GTS 33 years history

HAPPY THIRTY THREE YEARS
GOOD TIME STOVE COMPANY!

The year was 1973. An oil crisis had sent America into a panic. I had just started collecting antique stoves. I'm an avid collector of art, history, and items of enchantment, and beauty. Antique stoves were my latest passion. I started collecting the stoves for their beauty and artistry.

With oil prices skyrocketing, folks were looking for alternative fuel sources, and heating stoves were an option. The stoves made a hundred years ago were still as functional and efficient as the day they were made. Not to mention they were classic, vintage pieces of history. I started to sell my stoves in response to the needs at the time.

Now, thirty three years later, I'm still selling anqitue stoves. My passion for antique stoves is still as fresh and intense today as it was on the day I opened the doors to the Good Time Stove Company.

Please join me and my beautiful daughter Sara the stove princess in celebrating our thirty three years of selling antique stoves, and celebrating an industry that was bursting with innovation and creativity.

We've created this section with nostalgia, humor and reverence for the art and beauty of the antique stove. Have fun!

Stove Black Richardson

The 70's
To visit each one of our decades in business, click on the images to the left and below.


The 80's

The 90's

The new decade
The Good Time Stove Company Library
I am a proud collector of objects of history, of art, and of enchantment, whether it be an exquisitely designed parlor stove, a cherub decorated trade card, or a garden sculpture that sits among my perennials. It is my belief that an antique stove combines all three – history, art and enchantment.

In the last few years I have amassed a vast collection of ephemera dedicated to the stove manufacturing industry; trade cards, catalogs, photographs, advertisements and the like. The number of stove related items I’ve collected has easily surpassed a thousand.

With our website, I am creating a virtual library so that I can share my collection with you. My beautiful daughter Sara, the stove princess, and my team of designers and writers have been busy creating sections that celebrate and honor the rich and relevant history of heating and cooking stoves.

The Good Time Stove Company Press

Extra, extra read all about it!

In the last thirty three years we’ve been featured in books, magazines, newspapers and various and sundry press publications. To our good fortune we’ve never appeared on a post office wall. Click here to read our quotes and articles.

The Tin Man

He has a great big heart and has been standing guard in front of our showroom and museum for 20 years.

Hampshire Life

Burning Love: Richard Richardson's Passion for Potbellies and Parlor Stoves
Hampshire Life - March 7-13, 2008.
By Sean Reagan. Photos by Kevin Gutting

Above, Richard Richardson, center, and two of his children, Sara Labonte and Jaime Labonte, stand beside a cylinder stove in the showroom of the Good Time Stove Co. in Goshen, where they sell antique stoves. At the left, onthe floor, is a line of parlor stoves and behind them are the smaller four o'clock stoves.

On Left is a Scorcher potbelly stove, circa 1880-1910.

 

 

 


Richardson has made the outside of his Good Time Stove Co. building on Route 112 in Goshen a work of art. In the back yard is a sculpture garden.

There are two ways to find the Goshen headquarters of the Good Time Stove Co. First - and perhaps most obviously - you can be in the market for a painstakingly refurbished antique heating stove or kitchen range.

It's a niche market, but after more than 30 years in the business, the Richardson family enjoys a global reputation. For stove connoisseurs and newcomers alike, their business tends to be both your first and only stop.

The other way to discover the Good Time Stove Co. is simply to drive by the Route 112 museum and showroom and say, "Whoa! What the heck is that?"

At first glance, the building - adjacent to the Richardson family home - is an explosion of color, quirky sculpture and rehabilitated refuse. It looks like an antique shop run by Willy Wonka, with all the curios tacked to the exterior walls.

"I collect sizes and shapes," says Richard "Stove Black" Richardson, while showing a visitor around recently. He wears a cowboy hat over thick silver hair. His sneakers are handpainted bright red, yellow and blue, and the back of his jacket proclaims that "Happiness is a warm stove and a cold beer."

"People really seem to like the buildings. I didn't know they were going to be such a draw," he says.

Richardson loves offering outside tours, boasting that you can spend hours studying a few square feet of wall, always turning up some new piece - a bead, a knotted rope, a square of burnished metal. Last summer, a woman pulled in around lunchtime and was still shooting photographs at dusk.

There are hand-painted saw blades, antique bed frames with plastic toys dangling from them, kaleidoscopic maple syrup buckets, masks that run the gamut from comic to frightening.

The front door of this Glenwood parlor stove in Ricahrdson's showroom is decorated with cherubs

Crisscrossed machetes reflect the bright winter sun. Mailboxes recline beside birdhouses which are propped against oven racks adjacent to discarded road signs.

And if all that doesn't get your attention, there's always the 20-foot-tall tin man with the gleaming red heart who stands front and center waving to passersby. A local farmer, using the tin man as a gargantuan scarecrow, offered to trade it to Richardson for stove parts.

Richardson, who has since acquired a costume that allows him to resemble the two-story statue: couldn't say no.

Today, tin man costume in the closet, Richardson takes a step back and considers the building that has been home to his stove business since the early '70s.

"I like to see old things - stuff that's been discarded and given up on - come back to life," he says. Then he smiles and offers what might be the Good Time Stove Co.'s corporate motto - "plus, we're just having way too much fun with it."

When Richardson takes the tour inside the museum and showroom, the effect is like the difference between night and day. If the outside is flair and flash, 'then the interior, where the stoves are, is quiet, darker, anchored by iron.

