
Our Story
A
few years ago my wife Sue wanted a wheelbarrow to use as a flower
planter in our front yard. We set out to find an antique wheel; but
even with the help of my brother, who is an antique dealer, we were
unable to find a wheel that wasn’t broken, bent or missing
parts-such as the brackets to hold the axle to the wooden frame. I
just didn’t want to build Sue’s wheelbarrow and have a sloppy,
cobbled-up mess of a wheel.
Several months later my brother did locate a
complete wheel and axle in fine condition and it didn’t take me long
to build Sue’s wheelbarrow, just in time for Santa to deliver it on
Christmas morning. What seemed to be a happy ending was actually the
beginning of another story.
Many
of our friends and visitors asked if I could make a wheelbarrow for
them, and to each and all I explained how difficult it was to find a
wheel and axle assembly. And the nagging thought kept running
through my mind that someone should offer an old-fashioned wrought
iron wheel.
Developing the first wheel took a year and a half
of trial and error, and the purchase of new equipment for cutting
and forming and welding metal and building the various jigs and
fixtures that could not be bought. The result was a 15-inch
diameter, 8-spoke wrought iron wheel and axle, patterned after the
antique wheel on Sue’s wheelbarrow, which we now offer along with
wheels of other sizes and spoke configurations.
These
wheels, and our universal stub axle, are designed for a wide range
of uses on ornamental projects such as carts, wagons and buckboards
reminiscent of a “Byegone” era. We want you to be satisfied with
your wheels; and because great ideas need to be shared, we invite
you to send us a snapshot of your completed projects.
Wayne Groth
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