Forging ahead with new shop in Millerton

MILLERTON — Battle Hill Forge is moving to Millerton. The perennial stars of the Falls Village Halloween Scarecrow Contest are in the process of moving their equipment and materials to new quarters, shared with Gilmor Glass Works at 2 Main St. (at the junction of routes 22 and 44).Israel Fitch is a co-owner of the forge with Willy Blass. Fitch said Monday, Jan. 28, that the Falls Village site, with its distinctive metal sculptures and odds and ends in the yard, is for sale.“We’ve outgrown this space,” he said, gesturing toward the workroom, which, despite being mostly empty, still feels cramped.“It’s tight in here even without the machinery. Plus we’ll be making bigger pieces, and we don’t want to work outside.”Fitch said he and Blass have collaborated with John and Jan Gilmor before, notably on an eight-ribbed steel pumpkin that the Gilmor team blew glass into.“We had a really good time with that partnership,” Fitch said, adding that the future partnership feels “kind of exciting.”In addition to having plenty of room for Battle Hill’s more ambitious projects, the new digs will allow for an expanded retail presence as well.Getting the heavy equipment over to Millerton was an experience, Fitch said. Many of the machines are too big and/or heavy to allow for transport by trailer or pickup truck.Richard Plunkett of West Cornwall, whose company, Collections Care Transport, specializes in transporting artworks, helped with the move, which involved machines weighing two-and-a-half tons — and the forklifts to handle them.“We got the heavy stuff moved in two days,” Fitch said.A pickup was loaded with smaller items: an anvil, a welding table and something called an oil-quenching container.“That’s for Damascus steel blades — pattern-welded steel,” explained Fitch to a bemused reporter, adding business is booming. “We’ve never been so busy.”The client list is getting fairly high-profile. Battle Hill just completed the creation and installation of 70 feet worth of steel wattle fencing at The Cloisters museum and garden, part of The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.The project took 11 days from start to finish, including two days at the site — one to measure and one to install.

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