My exhibit at the Sikeston Depot Museum

Sikeston Depot Museum Steinhoff exhibit

The Sikeston Depot Museum and Cultural Center is hosting an exhibit of my work from the early 1960s through today. It’s at 116 West Malone Ave.

There are at least 103 images in the show, not counting layouts that would add about another two dozen shots to the mix. I’ll add links to some of the blog posts I’ve done about the pictures.

New Madrid Mississippi River Baptism

Ken Steinhoff photo exhibit Sikeston Depot Museum

On a whim, I went down to New Madrid in 1967, just before heading to Ohio University in Athens, Ohio. I consider this series – and pictures in Smelterville – as sort of my Cape Girardeau photography final exam.

Those two events showed the beginning of my style. Click on the images to make them larger.

Here’s some background on the baptism and my attempt to track down the participants 50-plus years later.

Robinson Road, Smelterville etc.

Ken Steinhoff photo exhibit Sikeston Depot Museum

You can read more about the old geezers I met in Ohio here. It was a unique experience.

I published a book of photos of the people I photographed in Smelterville 1967 and updated it with pictures and stories of them as adults. It’s available at the museum. Smelterville: A Community of Love.

Vandeven Mercantile, at the corner of Broadway and Pacific, was a great general store. I stopped there almost every lunch hour from Trinity Lutheran School. 

I would frequently shoot random photos to fill out the roll of film. When I shot a casual Gary Schemel in the Central High School cafeteria in 1964, we didn’t know that he had about a year to live. He was the first CHS student to die in Vietnam.

  W.T. Grants and the Blue Hole BBQ

 

Ken Steinhoff photo exhibit Sikeston Depot Museum

Brad Horky was caught reading in W.T. Grants.

Blue Hole BBQ moved from down by the cement plant on S. Sprigg to near Central. I don’t remember the cook’s name, but I ate there several days a week in my high school days.

Spot news

Ken Steinhoff photo exhibit Sikeston Depot Museum

I cut my teeth shooting spot news and sports for five bucks a shot. I was a pretty successful high school debater, so I thought I might go to law school, then into politics. I calculated that 1984 was the first year I was constitutionally eligible to run for president. Coming in third in a race for student body president quashed that plan.

After I sold two photos of a wreck to The Missourian, got a front page byline and ten bucks in the mail, though, I was ruined for real work for the rest of my life.

Who wants to spend years studying for the law when I could get paid for meeting interesting people and going to interesting places without having to crack a book? 

The color self portrait was taken in Ed Unger’s barber shop on Sprigg St.

Every day was different

I might spend a week at National Guard camp. or document the Toilet Paper Wars.

I happened onto the Delta Queen docking in Cairo when I stopped to see Ft. Defiance.

Ordinary people doing ordinary things

Ken Steinhoff photo exhibit Sikeston Depot Museum

I often say that my goal was to take photographs of ordinary people doing ordinary things – to focus on people whose names appear only when they are born, get married (or divorced), die, or get a speeding ticket.

Some of my subjects include Frank Richey, Athens tailor; a man at a pro-Vietnam march in D.C.; picture day at Hollister School; a little league player with an icy drink; an old man in Pahokee, FL; kids in Cape Girardeau’s Capaha Park pool; and an encounter with a FL state trooper.

Stealing souls

Ken Steinhoff photo exhibit Sikeston Depot Museum

I used to echo a sentiment by Chicago columnist Bob Greene that my job was to make a subject love me for 28 minutes while I stole their soul.

I’m older and – I hope wiser – to realize that I didn’t steal these souls. I merely borrowed them and am now returning them because we are alive only so long as someone remembers us.

This pictures range from Girlfriend Lila in curlers (when she didn’t kill me for taking the photo, I thought we might have a future); boys with tin can telephones in Ohio; Brother Mark on his bike; Central’s auto shop class; construction workers transforming the face of SE Ohio, and an assortment of young women. 

News with whiskers turned into history

Ken Steinhoff photo exhibit Sikeston Depot Museum

I often say that museum director Carla Jordan led me to understand that what I had once shot as news had grown enough whiskers that it could now be considered history.

At the end of a 2010 class reunion in the Arena Building, I stood on the stage watching a handful of classmates dancing. It dawned on me then that I hadn’t changed since high school days – I was always an observer, seldom a participant.

Coffee can film

 

Ken Steinhoff photo exhibit Sikeston Depot Museum

When I was working for The Jackson Pioneer and The Missourian, my darkroom was in the basement. I filed my money shots in glassine envelopes, but random photos that didn’t have immediate use were pitched in a trash can under my worktable.

