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Skeletons of the
Prairie:
Abandoned Rural Codington County, South Dakota

"The true basis for any serious study of the art of architecture still
lies in those indigenous, more humble buildings everywhere that are to
architecture what folklore is to literature and folk song to music."
–Frank Lloyd Wright
Drive down any road in South Dakota,
or practically any road in the Midwest for that matter, and you will
see abandoned buildings. You might come across an old house sitting in
the middle of a pasture with cows grazing around it. Or it might be a
barn that seems like it sprung up by itself in the middle of a soybean
field. It could even be a lone abandoned silo keeping watch over a
cornfield. Ever wonder about those old buildings? Who inhabited them at
one time? Why are they abandoned? That was the inspiration for Skeletons
of the Prairie: Abandoned Rural Codington County, South Dakota.
The book, released by the Historical Society in
2000, began as a project by the Codington County Historic Preservation
Commission to document and catalog, through photography, all the
abandoned houses, barns, and other structures in Codington County,
South Dakota, before they are all gone. Once the Historic Preservation
Commission finished their work, taking photographs of over 100
different buildings amounting to over 1,000 photographs, Historical
Society Director Tim Hoheisel thought a book would be a natural next
step.
“Our mission at the
Codington County Historical Society is to preserve, interpret, and
disseminate the heritage of Codington County. The photographs preserve
the buildings, the text interprets the history of them, and creating a
book disseminates the information to everybody. A project as important
as this just had to be accessible to as many people as
possible,” Hoheisel said. “The book is important to
our local history because it documents something that will be gone in a
few years; something that we will never see again.”
| The hardcover book is 160 pages long and contains
more than 200 full color photographs. Donning Company/Publishers
printed 3,000 copies of the book for the Historical Society. The cost
of the book is $40.00. All members of the Historical Society will be
able to get a 10% discount as a benefit of membership. All proceeds
from the sale of the book go directly to support the Historical Society
and its mission. |
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Professional photographer S. Paul Tuszynski took all of the
photographs. His photographs capture the light and shadow of each barn,
house, silo, or other abandoned structure, to create a specific emotion
for each picture. The beautiful and artistic photos are the focal point
of the book. Watertown writer Ried Holien then wrote text to accompany
the photos and really brought the buildings back to life. Part history,
part poetry, part literature, and part humor are what make the text so
delightful to read. Ried’s words put flesh onto the skeleton
frames of the abandoned buildings that Paul photographed. The book also
has a wonderfully written forward by South Dakota State University
English professor and writer in residence David Allen Evans.
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You may ask yourself, like many people will when
they see this book, why is it important to preserve these beautiful
old, abandoned, nearly fallen down buildings? It is important because
they are a tangible link to our past. South Dakota only became a state
in 1889, but that does not mean that we have no history. South Dakota
has historic relics comparable to Europe. They may not be
1,000-year-old castle ruins or cathedrals decorating the landscape like
in Germany, France, or England, but what we do have are no less
important. These abandoned buildings tell the tale of early pioneer
settlement into Dakota Territory and later South Dakota. It is true
that the reasons why these buildings are abandoned are not always
pleasant. Many of the farmers or settlers were forced out of their
homes because of droughts and depressions. Similarly, even the most
beautiful and historic castles in Europe do not have happy stories
within their walls. |
Whether we want to remember it or not, the history of these abandoned
buildings remains a part of our history. That history needs to be
preserved and the stories need to be told because architecture is the
message a civilization sends to the future. All of the abandoned
buildings, schools, churches, and other relics tell a story; a story of
who we were, where we came from, what we have done, and where we are
going. The people who built and used these buildings may not have been
from this country, but they sure helped build it. The people who grew
up living in these now abandoned buildings are mostly gone. Just like
the buildings themselves, fewer and fewer of each survive to see
another year. Too many young people today, to their own disadvantage,
do not know the history of these great buildings. They may not appear
like much, but to the people who built them and lived in them, they
were castles. They remain today as our prairie castles, standing proud
among the corn and bean fields, watching over herds of cattle, telling
us that we too were once small and poor. They tell us to remember where
we came from, so we can remember where we are going. Bill Holm wrote in
Landscape of Ghosts very accurately:

There is a kind of essential
truth in those old weathered boards, their condition of spiritual and
actual paintlessness, their color stripped away by age, history,
economics, nature. They show us part of ourselves not visible next to
the new windowless, sheet-metal prefab life of the moment, a part not
always cheerful and comfortable to think about. Sometimes they show us
unexpected joy. Poets, like photographers, pass by the new subdivision
without a single metaphorical quivering of their pencils, but an old
board that has been battered and beautified by its history has probably
got something valuable for human beings lying under it.
| Perhaps it is impossible for this or any book to
preserve the entire history of even one abandoned building. Still, this
book tries to preserve what it can, even if it is just skeletons and
memories. Every year, more of these buildings succumb to the elements
and old age. All the pictures in this book were taken in a ten-month
period between 1998 and 1999 in Codington County, South Dakota. During
that time, more than ten buildings fell down or were destroyed. More
will follow in years to come. Hopefully this book saves what little it
can from each building, if only a picture to accompany an obituary. |
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For more information, or to order a book, contact the Codington County
Historical Society, 27 1st Ave. SE, Watertown, SD 57201, phone: (605)
886-7335, fax: (605) 882-4383, e-mail: info@cchsmuseum.org.
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