Category Archives: History

Personal Photo Project No. 185


Unsolved
Unsolved

My Personal Photo Project this week was to photograph the most famous allegedly haunted house in Iowa. The Villisca Axe Murder House. I will state that I don’t believe in ghosts, but I am open to the possibility of their existence. In the same vein, I’m open to the possibility that Bigfoot exists, that aliens have visited our planet, or that it is possible some day Michael Bay will make a semi-watchable movie.

I have discussed visiting the Villisca Axe Murder House with numerous people over the years, but had never even came close to visiting it. I had actually resigned myself to believing that I would never actually go see it, but Shannon made it happen by taking me along to visit her brother who is a pastor in nearby Corning.

If you don’t know the story of the Villisca Axe Murders, here is a really short version, I’m borrowing from Wikipedia:

The Moore family consisted of parents Josiah (aged 43), Sarah (39), and their four children: Herman (11), Katherine (10), Boyd (7) and Paul (5). An affluent family, the Moores were well-known and well-liked in their community.[1] On June 9, 1912, Katherine Moore invited Ina (8) and Lena (12) Stillinger to spend the night at the Moore residence. That evening, the visiting girls and the Moore family attended the Presbyterian church where they participated in the Children’s Day Program, which Sarah Moore had coordinated. After the program ended at 9:30 p.m., the Moores and the Stillinger sisters walked to the Moores’ house, arriving between 9:45 and 10 p.m.
At 7 a.m. the next day, Mary Peckham, the Moores’ neighbor, became concerned after she noticed that the Moore family had not come out to do their morning chores. Peckham knocked on the Moores’ door. When nobody answered, she tried to open the door and discovered that it was locked. Peckham let the Moores’ chickens out and then called Ross Moore, Josiah Moore’s brother. Like Peckham, Moore received no response when he knocked on the door and shouted. He unlocked the front door with his copy of the house key. While Peckham stood on the porch, Moore went into the parlor and opened the guest bedroom door and found Ina and Lena Stillinger’s bodies on the bed. Moore immediately told Peckham to call Hank Horton, Villisca’s primary peace officer, who arrived shortly thereafter. Horton’s search of the house revealed that the entire Moore family and the two Stillinger girls had been bludgeoned to death. The murder weapon, an ax belonging to Josiah, was found in the guest room where the Stillinger sisters were found.
Doctors concluded that the murders had taken place shortly after midnight. The killer or killers began in the master bedroom, where Josiah and Sarah Moore were asleep. Josiah received more blows from the ax than any other victim; his face had been cut so much that his eyes were missing. The killer(s) then went into the children’s rooms and bludgeoned Herman, Katherine, Boyd, and Paul in the head in the same manner as their parents. Afterward, the killer(s) moved downstairs to the guest bedroom and killed Ina and Lena.

This crime was never solved.

The remainder of the Unsolved Series:


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To answer the most common question I’ve been asked, “No. Neither Shannon or I experienced anything spooky or abnormal while we were in the house. Nothing that could be remotely described as paranormal. If you want to completely grasp at straws because you have some kind of desperate need to feel like we were connected with the paranormal, the best I can give you is that the house feels kind of sad when you are in it.”

I was actually expecting to be disappointed in the experience, but I actually enjoyed it way more than I thought I would. The tour guide is the same guy that was featured in the episode of Ghost Adventures that was filmed in the house. He is very entertaining and tells many stories about the house and his experiences with reality television producers. In person, he seems a lot less convinced of the level of paranormal activity than he did on the show, but on the other hand, he doesn’t go inside the house on the tour either. He answers your questions in the upstairs of a barn that has been constructed on the property and then you tour the house on your own.

For a large fee, you can spend the night in the Villisca Axe Murder house. This is something I would actually be willing to do at some point in the future.

Next week’s Personal Photo Project will feature flowers of some kind again. Maybe the hibiscus.

Post No. 1718

Now that I am officially caught back up with my blogging, I’d like to do a little bit of general house cleaning and look at some completely meaningless statistics.

First of all and most importantly, the Gallery/Store has experienced a complete redesign. It could still be classified as a work in progress, but you should go check it out anyway:

Photography 139 Gallery/Store

I’m not completely in love with the way you navigate around the store/gallery, but it looks a million times better. Any feedback is appreciated.

On these periodic check ins, I like to look at and acknowledge the people that have appeared in this blog AKA An Artist’s Notebook the most since its inception all those years ago.

