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GRAFFITI HOUSE GOOD SOLDIERS, BAD ARTISTS NEW SCRIBBLINGS REVEALED page 2
Graffiti House still has mysteries to reveal

 Conservation technician Kirsten Travers works with a bottle of water and razor to peel paint from the walls.
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Date published: 7/23/2007

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She is quick to admit, however, that she would love to return and assist whoever restores the plaster.

In a few places, there are three layers of paint over the graffitied plaster.

Since buildings with Civil War graffiti are extremely rare, so are technicians like Travers.

"I've checked around and I can't find anyone else in the United States that does what I do," she said.

Graffiti houses are so rare, in fact, that this is only the second one Travers has worked on during her 11-year career. The other was in Fairfax, and that's where Edrington discovered her.

"We planned to have her come down here as soon as the grant officially came through," said Edrington.

Although graffiti houses like the one in Brandy Station thoroughly excite Travers, she obviously can't make a living from such occasional jobs.

In the past several years she has worked on a number of other different but highly specialized projects, including restoring a Saturn 5 rocket for NASA in Houston. This fall she will be part of a similar Saturn 5 restoration project at NASA's Huntsville, Ala., facility.

Before that, however, there is the challenge of the Brandy Station job and a graffiti-house project in Edinburg.

"The new owners had just redone the whole house when a former resident showed up on their doorstep one day and asked, 'Hey! Do you know about all that Civil War graffiti on the walls?'" Travers said with a smile.

She is a woman who loves her work, and Edrington and the BSF are glad they found her.

"After she finishes we will have a better idea what we are dealing with," said Edrington. "When we have a full assessment of what is needed, then we can work on applying for actual restoration grants."

And, Edrington stresses, time is critical because of the age of the plaster and the fact that trains rumble through all day on the Norfolk Southern tracks about 30 yards from the house.

Travers, who uncovered about 20 square feet of wall on Friday alone, will complete her work on Tuesday.

Within the next month the BSF will be putting together engineering proposals in order to prepare a complex architectural report. That will be submitted to state and federal authorities so the preservation group can apply for restoration grants.

The Graffiti House, with only parts of its walls exposed, opened in 2002 and now serves as an information center for the Brandy Station battlefield.

Donnie Johnston:
Email: djohnston@freelancestar.com


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