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bivester
anybody else going to this show down in mickey's hometown?

QUOTE


The massive sandstone, brick and wood structure, often referred to as a Fort Granary, was built by German immigrants at a time when Indiana gained statehood. It represents a rare rural architectural structure from the early 1800s--the largest granary of its type built by German craftsmen in the United States. It is located in the National Historic Landmark district in the Rapp-Maclure Owen Block of New Harmony, IN. It is owned by the Rapp Granary-Owen Foundation, a 501©(3) organization, established to acquire, refurbish, maintain, and operate the historic building. It operates as a multi-purpose conference center and is open for tours when not otherwise scheduled.
Completed by the Harmonists in 1818, the Granary was five stories high, 40 feet wide and 70 feet long, with a tile-covered German-style hip roof. The bottom two stories are constructed of stones acquired from a quarry near the Cut-Off River. The top stories are brick. The stone walls are four feet thick and contain several ventilation slits. The Harmonists believed that there would be a year of drought and famine before the arrival of the Millennium; thus they stored great quantities of grain here and in their churches as well.

After the Harmonie Society left, the Granary had many uses. It served as David Dale Owen's laboratory from 1843 to 1859. David Dale Owen, the first state geologist appointed in 1837, was the renowned "pioneer geologist of the Middle West." He installed large windows and high ceilings on the second level. David Dale Owen died in 1860 and his son Alfred David Dale Owen received the property. In 1866 new owners operated it as a woolen mill. In 1871 another party changed the granary to a corn meal mill. In 1877 Harriett Phillips converted it into a flour mill. December 20, 1878 the top two stories and the interior were destroyed by fire. In 1893, John Ribeyre re-converted the structure to a granary. In 1948 the Granary was purchased by Kenneth Dale Owen, geologist by profession and a descendant of David Dale Owen's brother Richard. It was identified by the New Harmony Memorial Commission as "needing preservation attention," and was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1965. Unoccupied, the magnificent blocks of sandstone and brick were steadfastly resisting the ravages of the elements.

In 1997/99 the Granary received historic preservation attention through the initiative of Kenneth D. Owen, with the generous support of numerous donors. A massive restoration of the building got underway. Restoration plans included a geological museum with exhibits focusing on the building's use during the David Dale Owen period and unique meeting facilities, as well as exhibits reflecting its German heritage.

In 1941 Kenneth Owen brought his young bride to New Harmony. She immediately wanted to restore the vine-covered and dilapidated granary. He explained "We don't own it, wait and see what can be done."

Acknowledging that the Granary had a stand-alone history, Owen purchased it in 1948. While Kenneth was out of town, Jane Owen invited young people of New Harmony to clean out the building and join her for an event in the Granary. It was "the dandiest square dance you've ever seen." That event led the visionary Mrs. Owen to "realize the Granary was breathing and alive, but had to wait for restoration." After the square dance baptism, the Granary waited over fifty years for its rebirth. The granary project required patience, but "little by little, step by step, we moved closer and closer to its resurrection."

In 1991 Kenneth Dale Owen and Jane Blaffer Owen formed the Rapp Granary-Owen Foundation with co-trustees Gary J. Gerard, Robert R. Guenther, David L. Rice and James A. Sanders. Three years later, in 1994, Kenneth Owen donated the Granary property to the foundation. The following year the skillful and creative restorative vision of the Owens was presented to an Advisory Committee asked to assess the project and bring this majestic structure "back to life." It was to remain true to the original Harmonist builders, their skills, craftsmanship, and functionality, as well as to the Owenite occupancy as a scientific learning center and geological laboratory.

Throughout the renovation, Jane Owen praised the excellent efforts of all involved and in particular the craftsmen. As she noted, "In the action of fine craftsmen you see the hand of God." A bronze plaque located on the main floor of the granary honors the craftsmen whose hands and hearts so carefully worked on this project. By the end of 1999 over 360 donors had met the challenge grants from the National Park Service Preservation and the Neighborhood Assistance Program and from the Lilly Endowment, Inc. by contributing over 2.5 millions for its renovation.

The granary has been renamed the Rapp-Owen Granary to reflect it's German/Rappite heritage and the subsequent Owen geological heritage of David Dale Owen and his brother Richard, the grandfather of geologist Kenneth Owen who owned the granary from 1947 until it was conveyed to the Rapp-Granary-Owen Foundation for restoration-renovation.