When I came back to Cape after about a decade, I discovered all those scraps of film were still there, so I rolled them up and stuck them in coffee cans until after I retired in 2008.

Much to my surprise, many of those pictures are more precious than the images I got paid five bucks for. I call those my Coffee Can Films.

I wanted a magic box to freeze time

When I started school, Dad and Mother decided to settle down in Cape again, and we rented a house on a hill at 2531 Bloomfield Rd. One night, I looked out my bedroom window at the traffic going by on Highway 61.

I wandered into my parents’ room – it must have been around 2 a.m. – and announced that “I’m never going to see those cars and trucks again.”

They may have gotten used to that kind of thing, because they didn’t seem surprised at my revelation.

Most kids wanted to build time machines that would allow them to skip forward or backward in time. Me? I wanted a machine that would freeze time. I didn’t know it then, but that was why I became a photographer with a magic box that would grab literal snapshots of time to be resurrected later.

Shouldn’t you dress up?

When I was supposed to do a presentation, Wife Lila said, “Shouldn’t you dress up a little for it?”

I said, “I’ve photographed presidents, the Pope and the Queen of England while I was wearing blue jeans. I don’t think these folks are any more special.”

Here’s the account of how I was called to photograph the Queen in the Bahamas.

I had an interesting exchange with a blue-haired woman aboard a church bus taking us to a Billy Graham / Richard Nixon rally in Charlotte, NC.

I covered so many war protests in the 60s and 70s that I still get nostalgic for the smell of teargas in the spring.

JFK assassination – my first newspaper EXTRA!!!

We had Wimpy’s. Letart Falls in Ohio had a gas station with a counter for the kids to hang out. I searched for it a few years ago, but it, like so many things it is long gone.

The SEMO Fair was almost as big a deal as Christmas and your birthday.

Royalty and a Flying Saucer Convention

Ken Steinhoff photo exhibit Sikeston Depot Museum

In addition to the Queen of England, I photographed many example of grade school, high school and college kings and queens. This pair was at Washington School.

The woman and the kid trying to swallow a Coke bottle were at the Buck Nelson Space Craft Convention, one of the strangest events I ever covered. I’m pretty sure this was the only time I asked someone, “And, what kind of clothes do the people on Mars and Venus wear?”

Cairo – a city of subtraction

Ken Steinhoff photo exhibit Sikeston Depot Museum

I’ve been photographing Cairo since 1967 when the city erupted in three days of protests, firebombing and civil unrest. It my first encounter with that kind of thing.

When Mother, Curator Jessica and I visited the Cairo Custom House Museum in 2015, I let them distract the museum worker who said the basement where the jail cells used to be wasn’t open to the public. When I got down there, there was no sign of the cells, but on my way back, I saw something that haunted me.

Robert Hunt, a 19-year-old soldier visiting in his hometown, was taken down those stairs to the basement after he was accused of being AWOL.

He was found hanged in his cell, allegedly with his own T-shirt. Hunt walked down those well-worn stairs, but he didn’t walk back up them. That prompted the demonstrations.

Barry Goldwater’s 1964 campaign stop in Cairo was my first presidential candidate experience.

Even more of Cairo is gone

Ken Steinhoff photo exhibit Sikeston Depot Museum

Since I started revisiting the town that’s nestled between the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers in the early 2000s, it’s harder and harder to find things to shoot because almost all of the buildings in the commercial district have been torn down.

When I took a two friends down there a couple of weeks ago, even more buildings had fallen in. The Elks Club was nothing but rubble.

I still chip away small squares of blue tile in the bottom right picture to give visitors a souvenir to take home.

I’ve done lots of blog posts about the town.  Here’s an early one with a good representative selection of buildings.

Back when every family had a shelf of yellow National Geographic magazines, I was often asked if I aspired to work for the publication.

‘No, National Geo photographers stand on trash cans to shoot roses. I trample roses to shoot trash cans,” was my standard response. I spent most of my career shooting the darker side of life – migrant farm workers, refugees, and poor folks.

Couldn’t have done it without Marty

Sis-in-Law Marty Riley was the one that did all the grunt work of putting the photos on the display boards. I couldn’t have done it without her.

Chicken livers and gizzards

Jay’s Krispy Fried Chicken 11-02-2024

I get a craving for chicken livers about twice a year. Gizzards, hardly ever, because they are usually too chewy.

One of museum workers turned me on to Jay’s Krispy Fried Chicken. Their gizzards are as tender as the liver, and the liver is out of this world. The okra is good, too.

