Many photographers hated covering meetings, but I usually didn’t mind. Even dull but necessary governmental hearings offered up opportunities for interesting portraits and studies in body language. (You can click on the photos to make them larger.)
This meeting was to bring together all the principle players to hear why it was taking so long to complete a bridge over the Cotton Belt Railroad tracks on Hwy 77 north of Chaffee. The project had kept the most direct route out of and into town blocked for more than a year.
The Missourian’s caption said “Chaffee residents demonstrated their concern Saturday with the slow pace of construction on Highway 77 at a hearing held by Jack Stapleton and Albert C. Riley of the State Highway Commission. Mayor Robert H. Capshaw of Chaffee gestures as he describes problems created by the construction. Clockwise around the table are, Elbert Masters, Maurice Montgomery, R.P.Stephens, contractor for the project, W.D. Carney, District 10 highway engineer; Mr. Riley and Mr. Stapleton.”
A trip to the construction site
I never met a barrier you couldn’t walk around, so I shot this picture of the movers and shakers looking through the barricade.
They got bold
When the group saw nothing bad happened to me, they moved closer. Yep, there’s no bridge there.
Mayor makes his points
The Missourian said, “Mayor Capshaw describes the highway problem to Mr. Stapleton as Keith Moore and Mr. Masters look on.
One day there will be a bridge here
There’s still a long way to go before a bridge is going to sit atop that pier.
Do NOT do this!!!
I was doing a freelance job for a railroad insurance adjuster when I did what this guy is doing: I walked on the rail.
“Do you know what one of the most common injuries I see?” the adjuster asked.
“What?”
“People who are walking on the rail like you are. When their foot slips off, it slices the ankle bone clean off.”
I never walked a rail again.
Not a happy crowd
You can tell this crowd is not happy by the dour expressions and the crossed arms.
W.D. Carney, the District 10 highway engineer disputed a statement made by Mayor Capshaw that the Chaffee Merchants had been damaged by the shutdown of the highway. “This is not true,” the paper reported he said.
“Town is not divided”
Mayor Capshaw asked permission to interrupt and asked for a a show of hands from those in the audience if they thought Chaffee had been done an injustice by the highway department. Every hand in the room was raised.
“Don’t come and tell us we have not been done an injustice,” Mr. Capshaw directed at Mr. Carney. “This town is not divided in its opinion we have been done an injustice.”
The crowd was so big it spilled over into the corridor and out onto the lawn.
Albert C. Riley
This is Albert C. Riley of the State Highway Commission. I don’t know who the reporter is who is behind him. I don’t think he was with The Missourian.
Jack Stapleton
Jack Stapleton of the State Highway Commission
A small town that has a road built that directs traffic around it or a road shut down for too long that leads through it can be a killer. Progress can be bad for a small town and delayed progress can be bad. The town of Wall in South Dakota has managed to survive a highway directing traffic away from it and is an interesting story. I would imagine that there are other success stories out there about towns in our area of Missouri.
Surely Mayor Capshaw deserves more ink than this.
How much more virtual ink would you like me to devote to him?
Robert H. Capshaw died May 12, 1995, at 76. Here is a link to The Missourian’s obit on Mayor Capshaw.
I had the honor to serve under Mayor Bob Capshaw I was his Patrolman, Chief of Police and Deputy Sheriff. Bob always backed me up and he always defended the City of Chaffee no matter what. The Capshaw family to this day is our family friends and they will remain our friends. There is no one that I can recall in a leadership position that can lead a meeting any better than Bob Capshaw that is because he was a leader, many disagree with him on several issues but when it came to Chaffee the citizens could depend on Bob leading and defending them day or night. Rest in Peace Mayor Capshaw you have served your community, State and Nation with honor.