This "modern" structure currently serves many purposes, and has been called a world class facility.

Now the facility is used for rehearsal dinners, weddings, receptions, business and professional meetings, conferences and luncheons. Each year the Granary also hosts New Harmony’s popular “Under the Beams” concert season.



looks like a cool place (both the venue and new harmony).

i think i'm gonna head down early, looks like some good picture taking ops down there.
kylie jo
This is the pits.
That is gonna be a sweet show!
I'll be at a silly wedding reception in mississippi. Ya'll have fun.
CanoeCanDo
My wife Jan and I plan to be there as long as there is no flooding to interfere with travel from the Bloomington, Indiana area. Mike
Spajo
Colleen and I will be there if the creek don't rise. Nashville, TN ~ Randy
bivester
QUOTE (CanoeCanDo @ Jun 11 2008, 06:24 PM) *
My wife Jan and I plan to be there as long as there is no flooding to interfere with travel from the Bloomington, Indiana area. Mike

QUOTE (Spajo @ Jun 12 2008, 02:17 AM) *
Colleen and I will be there if the creek don't rise. Nashville, TN ~ Randy

cool. hope to meet ya'll. here's hoping the flood waters stay down.

if you see me (my pic is in my profile), please say hello.
PatrickLongest
I so wanted to make this show...it's so close, such a cool venue, and with it being Mickey's stompin' grounds, I had this one in my radar for quite a while. However, it was the only day we could have my wife's end-of-cancer-treatments (or as I call it, the "Chemo No Mo") party. Still, if anyone hears of a ticket coming available, contact me. If the party wraps on time, I could probably rush over just in time.
CanoeCanDo
Anyone know how many seats there are for the performance? Just wondering how large or small the venue was? Mike
CanoeCanDo
QUOTE (bivester @ Jun 12 2008, 10:57 AM) *
if you see me (my pic is in my profile), please say hello.


Bill we met at the show in Bloomington, Indiana last year. Jan and I were the one's who started the wedding anniversary card around the audience for people to sign that you made sure got up on stage for Karin and Linford. I'll be certain to say hello and introduce you to my wife this time.

I saw you on stage at the National City Pavilion a few weeeks ago when you were busy taking pictures. Didn't get to say hello then. Sure was fun being in Cincinnati that night even with not getting home until almost 2:00 AM.

See you Saturday!

Mike
CanoeCanDo
I'm sure Bill will have more pictures to add from tonight's show but for now you have to settle for the work of an amateur...



CanoeCanDo
P.S. For those of you who gave Bill a lot of grief for wearing a white t-shirt while taking pictures at the performance of Ohio at the National City Pavilion I can attest to the fact that he dressed in black this time for his picture taking! biggrin.gif Mike
bivester
what a beautiful day and evening. new harmony and it's people are amazing.
nice to see mike and his wife. pics tomorrow.
bivester
ok, where to start? it's going to be hard to talk about this without sounding like a gushing fool, seriously.

i headed out to new harmony early, wanting to get a feel for the town after discussing it with mickey several times and then recently reading more about it. on the way over, i got a text from karin telling me that everything was fine but, to watch out for the national guard (new harmony sits on the banks of the recently severely swollen wabash river). that didn't sound good and i didn't know what to expect, but not too long after i began passing army transport trucks, probably 30+ or more, loaded down with sandbags, backhoes and other heavy machinery. ok, i was a "little concerned." then i soon began to see, on both sides of the interstate, what appeared to be lakes, but were in all actuality, corn and soybean fields, ok, i was a little more concerned, maybe worried.

i soon reached my exit and shortly after, new harmony. only to find on of the most beautiful little towns that i have ever seen in my life. almost surreal in its beauty and charm, it's like a town time forgot. in a good way. then as i turned off of church street towards the granary, i spotted many national guardsmen, in full camouflage unloading these flatbeads full of sandbags, building virtual walls to protect the historic homes, the "roofless church," the incredible, modern, richard maier designed welcome center from the ravages of nature. high, fast running water. i was within 10 feet of the banks of a river that should have been a quarter of a mile away. once again, surreal. very surreal.

and yet, all of this couldn't damped the spirit and the people of this amazing place. they went on with life, apparently much as they always do. the street festival/antique show was still happening, the local (and very good) country music band was still playing on a street corner, neighbors we're still walking and riding their bikes and being kind, stopping on the street to shake hands, say hello and welcome you to their home, then offering sightseeing tips to obvious strangers (me). one woman stopped me coming out of the roofless church, welcomed me, put down the kickstand on her bike and said "oh, you've got to see the garden across the street, took my by the arm and walked me though. again, very surreal and you began to realize, it's so sad this is such a shocking aberration...this is how it should be.

