Posts Tagged ‘porter county’

Halloween at the Porter County Museum

Monday, October 19th, 2009

Family Day at the Museum           October 25           10a – 2p
Bring your entire family to tour a less-spooky version of the Porter County Museum during Family Sundays. A Halloween-themed story time will take place at 11a and 1p. Free admission.

Forgotten Images           October 21 – October 30           6p – 8p
Explore the jail in an all new way—by black light. Long forgotten historical images have been displayed within the former barred fortress. Your mission: find 20 specific things within the pictures. The catch: you only have 15 minutes to accomplish this scavenging feat.
$10 donation per adult
$5 donation per student, senior, or child
No more than 13 participants allowed per time slot. Guests admitted every twenty minutes.
Three different image scavenger hunts available.

Haunted Museum Tours           October 21 – October 24           8p, 9p, & 10p
Ever visit the Porter County Museum and think that it is haunted? Well, you thought correctly. Come learn about the haunted history of the building and its contents during one of our Haunted Museum Tours. You never know when you will have a ghostly encounter of your own in the former jail and Sheriff’s residence.
$15 donation per adult
$10 donation per student, senior, or child
Tours last approximately 45 minutes.

BoooBash Halloween Party for Kids           October 24           11a – 1p
This entertaining and educational Halloween party for kids begins directly after the Saturday performance of the Witches Brew Ha! Ha! at the Memorial Opera House. Participants will be able to hear a spooky story, play themed games, decorate gourds, and have a frighteningly good meal inside the former jail and sheriff’s residence. With only room for 30 people, these tickets are going fast. $20/ donation per child.

Demons of the Jail           October 27 – October 30           8p – 11p
The restless spirits of the former Porter County jail come to life for revenge during the final week leading to Halloween.

Come attempt to make it through both levels of the jail and the basement—areas normally off-limits to the public. Are you brave enough to escape the demons of the jail?
$10 donation per adult
$5 donation per student, senior, or child
With luck, it takes approximately 15-20 minutes to escape.

Ghoulish & Glam Costume Cocktail Party           October 31           6p – 12a
Want to spend Halloween in two of the most haunted buildings in Northwest Indiana? Support the Porter County Museum and Memorial Opera House by attending this extravagant Halloween night fundraiser.

Learn of the haunted stories of the Museum and Opera House while enjoying endless hors d’ouvres, an open bar, and live entertainment all evening. Remember to wear your best costume to this eerie event.
$75 donation per adult
$55 donation per Historical Society members or Opera House season ticket holders.
Reserve your ticket at (219) 548-9137 or by the web at www.mohlive.com.

Harbor Lights at the Memorial Opera House

Saturday, May 23rd, 2009

Come visit the Porter County Museum tonight before seeing Chicagoland’s premier doo wop acapella group Harbor Lights at the Memorial Opera House. For more information on tickets, feel free to visit www.mohlive.com or call the box office at (219) 548-9137.

Doors at the Museum will open at 7p and will remain open until the show begins at 8p. Come take a look at the Sioux Native American beadwork that just came into the collection two weeks ago–it is a must-see! For more information about the Museum, visit www.portercountymuseum.org or call us at (219) 465-3595.

Professional of the Year, More

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

Greetings from the Porter County Museum!

 

Why does time move so quickly? One day I write a blog, blink, and the next thing I know I have skipped out on several months of blogging. Apologies all around for not keeping you in my loop. Quite a bit has happened (as it always does around this Museum) in the time since I last blogged, so I will do my best to fill you in. Look for more big changes at the Museum over the summer…

 

I am very proud to announce that I was nominated—and won—the ROSE Award for 2009 Professional of the Year. The Porter County Convention, Recreation, and Visitor Commission awarded me the Recognition of Service Excellence award plaque this morning/ afternoon at a very lovely luncheon at the Blue Chip Casino in Michigan City.

 

It is quite an honor to be nominated for this award–let alone win. Ruth Keefover from tourism did a marvelous job putting the event together. The meal was enjoyable and the company was outstanding. Maybe I am showing bias here, but I sat at the greatest table in the entire room.

 

Well, that is all for today. Hopefully I will find a bit of time to start my updates tomorrow. No promises, though. Last time I said I was going to blog the next day two months elapsed.

 

Best,

 

KMP

 

Executive Director

Porter County Museum

Porter County Treasures

Monday, March 16th, 2009

Time certainly flies while running the Porter County Museum. I feel terribly that I have totally neglected my blog for the last month. So many interesting, fun things have taken place between my last blog post and as I sit and lovingly type to you now.

 

For example, I have been speaking about the Museum’s restoration project at several different groups within the community—most recently the Valparaiso Women’s Club. Barbara Gramlick and Joan Lane asked me to come speak to the club about all of the wonderful changes within our Museum. Helen Arvidson accompanied me to the Women’s Club and spoke about our local cowboy celebrity—“Broncho” John Sullivan. Lucie Whitlow also attended the event and helped iron out the logistics of our presentation. Overall, the women seemed very interested and entertained by the things Helen and I had to say. I hope to have the whole club in to see the Museum very soon.

 

Pazour Point—The Valparaiso Women’s Club has been around for quite some time. In fact, the club was organized in February 1895 (my great-grandmother was a one-year-old at the time) by some of the same founding members of the Historical Society.

 

Speaking is not my only specialty. Last Monday I took our Henry Cross painting of Murray Beach and his 495 pound Goliath Grouper (a gigantic, endangered fish) to the Baumgartner’s in Chicago with Gregg Hertzlieb from the Brauer Museum of Art. Why did I take our beloved painting on a road trip? Well, Baumgartner Fine Art Restoration specializes in meticulous restoration work and has examined our beautiful “fish-man” painting. With the right amount of TLC and money, we will be able to restore Murray Beach and his whopper catch to their original, vibrant glory.

 

Pazour Point—I want to reiterate my thanks to Gregg Hertzlieb and Ed Melendez for their help in getting the painting to Chicago. Ed Melendez, Superintendent of County Parks & Recreation, provided a van to transport the painting to and from Chicago. This was no easy feat considering the painting is roughly 5’ by 7’. Gregg Hertzlieb, the Director/ Curator of the Brauer Museum of Art gave up several hours of his day to drive the painting to the Baumgartner’s studio in downtown Chicago. Without them, this project would not have been possible.

 

Yesterday was the opening of Treasures from the Porter County Museum at the Westchester Township History Museum in Chesterton. This is another fine instance of how time has completely gotten away from me. Jane Walsh-Brown, the curator of the Westchester Township History Museum, and I have been putting together a sampling of the Porter County Museum’s outstanding artifacts. I was even a guest on Jane’s show Historically Speaking last month and spoke about this special exhibit.

 

Go visit the Westchester Township History Museum. You really need to see this special exhibit if you get the chance. The Treasures of the Porter County Museum exhibit runs all the way through May 31 and truly is a gem of a display. No pun intended. Okay, maybe it was intended. Either way, you should make time for a tour of the Westchester Township History Museum.

 

These brief stories are only a sampling of what has been going on in my life at the Porter County Museum. In order to better document my experiences—and keep you mildly entertained—I will begin blogging regularly on Mondays and Fridays throughout the week. In addition to keeping you updated on all things Porter County Museum, I will begin a special feature with my Monday edition of blogs.

 

Starting today, I am going to be looking back in old newspapers and re-keying some of the things I find interesting (and hopefully you will, too). Today’s selection is from The Vidette-Messenger from Monday, March 16, 1959—exactly 50 years ago to the day.

 

The national headline from the paper reads: MIDWEST IS LASHED BY STORMS. The article goes on to say, “A savage winter curtain call of fierce wind, snow and rain storms howled across the Midwest during the weekend and swept eastward with undiminished fury.” Fast forward five decades. Hopefully we are done with snow for this season. Right?

 

A story about theft and vandalism made the main local headline for the day. This is of particular interest to me because I attended Washington Township High School.

 

Vandals Loot, Damage School

Two Sunday night break-ins, one at the Washington Township school and the other at Dommer’s service station, intersection of Ind. 49 and U.S. 30, are being investigated today by Sheriff’s police.

Loot obtained at the school included a small portable radio, a new 1959 Royal typewriter, valued at $180, and approximately $7.50 in cash. Taken from the service station were four new tires valued at $172.

 

The thieves caused a considerable amount of damage in the school break-in. However, Trustee Harland Beach stated that he has been unable to make an estimate as of yet.

 

Oren Reeder, janitor at Wasington, discovered the break-in at 6:30 a.m. He notified the sheriff’s office and Trustee Beach.

 

The investigation was made by Sheriff Edward Buchanan.

 

Buchanan said the thieves entered by breaking a door on the northeast side of the new section of the school. After entering the school, they attempted to break open two candy machines but were unsuccessful.

