WoodCentral Forums

Est. 1998 — 27 years of woodworking knowledge

A walk back in time

Posts

A walk back in time

Edited #1

Ellis Walentine

Hi folks,

Well, I sent our esteemed webmaster Peter a copy of the only video we ever published, 16 years ago, of one of my oldest friends, Bill McCarthy, in the steam-powered woodworking shop that he set up in one of his barns.   An avid historian who ran "Restoration Millwork," a cabinet shop and architectural woodworking business for many decades, and who has designed and engineered an amazing body of work -- from flintlock rifles, including a breech loading model -- to authentic period millwork, to steam engines of his own design, Bill has been collecting vintage woodworking machines ever since I've known him. I remember one of the first times I was getting to know him back around 1973, he had retrofitted an old BSA motorcycle transmission to a 24" Whitney planer to change feed speed on the fly. He also built a 29' Friendship sloop from scratch, complete with white oak planking, oakum joints and a thousand-pound lead keel that he melted and poured from a bathtub. And can you imagine turning a mast for a boat that size? He also set up a 50" circle mill on his property, hooked up to a diesel truck engine. All this said, Bill is still defying expectations, designing and building a combination wood- and metal-working shop at his home in PA, with the most extensive and exotic collection of machinery you can imagine. 

In retrospect, I think this is a pretty decent movie. You be the judge. All the credit for the video editing goes to Peter Parker Brodhead, the son of another old friend who now runs a large presentation business, with big-name clients all over the place. I was lucky to catch him at an early inflection point in his career to shoot this film with me. It looks like Peter Martin, our webmaestro, has done quite a lot of work on it too, to prepare it for streaming in this site.

Without further ado, please set aside 40 minutes and take a walk with me back into the nearly forgotten history of woodworking from the dawn of the Industrial Revolution.

https://www.woodcentral.com/gallery/index.php?/category/523

Ellis Walentine, Host

Re: A walk back in time

#2

Well, that was an enjoyable and informative 40 minutes.  Well done, Ellis.  Thanks!

Re: A walk back in time

#3

I concur, most enjoyable.  Thanks Ellis, Bill, and all that produced this video.

Re: A walk back in time

#4

Enjoyable tour through history. The woodshop filmed in Shawshank Redemption is in my hometown, and although it was electrified, it's still a fascinating place. I can remember being in it as a kid when it was in operation and being overwhelmed with magnitude and complexity of the machinery.

Re: A walk back in time

#6

Ellis Walentine

@admin,
Actually no. I tried many combinations of "bill mccarthy, musket, breech loading, shop shot" and they returned long lists of forum posts and no Shop Shots (except one that showed up of my visit to the PopWood show in 2009, where McCarthy's name was probably mentioned), so I went to the Shop Shots heading under Articles and scrolled down until I found it, which also wasn't easy because I knew the flintlock shot was an early one -- Shot 83 to be exact -- but it shows up in the list as #821, because of the way the script orders the shot numbers into the list. Not sure this is worth fixing. The search box actually took me to a Google results page at one point, which surprised me when I found several iterations of the Steam Workshop video on YouTube, though not in its entirety, probably because of the file size limitation? 

I'm not sure how or why people would be searching Shop Shots anyway, unless they know some specific terms they recall from an earlier reading -- unless they are looking for some generic topic that may have been mentioned in a shop shot. I think searching by the shop owner's name would have been useful. On a site like WC, with so many departments and so many thousands of pages of content and hundreds of thousands of messages, I can see how a generic search might return thousands of results, which wouldn't be too helpful. You've done a great job with the search function, but I suspect it's going to have limitations no matter what.

Ellis

Re: A walk back in time

#7

admin

@Ellis Walentine,
Searches for each section need to be made from the section page, as they all search different databases. For example, on the following page, replace "bill mccarthy" in the search box with something else, and it will search all the "article" files looking for that string of characters. 

https://www.woodcentral.com/?q=&p=Articles&search=bill%20mccarthy

It's not a fancy search, just a "needle in a haystack" search looking for a string of characters in the thousands of "article" files, but that is often helpful, opposed to reading all of the thousands of files looking for something. For example, looking for information on a Jet JJ-8CS jointer:

https://www.woodcentral.com/?p=Articles&search=jj-8cs

Re: A walk back in time

#8

This is a great presentation. Thanks to you for publishing this story.

Re: A walk back in time

#9

Alan Young

Wow! Excellent! and Fascinating.

Re: A walk back in time

#10

No place else than Wood Central.

YouToobers! Eat your hearts out

Re: A walk back in time

Edited #11

admin

Ellis Walentine wrote:

@admin,
Actually no. I tried many combinations of "bill mccarthy, musket, breech loading, shop shot" and they returned long lists of forum posts and no Shop Shots ...


The Archive section has been rewritten and now works much better:

https://www.woodcentral.com/?p=Archive&search=bill+mccarthy
https://www.woodcentral.com/?p=Archive&search=musket
https://www.woodcentral.com/?p=Archive&search=unicorn
https://www.woodcentral.com/?p=Archive&search=russ+finishing+secrets
https://www.woodcentral.com/?p=Archive&search=grandfather+clock
https://www.woodcentral.com/?p=Archive&search=tindall+wood+treatment
https://www.woodcentral.com/?p=Archive&search=jet+table+saw
https://www.woodcentral.com/?p=Archive&search=jet+lathe

Updated 2026-03-14 10:44:35 to add more examples

👍 This page answered my questions

Your vote helps other woodworkers quickly find the answers and techniques that actually work in the shop.