so how do you top an experience like this? you take a town full of these people, put them in one place, a beautiful, historical room, as linford might say "a well made thing" to share an evening of beautiful music, discussion and friendship. i spent the 30-minute preshow w/mike and his wife and mickey's mom, sandy and his sister, kim. what a blast, it's easy to see how mickey is what he is after spending some time with sandy, what a lovely woman. and it's always a pleasant surprise to walk into a room where they are playing and see a grand piano in stage, this time a steinway baby grand was sitting on the front left corner of the stage. while walking the town before the show and just turning the corner towards the granary not long before the doors opened i crossed paths w/molly and grafton (mickey's wife and son) riding their bikes to the show, laughing and talking all the way (you're probably expecting me to say someting about surreal about now...).

the show was beautiful, a big event for this small town, mostly all locals who seemed to be pleasantly confused by us crazy travelers ("you came in from where?"). they played two sets, with about a 30 minute break in between to socialize over homemade cookies, brownies and punch, it wasn't "timed" and no one was too rushed though.

during the first set linford told a story about visiting his mother recently and going to a covered dish church dinner with his mother, complete with tater-tot casseroles and fruit and jello mold desserts. the entertainment, a local barbershop quartet were unable to make it and linford's mother announced that he was a "professional musician" and there was a piano in the room, so he became the featured entertainment, playing old hymn that were called out to him. explaining that it was odd that he can't remember songs that he wrote five years ago yet he remembered everything they requested that evening, from his early. a couple of songs into the second set, he mentioned that during the break a woman said "well you talked about the old hymns but you didn't play one." so he launched into a beautiful solo of "let the lower lights be burning" to a quiet, dark, still room. it was stunning. beautiful.

all-in-all, i can't imagine a better day spent. it was beautiful. perfect.


the set...

first set
i don't wanna waste
fever
born
desperate
roll
innocent
trumpet child
kiddin' (and mickey really showed off for the hometown crowd)
trouble (w/molly)

break
homemade brownies and kiss cookies smile.gif

second set
motherless child
orphan girl (w/molly)
let the lower light be burning (linford solo)
suitcase
ohio
tom (w/molly)
president (w/molly)
encore
hush now
drunkards prayer

and pics are in the usual place (click on the link @ the bottom right in my signature).
Spajo
QUOTE (bivester @ Jun 12 2008, 09:57 AM) *
QUOTE (CanoeCanDo @ Jun 11 2008, 06:24 PM) *
My wife Jan and I plan to be there as long as there is no flooding to interfere with travel from the Bloomington, Indiana area. Mike

QUOTE (Spajo @ Jun 12 2008, 02:17 AM) *
Colleen and I will be there if the creek don't rise. Nashville, TN ~ Randy

cool. hope to meet ya'll. here's hoping the flood waters stay down.

if you see me (my pic is in my profile), please say hello.

Spajo
QUOTE (Spajo @ Jun 15 2008, 05:09 PM) *
QUOTE (bivester @ Jun 12 2008, 09:57 AM) *
QUOTE (CanoeCanDo @ Jun 11 2008, 06:24 PM) *
My wife Jan and I plan to be there as long as there is no flooding to interfere with travel from the Bloomington, Indiana area. Mike

QUOTE (Spajo @ Jun 12 2008, 02:17 AM) *
Colleen and I will be there if the creek don't rise. Nashville, TN ~ Randy

cool. hope to meet ya'll. here's hoping the flood waters stay down.

if you see me (my pic is in my profile), please say hello.

Sorry I didn't see your reply or profile before we left for New Harmony... But what a wonderful show!
There seems to be a great deal of nice people there. Mickey, Molly and family especially. I would love to talk to them more someday, but I don't want to impose. I have been lucky to enjoy their music with Swan Dive here in Nashville for many years. I always come away feeling better. PS "They Have The Best Tunes" Also I really loved it when OtR played Kiddin'. It's my favorite of their songs. Singing, musicanship, talent. Just a beautiful event and place for it to happen. It made me happier than I've been in awhile to attend. And I got to sit in exactly the same place we did the last time we were at The Granary. Another great time.
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