The stoves - most over a century old - have been Meticulously restored. There are squat potbelly stoves, sprawling kitchen ranges the size of small cottages, and ornate stoves with nickel trim and gleaming windows.


Richardson stokes a stove that heats his showwom. "I like to see old things - stuff that's been discarded and given up on - some back to life," he says.

"The stoves ground me," says Richardson, explaining the difference between what's outside and what's inside. He heads to the comer where a Vale Oak stove fills the room with warmth and the pleasant smell of a small cozy fire. The art, he says, feeds his spirit. The stoves, on the other hand, "keep food in the fridge."

Old photographs decorate the walls. There's the first time Richardson was photographed for the Daily Hampshire Gazette. There are framed advertisements from stove manufacturers dating back more than century. There are pictures of family and friends.

Richardson stands with his back to the stove while he talks. His daughter Sara LaBonte, otherwise known as the "Stove Princess," enters the room.

LaBonte, 31, was born at home -literally in the office where she now works each day fielding customer queries, coordinating the shipment of stoves back and forth to clients.

If you want to understand the nuts and bolts of the operation, LaBonte's the one to talk to. Like her father, she is devoted to stoves, and their compatibility is palpable.

When Richardson is trying to find just the right word to end a sentence, she'll supply it. Richardson introduces a subject - the challenge of restoring glass to antique stoves, say - and LaBonte launches a mini seminar.

Indeed, watching them work together and playoff one another lends credence to Richardson's notion that they were business partners in a past life. In this one, apparently, they've perfected the art of having fun while running a successful company.

Richardson, who is divorced, has another daughter Megan LaBonte, known as Stove Parts Girl, who also works for the company, and a son, Jaime LaBonte, no nickname, who does finishing work on the stoves and also handles a 10l of the photography for the company. Another daughter, TinaMarie, died in 2004.

Stoves have always been central to the family. When Sara was born. Richardson refinished an 1894 Highland Grand Cook and gave it to her as a gift. There's a photo in the showroom of that stove. Sara, in booties and kiddie sweater is perched atop it while her father - the beard and long black hair h as the stoves around him then - beams at her.

Those were in the early days of the business - back when Richardson had just become "Stove Black," purveyor of refurbished stoves, self-proclaimed custodian of the lost art of stove. Though he has since farmed out the bulk of the restoration work, in those days he was doing it all by hand himself, going so far as to apprentice himself to a local blacksmith learning to forge, shape and weld on his own.

Asked to share the story of how the Good Time Stove Co. came to be, he and Sara chuckle. It can be summed up in one word says Richardson: destiny.

"I was meant to live right here in Goshen and do this," he says. "This is what the Gods wanted."

Richardson, 59, grew up in New Jersey. In 1971, he was selling women's shoes and his boss offered him a promotion. Richardson had no clue what was on the horizon, but he was reasonably sure it wasn't a corporate career in the footwear industry.

So he passed on the promotion and quit the job. A few days later, a friend announced he was heading to a craft fair in Haydenville and suggested that Richardson, who had never been to Massachusetts, come along for the ride.

"I didn't have anything else to do so I said sure, I'll go to Massachusetts. Within 24 hours, I drove through Goshen for the first time and I said, 'If I could live anywhere in the world this would be it,' " says Richardson.

Within a year, he had moved to town. And soon thereafter, he bought a pair of stoves from a hotel in the Berkshires that was happy to have them off the premises.

"Basically, I'm a collector," he says of the decision. "I had a chance to buy some cool-looking stoves and I did. I liked them and I bought a few more. Suddenly I've got eight stoves and I'm broke so I had to sell a couple to pay the bills."

After a bit of restoring and repairing, selling the stoves was easier than he'd expected. He sought out the fine points of stove history - where they were made, the detail in the cast iron, the challenges in restoration.

He learned the art of iron work. He would break the stoves apart and refinish each piece - sometimes welding

Richardson, whose nicekname is "Stove Black," says his daughter and business partner, Sara "Stove Princess" Labonte, was born in the stove company office. Left, they pose with the "Tin Man of Goshen," which Ricahrdson says he acquired from a farmer by trading stove parts.

To listen to Stove Black and the Stove Princess tell it is to understand that the history of stoves is a uniquely American story. You can't tell it without touching the country's political, social and cultural history. And you can't understand it without an appreciation for the way the country transitioned from a rural backwater to a thriving global super giant.

It is also, as they are both fond of pointing out, the story of how some of what makes the American character both idealistic and indefatigable has been lost by the wayside in pursuit of money and convenience.

"Every stove that we restore and every piece of stove literature that we archive is a piece of America's history that would literally be lost otherwise," says LaBonte. "I feel a great desire to be active in the preservation of all of that."

The predecessor to stoves was the open fire - notoriously dangerous and inefficient. Fires consumed fuel at a rapid pace in exchange for relatively low levels of heat that were all but impossible to contain.

In 1742, Benjamin Franklin is believed to have invented what is called the Franklin Stove. It utilized metal to contain the fire and thus control the flow of heat. Rather than losing warmth up the chimney, the stove redirected the heat into the room where it stood.

Still, it wasn't until the middle of the 19th century that stoves became relatively commonplace for both heating and cooking. Most of the stoves and ranges that the Good Time Stove Company sells date to the period between 1840 and 1930.

In those days, stoves were the center of domestic life says Richardson. Every home had at least one. They were used to heat water for bathing, keep the outside cold at bay and cook meals.

