You’ve probably heard of the Barnwood Builders. Mark Bowe and his team take antique & reclaimed barns to a whole new level. He’s been a good friend of ours for a while. In fact, Barnwood Builders came to our manufacturing plant here in Newport, TN to film an episode featuring Hearthstone this past summer. They are truly awesome to work with and talk to. You can watch us on Barnwood Builders Season 10, Episode 4 titled The Apprentices on DIY Network. The episode with our feature premiered on Sunday, April 5, 2020. Stay tuned here to see our clip on the show!
Handcrafted Cabins & Barns
By: Greg Johnson
You might say it all started back in 1996, when a former coal miner from West Virginia was scouting the hills of Northeast Kentucky, looking for old log cabins to restore. Someone in Flemingsburg sent him to talk to one of the locals.
“My name’s Mark Bowe,” he introduced himself. “I’m thinking about getting into the log cabin business.”
“My name’s Johnny Jett,” the ponytailed older man replied. “I’m thinking about getting out of it.”
They didn’t know it at the time, but they were at the beginning of a 20-year friendship that would, strangely enough, turn into a hit television show where they play themselves.
Jett and his friend Sherman Thompson had been dismantling log cabins and selling them, and they agreed to become Bowe’s suppliers. By 1998 they were working for his Lewisburg-based company, Antique Cabins and Barns, forming the core of what would later become the crew of “hardworking hillbillies” on the DIY network’s popular show, Barnwood Builders.
As TV shows go, Barnwood isn’t your standard fare. The hour-long episodes portray 7 easygoing guys doing pretty much the same things they’d be doing if there weren’t any cameras around. It’s obvious from their playful country boy banter that they enjoy working together. The only drama comes with the occasional structural collapse or hornets’ nest, or when the weather turns uncooperative. But they’re nice guys, and viewers admire their work ethic and find their knowledge of the old pioneer buildings enlightening.
For self-described hillbillies, they’re a pretty sophisticated bunch. Bowe has a master’s degree from WVU, he served on the Lewisburg City Council, and he owns an insurance company in White Sulphur Springs. Jett is a Vietnam veteran who maintained the Fleming County, KY, water system for 25 years. More surprisingly for a man who’s usually shown operating heavy equipment, he’s an accomplished artist who sells his work at Www.Johnnyjettart.Com. Thompson is a farmer and tobacco grower, a bighearted guy who recently got a lot of attention on Facebook for an act of kindness he showed to a special needs child.
In addition to Jett, two other members of the crew have military backgrounds. Tim Rose, a Virginian who joined the team in 2006, worked for 10 years as an Air Force aircraft mechanic. Alex Webb, a Monroe County native who joined Barnwood in January 2016, pulled a hitch in the Army before becoming a locomotive engineer for Norfolk & Southern Railroad.
Graham Ferguson, originally from Summers County, has been on the crew since 2013, when he was introduced on the show as “the rookie”. He’d been doing landscaping; he knew Bowe because their children were attending the same school in Lewisburg. Max Hammer, a native Arizonian who manages the “Boneyard” near White Sulphur Springs where the logs are stored, rehabbed and assembled before delivery, was working as a fishing guide at the Greenbrier’s Sporting Club before he went to work for the company in 2015.
One thing all seven have in common is growing up with hardworking fathers who taught them how to use their hands. Many of them grew up on farms. They’re intelligent, but they like work that’s physical and concrete, where they can see what they’ve accomplished at the end of the day. You get the feeling none of them would be happy toiling away at a desk in a cubicle. The Barnwood Builders guys are the kind you want to have around if your furnace goes out in the middle of a snowstorm. They know how to do things. What they don’t know, they figure out.
- A Visit From Barnwood Builders , August 6, 2019Skip to Antique Log Homes , Circa 2007Skip to Antique Log Homes , Circa 2007Skip to Barnwood Living
- Antique Log Homes , Circa 2007Skip to Barnwood LivingSkip to Barnwood LivingSkip to
- Barnwood LivingSkip toSkip to Skip to Barnwood Builders Clip
Stay tuned here for our clip from the episode! In the meantime, the episode is also available for purchase on the list of platforms below. The title of the episode is The Apprentices.
Vudu Fandango Now Google Play YouTube ITunes Amazon Microsoft Video
Barnwood Builders ClipSkip to Call Us At 800-247-4442 Mon – Fri 9 A.M. – 5 P.M. Eastern | FAQs | [email protected]Skip to Call Us At 800-247-4442 Mon – Fri 9 A.M. – 5 P.M. Eastern | FAQs | [email protected] to Click here to see the unmatched Hearthstone money-back guarantee!
The Barnwood Builder crew came to Hearthstone in Newport, TN on a hot summer morning, August 6th last summer to be exact. It was an awesome day filled with many scenes, conversations, laughs, and the overall camaraderie for taking new wood and making it look antique. It’s where new becomes old and old becomes new. Take a look at our Mystic Timbers gallery below that perfectly embodies the new to old outlook. Https://Www.Mystictimbers.Com/