CAMA show hasn’t run out of steam yet

KENT, Conn. — Antique machinery enthusiasts from around New England and New York had beautiful weather for the Connecticut Antique Machinery Association’s (CAMA) 11th annual Spring Power-up on Saturday, May 2.
 
As always in this yearly tradition, CAMA members invited the public onto their grounds next to the Sloane Stanley Museum just off Route 7 to browse and admire the group’s extensive collection  of steam and internal combustion engines and tractors, to walk through the historic Cream Hill Agricultural School and to visit the Connecticut Museum of Mining and Mineral Science.
 
Machinery enthusiasts were also invited to display their own collections and set up vendor booths that offered antique tools and machinery parts for purchase.
 
Austin Kurtich of Harwinton demonstrated the process of blacksmithing, creating a J-hook that could be used to hang things such as clothing.
 
Among those attending were Rich Longolucco and Todd Sposato of Hopkinton, R.I., who made the almost two-hour drive to northwest Connecticut. 
 
Longolucco had previously attended one of CAMA’s festivals when he was coincidentally passing through town and decided to check it out. While roaming the grounds he noticed the construction of the blacksmith barn and stopped to help an employee who was struggling with installing one of the ceiling beams. 
 
Longolucco explained that the simple act of kindness allowed him to feel a sense of ownership of the building, and when Sposato, a machine shop teacher, told him about the 2015 Spring Power-up he knew he had to return.
 
The Kent Lions Club was on hand cooking hot dogs, hamburgers and french fries, with the proceeds going to help defray their operating costs.
 
 Click here for another photo.

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