There were stoves at local stores, at restaurants, in hotel rooms. There were stoves on trains. They were starting points for social gatherings and became stock images of the American past, idealized by artists like Norman Rockwell: two old men playing checkers and smoking in front of a hard-working potbelly stove.

At the turn of the 19th century, there were over 2,000 stove manufacturers working 24/7 to satisfy the American need for stoves. Salesmen for The Wrought Iron Range Co. of St. Louis, Mo., used to go door to door, hawking Home Comfort stoves off the back of a horse-drawn wagon.

And the stoves they produced weren't bland or uniform. There were, literally, hundreds of variations out there. Some were small while others took up half a room. Some were ornate to the point of fine art, while others were designed to be workhorses.

There was the Modern Glenwood Parlor Stove, the Ivy Franklin, the Atlantic Silver Moon, the New Era Caboose.

But when interest in alternatives to fossil-based heating fuels spiked in the early 1970s, many people in this country looked to Scandinavia for their model wood-burning stoves. They'd been in use there for decades and the presumption – somewhat inaccurate in Richardson's view – was that Scandinavian stove technology was superior to anything closer to home.

"Nobody chose to look back at an industry that was as huge as our appliance industry is today," he says. "They didn't want to hear about it. They just wanted to move forward."

A lot of those odl American stoves - maybe most of them - were destroyed in World War II, when the war effort's need for iron outweighed the need for stoves that had become, in light of technological developments, essentially antiques.

The Good Time Stove Co. deals in almost all of what remains. Some sellers approach the Richardsons, and they find others· by prowling the Internet, keeping an eye on auctions throughout the Northeast. They are, says LaBonte, experts in finding lost stoves.

Richardson's latest acquisition is an Othello stove that dates back to the 1880. Some seams need to be welded, the doors need to be reset to ensure a tight fit and a new ash pan and lid lifter will be needed.

Walking through the showroom, he gives a loving pat to a Red Cloud potbelly stove - "This was the workhorse," says Richardson. The stove threw out great clouds of heat churning steadily through fuel. Inelegant, perhaps - hence the potbelly - but a steady, reliable performer. These were the stoves that were used in public areas - country stores, hotel lobbies, restaurants.

There's also a sky-blue Harold enamel range there that has already been sold to a California investor.

Richardson's stoves are not merely decorative antiques. All of the stoves are functional and can be used for their original purpose. Their aesthetic beauty, he says, is essentially icing on the cake.

Good Time Stove Co. has sold stoves to movie sets looking to up their historical authenticity quotient. There's pair of potbelly stoves in the upcoming "Hell Boy II" and one in "Amistad" that once stood on the showroom floor.

The company gets calls and internet requests from all across the country and other parts of the world. Richardson's stoves have been shipped as far away as the United Kingdom and France.

These days, much of the restoration is done off site in Nashua, NH. Stove Black and the Stove Princess do the buying and selling – a full-time occupation for her, and close to the same for him.

It takes approximately 30 days to restore a beat up stove to a museum quality that functions safely. The company currently has a 6-month back up so great is the demand.

Asked if he has a favorite stove – to look at, to work on, to talk about – Richardson scoffs. It's literally the only time his brow can be said to furrow. How, he asks, could you possibly have a favorite one?

"I deal in some of the most beautiful stoves imaginable," says Richardson. "I look at all of them as art."

Left, two-level, dual-fuel (wood and gas) stoves at the Good Time Stove Co. Colored enamel, like taht on the light-blue Barstow, second from left, from the 1920s or 1930s, wsa one of the last visual changes before stoves went all to gas.

Over lunch in his kitchen, Richardson points out the yard – several acres of open field on the Goshen/Ashfield town line that lie behind the Richardson home and the Good Time Stove museum and showroom.

In recent years, Richardson has begun pulling back from the stove business – handing the reigns to Sara – and devoting himself to what he describes as "landscape art."

"I was really taken by all the different media you could play with outside," he says. He ticks them off – stone, vegetables, flowers, buildings.

He created small walks, sculpted bushes, piles of stones ill direct walkers here and there. The project fed his artistic side - he felt called to it the same way he felt called to stoves - but it lacked a coherent theme. While he worked, he wondered: Was this a hobby or something bigger?

When Tina Marie died, Richardson realized that what he was creating was a space that could be devoted to healing. "It really became a place where I could release my grief," he says. "That was a real turning point in the garden."

These days, even covered in snow, the garden is a captivating space. There's a small stone amphitheater in the works. There's an enormous ceramic dragon atop a long wall that doubles as - you guessed it - a stove. When the stove is lit, smoke comes out of the dragon's mouth. The garden has a name, Three Sisters Garden, for Richardson's daughters, and a Web site, www.threesistersgarden.com.

Ultimately, says Richardson, he hopes that it can be a place for anyone to visit. "When you walk through the gates, it's like walking into another world," he says. "I want it to be there for anyone who needs it."

The garden hardly supplants his stoves - nor would Richardson want it to. Yet gazing at it helps solidify one's sense that what makes the Good Time Stove Co. successful is not so much that Richardson and his family have cornered a niche market or are exceptional salespeople. It has to do with being aware of how you live and what you leave behind.

So they sell beautiful stoves, preserving a critical piece of America's past. They decorate the outside of the showroom in such a way that people can spend hours delighting in it. They turn a yard into a garden of healing and peace and open it up to the world.

And you always keep your eyes open for what might come next. "I'm 59," says Richardson. "And I'm far from done."

