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Father and son are reclaiming the craftsmanship of the past

When Peter Hunter was growing up in Cismont, his father would take him out driving along the back roads in the Southwest Mountains, where the young boy felt drawn to the old derelict houses scattered through those woods and fields. Years later, Peter took his son Blake along on his drives through the Blue Ridge and the Shenandoah, searching for the same abandoned treasures. Now Peter and Blake are the go-to team for reclaiming a taste of the past.

Peter’s love of reclaiming old materials began with salvaging run-down or derelict buildings; “I learned to build by unbuilding,” he says. As a young man, he lived in an abandoned house and fixed it up; over the next decade he worked for a cabinet-maker and a stonemason, and on new construction to gain those skills as well. He bought 20 acres in Batesville, using it to store the salvaged materials he was collecting all over central Virginia. After marrying his wife Debbie, Peter built a home on his land out of an old cabin from a friend’s property and materials he’d salvaged, including a homestead chimney and chestnut logs from a livestock pen on his property. “I was gathering these great materials—unbelievable craftsmanship, and the skills that were passed down. And I couldn’t afford to buy new materials, so …”

By the late 1980s, Peter was becoming well-known for his cabin restorations—and on the side, playing in a band called Cabin Fever. “Back then, there were no restoration stores,” he recalls. “But people had the money [to pay for restoration], and there was a sense … a love for old things.”

Soon Peter was tapping in to a community of people interested in reclaiming and reusing. “Yes, you need the materials,” he says, “but you also need the craftsmanship, and the environment in which you’re allowed to do it.” He could have built a company just doing restorations, but Peter wanted to keep his hands in the work, and train the next generation. “I want to share what I know,” he says, “and I can spot a young person who has the feel for it.”

“He’s constantly training, to pass the knowledge on,” says Blake—who knows first-hand. At age 11, Blake started helping his father out, going on salvage trips and gathering materials. “I remember we had these big piles of slate [shingles],” he says. “We were taking the slate off a UVA frat house roof, getting in before it was demolished.” Blake worked for his father every summer through high school, and during a gap year before college built his first stonework chimney. (“It’s still standing,” he says with a grin.)

But Blake had also inherited another of his father’s passions: “I was going to be a musician.” He went to music school in Boston, coming back every summer to make money working for his father. After graduation, Blake and his band, Trees on Fire, came to Charlottesville to live in a cabin and work for Peter—and stayed. Blake is still playing gigs around Charlottesville, now with a group called The Gatherers, but he’s also launched his own business, Feather Stoneworks. 

Father and son have found that doing what they love, creating something both old and new out of historic materials, requires a special kind of client—someone who loves craftsmanship, and has both the money and the time to have the job done right. One client who shares his passion is local software engineer Matt Lucas; he brought the Hunters in on the restoration of his family’s 19th-century house in Free Union a decade ago, and has had them working since on projects from a Revolutionary-era cabin in Crozet to a barn restoration. “It’s a really good marriage,” says Peter—after all, Lucas is a dedicated salvager, with his own barn full of historic building materials.

These days, Peter is consulting on design and construction, while Blake wants to incorporate what he’s learned about craftsmanship into his stoneworking and design firm. “I hope to continue moving towards building more creative outdoor living space designs with stone, while incorporating reclaimed material and a traditional design aesthetic,” he says. 

And there’s no question the old skills are still needed. A dry-laid stone wall Blake recently built along a section of creek in downtown Batesville, with steps up to a backyard patio, withstood the summer flooding after Tropical Storm Debby. Blake’s pretty proud of that work—it’s built to last a long time.