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Culver Citizen, October 6, 1904

Culver Citizen, October 13, 1904

Culver Citizen, October 27, 1904

Culver Citizen, November 10, 1904

Culver Citizen, November 17, 1904

Culver Citizen, November 24, 1904

Culver Citizen, December 1, 1904

Culver Citizen, December 8, 1904

Culver Citizen, December 15, 1904

Culver Citizen, December 22, 1904

Culver Citizen, December 29, 1904

 

 

The Culver Citizen is presented by permission of the Pilot News Group for the nonprofit uses of the Antiquarian and Historical Society of Culver.

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Culver Citizen, July 7, 1904

Culver Citizen, July 14, 1904

Culver Citizen, July 28, 1904

Culver Citizen, August 4, 1904

Culver Citizen, August 11, 1904

Culver Citizen, August 18, 1904

Culver Citizen, August 25, 1904

Culver Citizen, September 1, 1904

Culver Citizen, September 8, 1904

Culver Citizen, September 15, 1904

Culver Citizen, September 22, 1904

Culver Citizen, September 29, 1904

 

 

The Culver Citizen is presented by permission of the Pilot News Group for the nonprofit uses of the Antiquarian and Historical Society of Culver.

Viewing this file requires Adobe Acrobat Reader. Click the icon for your free download.

Culver Citizen, April 7, 1904

Culver Citizen, April 14, 1904

Culver Citizen, April 21, 1904

Culver Citizen, April 28, 1904

Culver Citizen, May 5, 1904

Culver Citizen, May 12, 1904

Culver Citizen, May 19, 1904

Culver Citizen, June 2, 1904

Culver Citizen, June 9, 1904

Culver Citizen, June 16, 1904

Culver Citizen, June 23, 1904

Culver Citizen, June 30, 1904

 

 

The Culver Citizen is presented by permission of the Pilot News Group for the nonprofit uses of the Antiquarian and Historical Society of Culver.

Launch PDF file.

The Winter (Feb. 21 publication date) issue of the AHS’ “Culver History Quarterly” was published in the Culver Citizen newspaper recently. As part of the AHS-Citizen partnership, every member of the AHS will receive a subscription to Culver’s weekly newspaper of record (read more in the newsletter itself).

 

A number of updates are available in this issue, so Launch PDF file.

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Culver Citizen, Jan. 14, 1904

Culver Citizen, Jan. 28, 1904

Culver Citizen, Feb. 4, 1904

Culver Citizen, Feb. 11, 1904

Culver Citizen, Feb. 18, 1904

Culver Citizen, Feb. 25, 1904

Culver Citizen, March 03, 1904

Culver Citizen, March 10, 1904

Culver Citizen, March 17, 1904

Culver Citizen, March 24, 1904

Culver Citizen, March 31, 1904

 

 

The Culver Citizen is presented by permission of the Pilot News Group for the nonprofit uses of the Antiquarian and Historical Society of Culver.

Ask any long-time Culver citizen about Warner Williams, and you’ll probably hear a description of an eccentric man riding around town on his bicycle, his long beard flying behind him. Others may recall the geodesic dome he constructed in his back yard, out of from which he churned out countless plaster animal sculptures following his 1968 retirement from the Culver Military Academy. According to Williams’ son David, the dome was his habitat, from which he typically emerged only for meals. The dome still stands in town, as do his animal sculptures, bas-reliefs, and bronze medallions, which can be found in area homes, at the Culver Public Library, and throughout the Culver Academies campus.  Despite the many accolades he received, Warner Williams is remembered as a quiet, humble person who worked long hours through the end of his life, chiefly because he enjoyed it. In a 1968 interview Williams said, “I’m not interested in production. I rarely reuse my work. Most of it is personal. I give a lot of things away.”  In addition to creating personal and commissioned pieces, Williams also spent a great deal of time educating the public about the process of artistic creation. According to his son Earle, prior to coming to Culver, he spent years traveling throughout the Midwest giving lectures with his oldest son Carroll running the projector, he would select someone from the audience and create a model of them in 20 minutes, which he would later fine-tune in his studio.

Williams interests extended to astronomy, graphology, the study of handwriting, photography, love of nature and music besides his sculptures and art.  Warner Williams believed that his work was more absolute than a question of the period of time it represented.  His work ranged from children. to great men, to evolution.  Williams once stated, “If the design is an interpretation of fundamental universal laws, it is timeless.  It has perpetual value, timeless as the cosmos, even though it may have periodic characteristics.”

Williams’ family and friends describe him as a Renaissance man whose curiosity for the world and breadth of creative interests was seemingly endless. In addition to his prolific artistic career, Williams wrote hundreds of satirical limericks, played piano and accordion, analyzed people’s characters by their handwriting, and read constantly. He built telescopes, the dome, and a wide-format camera used to photograph his art.  “If he couldn’t buy it, he’d built it,” said former Academy historian and Williams’ colleague Bob Hartman.  He built several telescopes, one of which resided on the roof of the Music and Arts building at the Academy.  “Every Saturday night when it was clear, cadets and families would come up and view planets and stars,” said Williams’ son David, noting that Scientific American Magazine featured Williams in a 1951 article about how to make your own telescope. One of his telescopes is still used at the observatory at the Woodcraft Camp.  According to David, “[Warner] was an artist by trade but he was really a scientist.”  He spent a great deal of time studying the natural world and his animal sculptures attest to that interest.