Sean Reagan is a Gazette reporter. He can be reached at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

Hampshire Life 2

Commerce from the Ground Up

By LAURA RODLEY - Gazette Contributing Writer
Daily Hampshire Gazette
February 11, 2008
Pg. 1, 4, 12-15

Inside today, business owners talk about the challenges ahead in 2008, in the second part of the Gazette's "Commerce from the Ground Up series.

His Business is Cooking
The playful Richard Richardson of the Good Time Stove Co. in Goshen wears his Tin Man suit in front of his store. Web sales are propelling his business.

As last week's stories suggested, questions about the health of the economy bedevil business owners and managers. In downtown Northampton, many note a slackening of customer traffic and look for gains from a new Business Improvement District. In the nearby village of Florence, small businesses are capitalizing on lower rents, free parking and community support.

It may look as though not much is going on in the Hilltowns, but business owners are busy.

The trick to survival seems to be specialization, finding a niche, keeping overhead costs low by doing as much work as possible yourself, and having the means to ride out the slow months, which are right now: January, February and March.

Customers are willing to spend money for that one special item, or for service they just can't get anywhere else. For some, business success depends on the Internet. For most, business has been good, but the increased costs of items they need to run their business cuts into profits, they say.

What follows is a town-by-town survey.

Goshen

Neil Godden is the sole proprietor of Neil C. Godden Traditional Timber Framing and Carpentry. His niche is cruck framing, a medieval timber framing found in cathedrals, which he builds with his business partner, Dave Bowman. In 10 years, his business has grown to include bmilding one entire house, beyond two or three timber frame houses a year. In cold winter weather, he works less. He said materials and tool prices have increased.

"From the time I started the project, March to June 2007, plywood had gone up 20 percent," he said, while taking off his coat after working on a timber frame in Worthington, due to be raised this month. Planer blades that cost $40 last time he purchased them now cost $52.

Judy Morin bought the Goshen General Store last April from her mother June Morin. It has been been family owned for 35 years.

"It's doing alright for now," said Morin, who started working at the store when she was 9 or 10. "when your mother owns the store, your stick here," said Morin. "Now my daighter's stuck here."

Her daughter Kelsey looks as if she thinks that its a good thing as she smiles shly poiting out squirrels on her mom's pink sweathshirt.

Morin added snowmobile parts like, carbides, or studs, catering to snowmobilers cruising trails behind her store, and ATV parts to the inventory of beer, liquor, bait and snacks.

"When they break their snowmobiles, they've got to have somewhere to go." They also can purchase Snowmobile Association of America passes there.

She expects business to pick up in the summer, with campground ' vacationers, and visitors to the DAR State Park.

Mike George is manager of George Propane on Route 9, owned by his father, Alfred, his brothers Mark and Christopher, and Mike himself. People are ordering less propane, and taking longer to pay their bills, George said.

"Fuel bills are 20 to 30 percent higher. Instead of paying tbem off in 30 days, they are paying them off in 60." However, he said, "Business is still steady. We stay busy because we're growing. Every year people are installing new gas appliances."

George said fuel prices have leveled off for a month. "As fuel deale maintain our margin."

For 37 years, Richard Richard has owned the Good Time stove Copmany on Route 112, selling and re-oring elaborately decorated, highly functional vintage woodstoves.

"The Internet drives a lot of business. We have a very high-end clientele, who buy really beautiful stoves," said Richardson, comparing his stoves to vintage cars in their appeal. "Through our Web site we make six out of 10 sales without us ever seeing the customer." One of his stoves was in the movie "Amistad" and two have been bought for the new movie "Hell Boy II".

He spices up business with fun, hence its, name. He had wanted a Tin Man costume for 15 years, to match the well-known landmark with the gleaming red heart that guards his store. He found one in New Hampshire, and, bought it, even though he was broke at the time. When he took it to a local tin-knocker, Tom Fern of Chesterfield, for alterations, it turned out that Fern had made it.

In her sixth year of business, Candy Laflam of Goshen, has an established 400 clients for her Pampered Pet Sitting, in parts of Franklin and Hampden counties and all of Hampshire County.

She says that 80 percent of those clients will use her service once a year, while 20 to 25 clients a day have their pets have a midday walk while they are at work.

"We do everything from millipedes to horses," said LaFlam, includingjhedgehogs and pot belly pigs,

While she does advertise, clients find her through word of mouth. "My vets and clients do my marketing for me," she said, She noted that business has been constant.

"In 2007, I expended in Amherst, Belchertown, and plan to expand into Greenfield," she said. "I can only thank my clients for that."

LaFlam is in the process of hiring three additional staff members, to add to her current core of five employees. Each employee works in a certain territory so the clients and animals remain familiar with them.

Worthington

Kip Porter and his partner, Mary-Beth O'Shea, give wagon rides, sleigh rides and have miniature donkeys and cute barn kittens for people to pet at their home business, O'Shea and Porter Draft Horses. They give wagon rides at weddings and special events. "That pays for their feed," said Porter.

After logging part time for 20 years, Porter has been logging full time for five with his Belgians, Mike and Rock. "I have four jobs right in Worthington. Two of them I can drive the horses to," he said, his face ruddy from working out in the wind.

Within the last year, he said, the price of logs. has dropped, cutting into his profits. "I can't increase my production," Porter said. "The horses and I can only produce so much in a given day." Nonetheless, O'Shea and Porter have a new barn with running water and electricity where they store 1,800 bares of hay trucked n from a field in June, when hay is cheapest. They received a grant a to help build the barn.

