Thursday, December 22, 2022

Noel Plunkett's Library Video (May/June 1987)

Those familiar with the history of Mooresville Public Library (MPL) know that construction of the "new" library building began in June, 1987.  The library is fortunate to have a VHS videotape recording made in May/June 1987 by Noel Plunkett, which shows the "old" library Carnegie building located at 32 West Main Street in downtown Mooresville, Indiana, as well as the construction site for the "new" library, which I call the 1988 building.

What good is a VHS cassette, you may well ask.  Who has videocassette recorders (VCRs) anymore?  Thankfully, there are wonderful gadgets that can convert videotapes into DVDs or digital recordings, and the library has such a gizmo.  Yesterday, I converted the videotape to DVD and digital formats.  Then, I took the raw video/audio and made a quick edit using Wondershare Filmora software.  Here's the result:

Mooresville Public Library, May/June 1987 Video, by Noel Plunkett

(Click Above to Play Video)

 

Mr. Plunkett's video begins by showing the front exterior of the MPL Carnegie building, then moves to selected interior shots.  Three MPL employees were captured on videotape:  MPL Director Sharon Beatrice, MPL Assistant Director/Indiana Room Librarian Wanda Potts, and MPL Staffer Mattie Deaton.  Then, Mr. Plunkett moves a few blocks west to 220 West Harrison Street, where construction began (in June, 1987) on the 1988 building.  Several unidentified construction workers appear in the video.  Mr. Plunkett provides a couple of voice-overs during the recording, in which he states the date of videography at the construction site.

 

Wanda Potts & Mattie Deaton appeared in this photo
of MPL Carnegie's last day (January, 1988)
L to R:  Director Pat Vahey, Asst. Dir. Wanda Potts,
Staffers Mattie Deaton, Theresa Lucas, and Sandy Lefler

 

MPL Director Sharon Beatrice (1984-1987)

Indianapolis News, Monday, June 15, 1987

 

The original video quality was low-resolution, and the audio was captured by a condenser microphone on the camera, so it is difficult to hear.  Retail camcorders from the mid-1980s filmed in analog, so the recording appears fuzzy on modern digital video players.  The quality, however, was standard for the retail market of the mid-1980s.

Mr. Plunkett's video is an invaluable historical account that captured the look and feel of the library (and construction site and its surroundings) from the time period.  Captured, too, were images (and faint voices) of some of the library staff from way back then.  For those who lived in and around Mooresville during the 1980s (and who frequented the library), it will bring back fond memories, as well as revealing what the library's current site looked like as construction began.  Sadly, such historical artifacts are often discarded, damaged, or otherwise lost as the years pass.  We are grateful that Mr. Plunkett donated a copy of his videocassette to the library, and that library staff had the foresight to preserve it.

 

Friday, November 11, 2022

The Decorinator's Living Legacy

We at Mooresville (Indiana) Public Library (MPL) were shocked earlier this week to learn that our long-time volunteer, Beth Hensley, had passed over (see her obituary online).  Just the previous week, she had dropped by the library to help with assorted projects.  It's heartbreaking to think that she's now gone.

 "Beth on Tuesdays" volunteering at Mooresville Public Library (2011)
(Click Photos to Enlarge)

"Beth-in-the-Box" at MPL (ca. 2005-2006)

 

Beth had volunteered weekly at the library (mostly on Tuesdays--hence, her nickname, "Beth on Tuesdays") since the late 1980s (either 1987 or 1988, depending upon who you were asking), but her ties with MPL reach back to 1953, when she began teaching at Mooresville High School (1953-1955).  She taught English and was the school librarian.

 Beth's faculty photo from the 1955

Mooresville High School Yearbook, Wagon Trails

 


Beth with her student library staff and her faculty photo

 from the 1954 Mooresville High School Yearbook, Wagon Trails

 

Between those yearbooks (specifically, on June 13, 1954), Beth married Mooresville native Maurice Hensley (1927-2017), who was longtime postmaster at the Mooresville post office, among the many businesses he and Beth operated together in town.  Their Jack & Jill Shop, a children's clothing store, flourished in downtown Mooresville (in the Farmers State Bank building) from the mid-1950s through the early 1960s.  The couple also owned and operated Hensley Coal & Oil Service from the mid-1950s through the 1970s.