By all accounts, Warner Williams was a true eccentric. Locals typically recall his appearance first, describing him as a Gandalf-like figure.  “He was this little gnome with a massive beard,” said his son David.   “He was small of stature, but feisty, a rather ornery person,” said Anne Duff. Duff recalled how he once wrote to Life Magazine to complain that I and the F in the title were too close together. He later credited himself for the improved spacing.  Many recall the metal WW that adorned the front of his car. His son Earle explained that Williams always pried the metal dealership symbols of his cars.  “He despised advertising,” said Earle. “One time when I came home from college, I noticed all the soup cans had the labels taken off.”  Earle’s mother, Jean, explained that Williams had removed the labels in a fit of anti-commercialism. Earle eventually inherited the WW plaque, which he adhered to his own car.

Both Williams’ sons noted that he was an inspiration for many cadets. “My father’s art studio was a safe haven with a lot of students at the Academy.  Williams seemed to believe that everyone was an artist, if one could simply slow down, focus, and tap into an inner sense of seeing.”   In 2012, the White-Devries Rowing Center was erected and adorned with two limestone eagle plaques. The architect was Williams former student John Chipman, who commissioned and paid for the plaques in Williams’ honor. They are based on the original bronze medallions Williams made for members of the crew team in 1968. Chipman, a 68’ graduate who owns his own architecture company, credits Warner Williams’ guidance for his success. Williams created a specialized architecture course for Chipman at the Academy.  “He took me aside and said, ‘I really want to design this special curriculum for you.’ I ended up spending a lot of time in his studio working on my projects. He was a mentor to me,” said Chipman, recalling how Williams ordered him a subscription to Architecture Magazine, and counseled him on his college applications. “There [was] really no real recognition of Warner Williams and what he’s done for the Academy…He was a great man who’s under appreciated.”

The Center for Culver History has an opening for a new museum director, a part time position (20 hours per week) paying $10 per hour.
The Director should have previous leadership experience and will be responsible for operating and maintaining the museum and its collections. Responsibilities include researching and fabricating exhibits, acting as a museum docent, overseeing museum volunteers, coordinating with the museum  committee and Antiquarian & Historical Society Board, caring for collections, reaching out to the community through Facebook, the AHS website, and programming, planning exhibits and events, and planning for the long-term direction of the museum.
The Director should be comfortable with computers, and have familiarity with Microsoft Word, PowerPoint, Excel, Publisher, and Photoshop or comparable visual editing programs, and have basic familiarity with the Internet, including Facebook. The Director should be willing and able to learn museum standard practices for operating museum database program PastPerfect, grant-writing, fund-raising, scanning and digitizing, caring for collections, and working with boards, patrons, and members.  Please send a cover letter indicating interest and abilities, resumé, names of three references by March 8 to P.O. Box 125, Culver, IN 46511.

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Culver Citizen, Nov. 5, 1903

Culver Citizen, Nov. 12, 1903

Culver Citizen, Nov. 19, 1903

Culver Citizen, Nov.26, 1903

Culver Citizen, Dec. 3, 1903

Culver Citizen, Dec. 10, 1903

Culver Citizen, Dec. 17, 1903

Culver Citizen, Dec. 24, 1903

Culver Citizen, Dec. 31, 1903

 

 

The Culver Citizen is presented by permission of the Pilot News Group for the nonprofit uses of the Antiquarian and Historical Society of Culver.

Viewing this file requires Adobe Acrobat Reader. Click the icon for your free download.

Culver Citizen, Aug. 6, 1903

Culver Citizen, Aug. 13, 1903

Culver Citizen, Aug. 20, 1903

Culver Citizen, Aug. 27, 1903

Culver Citizen, Sept. 3, 1903

Culver Citizen, Sept. 10, 1903

Culver Citizen, Sept. 17, 1903

Culver Citizen, Sept. 24, 1903

Culver Citizen, Oct. 1, 1903

Culver Citizen, Oct. 8, 1903

Culver Citizen, Oct. 15, 1903

Culver Citizen, Oct. 22, 1903

Culver Citizen, Oct. 29, 1903

 

 

The Culver Citizen is presented by permission of the Pilot News Group for the nonprofit uses of the Antiquarian and Historical Society of Culver.

Viewing this file requires Adobe Acrobat Reader. Click the icon for your free download.

Culver Citizen, May 7, 1903

Culver Citizen, May 14, 1903

Culver Citizen, May 21, 1903

Culver Citizen, May 28, 1903

Culver Citizen, June 4, 1903

Culver Citizen, June 11, 1903

Culver Citizen, June 18, 1903

Culver Citizen, June 25, 1903

Culver Citizen, July 2, 1903

Culver Citizen, July 9, 1903

Culver Citizen, July 16, 1903

Culver Citizen, July 23, 1903

Culver Citizen, July 30, 1903

 

 

The Culver Citizen is presented by permission of the Pilot News Group for the nonprofit uses of the Antiquarian and Historical Society of Culver.

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