PART 2: When the Entire Valley Followed — And the Real Secret Was Revealed

The Second Winter: From Doubt to Belief

The winter of 1879 arrived earlier and harsher than the year before. But this time, Boseman Valley did not panic.

Beneath nearly a meter of snow, the underground pipes worked silently. Smoke from chimneys was thinner, less constant. The sound of axes chopping firewood day and night disappeared. Instead, evenings were filled with steady lamplight and quiet conversation inside cabins that were strangely warm.

Samuel Hutchkins was the first to publicly admit his mistake.

“I’ve lived here ten years,” he said at the community gathering in early January, “and I never once believed the ground itself could keep people warm like this.”

He placed two figures before the crowd:

Firewood used last winter: 7.5 cords

Firewood used this winter: 5 cords

The difference was undeniable.

The Problem Lars Didn’t Explain at First

But not everyone who copied the system succeeded immediately.

Three families reported issues:

Damp pipes and a musty smell

Weak air circulation

Condensation forming inside cabins at night

Thomas Brennan—now the strongest defender of Lars’s idea—recognized the core problem.

“We copied the shape, not the principle.”

Only then did Lars finally stand before the community and explain everything.

The True Secret: It Was Never Just a Pipe

Lars drew three circles on a wooden board:

Exact Depth

The pipe had to lie below the frost line, at least 4 feet deep

At that depth, ground temperature remained stable year-round at about 45–50°F

Sufficient Length

Less than 100 feet: not enough time for heat exchange

More than 180 feet: air reached thermal equilibrium with the soil

Active Airflow

Not driven by wind

But by the stove and chimney, creating negative pressure

Air was pulled, not allowed to drift

“You think the pipe brings cold into the house,” Lars said calmly.
“No. It forces the cold to pass through the heart of the earth first.”

No one spoke.

The Unexpected Summer Discovery

Something no one expected happened in the summer of 1880.

Margaret Chen noticed her freight warehouse was far cooler than in previous years. While outside temperatures reached 92°F, the interior stayed around 68–70°F.

Lars simply nodded.
“The earth doesn’t only store heat,” he said. “It rejects excess heat.”

Without realizing it, they had created:

Passive cooling in summer

Reduced humidity

No need to open large windows that invited dust and insects

Children slept better. The elderly suffered fewer heat-related illnesses. Food kept longer.

When the Rumor Traveled Beyond the Valley

In 1882, a railroad engineer from Helena stopped by and spent one night in Lars’s cabin.

He measured, recorded, and wrote in his notebook:

“This is a climate-control system without machinery,
without additional fuel,
and with astonishing efficiency.”

Lars’s drawings began to circulate. There were no patents. No royalties.

Lars only said,
“If the earth gives this freely, I have no right to sell it.”

The Cost of Silence

Lars never left Boseman Valley. He declined offers of work in the East.

Some later said that if he had gone, American building history might have changed fifty years sooner.

When Lars died in 1893, a thin notebook was found in his wooden chest.
On its cover, written in old Swedish, were the words:

“Jorden andas. Om vi lyssnar.”
The earth breathes. If we listen.