"This grant is given to Massachusetts farmers, to keep them from going out of business, toward big capital expenses to make them more economically viable," said O'Shea. She has a full-time job off the farm.

Kip shoes their six Belgians, saving over $100 a horse on each shoeing.

Today he is taking Bubba, a 6r year-old Belgian, out for his fifth round of training, with 16-year old Mike. "It's time he became a man," joked Porter. Bubba nearly died from starvation before being taken on speculation by the couple for 30 days with the hope that they might be able to save him, which is they did. He is in glowing health with a full coat. They are surprised he doesn't shy from the town plow in roaring by.

Valerie Sullivan owned a selfle serve, 2,500-bush blueberry "hobby" farm, Blazin Berries, for 13 years, until last November. The work became too much, since she so did it all herself. "It wasn't worth it," she said. She made less than $1,000 a year, selling them from ng a road-side cart with a lock box .

"I went through five locks. The neighbor kids came and snapped it off at night." The house and farm sold within two weeks. She said, "It was time to move on, and so I did," all the way to New Mexico.

Huntington

Fanciful Victorian ephemera is what Barbara Paulson specializes in, offering prints, trade cards, old postcards and books at her homebased business, Paulson's Books and Ephemera, since 1980. "I'm closed from October to May because next to my house the snow always gets beyond me."

Last year she had a windfall of 1,000 first-edition mystery books from Washington that she bought from a book reviewer-who retired, Jean White. "That went over big," said Paulson.

Steve and Linda Hamlin have run Mountain Laurel Designs from their home since 1990. Only established regular clients buy window treatments from Hamlin, who is certified in window treatments.

"People don't have money, and are concerned about their job situation," said Hamlin. "It has been incredibly slow." She dropped her Yellow Pages ad.

Their second business, selling functional bags and clocks with imprints of her husband's photographs, at fairs since 2004, is just breaking even. A few months ago, her husband started their third business, NE Webart, which is reportedly doing well. He also makes professional clown shoes for a Springfield-based company, and made 70 pairs of shoes for the "Grinch" movie.

Chesterfield

Internet advertising is responsible for consistent growth in their business, said Carol Lingg; who runs the 1886 House Bed and Breakfast in Chesterfield with her husband, Joseph Lingg.

The B&B features three rooms with a full breakfast - fruit, cereal, eggs, meat or pancakes. Right now, it's slow, she said, adding that the inn's busy season is April through October. She can't say what the coming season will be like, as customers haven't booked reservations yet.

"I lucked out," said Bonnie Smith, of Chesterfield. In the child care business for 15 years, Smith has owned Bonnie's Program for six years. She provides beforeand after-school programs for 70 to 90 children a day at New Hingham Elementary School, which serves Chesterfield and Goshen, at Westhampton Elementary, and at Anne T. Dunphy, which serves Williamsburg.

"My work is guaranteed," said Smith. "I've been really lucky to help the people in my community - Chesterfield - being able to help the working families feel happy and safe while they're working." She has 14 "fabulous" employees, and pays rent and insurance at the schools to use their space. Smith said she has met all her goals and feels fortunate to be a vital part of the schools and her own community.

After being in business full-time for 39 years, Mary Anne Coleman is cutting back at her home-based Country Miss Beauty Salon to a couple of hours a week for health reasons. "I'm getting ready to retire in the next year," she said.

Extending New England's short growing season by having two greenhouses, one for seedlings and one for crops in the ground, is one innovative move that Tevis and Rachel RobertsonGoldberg use to make their business, Crabapple Farm, steadily prosper.

They sell vegetables and eggs, farming on seven acres, with hay and pasture dn 25 acres of their 185-acre farm. They sell meat from their dozen mixed head of cattle, and two dozen sheep. They try new crop varieties every year for their 1.00 regular customers. Tevis Robertson-Goldberg foresees that California growers soon will see that "transportation is a less cost-effective option," creating more business for local growers. "Food is not a discretionary purchase," said Robertson-Goldberg.

For owners of the Chesterfield General Store, it helps to be the only local store offering candy, beer, movies, groceries, a full deli and pizza, in an eight-mile radius.

Since Denise Kellogg and her brother, Daniel LaPrade, bought Chesterfield General Store, in August 2006, Kellogg has added hard ice cream, and serves breakfast on Saturday and Sunday throughout the year.

Kellogg painted the breakfast room pale orange and added yellow salvaged Subway booths, giving the room a southwestern flair.

She hasn't done any advertising yet, but will put signs up outside when all the hardware for the new wireless cafe she is planning for customers is hooked up, within 2 weeks. "only people who live within two miles of the Verizon Wireless building can get service," she said referring to the Verizon building in chesterfield.

Her father, Daniel LaPrade, mother Claire, husband Michael and daughter Savannah, 14, help out. Kellogg says ther are an enormous help, especially since she had a go-cart accident last year, breaking her left hand. "I couldn't lift anything," she said. "My daughter had to do my hair. I got up at 4 o'clock for her to do my pony tail."

Cummington

His family helps with the 100 sheep he raises for purebred breeding stock and meat at his farm, which he has owned for 51 years. Retired from his state job, he farms full time. He has Southdowns, black-faced Suffolks and white-faced Dorsets. He has increased his show circuit from showing locally to including bigger shows in Louisville, Ky.

