grown up in the former path of the wall. Independent photos/Steve James

SUDBURY — Dry stone walls are a familiar tradition in New England, but who builds and repairs them nowadays? 
Jamie Masefield, for one! 
The mason from Monkton was working on Monday at rebuilding a stone wall at Miller Hill Farm nursery and gardens off Route 73 in Sudbury. Masefield has been building and repairing stone walls full-time for 14 years. He has become so accomplished in his craft that Masefield is certified by the Dry Stone Wallers Association of Great Britain, where he has worked on similar walls with no mortar in the Lake District and Scotland. 
Masefield explains that the process evolved as farmers needed to clear their fields of rocks and it made sense to use the rocks to build walls to keep in livestock and mark the boundaries of their property. 
A well-built wall, he says, could last 100 years and the beauty is that after a century, it could be rebuilt using the same recycled stones.
Masefield works stone into barn foundations, retaining walls, stone trees and patios, along with restoring historic field walls to their original glory.

Share this story:

More News
Arts & Leisure

Two local authors release new must-read novels

On a book tour, they are the authors — with their shiny new novels, radiating the word “pu … (read more)

Arts & Leisure

Henry Sheldon Museum set to reopen May 11

The Henry Sheldon Museum reopens for the 2024 season on Saturday, May 11. This downtown Mi … (read more)

Arts & Leisure

New work on view at Edgewater Galleries

May is shaping up to be an exciting month at Edgewater Galleries in Middlebury, as they pr … (read more)

Share this story: