Valparaiso

FREY PUTS FAITH AND HOPE IN ‘CHARITY’

This story by Mary Henrichs originally appeared in The Vidette-Messenger on April 15, 1978.

Caritas. The Latin word for “charity.”

Sculptor Fred Frey likes the sound of the Latin word. It reminds him of our classical heritage. And his sculpture sits in front of a neoclassical building.

Five fountains currently being installed along the west side of Caritas will provide a formal approach to the Porter County Courthouse, Frey believes.

And the sculpture, itself, incorporates a variety of symbols which Frey feels were appropriate  to the nation’s Bicentennial – the butterfly, the phoenix, the eagle and a guardian shield.

Two wings of the sculpture seem especially like those of a butterfly, the traditional symbol of resurrection and new life for both Christians and the American Indian.

Frey said the center pole of Caritas has the contour of a butterfly’s antennae and the top can be seen as the head of a bird.

The bird’s head in combination with the wings evokes for him the rebirth symbol of the phoenix and the flight of the eagle.

The third wing of the sculpture is a shield form with its outer edge curved like an archer’s bow.

This shape is in keeping with the tradition of putting guardian figures outside public buildings and Frey said he was careful to place the shield wing at a right angle to the courthouse doors.

Asked about his reaction to the public furor over Caritas, Frey said he believes people will eventually like the sculpture. “As it becomes familiar, it will grow on them,” he said, adding that some people have told him this already has happened with them.

He believes the work cannot be understood immediately. People ask, “What’s it for? What’s it all about?” without giving themselves a chance to appraise it, he believes.

Frey feels that citizens will begin to appreciate the sculpture when pleasant weather allows them to walk around it, to see it from many angles, and to sit beside it at the edge of the surrounding pool.

Frey designed the sculpture at the request of the Porter County Bicentennial Committee and under sponsorship of the County Arts Commission.

The $43,000 required to construct and place the sculpture was in the form of private funds raised by an ad hoc committee headed by Joseph W. Bibler, Northern Indiana Bank and Trust Co. president.

Janet Sullivan, arts commission president, said Bethlehem Steel Corp. donated the steel for the sculpture and “Fred Frey never got one cent” for his work.

The commission donated the final $2,000 which put the fundraising campaign over the top, Mrs. Sullivan said. That amount was one-third of the non-profit organization’s resources.

Frey believes very little tax money will be needed to maintain the sculpture site. Power for the fountain lights and pumps “won’t be expensive” and water in the pool and fountains will be recycled.

Caritas will be dedicated May 7 (1978) in conjunction with a forum on “Public Art and Porter County” to be conducted May 6.

People and cities are not static, Frey observed. “Who knows? Maybe in 100 years nobody will want to change the sculpture.”

May 24, 1991: PRESERVING HISTORIC PORTER COUNTY Home still being ‘discovered’

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on May 24, 1991.

PRESERVING HISTORIC PORTER COUNTY

Home still being ‘discovered’

by Beverly Overmyer

The Vidette-Messenger

VALPARAISO ー “I wish houses could talk,” said Shirley Reiner, who with her husband, Van, still puzzles over the history of their 130-year-old house in the early residential section of Valparaiso.

The Reiners have discovered many facts about their home since they moved here seven years ago from Buffalo, N.Y. Much of the history of their home they still hope to discover.

But some things will probably remain a mystery, Shirley said.

The large frame house at Institute and Lafayette streets was built in the early 1860s in Powell’s addition, which had been platted Aug. 3, 1860.

Searching the tax records, Shirley discovered the house was owned by Obediah Dunham in 1875. In 1877, original records show a lease on the house for one year at $12.50 per month.

“One builder who looked at the house told us it must have been built before 1870 since the hand-hewn beams in the basement were not used after the 1860s,” she said.

When the Reiners replaced the roof of the two-story home and carriage house, they found four layers of shingles over wood shakes.

“There were three different colors of shingles on different sections of the roof,” Shirley said, “green, brown, and black.

“When we re-sided the house in blue we had an old picture to guide us. There had been plain wood trim on the corners of the house and under the eaves. We replaced it to make the house look more like it had before previous renovations.”

The house had a two-story addition facing Lafayette Street. The front porch also was changed. When Shirley stripped the paint from the baseboards in the dining room, she discovered two layers of hardwood flooring.

“Maybe they added the second layer when the addition was added 60 years ago to make the floor all look the same.”