 

 Hensley business advertisements from the 1956

Mooresville High School Yearbook, Wagon Trails

 

 

Beth standing outside the site of the Hensley's

Jack & Jill Shop (December 7, 2021)

 

Since 1953, Beth worked closely with Mooresville Public Library, as she wanted her lessons at the high school to support, and be supported by, the library's programs and resources.  When she retired from teaching, she continued working with the library in her spare time to support its activities.  Beth volunteered for dozens of MPL staffers, and she was also a member of the library's board of trustees during the 1980s.  Her devotion to the library spanned a lifetime.

Beth's contributions as a library volunteer were legendary.  She was honored in 2019 by the Indiana Library Federation for her efforts to enhance library service to the community.

Beth receiving the 2019 ILF Library Champion award

 

As a volunteer, Beth was supremely creative.  For decades she designed a multitude of displays, decorations, arts and crafts, and youth program materials.  Today, almost anywhere you're standing at the library, if you turn in any direction, you will see something that Beth created.  Her ingenuity was amazing.  She could construct anything from cardboard and construction paper.  Give her scissors, glue, string, wire, pens, markers, and a few other odds and ends, and she could make everything beautiful and interesting.  There isn't room for all the photos of her creations, but you may see many of them on our Cat's Eye View @ MPL blog.  The blog's author, Cauli Le Chat, who served as MPL feline roving reporter from 2010-2019, called Beth The Decorinator because she was all-powerful in crafting and artsy stuff.

I cannot overemphasize the significance of Beth's arts and crafts work to the library and its staff and patrons.  It is a joy to see kids' and caregivers' faces light up when they see one of Beth's "crawl-through" creations at the MPL youth services entrance, or a book-themed display atop bookshelves or in display cabinets.  Beth's backdrops for our adult programs (often featuring noted authors or speakers) were jaw-dropping; her attention to detail and cleverness in composition were stunning to behold.  (Here's just one example; there are many, many more.)

Beth's 2016 Igloo Tunnel (climb-through)
in front of MPL Youth Services entrance

Beth sitting in a rocking chair (above) and with

author Philip Gulley (below) at a 2009 library program



Beth loved working with the library's staff--most often, with the youth services department--to develop arts and crafts for various programs, events, displays, or just to promote items available to checkout.  For example, kids loved her beds and sleeping bags (made from surplus cardboard and fabric) for the overnight stuffed animal sleepovers.

Beth's cardboard beds and fabric sleeping bags

for the library's 2011 Teddy Bear Sleepover

Apart from her artistic talents, Beth was an encyclopedia of local knowledge.  She knew practically everyone in town, and she could recite familial relationships (and places families lived) off the top of her head.  More times than I can count, she filled-in missing details about Mooresville history that had stumped my best research efforts.  What's more, Beth valued the community's local history and the ways the library strove to preserve it.  For example, for decades Beth clipped obituaries from the Mooresville and Martinsville newspapers to place on file (and, more recently, to digitize and upload to our online database, Legacy Links).  She made sure that those important pieces of historical and genealogical information were retained.

Beth also had an amazing memory for academic information.  She could still recite poems she memorized decades before while attending high school or college (Indiana State Teacher's College, now Indiana State University), and she was an enthusiastic supporter of reading for all ages.

While Beth appreciated the practical value of technologies in libraries, she firmly believed that it was important for people to know how to function without the benefit of computerized gadgets.  "They still need to know what they can accomplish with just pencil and paper," Beth once said.  "The old ways of doing things can still be useful."

