Need
a good read for Labor Day? We suggest Sunday Afternoon on the Porch: Reflections of a Small Town in Iowa 1939-1942, by Everett W. Kuntz.
In 1939, just before graduating from high school in the small town of Ridgeway in northeast Iowa, Everett Kuntz spent his entire savings of $12.50 on a 35mm Argus AF camera. He made a camera case from a worn-out boot, scraps from a tin can, and a clasp from his mother's purse. For the next several years, especially during the summers when he worked on his parents' dairy farm, he clicked the shutter of his trusty Argus all around the quiet town.
Everett
bought movie reel film in bulk from a mail-order house, rolled his own film,
and developed it in a closet at home, but he never had the money to print his
photographs. More than two thousand negatives stayed in a box while he married,
raised a family, and worked as an electrical engineer in the Twin Cities. When
he became ill with cancer in the fall of 2002—sixty years after he had
developed the last of his bulk film—Everett opened his time capsule and printed
the images from his youth. He died in 2003, having brought his childhood town
back to life just as he was leaving it.
A
sense of peace radiates from these images. Whether skinny-dipping in the Turkey
River, wheelbarrow-racing, threshing oats, milking cows, visiting with
relatives after church, or hanging out at the drugstore or the movies,
Ridgeway's hardworking citizens are modest and trusting and luminous in their
graceful harmony and their unguarded affection for each other. Visiting the
town in 2006 as he was writing the text to accompany these photographs, Jim
Heynen crafted vignettes that perfectly complement these rediscovered images by
blending fact and fiction to give context and voice to Ridgeway's citizens.
Photo from Sunday Afternoon on the Porch: Reflections of a Small Town in Iowa 1939-1942, by Everett W. Kuntz
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