Buy the DVD



Up
Taming 1
Taming 2
Taming 3
Taming 5
Taming 6
Taming 7
Taming 8
Embudo Depot
Florence Oil
Helper
Ogden Industry
Price
Salt Lake City
Scofield
Soldier Summit
Agent
Conductor
Dispatcher
Machinist
Section Foreman
Cab Safety
Engine Watch
Flagging
Trainload


 

 

Vol. 2
No. 9

Go to magazine Table of Contents...

July
1926

 

Embudo Depot

A Picture Done in Rocks

 

WHEN H. M. Wallace sought health in a western climate in 1912, he came to the little place called Embudo, on the Denver & Rio Grande. He saw the big cool shade trees on the station grounds and knew that someone who had formerly lived there had a soul, willing to contribute a blessing to those who were to follow.

This oasis in a seeming desert brought visions to his active mind of a garden that might be, and he thought the trees looked lonely in their setting of bare sand, so he decided to do his bit and build a home for them and now there stands as a memorial to the visionary garden of his mind the "Garden of Rocks" of today.

It was slow work at first, to make this Eden with hands; but slowly and surely it took shape and grew until now it is a true beauty spot and a delight to all who see it.

Mr. Wallace worked in seclusion and expected to finish the work and move on before it was discovered, and he felt very embarrassed when his work was suddenly found, and he felt gratified when it was approved by all of the company officials and employes who saw the work that was being started. Not an official of this railroad or any other railroad who has passed through Embudo has anything but the highest praise to offer for Mr. Wallace's unique and rare work.

This garden of rocks was made possible by the inspiration and genius of Mr. Wallace, and the generosity of the railroad in furnishing him all the material necessary to do the work. Carloads of rocks and cement have been sent to Embudo to help Agent Wallace in this great work, which he has done at odd moments when the duties of being agent did not demand his time.

Embudo is in an artists' country. There are artists' colonies in Taos and Santa Fe, and the main highway is by Embudo. The artists traveling by are attracted by this unique spectacle and investigate it, always offering the highest praise. Pictures have been taken of Embudo and sent back to Mr. Wallace from all parts of the world.

One of the leading five artists of the world has aptly named Embudo, "A Picture Done in Rocks Instead of Oils." A member of a noted firm of architects has said that he is glad to have seen it, after having seen everything of architectural interest in the world.

Not a jagged edge is left. One may lean against any part of the buildings without catching or tearing the finest clothes, The rocks are pointed, but they are so placed that the surface is entirely smooth.

One of the most interesting spectacles is the "Rock-a-Day Tower." This tower is being built by placing only one rock a day. Every rock represents a small act for each. Mr. Wallace says that this plan was adopted because he felt there was no time to devote to such a large structure, so, he is letting time itself accomplish the task. The tower is constructed to carry telegraph and telephone wires terminating in the station.

Near the station is a tiny grave floored with three terraces of unbroken white quartz and then walled to prevent injury by range cattle. This is the grave of the baby of Ray Wasson, who was agent at Embudo years ago.

TO look at the Embudo station today one would never realize that before Mr. Wallace took over the work it was just an old wooden structure like many others we see daily. By his tireless energy and
ambition and with about ten trainloads of material, Mr. Wallace has started a masterpiece.

The station is entirely veneered with unbroken cobblestones with a cornice of broken mineralized quartz. The freight house is veneered with unbroken malapie.

The artistic sign, "'Embudo," is hung on two pendulums of cable chain terminating in the link and pin of earlier days of railroading, and its total weight is six hundred and ten pounds. Despite this weight this Mosaic sign with obsidian background and letters of white quartz is so well balanced that it sways like a pendulum in the wind.

The waiting room in the station is all of concrete and rocks. The ticket window is constructed of locomotive firedoor chains anchored in a section of No. 30 rail. The wainscoting is of broken mineralized quartz, and the polished concrete table tops are ornamented by bridge spikes.

Directly beneath the ticket window, at the back of the safe which faces in the office, is a hole in the rocks left for a memorial. Mr. Wallace has specimens of rocks from all parts of the world, sent to him by officials, employes and other people passing through who became interested in his work. He is going to embed these specimens with a history in this alcove. If anyone has a rock specimen he would like to add to this memorial it would be thank fully received by Mr. Wallace, and a little history of the rock should accompany it.

There is no furniture in the office, with the exception of the chair upon which Mr. Wallace sits. A concrete desk about eighteen inches wide extends on two sides of the room. All the boards have been removed from the joists and the openings have been utilized as record space. In one corner is a stand made of cement and rocks, and on its is a vat and press. The entire floor of the waiting room and the office is tiled, and the rooms are finished with a raw wood from which the bark has been stripped.

The cabin kitchen is entirely lined with mineralized white quartz, and the artistic effect and arrangement of the stove, tables, and sink in little nooks and niches makes a very attractive kitchen. Above the sink is a little niche for a looking glass and toilet articles. A hole about five feet deep lined with smooth rocks, and with steps leading down into it makes an original and comfortable standing bath.

In the little cellar, under the kitchen, which is kept cool by air vents, is a model rock refrigerator, another clever idea made practical by the versatile agent.

In the Garden of Rocks there is a summer sleeping room with an open-air fireplace. The roof is canvas and the walls are of rock and this beautiful room nestles among elms which were at the beginning of the work mere twigs contributed by sympathetic friends.

In the midst of our Eden is a spring of cool sparkling water. Growing in the water are beautiful water lilies, and peeping from behind the lilies is a large, oddlyshaped rock which resembles a big frog.

The artistic effect is wrought entirely in unbroken rocks, attained merely by placing them with a sympathetic regard for restfulness and responsive vision, for they have been placed so that when you look at them they quietly look back at you.

The big, tall shade trees on the station grounds look down at the winding paths lined with rocks as they circle in and out at the base of the trees, down near the spring, and wind away again to the flowers, and as the cool breeze shakes their leaves they murmur low how happy they are to live in the Garden of Rocks and to be part of the picture done in rocks by the Agent at Embudo.

embudo depot c1920 d2-9 .jpg (145417 bytes)
Embudo Depot c1920

 

embudo depot yard cabin c1920 d2-9 .jpg (151654 bytes)
Grounds and Cabin

 

embudo depot entrance c1920 d2-9 .jpg (103274 bytes)
Entrance

 

embudo depot ticket window c1920 d2-9 .jpg (129833 bytes)
Ticket Window

 

 

 

© Copyright 2005 Sandia Software All Rights Reserved