More

Joplin Tornado Volunteers Seek Out Owners Of 27,000 Photos Found In Rubble

Joplin Tornado Photos

SHARON COHEN   08/20/11 03:39 PM ET   AP

CARTHAGE, Mo. — White-gloved workers line the long tables, carefully sifting through photos of proms and weddings, baby's first day, proud soldiers in their uniforms. They gently clean off any dirt, dry rain-damaged pictures – and salvage a city's lost treasures.

The history of Joplin, Mo., is slowly coming into focus here, one snapshot, one portrait at a time. A church room in this nearby town has been converted into collection central for more than 27,000 photos buried or blown away in the monster May tornado that left 160 dead and obliterated a third of Joplin.

Amazingly, even as 200 mph winds reduced homes to splinters, fragile photos survived. Even more incredible was where some turned up: Trees. Barns. Barbed wire fences. In Oklahoma, Arkansas, Kansas, Tennessee. And, of course, all across Missouri.

Days after the May 22 storm, Angela Walters, a genealogist in Oklahoma, noticed some of these photos on Facebook pages. Many listed bare-bones information: streets where the pictures were found, a contact phone number. Why not put all of them in one place, Walters thought, so their owners could find them? So many people had lost so much, surely they'd cherish any trace of their past.

"When a disaster happens, as soon as you hear a family is safe, the next thing you always think about is photos," she says. "They're irreplaceable. We can go back to the time and place and people we don't have in front of us anymore. They're the record of our lives."

Walters created a Facebook page – the Lost Photos of Joplin – to post pictures found in the storm-ravaged city and far beyond. She joined forces with a similar local project, and the First Baptist Church in Carthage stepped up to help.

Volunteers at the church – about a dozen miles from Joplin_ clean and dry each photo. They record anything written on the images, then number, scan and send them to Walters. She plans to post about 1,000 a week. (DVDs, letters and other personal mementoes also are being returned.)

"We're trying to let people know there's a community here that wants to preserve their memories ... help them move forward and assure them everything is going to be OK," says Thad Beeler, head of the church's photo rescue team.

It's slow going. Almost 500 photos have been returned so far. For every "find," there's reason to celebrate.

Judy Lowe, a real estate agent, lost everything in the twister; all that remained of her house were bathroom tiles. So finding a photo of her son, Scott, on the Facebook page "was like claiming a victory from the tornado," she says.

"Every day you realize everything you had is gone," Lowe explains. "You think, I don't have this or that.' Then to get one part of your life back – it's overwhelming. You just cry."

The battered, orange-tinted picture shows Scott, then 2 (he's now 8) mugging for the camera in the bathroom, pretending to be shaving with foam on his chin.

"It's a day and a memory and a piece of time," she says of the photo. "That's all I have now. I don't have a baby blanket. I don't have his first little outfit he came home in. I don't want you to think I'm a pack rat, but it's honestly something that takes me back to happier times. ... Since the tornado, they've been few and far between."

Holly Wilson found comfort, too, in a photo, after losing her grandmother in the tornado. The elderly woman suffered a fatal heart attack while trying to ride out the storm huddled in a closet with her daughter (Wilson's mother) and another family member.

Wilson turned to the Facebook page, searching for familiar faces. "I thought maybe if I look every second of every day, I can find a little piece of hope," she says.

She did. She found a vintage black-and-white photo of her great-grandparents with their first grandchild. She was so excited she woke her mother – who'd lost her house and job – even though it was 3 a.m. "My mother was grinning ear to ear," Wilson says. "It was like my grandmother was there a little bit."

Wilson says the picture was old so she wouldn't have known that was her family if the names weren't on it.

About 25 percent of the `lost' photos have some written information. Walters has used clues – school logos and team uniforms, for instance – to help identify others.

The photos span more than a century, ranging from sepia-tinted studio portraits to digital snapshots. They capture changes in cars and clothes, hemlines and hairdos, along with enduring milestones: a bride's glow, a child's glee at his birthday party, a graduate's proud smile.

This is one town's history through a lens.

There are individual portraits: One of the grandest is a giant 1904 photo of a man named Sylvester Clarence Couch, dapper with his hair parted down the middle, a derby and pearl-like tie pin. Noted on the back: his Oct, 18, 1884, birthdate, and the fact that he was 20 in the photo.

There are class pictures: The smiling first graders at Emerson Elementary School (which was severely damaged by the tornado) are seen in 1942, sitting next to a war-themed placard: "We do our part for V."

And there are family albums: One large cardboard collage features a faded image of World War I soldier, a handsome World War II soldier bookended by two women, little boys in cowboy hats and jodhpurs, a young man in a graduation cap and gown, couples in bridal wear, cars from almost every decade, and more. Will someone recognize a cousin or aunt and come forward?