 

Thieves Destructive

They broke through a door in the school show but apparently did not take anything from this room. The thieves then went to the office of Principal James Dold where they smashed the glass in the door.

 

In this office they obtained the radio, typewriter and cash. Several file cabinets were badly damaged with a crowbar, police said. The thieves also broke another door in the building as they left.

 

The break-in at the service station was investigated by Deputy Ewalt Jahnz. Station is operated by Carl E. Dommer, who discovered the entry at 7 a.m. today.

 

Jahnz stated that there was no sign of forced entry to the building and that the thieves apparently used a key to open the front door. Nothing except tires appeared to be missing.

 

Prof Gets Fulbright Award

Dr. Ferencz P. Kallay, assistant professor of geography and geology at Valparaiso University, has received a Fulbright Scholarship for study of the population problem on the island of Sardinia.

 

Dr. Kallay specializes in the geography of Mediterranean Europe and he is one of only two Americans who have done field work in Sardinia during the past five years.

 

He received his doctorate from the University of Michigan in 1955 on a similar study undertaken on this second-largest island in the Mediterranean.

 

While in Sardinia on the grant which is effective this fall, Dr. Kallay also will be studying the effects of the Flumendosa irrigation project on the island’s economy.

 

Plans Field Probe

He will conduct field investigations in the fall and spring and will spend the winter interviewing government officials and representatives of private enterprise in addition to doing library research.

 

While on the Italian island, the VU professor will be associated with the geography departments of the Universities of Rome and Cagliani and he will lecture in Italian at these schools in spring, 1960.

 

Upon completion of his Fulbright grant in June 1960, Dr. Kallay will take summer courses in political geography at either University of Paris or Oxford.

 

He plans to present a paper at the International Geographical Union which will meet in Stockholm in August. He will then return to Valparaiso where he has taught since 1957.

 

Born in West Virginia, Dr. Kallay lived and studied in Hungary until 1947. He received his BA and MA degrees from Wayne State University, Detroit, and earned his Ph.D at the University of Michigan. He is listed in “American Men of Science.”

 

I do have to say the most amusing aspect of this issue of the paper has to be the advertisements. In the spirit of St. Patrick’s day, I have to say that the ad for Calvert Reserve whiskey is my favorite. It starts by saying, “Only Calvert’s Hand of Skill blends the whiskey with more power to please!” The tag line underneath a giant hand holding a shot glass situated next to a variety of stereotypical Irish items says, “Celebrating St. Patrick’s Day? Let Calvert Reserve add its own festive note to the occasion.” At $4.85 for a 4/5 quart or $1.55 for a ½ pint, I am going to assume many people chose to celebrate fifty years ago.

 

Looking Backward

Do You Recall These Reports?

 

TWENTY YEARS AGO (Now seventy years ago)

March 16, 1939

Valparaiso’s water supply was imperiled Wednesday night when a plug in a street connection of the sixteen-inch supply line from this city to Flint Lake blew out. The break occurred in the vicinity of McKinley street on State Road 49.

 

Charles Kern, Valparaiso High school senior, and winner of the Porter County oratorical contest sponsored by the American Legion posts of the county, is at Lafayette, Ind., today competing in the Second congressional district contest.

 

FIFTEEN YEARS AGO (Now sixty-five years ago)

March 16, 1944

Portage township, Porter County, entered the casualty lists for the third time this week when another serviceman, Clyde E. Hewitt, Jr., technical sergeant, was reported lost in action in the European area.

 

Mrs. Martha Jane Griswold, 92, for 64 years a resident of Valparaiso, died today at the home of her son, Clarence Griswold, 104 Napoleon street.

 

TEN YEARS AGO (Now sixty years ago)

March 16, 1949

The Sheriff’s department continued an investigation today on the series of recent break-ins east of the Valparaiso City limits. Latest incidents were reported Monday and Tuesday mornings this week.

 

The public works committee of the U.S. House of Representatives has approved a petition for re-opening government investigation or the Burns ditch harbor project, The Vidette-Messenger learned today in a telephone conversation with Rep. Charles A. Halleck.

 

I have learned quite a bit going through the old newspapers this morning. Check back here Friday for my next blog post. In the meantime, plan a visit to the Porter County Museum. Or better yet—join the Historical Society as a member! Until next time…

 

Best,

 

KMP

Executive Director

Porter County Museum

 

 

Paintings, Murals, and Records—Oh My!