As part of her funeral planning, Beth arranged that memorial contributions could be made to Mooresville Public Library.  That was so like her--always thinking of how best she, and others, could help the library serve the community.  I can't imagine what we will do without her.  But, everyday, whenever we are assisting patrons, MPL staffers will reflect for a moment and ask, "What would Beth have done to make this better?"  Better was Beth's byword.  It will be her lasting legacy to us. We're honored to have known, and worked with, her, and we trust that all who come after will enjoy her creativity on display throughout the library.  "The Decorinator" was truly an inspiration to us all.

 

POSTSCRIPT:  Here are some photos of Beth Hensley's creations (and a display honoring Beth) that you may now see in the library's grand hall.









 

 

Thursday, October 13, 2022

History Cyber Sleuths (New Video Series)

Mooresville (Indiana) Public Library has a new video series called History Cyber Sleuths, in which library staff attempt to uncover historical details about undated or unidentified artifacts (photographs, documents, diaries, paintings, drawings, maps, objects, etc.) that have been brought to their attention.  This brochure elaborates.

Here are the first four episodes (click below to play videos):



History Cyber Sleuths, Episode One

"History in 'Plane' Sight"

by Mooresville Public Library

 


 History Cyber Sleuths, Episode Two

"Founder Portraits Found"

by Mooresville Public Library

 


History Cyber Sleuths, Episode Three

"Mooresville's Musical Aloha"

by Mooresville Public Library

 

 

History Cyber Sleuths, Episode Four

"James Hill, Emma Torr, and the Indiana Y.P.R.C."

by Mooresville Public Library

 

Can the library's history cyber sleuths solve these mysteries?  You'll have to watch to find out.


Wednesday, September 28, 2022

Our Spooky Haunted Book Trailer Playlist

Halloween is only a month away, so it's time to do some fun reading about ghosts, hauntings, poltergeists, spirit communications, and such like.  Mooresville (Indiana) Public Library (MPL) has a paranormal book trailer playlist on YouTube for nonfiction books on these and related subjects.  See the entire video playlist here.

Click on the videos below to watch book trailers for these recommended reads.  Many of these items are available to checkout from MPL's Evergreen Indiana catalog.

 

RECOMMENDED READING

 

HOOSIER HAUNTINGS

These books discuss haunted places, ghosts, poltergeists, and spirit communications in Indiana.

Haunting at Sycamore Lake, by Karl C. B. Muilliwey

(MPL Book Trailer 14)

(An Indiana Haunted House)




 The Feeders at Night, by Aldo Gonzalez

(MPL Book Trailer 307)

(An Indiana Haunted House)


Haunted Histories in America, by Nancy Hendricks

(MPL Book Trailer 660)

(Includes Indiana Haunted Places)

 

 

The People in the Attic, by Doretta Johnson
(MPL Book Trailer 691)

(An Indiana Haunted House)



Shelf Doll & Other True Paranormal Tales, by Karl C. B. Muilliwey

(MPL Book Trailer 110)

(NOTE:  This book is unavailable, but a summary can be viewed here)

 

SPIRIT COMMUNICATION & THE AFTERLIFE

These books discuss evidential communications people purportedly have had with their deceased loves ones and friends, as well as other communicators.  Some communications allegedly describe the afterlife.  Some (such as A. Campbell Holms' book) offer comprehensive, encyclopedic coverage of all psi phenomena.

 

The Articulate Dead, by Michael E. Tymn

(MPL Book Trailer 710)

 

The Facts of Psychic Science, by A. Campbell Holms

(MPL Book Trailer 597)

 


 The New Revelation & The Vital Message, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
(MPL Book Trailer 146)

 


Six Books About Animals & the Afterlife

(MPL Book Trailer 609)


What Happens When You Die, by Robert Crookall

(MPL Book Trailer 708)

 

 


 Four Books About Precipitated Spirit Portraits

(MPL Book Trailer 355)

 


The Psychic Life of Abraham Lincoln, by Susan B. Martinez, Ph.D.

