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RE: Knox, Indiana, Knox Volunteer Fire Department, Starke County Sheriff
We have memorials in Knox, just as does every other American city, town and village. There are always questions of taste and appropriateness. Governmental units that decide on memorials need to show restraint. Otherwise, memorials, lasting for eons, will end up being embarrassments. The 1st picture (above) shows an ordinary and appropriate memorial on the courthouse lawn.
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In this picture the little boulder marks the location of the first Starke County courthouse. I was rather fond of this rock back in the days when it was overgrown and neglected. It was a good local trivia question:
Do you know where the original Starke County Courthouse was located? Ha! And there's even a rock with a brass plaque. It was recently moved (?) and put on the concrete foundation. This ruined the appearance of the new stone retaining wall. Really. It used to be moderately charming.
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Some memorials are instant embarrassments. These two boulders flank the flagpole at the County Jail / Prosecutor's Office / Sheriff's Department. The boulder on the right has a low relief portrait of a dead sheriff. He died of heart trouble, exacerbated by a very big drinking habit and a felonious family. The unadorned boulder presumably waits for another officer of the law of equal merit.
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At the south-side firehouse 2 large memorializing boulders flank a statue of a fireman clutching a rescued infant. None of those mentioned on the memorials died in the line of duty. Although this is the most tasteless monument there is more to the story. A short time ago a plywood cutout on the roof augmented this display. It was a modified depiction of the Flag Raising at Iwo Jima. In this representation, firefighters had replaced the Marines. It is my understanding that this stuff was all donated to the fire department. I guess it all can be better understood as the fire department not wanting to seem mean spirited by refusing a gift. After a while, when the plywood Iwo Jima got a bit weathered, it was discreetly removed.
This brings me back to the point of this little essay. Those in charge must show restraint. At times they might appear mean spirited. They may have to say "No" to friends and politically powerful figures. This is particularly difficult in a small town where no one wants to make waves.
Bad memorializing is closely related to the problem of small town nepotism. At the Knox library a flag pole displays a brass plaque dedicated to the memory of the donor's wife. The donor was the President of the Library Board at that time. Of course the general public was not let in on this deal to buy flag poles and erect little brass monuments.