Friday, February 6th, 2009

Today was nothing short of an adventure—enjoyable, of course. Sitting here piecing together the day after-the-fact almost seems like a work out. It might be a bit better if I did not have to keep ignoring the ghost that appears and disappears in the bedroom across from my office. Even the paranormal want to take part in what is going on around here!

Hit the rewind button. Everything began with responding to phone calls and e-mails this morning at 8a. Two major things were set to happen during the day. The first was that Gregg Hertzlieb was coming from the Brauer Museum of Art at Valparaiso University to help stabilize the Cross painting in our collection. My second major event involved volunteers from the Historical Society and moving two hundred records from the basement of the county garage. Was I in for a huge surprise…

Gregg Hertzlieb, Phillip Brockington and Howard Reeve came from the Brauer to help give the Cross painting some much-needed TLC. Lucie Whitlow and Blaine Hilton—members of the Advisory Board and Historical Society—came to help as well. Blaine even video documented the morning, which will be available on the Museum site at www.portercountymuseum.org. If you have a moment, watch a few of the video clips. They are very interesting to say the least.

Phil and Howard completed some minor restoration work on the frame of our Silas Hazen Lincoln portrait. I honestly cannot say for certain if it is an original portrait. Phil and Howard think it was a Kurz and Allison lithograph that was colorized by Silas Hazen in the 1860’s. The strongest evidence in favor of their argument is two other similarly sized lithographs of George Washington and Thomas Jefferson from the Kurz and Allison studio. Either way, it makes a compelling story. I actually got Phil and Howard to go on video with me to talk about the work they had done aesthetically restoring the frame on the Lincoln. Check out the video on the website as well.

Back to the “Fish-man” painting… Gregg and I carefully took the Cross painting off the wall and set it on protective paper that Lucie placed on the floor. If any of you are familiar with the story (and the condition of the work), you know that there are two sizeable slashes across the canvass. This happened when the painting was originally displayed in the Conservation Club clubhouse on Route 130. A vandal (or vandals) broke in and practiced their swordsmanship on poor old Murray Beach and his Goliath Grouper. As a protective measure, the club voted to send the painting to the Museum. Fast forward several decades…back to the morning of Friday, February 6 at 10:30a…. Gregg applied very strong (and very temporary) linen tape to the back of the tears in the painting. Once the tape set, Gregg and I picked the painting up and set it back on the wall. For more information on the tape and the temporary stabilization process, watch Gregg’s video clip—it is very informative!

Full restoration is in order for the Valpo man and his large endangered fish. Gregg is going to get an estimate for professional restoration through his contact in Chicago. Phil and Howard estimated that total restoration would probably cost an upwards of several thousand dollars. Look for me to have a begging cup on a sidewalk near you soon. All joking aside, this project will be a major focus in the coming year.

In between the first major project and the second, Blaine and I had time to film a quick video regarding the mural that will be unveiled during the Friday, February 13 VIP party before the opening performance of Ragtime at the Memorial Opera House. It almost gave Blaine his first blooper reel for the Museum website. While explaining the mural and its history I almost took a tumble over one of the last remaining antique tools in the room… Would not be the first time I was on YouTube…

Sadly, I can sum up the final major project of the day with one sentence. I am not very good with math. What was supposed to be moving two hundred records from the county garage was just that—moving two hundred tin boxes of records. Too bad I underestimated the total number which is actually closer to 4,000 tin record boxes (among many other boxes of records from the early Twentieth Century).

Mike Spudic, Jason Trunick, Lucie Whitlow, Blaine & Trena Hilton, Stacey Hensley, and Michael Shaw made quick work of the tiny fraction of the records we moved this afternoon. Twenty banker boxes full of records to be exact. Once we secure more boxes the project will resume. Al Hoagland, the supervisor of the highway department, is just happy to see the records begin to move.

Well, I am getting tired and would bet money (not large amounts, though—remember, I am not good with math) you are growing tired of reading. Tomorrow morning I plan on writing more about the project of moving the records from the county garage to the Museum along with what our tentative plan is for the records once they are all (yes, 4,000 tins and then some) here.

Until next time, be sure to check the website to see if any videos are available. Blaine Hilton is doing some amazing things to bring our Museum into the technology age. It is exciting to have a support network of so many intelligent, enthusiastic people that think highly of the Porter County Museum and Historical Society.

Best,

KMP
Executive Director
Porter County Museum

Night (and Snow Day) at the Museum

Wednesday, February 4th, 2009

What a day. Over two feet of snow and it is still falling. I have honestly not seen this much snow at once in my entire lifetime. I actually stayed overnight at the Museum last night because the roads (and the wind) were so bad. My car looks like a tiny igloo with a side mirror sticking out of it.