The couple had discovered many things about the previous owners of their house. Miles McNiece owned the property in 1906 and had a store on Lincolnway a few blocks from his home. The house remained in the family until 1961.

McNiece’s daughter, Geraldine, married Dr. Blount. The couple had no children, leaving the house to their nieces and nephews.

In the basement, the Reiners found three dusty metal file boxes containing many of Dr. Blout’s patient records. One shows a 1926 record of a $4 visit by Agnes Murphy.

The Reiners got some first hand information from one of the nephews, James McNiece of Valparaiso, who told them he remembered his grandfather being laid out in his coffin in the parlor before the funeral.

In the 1930s, the house was renovated into a two-family house. Doorways, windows, closets, hallways and stairways were changed to make a large apartment with a kitchen at the rear next to the back stairway.

“The mother of one of our kid’s friends told me that as late as the 1970s there was a dumbwaiter back here and a door in the wall that had been used by the ice man for deliveries. I wish the dumbwaiter was still there,” she said.

Another reminder of earlier years that Shirley regrets losing is a claw-foot bathtub.

James Brocke bought the house and returned it to a single-family residence. The Reiners and their three children, Tim, Rebecca and David, made the modernized house their home in 1984.

The family found the location as convenient as the earlier families did. Shirley said she was looking for a house near downtown so the family could walk to the stores, library and the YMCA. 

Some of the other best features of the house were built in long ago.

“The upstairs porch faces south and that always gives you a wonderful light,” Shirley said. “And the house has a good air flow so that a good breeze always blows through the house. Lots of new houses we see now don’t have these features.”

Other discoveries show the changes made over the years. Many windows were bricked up or moved on the same wall. Walls were apparently moved. The Reiners are also puzzled about the two brick chimneys in the basement on the opposite side of the house from the fireplaces added to the first- and second- floor additions.

The woodwork may be original or it may be from the renovations of the ‘20s, Shirley said. Shirley plans research trips to the Old Jail Museum and the genealogy department of the Valparaiso library to try to discover more about the short-term owners as well as people who may have rented the upstairs during the three decades it was apartments.

The Reiners found a child’s school essay from the 1920s, but don’t know if the child or his teacher lived in the house.

The Reiners’ home is at Institute and Lafayette streets.

The Reiners’ home is at Institute and Lafayette streets.

May 13, 1931: Porter County Going Forward Making Way for Prosperity

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on May 13, 1931.

Porter County Going Forward Making Way for Prosperity

Every true citizen has faith in Valparaiso and Porter county, and is loyal to it. But a city or county cannot remain great and achieve greater greatness on faith and loyalty alone. It must have normal amounts of money and credit flowing through the marts of commerce and the reservoirs of industry to stimulate business, put money into the workers pockets and absorb the offerings of trade.

The man or woman who has faith in Valparaiso and Porter county and is loyal to them can show this to the best advantage now by buying in Valparaiso and Porter county. Many have ample resources and permanent jobs or positions, but they are not doing this, they have been putting money away, for a rainy day. Some of them have planned for a flood such as Noah saw.

This is socially and economically wrong. Stunted buying makes for the loss of jobs, the closing of factories and business houses, vast unemployment in lines not directly connected with the line in which business has fallen off. NOW is the TIME to show faith in Valparaiso and Porter county by spending money for reasonable and necessary goods and service. We must remember that Valparaiso is a growing city which needs the full SUPPORT of every citizen to achieve its magnificent destiny.

FORWARD INDUSTRIAL PORTER COUNTY.

May 10, 1986: Cruise-control measure on agenda

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on May 10, 1986.

Cruise-control measure on agenda

by Pat Randle

Staff writer

Brain McMillan, 16, skate boards downtown Friday night(V-M: Kathy Woodward)

Brain McMillan, 16, skate boards downtown Friday night

(V-M: Kathy Woodward)

Valparaiso may outlaw skateboarding in commercial areas, loitering, and standing or sitting on cars in an attempt to control teenage cruising on Lincolnway.

An ordinance designed to end problems created by the weekend cruise will be introduced to the City Council when it meets at 7:30 p.m. Monday at City Hall.

The effect to the law probably would be to close down the cruise, Police Chief Walter Lamberson said.

On Friday and Saturday nights, teenagers and others cruise the Lincolnway strip. Some ride in cars. Others walk, skate or skateboard along sidewalks, stopping to talk with friends in cars or on foot.

