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	<title>Comments on: Spring 2009&#8242;s Fantastic Grand Finale</title>
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	<link>http://stormeyes.org/latest/2009/07/spring-2009s-fantastic-grand-finale/</link>
	<description>Roger and Elke&#039;s Chase Blog</description>
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		<title>By: Elke Edwards</title>
		<link>http://stormeyes.org/latest/2009/07/spring-2009s-fantastic-grand-finale/comment-page-1/#comment-76</link>
		<dc:creator>Elke Edwards</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 04 Aug 2009 22:24:02 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://stormeyes.org/latest/?p=298#comment-76</guid>
		<description>According the the Salina Journal, it was a 120 year-old stone smoke house!

http://www.saljournal.com/news/story/smokehouse-move-to-belleville-61809

Her&#039;es the story:

Salina Journal

BELLEVILLE -- A touch of Republic County&#039;s past went for a short, slow ride Wednesday.

A unique round smokehouse, made mostly of limestone and mortar -- except for the wooden door and frame -- is destined for permanent display at the Republic County Historical Society Museum grounds in Belleville.

Madaline Miller, of Fort Collins, Colo., gave the 120-year-old structure to the museum.

&quot;They just wanted to get it to where it would be preserved and not fall down,&quot; said Sherrie Larson, the museum&#039;s director and curator.

In an operation that was two years in the making, the smokehouse was moved nearly 15 miles to Belleville from Miller&#039;s childhood home four miles southeast of Courtland.

Miller, who is 90, told Larson she played in the smokehouse as a child.

Ball &amp; Son, a house-moving company from Belleville, first placed the structure on a concrete pad and then loaded it, pad and all, onto a trailer.

Phase one of the move, getting the smokehouse and trailer to Belleville, took 2Ôªø1âÑ2 hours to complete. Next week, it will be off-loaded to its permanent home on the museum grounds, joining a church, one-room school, log cabin, blacksmith shop and the Ag Building, where antique farm equipment is stored and displayed.

&quot;I think it will be great. It will add to the settlement scene,&quot; said Vickie Kolars, assistant museum director.

The museum is visited by up to 3,000 people a year.

Larson said the move cost $7,500.

Structures like the smokehouse provide a vital glimpse of the past, she said, and are among the artifacts that should be preserved as a way of teaching our history.

&quot;The settlers took a huge risk when they came west to settle the land, and many of their ways of life have been replaced with technology,&quot; she said. &quot;This is our way of helping to preserve what life was like when life was a lot simpler.&quot;</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>According the the Salina Journal, it was a 120 year-old stone smoke house!</p>
<p><a href="http://www.saljournal.com/news/story/smokehouse-move-to-belleville-61809" rel="nofollow">http://www.saljournal.com/news/story/smokehouse-move-to-belleville-61809</a></p>
<p>Her&#8217;es the story:</p>
<p>Salina Journal</p>
<p>BELLEVILLE &#8212; A touch of Republic County&#8217;s past went for a short, slow ride Wednesday.</p>
<p>A unique round smokehouse, made mostly of limestone and mortar &#8212; except for the wooden door and frame &#8212; is destined for permanent display at the Republic County Historical Society Museum grounds in Belleville.</p>
<p>Madaline Miller, of Fort Collins, Colo., gave the 120-year-old structure to the museum.</p>
<p>&#8220;They just wanted to get it to where it would be preserved and not fall down,&#8221; said Sherrie Larson, the museum&#8217;s director and curator.</p>
<p>In an operation that was two years in the making, the smokehouse was moved nearly 15 miles to Belleville from Miller&#8217;s childhood home four miles southeast of Courtland.</p>
<p>Miller, who is 90, told Larson she played in the smokehouse as a child.</p>
<p>Ball &amp; Son, a house-moving company from Belleville, first placed the structure on a concrete pad and then loaded it, pad and all, onto a trailer.</p>
<p>Phase one of the move, getting the smokehouse and trailer to Belleville, took 2Ôªø1âÑ2 hours to complete. Next week, it will be off-loaded to its permanent home on the museum grounds, joining a church, one-room school, log cabin, blacksmith shop and the Ag Building, where antique farm equipment is stored and displayed.</p>
<p>&#8220;I think it will be great. It will add to the settlement scene,&#8221; said Vickie Kolars, assistant museum director.</p>
<p>The museum is visited by up to 3,000 people a year.</p>
<p>Larson said the move cost $7,500.</p>
<p>Structures like the smokehouse provide a vital glimpse of the past, she said, and are among the artifacts that should be preserved as a way of teaching our history.</p>
<p>&#8220;The settlers took a huge risk when they came west to settle the land, and many of their ways of life have been replaced with technology,&#8221; she said. &#8220;This is our way of helping to preserve what life was like when life was a lot simpler.&#8221;</p>
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