KELLYSMYTH


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Portrait of Kelly Smyth

Frequent selection for inclusion* in EarlyAmericanLife magazine's Directory of Traditional Crafts is significant recognition for forging (not fabricating) historic hardware for newly constructed buildings or ships for various historic sites. Any opportunity to study originals, either in situ or collections, is pursued.

Besides forging historic hardware for various projects in a stone blacksmith shop at a small historic site without electricity, Smyth has begun offering adult workshops through the local community college's department of continuing education. This is in addition to a long standing summer series for the ten to twelve year old set. Smyths' ventures off site include speaking at two international conferences about historic ships' hardware and teaching workshops at various regional venues. This is the logical continuation to nearly ten years spent demonstrating and interpreting historic blacksmiths' work at two of the premier living history museums in the country.

Although not unprecedented, Smyth's recent invitation to return to the Mall as a participant in the forty-first Smithsonian Folklife Festival is quite rare. Originally invited to attend the thirty-eighth Folklife Festival (in 2004) at the maritime venue for historic blacksmiths' work forging (not fabricating) ships' hardware for three (now five) recently constructed historic vessels: Susan Constant and Discovery / 1607 / Jamestown Settlement (VA), Kalmar Nyckel / 1638 / near the Rocks on the Christina River (Delaware) plus the John Smith 400 Shallop and the Sultana (both in Chestertown, Maryland), this national opportunity will be a general presentation of historic blacksmiths' work typical to buildings like the new Print House at Historic St. Mary's City, Maryland's seventeenth century capitol (and one of Smyths' projects last year), and Jamestown Settlement, celebrating its four hundredth anniversary this year.

"When I first started this work, I was given very little instruction but as an interpreter at a living history museum I had tools (including forge, bellows, anvil, and vice), coal, materials, and hours to practice the basics while trying to offer the general public some understanding of what they were seeing. Certain techniques I taught myself in those early days have allowed me to forge certain items with relative ease such as the buttonhead bolts - nearly a thousand to date (1/2", 5/8", 3/4", 7/8", 1" & 1 3/8") - I've made for the historic ships I've worked on or marlinspikes, a tool used for splicing line, with tapers that are necessary to many other forgings such as hinges".

Since Smyth is primarily self-taught and understands most of the common mistakes, he is able to save his students countless hours of frustration trying to gain the skills they need to pursue their various projects or alter perceived errors into delightful alternatives. * 2007, 2006, 2005, 2004, 2003, 2002, 1999, 1998, 1996, 1995

KELLYSMYTH
415 Cedar Ave.
New Smyrna Beach, FL 32169
Phone: 386-424-9136
Email: mkellam2@cfl.rr.com

KELLYSMYTH has been selected for the following Directories:

2011
Year: 2011, 
				Category: Metals
METALS
2010
Year: 2010, 
				Category: Metals
METALS
2009
Year: 2009, 
				Category: Metals
METALS
2008
Year: 2008, 
				Category: Metals
METALS
2007
Year: 2007, 
				Category: Metals
METALS
2006
Year: 2006, 
				Category: Metals
METALS
2005
Year: 2005, 
				Category: Metals
METALS
2004
Year: 2004, 
				Category: Metals, Iron
METALS, IRON
2002
Year: 2002, 
				Category: Metals, Iron
METALS, IRON
1999
Year: 1999, 
				Category: Metals, Iron
METALS, IRON
1998
Year: 1998, 
				Category: Metals, Iron
METALS, IRON
1996
Year: 1996, 
				Category: Metals, Iron
METALS, IRON
1995
Year: 1995, 
				Category: Metals, Iron
METALS, IRON
Biography updated January 12, 2023   Photograph updated February 9, 2021  Contact information updated April 15, 2011
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