The cruise is so popular that it congests traffic.

And it upsets downtown business owners and some adults who want to go downtown or just drive across Lincolnway after dusk on weekends.

Last year the city proposed an ordinance, but tabled the issue and asked cruisers to control themselves.

City officials apparently have decided that has not worked.

The proposal would make it unlawful to loiter in any public place, to stand or sit on vehicles in any public street, and to roller skate or skateboard on any roadway or sidewalk in a commercial zone, according to the agenda for Monday’s council meeting.

To enforce the new laws, city police would be paid overtime to work Friday and Saturday nights, Lamberson said.

“Once the ordinance is passed we’re going to try and get some officers to work overtime for the areas where there are problems.”

Volunteer police will be used as well, Lamberson said.

“Along with the ordinance, heavy enforcement is going to have to take place in order to control the problem or alleviate it.”

City police worked with other officials, including City Attorney Brad Koeppen and members of the city’s cruiser control committee, to gather information for the new ordinance.

Lamberson and others looked at the laws other cities use.

May 4, 1946: DRASTIC DIMOUT HITS CITY LIFE

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on May 4, 1946.

DRASTIC DIMOUT HITS CITY LIFE

Local Industry, Business, Civic Affairs Curtailed Sharply By Electric Ban

Plant Managements Struggle To Revise Work Schedules; Merchants Restricted To Short Hours; Entertainments Affected

Seriousness of the current dispute between coal mine operators and the United Mine Workers was brought home to Valparaiso and environs today with a jolting impact.

Acting on orders from the state public service commission, the Northern Indiana Public Service company late Friday distributed to local merchants and industries are effective immediately and will continue until a perilously low stockpile of coal is replenished with “normal deliveries” from the mines.

Under the order, business and manufacturing in Valparaiso comes under drastic curtailment. Local industry is ordered to use electric power no more than a total of 24 hours during any period between Monday and Friday of each week. No use of power permitted Saturdays and Sundays.

Plants Hard Hit

This meant that local plants, dependent upon electric power, now operating in some instances on a three-shift basis, will be forced to reduce schedules to one three-shift day, three days of eight hour shifts, six days of four-hour shifts, or a similar arrangement.

Management in Valparaiso industries was reported this morning to be struggling with the problem of compliance with the order which will mean layoffs for hundreds of workmen or severely reduced work weeks.

Realizing the extent of the emergency presented, NIPSCO officials were allowing a “grace” period for the readjustment, but full compliance was expected by early next week.

Commercial users, which includes virtually every merchant in town, are limited to 24 houses weekly, from Monday to Saturday and such use must be between 2:00 and 6:00 p.m. of said days. Stores dealing with food are exempted, but must use only minimum requirements of electric power.

Activity Curtailed

The order was expected to prove a staggering blow to industrial output here and to seriously curtail retail activities.

Complete elimination of power was ordered for such uses as decorative or ornamental and flood lighting, sign lighting, window and showcase lighting. Interior lighting in excess of minimum requirements was forbidden.

This meant that Valparaiso is to experience a brownout comparable to that already in effect throughout Illinois, although street lighting will be maintained as a safety measure.

The decree touches everyone in varying degrees. Every consumer of electric power, private, commercial, and public, is expected to comply with provisions of the order.

Confusion Widespread

Even those classes of consumers exempted from the more rigid provisions of the order are expected to use a minimum of current necessary to carry out their services.

The order created widespread confusion among businessmen and local groups planning evening entertainments. Under terms of the brownout, no night activities of schools, lodges, civic groups and similar organizations may be carried out if the use of electric current is necessary. If other means of lighting can be found, such programs may be carried out.

A number of services were declared exempt by the public service commission. The list of such individuals, businesses and institutions may be found in the question and answer column which appears in today’s Vidette-Messenger. In brief, the order exempts “essential” services which contribute to public health, safety and protection.

A report issued Friday that NIPSCO had the smallest supply of coal on hand of any utility in Indiana was denied by Sam Busby, secretary of the PSC. According to Busby, there are other utilities servicing central and southern parts of the state which are “worse off” than NIPSCO, whose Michigan City generating plant reportedly has sufficient coal to last it until June 7.

Both Bushy and officials of NIPSCO emphasized that “The PSC is not literally ‘closing’ anything. It has merely prescribed during which hours electricity may be used.”