(MPL Book Trailer 184)



Four Afterlife Research Books by Rev. Charles L. Tweedale & Violet Tweedale

(MPL Book Trailer 818)

 

The World Unseen, by Anthony Borgia

(MPL Book Trailer 473)



The Supreme Adventure, by Robert Crookall

(MPL Book Trailer 406)

 

 
Conversations Beyond the Light, by Dr. Pat Kubis & Mark Macy
(MPL Book Trailer 81)
 
 

 A Study in Survival, by Roger Straughan
(MPL Book Trailer 109)



Unfinished Symphonies, by Rosemary Brown
(MPL Book Trailer 32)


HAUNTED PLACES, GHOSTS, & POLTERGEISTS

These books talk about specific haunted places, ghosts or earthbound spirits, possession/obsession, and poltergeist phenomena.  A couple of books suggest that spirits assisted archaeologists in finding unknown, lost ruins or artifacts.



Ghosts & Earth Bound Spirits, by Linda Williamson

(MPL Book Trailer 531)



Thirty Years Among the Dead, by Carl A. Wickland, M.D.

(MPL Book Trailer 153)

 

Poltergeist, by Colin Wilson

(MPL Book Trailer 63)


 
Poltergeists, by Alan Gauld & A. D. Cornell
(MPL Book Trailer 611)



This House is Haunted, by Guy Lyon Playfair

(MPL Book Trailer 152)



Two Books About Haunted Borley Rectory, by Harry Price

(MPL Book Trailer 823)
 


The World's Most Haunted House, by William J. Hall

(MPL Book Trailer 215)



True Ghost Stories, by the Marchioness Townshend of Raynham & Maude ffoulkes
(MPL Book Trailer 1)
 
 

The Gate of Remembrance, by Frederick Bligh Bond

(MPL Book Trailer 414)



The Mystery of the Buried Crosses, by Hamlin Garland

(MPL Book Trailer 100)

 

 


Thursday, September 22, 2022

Bass Building Demolition

We've previously blogged about the George W. Bass Building, which was irreparably damaged by a tornado on April 8, 2020.  While walking through downtown Mooresville over my lunch break, I noticed that the structure is in the process of being demolished.

Bass Building Demolition Under Way (September 22, 2022)

(Click Photos to Enlarge)

(Photos by William R. Buckley)

 






It has been two-and-a-half years since the building collapsed, and although Mooresville citizens are undoubtedly pleased that the ruins are finally being removed, we are also saddened that another piece of local history is being carted away.  Since the structure couldn't be salvaged, however, removal was the only sensible recourse.

We've heard on the town grapevine that a parking lot will be constructed on the Bass site.  While that's beneficial for downtown businesses and customers, it seems a rather pedestrian use of the land.  But nobody asked my opinion, so I'll just sit quietly in an out-of-the-way corner someplace.

You can read all of our previous blog posts about the Bass Building here.

Farewell, Bass Building.  You gave us 130 years of wonderful history.  George W. Bass, wherever you are, would be proud of that.


UPDATE SEPTEMBER 29, 2022:   A week after taking the photos above, I returned downtown to shoot some additional photos showing the progress of the demolition.  The concrete structure in the middle of the rubble was the Citizens Bank vault when the bank was located here (1931-1966).  Click the images to enlarge.









UPDATE OCTOBER 15, 2022:  The Bass Building is gone.  These photos (below) were taken on Friday, October 14, 2022.  Since it appears that grass seed has been planted (note straw covering), perhaps the land will now be used as a tiny park space, rather than as a parking lot as rumors previously reported.  An outdoor eating area would be nice.








Monday, September 19, 2022

A Tale of Two Simons

Longtime Mooresville resident, renowned painter and Indiana State Banner designer Paul Hadley painted a watercolor rendering of Simon Moon's cabin, which now hangs along with other Paul Hadley paintings at Mooresville (Indiana) Public Library.

"Simon Moon's Cabin," by Paul Hadley
(click photos to enlarge)

 

It should be a simple matter to learn more about Simon Moon, whose cabin was commemorated in Hadley's watercolor.  But you'll find a convoluted historical trail that has confused researchers for decades.  That's because there were TWO Simon Moons associated with our local and regional history.