The project is mostly about photos, but organizers also hope to match people with other lost possessions including recipes, wedding DVDs, military papers and letters, many poignant or funny.

In one, an aunt and uncle lovingly celebrate their niece's first birthday, writing: "You have brought joy to so many people." In another, a soldier updates his health in a March 17, 1945, correspondence: "The stitches are out and I can lay on my back a little – that is with a pillow. ... Ha, ha, they sewed me up with the silver wire, ..."

Walters hopes to post everything online, then have a public display. Anything not claimed will be given to a local museum or library.

The Facebook page is one of a handful of efforts to return cherished possessions to the people of Joplin.

The Joplin Museum Complex will give away tens of thousands of negatives of portraits, wedding and yearbook pictures to those photographed or their families. The pictures were taken by Murwin Mosler, a studio photographer who chronicled Joplin's people and buildings over nearly 50 years.

Some images belonged to the museum; others come from the late photographer's tornado-damaged studio.

"This is one thing that can be of value to people," says Brad Belk, the museum's executive director. "This is their history and we want to get it back to them."

There still is much collecting to do from the streets; hundreds of photos arrive at the church daily.

Judy Lowe and her son, Scott, donated about 65 they found while walking the rubble-strewn street where their house once stood.

Lowe is assembling a scrapbook of the tornado for her two young sons. It will include three photos of them that were returned to her. "It's something my boys will keep and hopefully," she says, "it'll bring them peace."

She says they've all learned a lesson – treasures have no price tag.

"All this other stuff is just stuff," she says. "It's the memories that count – and the photos."

___

Online:

http://joplinrescuedphotos.org/

Sharon Cohen is a Chicago-based national writer for The Associated Press. She can be reached at features(at)ap.org.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST IMPACT

CARTHAGE, Mo. — White-gloved workers line the long tables, carefully sifting through photos of proms and weddings, baby's first day, proud soldiers in their uniforms. They gently clean off any d...
CARTHAGE, Mo. — White-gloved workers line the long tables, carefully sifting through photos of proms and weddings, baby's first day, proud soldiers in their uniforms. They gently clean off any d...
Filed by Jessica Prois  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 62
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3  Next ›  Last »  (3 total)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mrsbean54
07:31 AM on 08/22/2011
This is a beautiful gesture. On a side note, can we just stand in awe for a second at the contribution digital photography has made to our society? We can have multiple copies of our memories now, and it's much harder to lose them forever. And, we can have as many as we want! I heard what I thought was a great idea from someone once: you can make a ziplock back of memories. Scan your old pictures onto a computer (you can do this at the library if you don't have a printer/scanner at home) and put them on a flash drive (they're so cheap now). Put the flash drive and whatever else you want in a ziplock back in the kitchen, along with a roll of duct tape. If a disaster is likely, throw the bag into the freezer and duct tape it shut. It's likely that it would survive. This might be more helpful in the event of a bad hurricane rather than a tornado, but it's worth a try.
04:45 PM on 08/22/2011
Better still, put your photos on a CD or DVD and make several. Keep one, one in the safe deposit box if you have one, and send one to family members that are in other parts of the country. That way, if an entire area is destroyed, someone on the east or west coast will have a copy for you.
I suspect that many of these people didn't have the time to tape up the fridge...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mrsbean54
05:01 AM on 08/23/2011
That's a good idea as well. CDs are also cheap and hold quite a lot of photos. In case you don't have someone in another area to send it to, it's also easy to put photos on free photo websites. I know Picassa has one, and also Photoshop, among others. It's free and there are at least a few gigs of space, with the option to buy more. The only problem with that is the dpi is usually reduced so you no longer have the full quality version of the photo if it was taken on a quality digital camera. I agree that most of these people would not have had time to tape the freezer shut...coming from Florida, we always came up with plans like this for hurricanes. Still, like any disaster, having multiple avenues of preparation is always best.
fredgladys
Your Micro-bio is empty, I know, stop nagging.
08:27 PM on 08/21/2011
A good news story for sure. I am a believer in safeguarding family history, to that end I scanned and saved all the old family photos on cd and gave every member of the family a copy. You often hear survivors of home fires and other catastrophes saying that one of their regrets is that their history has gone up in smoke with the destruction of photos.
04:04 PM on 08/21/2011
My paternal Grandparents lost a house to fire in the 1950's. My maternal grandparents lost their house to a fire in 1980. All photos were destroyed. The most important thing was that everyone was alright. I would have loved to have seen photos of my relatives I never had the chance to meet or of my parents when they were children. Here is to hoping the tornado victims can have a little piece of their life returned. Nice job, Joplin, for this thoughtful act. :-)
photo
morefreethings
fixed income analyst
12:13 PM on 08/21/2011
Im proud of the people of my state for their behavior post tornados.....everyone helping out, and most importantly no looting....
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
couer
01:43 PM on 08/21/2011
A true testament of the goodness in most people when devastation occurs. All of you should be proud. If we don't stand together, we die alone. I'm not sure who said that but it seems appropriate. Wishing all of Missouri well.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Steve Lane
08:58 AM on 08/21/2011
I have written many times criticizing America but these people show the best that Americans can be. Using initiative and hard work to reunite the traumatised tornado victims of Joplin with their lost personal treasures. A credit to the USA.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tweeksmom
This space for rent.
07:08 AM on 08/21/2011
What a great story!
09:50 PM on 08/20/2011
That is great, they should be very proud of themselfs for what they are doing!
09:27 PM on 08/20/2011
I seriously doubt that "Trees. Barns. Barbed wire fences" from the Joplin tornado ended up in Oklahoma, Arkansas, Kansas, Tennessee.