Text of Order

The essential text of the PSC order read as follows:

“Northern Indiana Public Service company is hereby authorized and directed, during the effective period of the coal strike which began April 1, 1946, and for such further period as may elapse until normal deliveries of coal are resumed to curtail the use of electricity:

“(a) For all such purposes as decorative or ornamental and flood lighting, sign lighting, window and showcase lighting, comfort air conditioning, car heating, and interior lighting in excess of minimum requirements;

“(b) For industrial use except for an aggregate of 24 hours during the period Monday to Friday, inclusive; or to a use each week not to exceed 1/30th of the kilowat hours used in April, 1946, monthly billing interval; and

“(c) For commercial use except for an aggregate of 24 hours during the period Monday to Saturday, inclusive such use to be between 2 and 6 p.m. of said days.”

The order stated that NIPSCO would be empowered to “exempt from such curtailment the supply of electricity for transportation, communication, and for purposes and establishments immediately essential to public health and safety and for the protection of life and property.”

Furter, the PSC authorized the utility to enforce its decree to the extent, if necessary, of cutting to any person or firm which violates its provisions.

Anticipating a flood of questions from consumers uncertain as to exactly how they should proceed toward compliance, Walter H. Hathaway, manager of the Valparaiso NIPSCO district, said:

“Where there are borderline cases, and special questions arise, a good rule to follow is to find the answers to this question: Is the (consumption) actually necessary from the standpoint of public health and safety? The answer to that question, in 9 cases out of 10, will serve as a reliable guide.”

Public Co-operating

“The response and public cooperation in carrying out this exceedingly fine,” Hathaway said today. “We realize that it will take a time for all of our customers to thoroughly understand how this dimout affects each one of them, and arrange their schedules accordingly. From the response so far given, we do not anticipate that it will be necessary to shut off service to any of our customers because of non-compliance with the public service commission order.

“Although most of our efforts have been concentrated with industrial and commercial users, residential customers should realize that this order also applies to them in that they are expected to keep consumption at a minimum. The more complete the co-operation the longer NIPSCO will be able to furnish electricity with its rapidly dwindling coal supply.”

April 25, 1931: UNEMPLOYED OF VALPARAISO WILL BE GIVEN CHANCE TO USE LOTS FOR GARDEN TRUCK

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on April 25, 1931.

UNEMPLOYED OF VALPARAISO WILL BE GIVEN CHANCE TO USE LOTS FOR GARDEN TRUCK

A move to assist unemployed in Valparaiso by means of making use of vacant lots for the producing of vegetable crops was suggested to members of the city council at Friday night’s session at city hall.

It originated with Councilman Myers E. Zimmerman, College Hill representative on the council. It was the belief of Councilman Zimmerman that a number of persons in the city could be helped materially this summer being permitted the free use of vacant lots for the raising of garden truck.

He suggested that the city engineer’s office be made an exchange whereby lot owners and persons desiring ground space be brought together so the parcelling could be made.

Councilman Kane was of the opinion that The Vidette-Messenger service could be utilized to better advantage, in bringing the information to the lot owner and those desiring lots.

Councilman Harry Albe finally settled the argument by suggesting that the Community Chest organization was the proper agency in this form of welfare work, and others agreed. So the matter of lot exchange and distribution will be placed in the hands of the Community Chest committee.

April 9, 1946: VALPARAISO’S BOY SCOUTS

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on April 9, 1946.

VALPARAISO’S BOY SCOUTS

Valparaiso’s boy scouts were looking forward today to what they hope will be the biggest waste paper collection in the city’s history next Saturday, April 13. About fifty boys from local Troops 20 and Scouts are enthused over their prospects following receipt of many calls from householders who have promised to have their bundles ready on the big day. In the above photograph four Valparaiso Scouts offer a graphic portrayal of what they hope the citizens of the community will have ready for them next above are, left to right, Scouts Wilbur Fleenor, Troop 20, Don Curtis, Troop 27, William Wareham, Troop 27, and Charles Able, Troop 20.

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April 2, 1971: Parsnips Anyone?

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on April 2, 1971.

Parsnips Anyone?

George J. Clifford, of 2808 N. Campbell, holds two large parsnips grown in his home garden. Largest parsnip is 20 inches long, 14 inches in circumference and weighs two and one half pounds. Clifford says organic gardening is hobby and he is president of Valparaiso Organic Garden Club. Success is due to plenty of rain, rich soil and fertilizers.

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