IDAHO FALLS (AP) — History needs nothing more than a crack in the plaster to slip out like a ghost.
That's how it happened on A Street in downtown Idaho Falls. Winter ice dislodged a chunk of stucco from the east side of the Great Harvest Bread Co. building. Spring wind pulled back the stucco and plaster, revealing brick and several feet of heavy block lettering at least a century old.
Great Harvest owner John VanOrman saw the antique letters and wanted to keep peeling.
"It's like a little hidden treasure," VanOrman said. "You see a little piece of it and you keep digging, finding more."
Painted walls of the vintage are called "ghost signs." They were created in the late 1800s and early 1900s when painters — or "wall dogs" — plastered buildings with business names and ad art.
Circumstance preserved the lingering ghost signs.
VanOrman did some sleuthing since the wind unearthed his ghost sign three weeks ago.
The sign reads "IDAHO FALLS DEVELOPMENT CO. LTD." VanOrman's chain of title records show the business owned the building from 1907 to 1912.
The sign presumably was painted in that five-year window. VanOrman looked up city maps showing the Gayety Theatre was built next door — inches away, if not touching — between 1911 and 1921.
The building containing the movie theater and businesses that followed was torn down in the '80s to make room for a bank parking lot.
That building, however, acted as a buffer that protected the now 100-year-old sign.
"Really, that sign hasn't seen the light of day for 80 years," VanOrman said.
The sign became the city's history project. The crew from All American Cleaning and Restoration carefully chipped away at the layer of plaster like archeologists on a dig as passers-by stopped to puzzle briefly on the sidewalk.
Crewman Steve Wright said he and the other workers were told to take extra care not to ding the lettering. That meant gentler work and a longer process.
"We'd probably be chiseling it," Wright said through a white ventilation mask. "It's a new experience compared to what we normally do."
Across the street, Robert Fischer stepped out of his barber shop to smoke a cigarette and watch the progress. Fischer owns Robert's Deluxe Cuts.
Source: www.deseretnews.com
Antique fire equipment to parade through Westminster, have show at Farm Museum Saturday - Evening Sun
Retired fire equipment from the 1920s through the '80s will be on display Saturday at the Chesapeake Antique Fire Apparatus Association's 43rd Annual Spring Muster at the Carroll County Farm Museum.
"It's similar to an antique car show, but with fire apparatus," club president Frank Tremel said.
The Spring Muster starts off with a parade of the antique fire equipment, complete with sirens and horns a-blaring, traveling down Main Street in Westminster to the Farm Museum at 10 a.m.
Equipment will be parked around the Farm Museum Pond off Gist Road so that the pumping equipment can access the pond water for pumping demonstrations, said Charlie Cadle, a member of the CAFAA board of the directors.
Most of the equipment on display will be from the '50s, '60s and '70s, Cadle said, but members also have pieces that go back to the 1800s, though those aren't the motorized vehicles. Attendees can expect to see antique hook and ladder trucks, pump trucks and specialty equipment, such as brush trucks, as well as a variety of hand-pulled carts with different uses.
"There's plenty of them out there," Cadle said of antique fire equipment.
Most fire companies replace their equipment after 20 years, he said, and many are in the practice of selling the used equipment to a fire company member or an outside collector. Most of the collectors are retired career or volunteer firemen, he said.
Tremel said the majority of the equipment taking part in the muster is privately
owned, but a few fire companies, including Westminster's, own historical fire equipment and will be bringing it to the show. Westminster usually brings its 1924 Lafrance ladder truck, he said, which is also on display in its firehouse museum the rest of the year.In addition to the fire equipment, there will be a flea market, different vendors and children's activities.
"A lot of kids like fire engines, as did I," Cadle said.
Many of adult men remember their fondness for fire trucks from when they were children, he said, and want to bring their own children out to the muster to share that experience with them.
"You're always a kid at heart," he said.
In addition to the muster being an opportunity for the CAFAA as an outreach event to the public, it's also an opportunity for its members to get together and see what each has been working on in the past year.
Many of these pieces come in some level of degradation, Cadle said, and the members work hard to restore them to how they would have looked in their era.
The event is free for all attendees, and non-club members are welcome to bring their equipment as well, he said, though there is a $15 registration fee to be part of the show.
"It's just a day to recognize the fire service by displaying the antique apparatus from years gone by," Tremel said.
If you go
What: Chesapeake Antique Fire Apparatus Association's 43rd Annual Spring Muster
When: 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday
Where: Carroll County Farm Museum Pond, off Gist Road in Westminster
Cost: Admission is free for all ages, registration for a piece of fire equipment is $15
For more info: Call the Farm Museum at 410-386-3880
Source: www.eveningsun.com
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