Amy Pulley and Alice Cozzolino are planning coffeehouses, a tasting and a film series based on environmental issues, and have just installed a bulk herb display at The Old Creamery Grocery Store in Cummington, which they have owned for over seven years. Their store is a focal point on Route 116.

Business-wise, "Mid-October to mid-December was a bit weak. We're up from last year," said Cozzolino. "Our customers talk about the economy a lot. They're worried," said Cozzolino, her arm in a sling from recent shoulder ery. "Our insurance is going way up, fuel is going way up, vendors are charging delivery fees they didn't used to.

At this point, Cozzolino said they are trying not to pass on increased business costs to their customers.

Douglass Reed is minding Cummington Supply Inc., on Main Street, started by Frances Kip in 1974, while the owners take three months off. Reed said it's been a little slow, compared to other years. "In the last couple weeks I've been selling Sheetrock and insulation. People are moving indoors to work."

According to herbalist Lisa Edson, who has owned home-based TwinStar Herbals for three years, "business is expanding." She has made herbal medicinal products geared to healing skin rashes like eczema. She has been a certified herbalist since 1999. "I make honey products mixed with herbs, to make the herbs taste good." She keeps costs down by doing all the marketing herself. She sells her products in Boston, Connecticut, Vermont and Western Massachusetts.

Cosimo Ferrante relocated his business, Mad House Imports, from Williamsburg to Cummington, on Dec. 1 last year. His business has grown so much that he needed room to spread out, and to garage his minis. He bought the space with two buildings, known as Cummington Garage for the last 30 years, with his father, Douglas Ferrante. A 1993 graduate of the New England Technical Institute in Whately, Ferrante has been interested in Minis as a hobby for 20 years, and turned the hobby into a business in the last two.

He says it is priniarily an Internnet operation - his clients find him on the Internet, sending him their cars "to fix the rust, engine and brakes, to make it like a new car," from all over the United States, including Las Vegas, Virginia, and Tulsa, Okla.

"There are only two or three other shops in the country, in California and Georgia," said Ferrante. Besides half a dozen rebuilds of Minis a year, he provides other car services, since his goal is "to stay busy in the crummy economy." He converted one Mini with a diesel engine to make it capable of running on vegetable oil, with a custom-built tank on the right side. This grease car came in second place in the 2006 Tour de Sol. Right now, he's getting a car ready that is entered to run a 1,400-mile race - the Targa Newfoundland - this summer.

Plainfield

John Lobrose has forged hinges, hooks, bathroom and kitchen items at his home-based Hot Anvil Forge part tiine for 14 years. He plans to find more gift stores, beyond Amherst and Great Barrington, to showcase his wares.

Veteran logger Michael Orzel has owned and operated Michael Orzel Logging for seven years. He says business apd firewood sales are good, since he has made adjustments. "Now you have to categorize the logs to get more money for me and the landowners, to make ends meet for the fuel buyers," he said. While prices of saw logs have gone down because there is not a lot of building, he said veneer prices are holding steady.

Commerce From the Ground Up
Today, in the second part of the Gazette's "Commerce from the Ground Up" series, reporters check in wit the Valley business owners on the state of their enterprises.

Last week's stories, archived on GazetteNET, chronicled business activity in Amherst, Belchertown, Deerfield, Easthampton, Hadley, Hatfield and Williamsburg. The two-part project is designed to assess Valley commerce at the grassroots level, in community-by-community business portraits.

As last week's stories suggested, questions about the health of the economy bedevil business owners and managers.

Here's a sample of what our reporters heard from those profiles in today's stories.

"We have a wonderful array of businesses. There is incredible potential dowtown and the character and uniqueness of the central business district is not going away. We are committed to this and want to secure it for the future. That's our greatest challenge."
-Dan Yacuzzo, Eastside Grill, Northampton.

"Comsumers are growing more comfortable with the idea of getting a lot of their produce from local growers."
-Tim Nourse, Nourse Farms, Whately.

"The economy is a little sketchy right now. We're holding our own and expect continued success. I've grown every year I've owned the store. For Florence, it gets better and better. I think the area will continue to grow."
-Linda Warburton, Herlihy's Clothing Store, Florence.

"I'm not really concerned about (a recession). I try to give the best prices I can. This year's going to be tough, I know that."
-Ben Varrecchia, Mass Outfitters, Granby.

"We feel the printed page is under assault. That means we have a job to do. We are all doing something very special. We are serving the book."
-Neil Novik, Odyssey Bookshop, South Hadley.


Kurt Brazeau, owner of MurDuff's Jewelry in Florence, shoes JoAnne Finck a ring in his store at 90 Main St.


After spending $20 million, Big Y opened its new store on North King Sterrt before December holidays last year - making it the newest in the family-owned chain's holdings.


Winter Supplies adorn the front porch of Florence Hardware on North Maple Street in the village of Florence.


Fortin, left, and her daughter, Mia Phillips, right, of Southampton, look at shildren's clothing during a midwinter sale in the new Peebles department store on Route 10 in Southampton.


Expanding Against Competition:Odyssey Bookshop staff member Meredith Crawford arranges poetry books on the lower level of the South Hadley store. The business moved into the downstairs space in November, expanding amid a continued challenge by mass-market retailers. The lower level features fictio, mystery, poetry and children's books.


Orchard Growing: Brad Morse checks out the buds of a peach tree in the Outlook Farm orchard in Westhampton. Morse plans to have 25 percent more peach trees by next year and plans to expand the store this spring.


