JOHNSON COUNTY IAGenWeb Project |
Copyright 2003
By Bob Hibbs
April 12, 2003
An old Press-Citizen newspaper clipping of an Irving Weber article published
more than a quarter century ago
A trimmed, lightened, brightened and higher contrast image results from several
tricks using an Adobe Photoshop program on a home
Other tricks remove obscuring tree trunks and foliage, recreate hidden signage
and building front and make unwanted ink vanish.
Other tricks remove obscuring tree trunks and foliage, recreate hidden signage
and building front and make unwanted ink vanish.
By Bob Hibbs
An Iowa City image from about 1914 can be rehabilitated to visual acumen by modern computer technology, several dozen hours of experience, and about 20 minutes of digital wizardry. The
case in point surfaced recently after a phone call from Iowa City native Carol
Chopek Seydel recalling her family’s connection to the dome at Old Capitol. Her son, Lyle Jr., recently pulled the rope guiding the new golden dome into place atop Old Cap, marking continuation of a multi-generational odyssey dating to Lyle’s three-greats grandfather Michael Seydel who helped build Old Capitol during the 1840s. On
Carol’s side of the house, Lyle’s grandfather Lee Chopek worked the metal
recovering in 1927. In
the process of writing the story of Carol’s family connection to Old Capitol
for the Press-Citizen in 1977, the late historian Irving Weber chose an
accompanying image featuring Little Dutch Hall which was located on the north
bank of Weber explains that the Chopek family owned a cabin next door to the hall site for several decades, a cabin previously owned by several generations of the Hanlon and Englert families. A 2001 book published by the Press-Citizen which was esearched and written by this reporter carries an image of Carol’s parents on the dock at the cabin. The family still spends considerable time at the site. During conversation in her home, Carol recently produced a precious roll of lamination which contained a copy of the 1977 article. Since it was not reprinted in any of the eight volumes of Weber columns, it provided interesting reading. It also presented a challenge of what might be done with its faded images. As
a retirement gift to himself, this reporter purchased a home computer system
several years ago which included, But, alas, retrieving Little Dutch Hall from the Iowa River is impossible. It was washed away by floodwaters in June 1918, hung up on a snag in the river and was pulled apart by the onrushing waters. Computer manipulation can only do so much. P.S. This reporter will conduct a four-part seminar on local history during the first four Fridays in May. Each will be a two-hour session beginning at 3 p.m. with a 10-minute mid-session break. They will feature images which speak to the title: “A Hundred Good Stories: Vignettes Which Make Iowa City History Come Alive.” The
April 25 registration deadline approaches and class size is limited. Fee is $30.
For other details or a brochure call Jan Rigotti at 335-3245. Registration is
open to anyone interested, and sponsored by the UI Retirees’ and the Emeritus
Faculty associations with support from the UI Alumni Association. Although
it’s part of what’s called Senior Collage, no one discriminates based on
age; young people have been known Sessions will occur in the Van Allen Hall auditorium which is best approached from the south across Iowa Avenue from Bruegger’s Bagel Bakery a block north of the Senior Center. Parking is available in the Tower Place ramp; and, believe it or not, often along Iowa Avenue on Friday afternoons. According to advance puffery, “this review of Iowa City’s history will be crisp, fun and informative.
Next Saturday:
There was no county jail!
Bob Hibbs collects local postcards and
researches history related to them.
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