Top Ten People to Appear in these Pages:

1. Jesse Howard – 224
2. Jay Janson – 199
3. Teresa Kahler – 185
4. Derrick Gorshe – 184
5. Shannon Bardole – 173
6. Jen Gorshe – 170
7. Dad – 163
8. Carla Stensland – 148
9. Mom – 147
10. Willy – 144

At these times, I also like to look at the most popular pictures in the store. I can’t claim to know 100% how these are determined, but I think it has something to do with pictures that get the “Thumbs Up”.


25 Most Popular Photos of Photography 139

25. Open Mic Night


24. Young Heroes Banquet

8.
23. The Girl in the Blue Skirt Beta


22. Katelyn Augustin


21. Evie Gorshe – 18 Months


20. Maddux Davis – 6 Months


19. Huxley Father-Daughter Dance


18. Young Heroes Banquet


17. Barn Between Boone and Ames


16. Evie Gorshe – 18 Months


15. Me and my Mom in Colorado


14. Jeff and his Best Man


13. Alice DeWaard – 9 Months


12. Alice DeWaard – 9 Months


11. Evie Gorshe


10. 2011 Kansas City Youth Group Mission Trip Group Photo


9. Becky Perkovich – 2011


8. Maddux Davis – 6 Months


7. The Living Legend – Instagram


6. Me and Joe’s Coupe


5. Jill Gorshe – Must Be Truth


4. Frog


3. Evie Gorshe

Day 21 - Hole
2. 365 Day Project Day 21 – Hole


1. McHose Park Frog

Hopefully will check back in on these numbers around Post 1800.

Personal Photo Project No. 181


$80
$80

The first scheduled stop on Shannon and I’s road trip itinerary was the grounds of a former 19th century cult that had a colony near Corning, called the French Icarians. They had some pretty crazy beliefs like:

Fraternity. As a rule of conduct, three principles summarize all: Love your neighbor as yourself. Do unto others as you would have others do unto you. Do to others the good that you wish for yourself. All must be as brothers, living each for all and all of each.

Equality. It is not nature, but society that has made men unequal in intelligence and education. The remedy for existing social problems is the universal application of the principle of social equality. Social equality can be achieved by a system of communal sharing of goods and services. The community has an obligation to provide free equal educational opportunities to all. And all individuals must be treated equally before the law.

Liberty. All religious opinion must be accorded tolerance and respect. Freedom of speech is basic and all people may participate in the communal assembly meetings, the principal means of setting community policy.

Yeah, like that would ever work!

The rest of the $80 Series:


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I’m curious to know if Shannon can figure out what is “wrong” with the image that I chose to represent the entire photo series. I guess I’ll have to wait to see.

Personal Photo Project of the Week #133


The Living Legend
The Living Legend

This week’s Personal Photo Project was to photograph the No. 844 (The Living Legend) when it passed through Boone.

I actually photographed it on3 separate occasions. I took a “salesman’s lunch” on the day it came in and stood on a bridge west of Boone with a small contingent of people (including my Mom) waiting for it to enter Boone.

That night I visiting the UP Freight Yard in Boone to photograph it again. Unfortunately, they didn’t have it open to the public. So I did what I could.

Then the next morning I setup near Jordan Corner before I went to work to photograph it leaving Boone.

Here is the story of The Living Legend from the Union Pacific website:

Steam Locomotive No. 844 is the last steam locomotive built for Union Pacific Railroad. It was delivered in 1944. A high-speed passenger engine, it pulled such widely known trains as the Overland Limited, Los Angeles Limited, Portland Rose and Challenger.

Many people know the engine as the No. 8444, since an extra ‘4’ was added to its number in 1962 to distinguish it from a diesel numbered in the 800 series. The steam engine regained its rightful number in June 1989, after the diesel was retired.

When diesels took over all of the passenger train duties, No. 844 was placed in freight service in Nebraska between 1957 and 1959. It was saved from being scrapped in 1960 and held for special service.

The engine has run hundreds of thousands of miles as Union Pacific’s ambassador of goodwill. It has made appearances at Expo ’74 in Spokane, the 1981 opening of the California State Railroad Museum in Sacramento, the 1984 World’s Fair in New Orleans and the 50th Anniversary Celebration of Los Angeles Union Station in 1989.

Hailed as Union Pacific’s “Living Legend,” the engine is widely known among railroad enthusiasts for its excursion runs, especially over Union Pacific’s fabled crossing of Sherman Hill between Cheyenne and Laramie, Wyoming.

The rest of the The Living Legend Series:


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Next week’s Personal Photo Project will involve a sunflower.