| Note
to Reporters and Editors: Photographs to accompany this release are
available by e-mail from Janice Fink at jfink@coe.eng.ua.edu.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Several metallurgical and materials engineering
students at The University of Alabama are donating their time and
skills to help restore a pre-Civil War mausoleum to its original
state.
The elaborate 20 by 20 foot structure, located in Tuscaloosas
Evergreen Cemetery next to Bryant-Denny Stadium, was built in 1859
by Dr. Simeon J. Eddins. Although the tomb no longer houses any
remains, a marker serves as a remembrance to Eddins brother-in-law,
a Confederate soldier once buried there. Due to weather and age,
much of the buildings iron trim and window centerpieces had
been damaged and deteriorated, robbing it of its historic features.
Betsy Hayslip, executive director of the Heritage Commission of
Tuscaloosa County and current owner of the mausoleum, suggested
its restoration as a hands-on project for engineering
students to Dr. Garry Warren, professor of metallurgical
and materials engineering at UA.
I think that the mausoleum is a treasure to Tuscaloosa,
said Hayslip. And I wanted to show the community what wonderful
artistic things the engineering students at The University of Alabama
could do.
Warren helped organize a group of students to undertake the restoration,
including members of the student chapters of three engineering societies:
the Minerals, Metals and Materials Society; AMS International; and
the American Foundrymens Society. He has also served as their
faculty adviser for the project.
They are working to restore two main elements of the building -
the decorative iron window trimmings and the iron icicles that hung
from the roof of the building.
We are completely remaking the window centerpieces and the
trim, said Warren. To do this, we took one of the centerpieces
and used it to make a mold. We also made a mold of the icicle trim
that hangs down from the roof - this we made from the last original
piece that remained.
Students are casting the pieces in the Colleges Farabee Metal
Casting Laboratory by pouring molten iron into molds of the iron
trim, to create new, accurate replicas. The pieces are being made
from gray iron, or cast iron, which was the material used for the
original trim.
This project is certainly over and above what students do
in their required classes, said Warren. Each student
that is working on this does so in their extra time.
And along with getting to participate in preserving the communitys
history, the students are also gaining some practical experience
in making cast iron parts, he added.
The restoration started a year ago, and is expected to be completed
by the beginning of the summer. This is still a work in progress,
said Warren, but it wont be much longer now before this
historic landmark looks the way it should.
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