My writing skills needs some work, but this writer needs a class on writing and geography.

The tornado was a serious disaster, and I don't take away from that fact.
Apprently, the Huff Post takes writing they can get for free these days.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
CB5
2012 will either make us or break us. VOTE
04:15 PM on 08/21/2011
It did happen primarily in the 4state area KS.OK.MO.ARK. and some other states. It was an EF5 tornado very wide and very long.
04:48 PM on 08/22/2011
I believe the author said the the photos were found in trees, etc. And that they were found as far away as Oklahoma, Arkansas, Kansas and Tennessee.
09:22 PM on 08/20/2011
The author is not to smart as she said

Amazingly, even as 200 mph winds reduced homes to splinters, fragile photos survived. Even more incredible was where some turned up: Trees. Barns. Barbed wire fences. In Oklahoma, Arkansas, Kansas, Tennessee. And, of course, all across Missouri"

Of course paper photos will surive as the fly in the wind and drop on top of the ground
09:16 AM on 08/21/2011
You're the type of person who finds the cloud in every silver lining.
10:35 AM on 08/21/2011
No I think reporters need to report the facts and not make up stuff
09:07 PM on 08/20/2011
What a wonderful , loving thing to do. I am the genealogist and have a huge number of old photos all scanned into my computer and backed up on a seperate small harddrive. I don't go on a trip without it. I have many very old one that are unknowns and it breaks my heart to know I will never know who these people are who stare out at me. God bless all of the folks involved in this as they are serving a great purpose.
08:41 PM on 08/20/2011
Terrible topic, terribly trite in delivery- a terrible piece of work the whole way through. "Even more incredible was where some (photos) turned up: Trees. Barns. Barbed wire fences." - Does this woman even know what a tornado is?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
03:45 AM on 08/21/2011
Kind and generous people are doing a great service to a traumatized community - that must bother you terribly...
10:59 PM on 08/21/2011
If "Kind and generous people are doing a great service", I am very glad. Mostly it's the writer's sensationalism that bothers me. If your going to directly reply to my comment, it's only polite that you respond to something relevant to that comment. I ain't gonna sit here and be your soapbox. Obviously, reading the article made you sad (about the deaths you already heard about) and when you saw my comment and perceived it as negative, you lashed out emotionally. You like being told what you feel?
09:20 AM on 08/21/2011
Was it really a terrible topic or a good excuse for you to complain and criticize?
08:10 PM on 08/20/2011
I think that is the best thing to do for the owners! Good job for trying to find that pictures! God Bless You
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Adam Hose
Dad/Arborist/Trucker
08:07 PM on 08/20/2011
I think that's great. I keep my son's photo's in a fireproof safe.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
05:32 PM on 08/20/2011
I'm also very thankful this article didn't mention one person that took over what others were doing & started talking about how SHE started it all. I'm still glad for the efforts of each person that has helped with this project, however I don't like people that will take claims for things that others do.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
05:28 PM on 08/20/2011
I am so thankful for the fact that my mom & I had just gone to a scrapbook day in Carthage on 5/21. She still had some scrapbooks & MANY pictures in her car when the tornado hit. Her house was in the devastation zone. Her car was damaged & so was the house. Her pictures in the car were not damaged though. When we were going through stuff before they knocked the house the rest of the way down my sister came out @ one point & said "I found treasure!!!" as we sifted through it there were many pictures, some of them dating back to the late 1800's. I am so thankful for this group in what they are doing. For every blessing they bring may they be equally blessed.
04:50 PM on 08/22/2011
This is the good news section of Huff Post. Can't we just get along?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
07:42 PM on 08/23/2011
I don't see how I was not getting along with anyone here...my post was positive. What do you mean by your comment "Can't we just get along?" I don't see how you can take this as me not getting along with someone. :) Have a blessed day.