CityView Magazine

July/August 2019

CityView Magazine - Fayetteville, NC

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Discove r Cit yV iewN C.co m's fre s h up d ate d loo k ! | 29 910.391.3609 • 2637 Raeford Road, Fayeeville, NC • www.cbdrx4u.com Offering high quality CBD products with 0% THC. From oil tinctures to topical creams, our products from Denver, Colorado are produced by doctors and chemists. FESTIVAL OF YESTERYEAR September 8, 2018 10:00-5:00 pm A History LIVE! FREE EVENT FESTIVAL OF YESTERYEAR September 8, 2018 10:00-5:00 pm A History LIVE! FREE EVENT www.museumofthecapefear.ncdcr.gov 801 Arsenal Avenue, Fayetteville, NC 28305 (910) 500-4240 FAYETTEVILLE, NC Lafayette www.museumofthecapefear.ncdcr.gov 801 Arsenal Avenue, Fayetteville, NC 28305 (910) 500-4244 FAYETTEVILLE, NC Lafayette Featuring Colonial Williamsburg's Stephen Seals portraying James Armistead Lafayette. T H E M U S E U M O F T H E C A P E F E A R P R E S E N T S FESTIVAL OF YESTERYEAR A C E L E B R A T I O N O F E A R L Y A M E R I C A S e pt e mb e r 7, 2 019 10:00 am - 5:00 pm A History LIVE! FREE EVENT Living History, Hands on Crafts, Puppet Show, Music, Lafayette Birthday Cake and MORE! workmanship, detail and finish. "Each piece of wood has a heart," Ray says as he cradles a piece of wood the size of a box of tissues the way a gemologist might with a rare stone. It's an expensive piece of wood from Africa, called Bubinga. Ray was 16 when he received his very first shiny toolbelt, complete with a brand-new claw hammer, and he felt confident when he walked onto his first jobsite in his native Rhode Island. A third-generation Italian, great- grandson of a contractor and son of a tool maker, he was filled with pride but was about to receive a rude wake-up call. e seasoned workers on the site made nonstop fun of his shiny tools and his spotless hard-toed shoes. He realized he would have to work hard to gain their respect. at meant coming in early and staying late, a lesson that applies in almost every career and every field. Starting off as an apprentice, Ray moved quickly up the ladder to become a framer and joiner. Aer years of withstanding the brutal weather of Rhode Island and Cape Cod, he turned his hand to making cabinets and building staircases. In the carpentry industry, this is akin to earning a master's degree. e more he worked with wood, the deeper his respect and passion became, which ultimately lured him into the restoration and finishing business. In the field of word-working specialties this is just about tops and undoubtedly, his father and great-grandfather would have watched on with enormous pride. en his knees gave out. But the apparent health disaster pushed him into a new and rewarding career. Pride radiates from his hands as Ray shows me a compass plane which belonged to his great-grandfather around the turn of the 20th century.

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