Working Horses:Kip Porter of O'Shea and Porter Draft Horses in Worthington Schools Bubba, the horse in front with Mary-Beth O'Shea, use the horses both for work and for other people's play - through sleigh and wagon rides.


A Place To Be: Daniel Garretson of Ashfield rings up groceries at the Old Creamery Grocery in Cummington. The store, owned by Amy Pulley and Alice Cozzolino, aims to expand its rols as a community center.

A New Retailers Reflection:

Bill Cullen, owner of Winterset, a new Northampton gift store, sits with a butcher block made by Winterset and Irish Coast furniture from reclaimed pine. Cullen reflects on the realities of doing business in downtown Northampton.


Finding Niche for Yoga: Gayle Stefanelli teaches yoga at Stretch Yoga Center in Granby. In the background is Betty Boissonnault of holyoke.


Business Portrait:
COSIMO FERRANTE, 38

BUSINESS & LOCATION: Mad House Imports, 9 Main St., Cummington.

WHAT THEY DO: Take completely apart and put together Minis for clients.

WHY OPEN NOW: Cummington site has a lot more space.

BIGGEST CHALLENGE: Internet access. Using dial-.up service is like going back in time.

BIGGEST ADVANTAGE: Being in a niche, finding something that appeals to people.

VERBATIM: "The Mini itself is an automotive icon, like the Beetle and
Ford Model T. It had a history that's kind of nice. It's a cool car. It fits the economy because it was designed in '58 as a British economy car, after the Suez crisis, a little car to sell for little money on a large scale, as part of their solution for what they were experiencing in 1958."


Business Portrait: DENISE KELLOGG, 39

BUSINESS & LOCATION: Chesterfield General Store, Chesterfield

WHY OPEN NOW: "It's always someUiing I wanted to do, the breakfasts on Saturday and Sundays."

BIGGEST CHALLENGE: "It's slow right now. It's always slower after Christmas, lor the months OT January, February, March."

BIGGEST ADVANTAGE: "The convenience, living half a mile away, being able to put my daughter on the bus" and being available when she needs me."

VERBATIM: "It's a lot more work than I thought it would be."


Business Portrait: CANDY LAFLAM, 34

BUSINESS & LOCATION: Pampered Pet Sitting LLC, offices in Goshen, Easthampton and Westfield.

WHY OPEN NOW: "People need these services."

BIGGEST CHALLENGE: "I don't really know. I don't have any."

BIGGEST ADVANTAGE: "I get to work with pets all day. People heed this service. Pets are their babies, their fur kids. I get to - day in and day out - take care of. their fur kids."

VERBATIM: "I'm seeing no recession. People are still going away, still taking vacations; I have bookings until November."

More than 35 Years of History

The year was 1973. An oil crisis had sent America into a panic. I had just started collecting antique stoves. I'm an avid collector of art, history, and items of enchantment, and beauty. Antique stoves were my latest passion. I started collecting the stoves for their beauty and artistry.

With oil prices skyrocketing, folks were looking for alternative fuel sources, and heating stoves were an option. The stoves made a hundred years ago were still as functional and efficient as the day they were made. Not to mention they were classic, vintage pieces of history. I started to sell my stoves in response to the needs at the time.

Now, thirty three years later, I'm still selling anqitue stoves. My passion for antique stoves is still as fresh and intense today as it was on the day I opened the doors to the Good Time Stove Company.

Please join me and my beautiful daughter Sara the stove princess in celebrating our thirty three years of selling antique stoves, and celebrating an industry that was bursting with innovation and creativity.

We've created this section with nostalgia, humor and reverence for the art and beauty of the antique stove. Have fun!

Stove Black Richardson

The 70's
To visit each one of our decades in business, click on the images to the left and below.


The 80's

The 90's

The new decade
The Good Time Stove Company Library
I am a proud collector of objects of history, of art, and of enchantment, whether it be an exquisitely designed parlor stove, a cherub decorated trade card, or a garden sculpture that sits among my perennials. It is my belief that an antique stove combines all three – history, art and enchantment.

In the last few years I have amassed a vast collection of ephemera dedicated to the stove manufacturing industry; trade cards, catalogs, photographs, advertisements and the like. The number of stove related items I've collected has easily surpassed a thousand.

With our website, I am creating a virtual library so that I can share my collection with you. My beautiful daughter Sara, the stove princess, and my team of designers and writers have been busy creating sections that celebrate and honor the rich and relevant history of heating and cooking stoves.

The Good Time Stove Company Press

Extra, extra read all about it!

In the last thirty three years we've been featured in books, magazines, newspapers and various and sundry press publications. To our good fortune we've never appeared on a post office wall. Click here to read our quotes and articles.

The Tin Man

He has a great big heart and has been standing guard in front of our showroom and museum for 20 years.

