Estabrook

Lime quarry

ref: www.kouroo.info  Fall1996_StephenFElls.pdf "Henry Thoreau and the Estabrook Country: A Historic and Personal Landscape", Stephen Ells, Note 31.

It is worth reading the referenced paper - 86 pages, of which the lime quarry is just a reference. A few of my selected notes from the reference:

  • The quarry was in operation in the late 1600s and early 1700s.
  • Lime was mined for cement and plaster. It could be used as flux in the bog iron process. It is noted in the article that there is no indication that this lime was used for iron manufacture, but there was a bog iron operation further west in Concord.
  • Description: "eight pits, as wide and deep as 10 feet, and up to seventy feet long, following beds of marble that stand vertically and pinch out at both ends into thin seams"
  • Fenn school project: estimated that workers excavated 7,600 cubic feet of limestone and rock from the largest quarry, and hauled to the kiln located a quarter of a mile south"
estabrook lime quary 131018cr
Estabrook lime quarry winter 140105cr

Stone walls are so much a part of the rural New England country. This one was striking for how straight it is, and its unobstructed view.

estabrook wall 130922cr
rock wall w lichen 140405cr
lillypads punkataset clouds 130727r
dragonfly punkataset 130727c

Hiking - Open Space

Simple things - there is only one location this marker could be - fun that the point indicated is at the junction of three towns, located a ways into some woods.

three town marker sudbury stow mayard