Houston daily journal. (Perry, GA) 2006-current, December 09, 2006, Page Page 16, Image 50

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Hometown Pimiotiins Made in 1 America 1 | 1 Wheelwright Tim Hoffman pours water on a hot rim of steel and momentarily disappears in a billowy cloud of steam at Hansen Wlieel & Wagon Shop in Letcher, S.D. (pop. 160). "We don’t use glue or nails to hold tlie spoke to the wheel, so the shrinking steel pulls everything up tightly for a strong bond," says Hoffman, 31, who lias been perfecting the art of wooden wlieel making for six years. After the hot steel rims shrink and cool, the Special Pullout Section! Doug Hansen learned woodworking and blacksmithing at Mitchell (S.D) High School and the nearby Mitchell Technical Institute. “She brought home an old broken-down buggy, and then my granddad bought a span of mules and said he needed a wagon.” Hansen became so proficient at making wheels and wagons that his grandfather suggested he start the business. During the last 28 years, Hansen Wheel & Wagon has made about 1 (),()()() wooden wheels and 13,000 wagons of all kinds, from reproduc tions of 19th-century stagecoaches to wagons used as living quarters by sheepherders. Hansen’s business has grown because of a renewed interest in the Old West. “People have moved from the farm to the city, but have a long ing for the past," he says. “It’s a nostalgia thing.” To build authentic replicas, Hansen and his ■ . ■ wli i Dale Michel fits the wooden door on a replica of an 1880 s, nine-passenger Western-style stagecoach. Crafting Vintage by CHUCK CECIL wheels are painted and mounted on the 50 or so horse-drawn stagecoaches and other vintage wagon replicas that roll out of the shop each year. Owner Doug Hansen, 47, started the business in 1978 after spending his teen years fixing broken wagon wheels and , repairing dilapidated buggies. 1 "My mom and granddad really got me started," says Hansen, who Vehicles . ■HO IwMA Horse-drawn conveyances, such as this luxury stagecoach, are built by Hansen Wheel & Wagon in Letcher, S.D. wife. Holly, travel to farms, museums and other places where antique wagons are used or displayed, sketching and measuring every piece of the old originals. He has dozens of notebooks with hand- written details on all kinds of Old West rolling stock, from chuck wagons to prairie schooners. From his sketches, Hansen and his shop’s 10 craftsmen— wainwrights, wheelwrights, blacksmiths, coach makers, car penters, pinstripe painters and upholsterers—build wagons as they were made in the 1800 s, using square nails or handcraft ed bolts when required. Hansen’s shop is known for fine craftsmanship in refurbishing or making new wheels and wagons from ash, oak and hickory wixid. Wagons made at the shop range in price from $9,000 to SBO,OOO, depending on how elaborate and labor-intensive the project. The shop’s authentic reproductions are sought around the world. Hansen has sent a replica chuck wagon to Japan and a sheep wagon to France, while Western-style wagons are favorites among cowboy wannabes in Germany. Hansen wagons have appeared in movies, includ ing Dames With Wolves, and in television commercials, such as the Budweiser beer wagons drawn by Clydes dale horses. Wells Fargo Bank uses a dozen Hansen made stagecoaches for advertising and promotion, while Hansen wagons can lx? found on display in museums and Western-theme restaurants, and driven by participants in draft horse competitions. ife i Hansen's most unusual order was for a wagon wheel 18 feet in diameter for che 2003 Warner Brothers movie Looney Tunes Back In Action. In 2001, operators of the Booth Western Art 'i WSWL ' Hand detailing a Budweiser wagon “To my way of thinking,” says Hansen, “what ever we do here—whatever leaves here—we give it our best; and you can be sure that the next time we do it, we ll do it even better." Chuck Cecil is a freelance writer in Brookings, S.D. Visit www.hansenwheel.com or call (605) 996-8754 for more information. To see other vintage vehicles built by Hansen Wheel & Wagon, visit AmericanProfile.com Page 16 Museum of Cartersville, Ga., asked Hansen to refurbish a historic stagecoach donated to the museum. "We wanted the coach to look old and used, but still be in very good condition,” says Seth Hopkins, the muse um’s executive director. “We were thrilled with the results." Hansen is a perfectionist and keeps a watchful eye on the tiniest construction details. He and his craftsmen enjoy the challenge of continuing the almost lost art of wheel and wagon making, and they’re reluctant to deviate from meth ods used in the 1800 s to make the durable horse-drawn con veyances. Online Extras • www.americanprofile.com