Joplin Metro
<img src="http://www.joplinglobeonline.com/images/zope/extra.gif" border=0> New book examines change in Joplin’s historic buildings <font color="#ff0000">w/ photo slide show</font>
Advance the player to view a slide show of historic and current Joplin photos from Leslie Simpson’s new book, “Now and Then and Again: Joplin Historic Architecture.”
By Wally Kennedy
wkennedy@joplinglobe.com
The subject matter may be painful for people who know Joplin, contrasting as it does buildings that once defined Joplin’s identity with those that now define it.
In fact, “Now and Then and Again: Joplin Historic Architecture,” a new book about Joplin’s architecture by Joplin resident Leslie Simpson, can be downright depressing.
But that’s the point.
“I want to inspire people to preserve what we have got left for everyone’s future,” Simpson said.
The 98-page book contains almost 200 photographs. It is based on “Extreme Makeover: Joplin Edition,” a computerized slide show that Simpson produced a couple of years ago to show to local groups. She offers half-hour and one-hour versions of the program.
“I developed the program by using present-day views of sites around town contrasted with vintage photos of historic buildings on that site,” she said. “I have shown it to 25 groups, so far.
“Every time I have shown the program, someone will tell me, ‘I wish you had a book about this.’ The (buildings) that get the loudest groans when I show the program are included in the book.”
Simpson often prefaces her program with a warning about the “architorture” the audience is about to witness.
One of the loudest groans involves the Columbian building at 418-420 S. Main St. When it was built in 1893, it reflected the popular beaux-arts style and featured beautiful stonework for the facade.
The ornamentation was removed and replaced with a featureless facade by the 1930s, and the site then deteriorated into a “shaggy” vacant building, Simpson said. The front recently was given a new look by Jeff Neal Co., and today it is home to Columbia Traders.
“When I show people what the Columbia Traders building originally looked like ... it kind of makes you sick,” Simpson said. “Everyone who sees it asks, ‘What were they thinking?’
“Another groaner is the Ambassador Apartments at Fifth Street and Moffet Avenue. We show the apartments and the house that once stood there. The house was really flamboyant, like the Schifferdecker House that exists near there now.
“When I show the program, people won’t shut up. A 30-minute program can last three hours. Somebody has a story to tell about every building — how they bought sodas there in the 1950s. They relive their youth.”
Simpson has used the theme of a reality makeover show, “but these are not necessarily good makeovers,” she said. “I’m trying to have fun with something that is depressing.
“Some people have begged me to stop my program because it is so depressing. They can’t stand it. I have enjoyed the reaction. Hopefully, people will choose to get involved when they see what can happen if you don’t get involved.”
‘Biggest Loser’
Her program’s “Biggest Loser” section shows a vintage picture of a site and the vacant lot that exists there now, but the book is not just about lost houses and storefronts.
“Many of Joplin’s original industrial buildings were architecturally wonderful,” Simpson said. “They took pride in not only the look of their homes but the look of their industrial buildings.”
Another part of her presentation — “What Not to Wear” — shows buildings with classic facades that have been covered up with metal siding.
“The Joplin Globe is featured as the first example of what not to wear,” Simpson said. “When people see it, they snicker. We call it the ‘cheese grater’ building.”
The book features some of the same buildings, as well as evolving makeovers of buildings, such as Newton’s Jewelers at 428 S. Main St.
“It has been there for a long time,” Simpson said. “That building has had four different facades, but all of them have been Newton’s Jewelers. It shows an evolution of taste. There was the 19th century storefront. Then it got the semi art deco look in the ’40s, and so on. That building has had more face-lifts than Joan Rivers.”
The book contains 95 before-and-after descriptions. Most of them involve structures in downtown Joplin or along Route 66, where former motor courts have been replaced with sometimes abandoned shopping centers or strip malls.
Simpson has been gathering photographs and doing research for her slide program for decades.
“The book is a reduced version of the slide program,” she said. “There are 300 and something pictures in my slide show. When I decided to do the book, I thought that many photos would be too unwieldy. I could do a second volume in the future of photos that I was not able to include in this one.”
- Joplin Metro
-
-
Lobbyist: Bill on tax-stacking appears stalled
A fix for Joplin’s tax-stacking exposure has not materialized in this session of state legislative action, as city leaders had hoped.
And, with only four days left before the session ends, not much chance is seen for the rescue of a bill that would protect Joplin, and other cities, from potential lawsuits such as one filed last year over the city’s multiple sales taxes. -
Sex offender sentenced for failure to register
A former Texan was assessed two three-year prison terms Monday for failing to register in Jasper County as a sex offender and for receiving stolen property.
Clay E. Herring, 53, pleaded guilty Feb. 22 to the charges in Jasper County Circuit Court. -
Drunken driver assessed suspended sentence in crash
A Webb City man was assessed a suspended sentence Monday on an assault conviction for operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated in an accident two years ago that caused serious injuries to another man.
Justin M. Allen, 32, pleaded guilty March 22 in Jasper County Circuit Court to second-degree assault in connection with a two-vehicle accident May 13, 2008, on Highway 43 north of Joplin. -
Salary schedule to come before Board of Education
A proposal that would institute a pay freeze next year and slightly reduce starting pay for new teachers is to be taken up tonight by the Joplin School Board.
Superintendent C.J. Huff said the salary schedule that will come before the board will include changes that would reduce the annual starting pay for new teachers with no experience next year from $33,372 to $33,122. -
Brad Belk: May tornadoes struck Joplin twice in 1970s
Two incredibly destructive and deadly tornadoes touched down in Joplin during the early 1970s.
Both occurred during the month of May and were separated by just a little over two years of time. -
Mothers, daughters experience pioneer life at nature center
Mothers and daughters got an early Mother’s Day treat last week when they stepped back in time to learn how nature played a role in the life of a pioneer woman.
-
Students brave cold, wind for Fun Run
Sixth-grader Lexie Vaught found a burst of energy as she ran down the final stretch of her mile-long run Saturday morning, well ahead of the other girls in her race.
“I was pacing myself until I got to the end,” she said. “It was amazing (to cross the finish line).” -
Summer school programs facing financial pressure
When Jessica Stahl sent her daughter to summer school last year, it was as much about easing mom’s kindergarten jitters as her daughter’s.
“I’ve never been a school parent,” Stahl said Wednesday while waiting to pick up her six-year-old daughter from Columbia Elementary School. -
VPAA search looms large in MSSU faculty relations
The filling of the position of vice president for academic affairs is emerging as a key issue for faculty relations at Missouri Southern State University and could determine whether any trust can be rebuilt with President Bruce Speck, several faculty said.
-
Fuel prices could be peaking
For a while there, it looked like gasoline would reach $3 for a gallon of regular, and it still might, but the chance of that happening is less likely today than it was even a few days ago.
- More Joplin Metro Headlines
-
Lobbyist: Bill on tax-stacking appears stalled






