An Old Stone Row in the Bolton, Vermont Woods. Photo by Mike Luoma.

An Old Indigenous Stone Row?

Following a Trailside Stone Row in the Bolton, Vermont Woods

Mike Luoma
6 min readMay 7, 2024

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This past weekend, I followed part of an old stone row, the term I use for what some call “stone walls”, deep into the woods along a trail in the Jericho and Bolton, Vermont area.

Quartz Atop a Stone Row in the Bolton, Vermont Woods. Photo by Mike Luoma.

The placement of white quartz stones in and atop the stone row, and the presence of non-traditional coursework which seemed to include potential Great Serpent iconography led me to wonder about the potential for an Indigenous origin for this stone row, which some assume to be an old farmer’s construction.

That’s an understandable assumption, given Yankee Lore and the context: our forests and woods in Vermont are all pretty young, in relative terms. Agriculture cleared 80–90% of Vermont’s tree cover by the beginning of the 20th century. Many of today’s “woods” were farms, orchards and working forests 150 years ago, so stonework in the middle of nowhere now might have been part of a farm back then. Ergo, that’s gotta be a farmer’s stone wall in those woods. Right? Who else’s would it be? Well…

That’s really the big question I’m asking — is some of this stonework actually older…

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Mike Luoma

Author, Podcaster, Radio Host & Music Director, Explorer, Researcher, Science Fiction & Comic Book Creator. From Vermont.