Mother Earth

LOST STOVE ART
By Alfred Meyer Photography
By Walter Wick
Mother Earth New ARticle
IF THE FACADE OF THE GOOD TIME Stove Company in Goshen, Massachusetts, resembles a Wild West s saloon, the inside and back yard remain pure Yankee-reflecting, as they do, compulsive smithery, unbridled ingenuity, an apparent grudge against the cold, and the native ~impulse to save everything. The yard is the resting place, probably not final, of defunct stoves, broken grates, rusted hinges and an old lawn mower. The workshop at the rear of the building is crammed with acetylene tanks, casting molds, grinders, sandblasting nozzles, virgin firebrick liners, two stripped cast-iron ranges awaiting rejuvenation, and exactly one black smith, a masked man at the moment welding a seam on a stove jacket. Off to the side, as well as upstairs, shelves sag with spare parts-legs, doors, vents, grillwork-most of them salvaged from stoves beyond repair, some of them fresh recasts, some collected from the leftover inventories of late, great American stove manufacturers.

weld antique stove cast ironHowever, as is the case in most New England homes, it is the front parlor that is the show room rather than the working center. It is also here, in the front, that 40-year-old proprietor Richard Richardson (a.k.a. Stove Black) displays his completely restored antique wood- and coal-burning stove~ and ranges. To browse among them is to attend a rally of classic engines of warmth, all poised for fuel, ignition and radiance. Some are relatively recent, like the sleek, baked/-enamel 1928 Kalamazoo cooking range destined for shipment to Mexico, where it will serve as a prop for a Hollywood film. Others, like the' black Glendale brooding in. the corner, represent the apex of cast-iron stove manufacture in America, a period culminating shortly after the turn of the century. Still others qualify as truly venerable, like the pair of late 18th-century Franklins or, the oldest of all, the 1790 Ten Plate that stands against the rear wall.

smith and anthony parlor stove "Technically, they're just heating and cooking appliances," says Richardson. "And those you see here are now in tiptop shape, ready to be fired-to bake bread, heat rooms, put some soul in our houses again. But I ask you, look closely. Everyone is also a time traveler, an artifact that tells you not only something of the history of metallurgy and of the technology of combustion, but also a bit about how we once lived and how households worked. Think, for example, of what it meant for a farm family to acquire a second, slightly smaller range for what used to be known as the summer kitchen, often located on the back porch. It made cooking and life itself, I would venture, at least for the cook-far more bearable during the hot days of July and August.

smith and anthony parlor stove "But there's another aspect," Richardson continues, excitement beginning to carry him. "Every stove is a work of functional art as well. A lost art, perhaps, but an art nonetheless. Marvels of engineering and design, in my opinion. In fact, 'Lost Stove Art' is how the Connecticut Valley Historical Society billed an exhibition of several of my stoves not long ago. I think they got the name right."

antique cylinder stove heats workshop Lofty sentiments, perhaps, for a man who calls himself Stove Black, yet judging from the appearance of his floor models he is right. These were not mere instruments of utility, meant to labor out of sight in the basement. Rather they were showpieces, as ornate and busy in some cases as, say, Victorian sofas, or as simple and spare in others as, say, Shaker chairs. Whether through the curlicues in. nickel trim, the shapes of brass finials or the figures and scenes molded from the stove iron itself, the old builders clearly catered to the tastes of their day.

antique cylinder stove stewart oak "Well, they had to if they wanted to sell stoves," Richardson points out. "That's what the stove business was all about, obviously, and still is, as far as I'm concerned. This is how I make a living, you know. Even so, 1 can't stop admiring the skill, thought and creativity that went into making these stoves. 1 mean, they not only worked splendidly, they were beautiful, too. Still are, those that are left."

It was a pair of such beauties that launched Richardson on his restoration career 15 years ago. He discovered the twins by accident, identical Stewart Rounds rusting away in the cellar of a Berkshires hotel. "I got them for little more than moving them out of there," he recalls. "They were the tall commercial stoves typically used in hotels, churches, depots, even steamboats. 1 went to work right away, naively with emery paper and a steel brush. By now my methods are considerably more sophisticated, I promise you."

antique parlor stove herald So it would seem, for in the intervening years Richardson has had to acquire a variety of skills, not only in metal- and iron working, but in industrial research and marketing as well.

"First 1 apprenticed myself to a local blacksmith, then to another one up the way. 1 learned to forge, shape and weld. Most important, 1 learned metal fabrication and how to work with cast iron, a material almost obsolete now, but which requires great finesse in technique. Iron is the name of the stove game, by and large. After that come the decorative elements: nickels, brasses, micas and so forth. The point is, faced with a cracked molding, a broken leg or a missing vent door, I've often had to make the replacement from scratch."

antique cooking stove quaker He's also had to plunge into some extraordinary research, tracking down long-out-of date sales manuals, catalogues and manufacturing specifications for various makes of stoves. Through these, as well as through the Limited number of available semi scholarly books devoted to the 19th-century stove industry, Richardson has turned himself into a learned historian of the art and science of heating.

Beyond bringing a stove back to near perfect condition, however, the most rewarding part of his business, he admits, is fieldwork, that is, locating old stoves that he can buy and restore.

"At this point," he says, "I'm an expert at getting wind of an available stove, particularly here in New England, the heart of stove country. I'm also good at helping people scrounge through attics, cellars, garages and barns where a jewel just might be moldering away underneath a tarp in some nook or cranny."

Once a restorable stove or range is found, not only its pedigree but also its individual history is discussed, followed by a struck bargain. Most of the time. "The finest old Garland 1 ever saw 1 couldn't buy," he recalls ruefully.

"The farmer in whose barn 1 found it refused to sell. Not because of my offer, which was generous, but because his cat preferred to have her kittens in its oven. He didn't want to disturb her routine. Still doesn't, damn it all. What a stove."

At this stage, Richardson enjoys a national clientele, displaying his stoves not only on the show-room floor in Goshen but, more recently, on videodisc. Moreover, his very success has trained him in the most fundamental skill of all when it comes to commerce in old stoves: lifting very, very heavy things.

antique cooking stove quaker