Young Mason Attempts To Repeat as Winner of National Competition

Words: Dan KamysThe North Carolina Masonry Contractors Association (NCMCA) held its Annual Apprentice Masonry Skills Contest on May 18, 2002 at Triangle Brick Company in Wadesboro, NC. Thirty-nine contestants from 12 NCMCA member firms competed for cash, tool prizes, and the prestigious David R. Sigmon award for the contest's highest score.

This year's Sigmon award winner was Garrett Hood of McGee Brothers Company in Monroe, N.C. His prizes included $600.00 in cash — which is traditionally matched by the employer — along with a MK Diamond brick saw and a wheelbarrow load of masonry tools. And he gets to keep the wheelbarrow. Hood, who just graduated from Central Cabarrus High School in Concord, N.C., has been accepted at the North Carolina State University Schools of Engineering to study civil engineering this fall. He is the son of Wayne and Roberta Hood of Midland, NC.

Hood might be described as the "Tiger Woods" of apprentice masonry contestants. He won the North Carolina SkillsUSA-VICA High School Masonry Championship in 2001 as a junior and went on to win the 2001 National Championship. He repeated as North Carolina Champion earlier this spring and will defend his national title this summer at the SkillsUSA-VICA National Conference in June. The results of this year's SkillsUSA-VICA Techspo competition will be reported in an upcoming issue of Masonry.

Hood was also the winner of the North Carolina Department of Labor Annual State Fair Masonry Apprentice Contest last fall in Raleigh and was recently named the North Carolina Department of Labor's High School Apprentice of the Year.

Hood's success in the national competition follows that of many other North Carolinians. However, it has been many years since a winner has repeated in the same category. About the possibility of repeating as "champ," Hood says, "I'm actually pretty confident. Winning the competition again would really be something!"

Not surprisingly, Hood is a hard-working young mason. During high school, Hood worked for McGee Brothers on Saturdays and on his days off from school. His hard work has had some personal impact on Hood. He has had to abandon his lone hobby, motocross racing. "It was hard to give it up but injuries, like a broken jaw, were adding up," Hood said. "And they were adding up to days that I had to miss from work. I couldn't do that any more."

Todd Hartsell, Hood's high school masonry instructor, recalls, "He took my introductory class as a sophomore, and I remember that he caught on very quickly." As for his future, Hartsell says of Hood, "Garrett is a fine young man with a level head. It's obvious that he's a fine young mason, as well. I know from working with him that he has a bright future ahead of him."
The Behind-the-Wall Secrets Every Mason Already Knows (But Some Ignore)
March 2026

You’ve been around long enough to know this already: stone doesn’t fail on the face; it fails behind the wall. You can lay the prettiest veneer in the county, but if the prep is junk, that wall’s gonna start telling on you after a couple of winters. Manu

From the Mound to the Mortar: Jon Rauch’s Tall Order in the Masonry Industry
March 2026

In the record books of Major League Baseball, Jon Rauch is a literal giant. At 6 feet, 11 inches, he remains the tallest player to ever step onto a Big League mound. But today, the Olympic Gold Medalist and 11-season MLB veteran isn’t looking for a strike

Case Study: The Scoop
March 2026

Leading UK architecture firm, Corstorphine & Wright, has announced the completion of ‘The Scoop’, a unique concave office building in Southwark, London. The innovative design reuses an existing building and integrates a conical cut-out façade in white gla

Executing Color-Driven Designs Without Compromising Craftsmanship
March 2026

On today’s jobsites, masonry contractors are being asked to do more than install manufactured stone veneer (MSV). They’re being asked to interpret design trends and execute them with precision. Homeowners arrive with curated Pinterest boards. Designers r