 

And no, my stay last night was nothing like the movie. I think the ghosts were even too preoccupied with the weather to notice my sleepover. Speak of sleep, I bet everyone from Fitzgerald Enterprises is lacking in it. Undoubtedly they were all out shoveling and plowing the walkways and parking lots of the county. If it was not for their hard work, we would surely have to make a tunnel system under the snow by now.

 

Please get here soon, warm weather!

 
Sometimes I get too caught up in my own work to realize there is quite a bit going on around me. Regardless of Mother Nature, there is still quite a bit going on at the Porter County Museum (PCM) this month. If you have the opportunity, maybe you will join us soon…


This Friday (February 6) is going to be very, very busy. Gregg Hertzlieb, Director of the Brauer Museum of Art at Valparaiso University, is coming at 10a to make a few minor repairs to the “fish-man” painting. Gregg—and his docents Phillip Brockington and Howard Reeve—have been a tremendous help to the Museum.

 
For those of you unaware of the work, the “fish-man” painting features one-time Valparaiso resident Murray Beach standing next to a now-endangered Goliath Grouper. The work was commissioned by Elias “Lucky” Baldwin and painted by Henry H. Cross. Most all of the artist’s other paintings were commissioned by Buffalo Bill Cody and now hang in Cody’s Museum in Wyoming.

 

(Pazour Point—Buffalo Bill was longtime friends with “Broncho John” Harrington Sullivan, a true-life cowboy and former resident of Valparaiso, Indiana. Mr. Sullivan’s correspondence with Buffalo Bill now resides in the Museum. Helen Arvidson, a terrific Museum volunteer, will be blogging about “Broncho John” soon. After all, this year is Mr. Sullivan’s 150th birthday. The candles are on back-order)

  
The story gets better. About a week and a half ago Valparaiso resident Don Beach and his wife visited the Museum after hearing about the restoration work in the newspaper. On a whim, I asked Don if he was related to a Murray Beach. To my dismay he said yes—his father was Murray Beach. I asked him if there were any older Murrays in his family. Once again, his response astounded me. His great-grandfather was Murray as well. We had a match. I showed Don and his wife the painting and told him the story. Both were stunned to learn of the painting—but very appreciative that it was hanging in the Porter County Museum. I hope to see Don, Nancy, and more of his family visit the Museum soon.


Later in the afternoon on Friday volunteers from the Historical Society will be journeying to the county garage on Route 2 to rescue old historical records from the basement of the building. There are literally hundreds of small tins full of old envelopes packed with county records going back well into the 1880’s.

Our opportunity to save these historic records was presented to me by Gwenn Rinkenberger, the Porter County Attorney. Gwenn informed me of the records a day before the last time we had a decent sized snow (it seems to be a good way to mark time, right?). She and I traveled to the county garage one morning to preview the records so I could assemble a plan.

 

Talk about amazing! The records, aside from a little bit of dust, are in pristine shape. The lack of sunlight in the basement has quite a bit to do with their condition. There are literally hundreds of tins all holding envelopes of historical information from Porter County. Gwenn and I sampled three tins to bring back to the Administration building–one from 1882 (the year the courthouse was built), criminal records from 1891, and one from the May term of the Superior Court from 1897. Melissa Hartig, Vi Wagner, and Commissioner Carole Knoblock were all very intrigued with our find. It will be great to have all these other records preserved at the Museum for posterity’s sake.

 

Volunteers are going to meet at Noon on Friday at the Museum and then drive over to the county garage. We are going to pack the tins into boxes and transfer them back over to the Museum. Once the records arrive in their new home they will be numerically re-organized within the storage boxes and catalogued. The contents will then be examined and accessioned to the Historical Society’s collection.


If you would like to help peruse the tins and assist us in cataloguing the records, please feel free to call me at (219) 465-3595 or send me an e-mail at info@portercountymuseum.org. It is a great time to get involved at the Museum—especially if you have a bit of free time on your hands.

 
Look for more blogging from me later today. What else am I going to do with all this snow? Maybe I will go sledding. Nah. I will blog instead. Stay warm, everyone!

 

Best,

 

KMP
Executive Director
Porter County Museum

 

P.S.- “Pazour Points” are my personal comments and stories as Executive Director. Most of the “Pazour Points” you read will be my way of connecting related things together. A majority of the time “Pazour Points” will be completely random, but still somehow make sense–just like me.