DUNN COUNTY - For this work, bring a strong North Dakota back.
Experience is helpful, but not necessary. Salary is not negotiable. There is none.
A strong back will be needed to cut cottonwood beams and juniper rafters. It will be needed to shovel decades' worth of fallen plaster and dirt blown in through broken windows. It will be needed to hack away grass overgrown around abandoned farm equipment, dig a new hole and repair the outhouse.
The Hutmacher farmhouse in rural Dunn County will be taken off the list of endangered historic places and, like the bald eagle, saved for the future.
Preservation North Dakota, based in Buffalo, will hold a restoration work week Saturday through July 21 at the Hutmacher site. It's located 10 miles northwest of Manning on a windy gravel road.
The group will take all comers, though they need to register. Helpers should bring a working attitude and their own money for food, lodging and safety gear.
As old farmhouses go, this one is of some repute in historic circles, here and elsewhere.
In all of the Midwest, it is unique, said preservation director Dale Bentley, whose nonprofit group named the site to its 2007 most endangered list of historic sites.
It is not the only sandstone prairie house built in a style brought over from the Black Sea region of the Russian Ukraine, the stone prized from sandstone outcroppings in nearby Dunn County hills and held together with clay and straw mortar.
It is singular in that, like the house, all five outbuildings also are made of stone. In every other known site, other buildings, the barn or granary, were built of wood.
Those stone walls are 16 inches thick. And they are all still standing.
Stone, like a good North Dakota back, remains upright.
All else is in disrepair, hovering on ruination. The floors, the windows and the roofs of cottonwood beams and cedar rafters woven with willows have given way to time and weather.
It is not too late, Bentley says.
Save America's Treasures provided a matching grant of $98,000 for the project. It's the same group that helped preserve the Old North Church in Boston, where in 1775 Paul Revere had two lanterns lighted to signal the British approach by sea.
History in the colonies and history in the heartland is different in time and in intent. But it is all America's story.
As North Dakota's story goes, the Hutmacher farm is not all that old.
Frank Hutmacher built the house and buildings in the years 1928 to 1930.
At that time, craftsman houses with indoor plumbing were in vogue in towns and cities. But Hutmacher used the materials in the hills around him and the old world skills he learned from his father, Valentine, who used the same style and stone to build the homestead buildings a mile to the southeast in 1911.
The house was occupied until 1979, when Frank Hutmacher's son, Alex, moved to Dickinson. It never did have plumbing. Nor did it have a well for water, or other than a coal stove for heat. It did eventually have electricity.
The ceilings, when Alex Hutmacher left, were covered in bright oilcloth held in place with Mason jar lids.
Bentley thinks the interior should be restored back to the '70s, when the home was last occupied, rather than to the '20s, when it was built.
It was as if life in the Jimmy Carter, polyester wearing-era somehow never penetrated those thick stone walls.
The inside, with faded curtains blowing through the broken window glass, is for later.
Now comes the outside, where time has been waiting.
The Hutmacher farm was saved before, by Steve Burian, a neighbor, who bought the small acreage and donated it to the Dunn County Historical Society in memory of the pioneers.
The elderly society, unable to do all the necessary maintenance, deeded it back to the Burian family.
Arnold Burian, of Bismarck, Steve Burian's son, said the family was happy to deed it over again in March, this time to Preservation North Dakota.
"It would be a significant loss if it's not preserved," said Burian, who plans to bend his back to the shovel out at the site.
It is the first time the nonprofit has accepted ownership of an historic property.
Bentley said he believes future Hutmacher work projects, like what has happened with dinosaur digs, could find a niche in experiential tourism. That's the kind where people pay for the opportunity to experience and learn something real.
There will be real work to do, starting with the general tidying up, sorting and digging out scheduled starting July 14.
Bentley said he believes the day will come again when the Hutmacher farm looks like it once did, a series of modest, but intrinsically beautiful stone buildings with high hills on the windward side and the prairie stretched out front.
Besides a strong back, helpers should bring some North Dakota soul, the kind that makes them relish the feel of wind drying their own sweat and the taste of dirt they've breathed, washed down with cold water.
To register for this and possibly two other work weeks this year, call 633-2763.
(Reach reporter Lauren Donovan at 888-303-5511 or lauren@;westriv.com.)
Posted in Local on Saturday, July 7, 2007 7:00 pm Updated: 3:46 pm.
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