Simon Moon (1786-1879) was a Quaker (Society of Friends) who, during the 1830's, settled land in Morgan County, Indiana (first in Gregg Township, then in Brown Township). He lived near Long Ridge, a few miles southwest of Mooresville.  "Our" Simon Moon (let's call him the "Bethel" Simon Moon for sake of comparison) is often mistaken for a relative, also named Simon Moon (1784-1835), who, on May 6, 1834, founded the town (now city) of Westfield, Indiana (in Hamilton County, north of Indianapolis), along with fellow Friends Asa Bales (Mooresville's first postmaster in 1826) and Ambrose Osborne.  All had relocated to Indiana from North Carolina.  We know that the "Westfield" Simon Moon was married to Hannah (Stout) Moon (1789-1844), and both are buried in the Old Friends Cemetery Park in Westfield, while the "Bethel" Simon Moon and his wife, Lydia Moon, are both buried in the Bethel Friends cemetery (see grave markers).  This has confused historians for many years, since the "Westfield" Simon Moon had once lived with Asa Bales in Mooresville before moving to Hamilton County.

Confusing one Simon with another was not uncommon in the 19th century.  Quakers habitually named offspring with identical Biblical names, so within an extended family tree, there could be many Daniels, Simons, Sauls, etc., all with the same surname and, perhaps, no distinguishing middle names.  Muddying the waters further was a Quaker practice (common during the early 19th century and earlier) of not marking grave sites with named headstones.

Both Simons knew each other.  It was a smaller world back then.  Many of these settlers met one another at religious gatherings or in the ordinary course of social visits or business.  These regular (sometimes everyday) interactions mix-up the historical records when one is searching for a particular person, only to discover another individual with an identical moniker who frequented the same geographical areas.

How can we sort out the two Simons?  Thankfully, Richard L. Moon, the "Bethel" Simon's fourth great-grandson, has written a short book explaining the differences between him (i.e., the "Bethel" Simon) and the "Westfield" Simon.  Richard's book presents the evidence persuasively and compellingly, showing land ownership, deeds, maps, Friends meeting records, family trees, and other documentation that clearly indicate two separate individuals who happened to share the same name.
 
Click image (above) to read a digital
copy of Richard L. Moon's book
(in PDF format)
 
Besides being available (free-of-charge) as a digital (PDF) book that you may access online, a printed copy of the book may be checked-out from Mooresville Public Library's Evergreen Indiana (E.I.) catalog, if you have an E.I. library card.

Friday, August 12, 2022

Morgan County "History Buff"alo Returns

 You can't celebrate Morgan County's Bicentennial (1822-2022) without Brutus.


 MPL's Ms. Catherine with Brutus (August 12, 2022)

(CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE)

 

Brutus, the official Morgan County (Indiana) Bicentennial Bison, is visiting Mooresville Public Library (MPL) during the month of August, 2022.  Get to know the big fella.  We have a bunch of photos.

 "Whoa, Big Fella!"
MPL Executive Director Diane Huerkamp & Morgan County Historian Don Adams coax Brutus to graze in the Grand Hall Directors' Alcove

 

Say, Brutus, did you make that carpet stain?  Bad bison!


   Heading East & West Across the Hoosier Plains


Let's take a peek at those signs, shall we?





What's Brutus' neck tag say?

 

More close-ups?  Sure!


"How ya doin' out there?"

"Wouldn't mind some grass or hay.  Just saying."

 

There's one more REALLY IMPORTANT sign:

 

Does Brutus look familiar?  If you happened to drop by the Library during the 2016 Indiana Bicentennial celebration, you might have seen Brutus wearing different colored fur.  We blogged about his 2016 visit (click here), and Cauli Le Chat, MPL feline roving reporter (2010-2019), also talked about it (click here).

Brutus in 2016 during the Indiana Bicentennial Celebration









Brutus welcomes photo ops, so stop by and take some "selfies" with Morgan County's official Bicentennial Bison.  Just don't climb on or touch him.  He's a friendly dude, but we don't want to get him riled up.  Stampedes we don't need inside the Library.