If you make it down for the exhibit, give this place a shot. It’s worth it, and it’s not far from the museum. Who knows, I might even meet you there.

Gallery of exhibit photos

To make it easy to scroll through the exhibit photos, I’ve placed them in a gallery. Click on any image, the use the arrow keys to move around.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Syl Johnson Earns Suspension

1966 CHS Basketball Homecoming Dance 02-25-1966From The Missourian: Sylvester Johnson, Cape Central’s football and basketball standout, fulfilled one of his greatest dreams – to wear Principal Dallas Albers‘ suspenders – at the recent basketball homecoming dance.

Mr. Albers, an inveterate suspenders-wearer, noticed Syl admiring the pants-holder-uppers at an assembly one day, so he made a “deal” with him: if the team won the homecoming game with Sikeston, Syl wouldn’t have to worry about his pants falling down at the dance – they would be securely held up by the coveted suspenders.

“Had confidence in my boys”

1966 CHS Basketball Homecoming Dance 02-25-1966To make a long story short, Central did just that – and Mr. Albers, is shown here wearing a belt (“because I had confidence in my boys”) pinning the prize on the season’s high scorer.

Beth Barringer crowned queen

1966 CHS Basketball Homecoming Dance 02-25-1966Miss Beth Barringer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Barringer of 1012 North Middle, was crowned Central High School Basketball Homecoming Queen. The queen and her court are, from left, Miss Mary Ann Sides, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J.O. Sides of 1403 Bessie; Miss Debbie Elfrink, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Elfrink of 1216 Butler; Miss Barringer; Miss Linda Stone, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Stone of 1744 Themis, and Miss Ruth Wilson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter A. Wilson of 527 Amethyst.

Escorts didn’t rate a photo

1966 CHS Basketball Homecoming Dance 02-25-1966Serving as escorts were Brad Horky, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Horky of 1447 Broadway; Terry Robinson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Robinson of 1708 Montgomery; Mike Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel B. Johnson of 1301 Bertling; Richard Baker, son of Dwight Baker of 121 North Clark, and Sylvester Johnson, son of Mrs. Lula Mae Johnson of 910 Giboney.

 

Jump, Coach, Jump

Central High School vs Fox baseball 05-16-1966“Central Coach Leon Brinkopf leaps aside as a wild throw gets by Fox third sacker Ron Williams in the opening inning of Saturday’s Sectional game at Jackson. Mark Kirkpatrick is the Central player clutching the bag after a head-first dive,” was the caption in the May 16, 1966, Missourian sports section. (You can click on the photos to make them larger/)

Central wins 8-0

Central High School vs Fox baseball 05-16-1966The oft-postponed Sectional game between Cape Central and Fox (Arnold) got off the launching pad Saturday afternoon and the Tigers scored and 8-0 victory behind the one-hit twirling of Brad Horky. The game had been rescheduled twice because of the rain and the third attempt was only possible through the efforts of Lou Weiss, Jackson coach. Weiss and his crew labored throughout the morning to bring the diamond in shape for the game, wrote Charley Murdoch, sports editor.

Capaha Park, the scheduled site of the game, represented a lake in left field. Jackson has one of the best draining diamonds in the area.

Horky in complete control

Central High School vs Fox baseball 05-16-1966Horky was in complete control of Fox and the first hit was not obtained until the sixth when Gary VanHorn sent one up the middle. He advanced to second an an infield out and was stranded. The rangy righthander struck out eight and did not allow a walk. He hit one batter in the seventh when Fox made its only serious threat to score.

An infield error and the hit batsman after one out was followed by another infield out as both runners advanced. The game ended as Ron Drinnin sent a fly to right field.

Weird first inning

Central High School vs Fox baseball 05-16-1966A weird first inning started the contest as the Tigers scored two runs on three hits and three errors. Terry Robinson started it with a single to left. Mark Kirkpatrick put down a bunt and the Fox shortstop added an error. Mike Schuette put down another bunt to the third base side and all hands were safe. When Larry Kitchen sent one to short, another error followed. John Brandt bounced back to the mound, the fox hurler continued the bobble-the-ball game, and two runs were across.

Five-run fifth

Central High School vs Fox baseball 05-16-1966

Four hits, two walks and a sacrifice gave Central a five-run fifth and they were off and running to the title. Kitchen’s double served as the only extra base blow. Kitchen, Horky and Dan Beard each had a pair of runs batted in for the affair. Schuette, Kitchen and Horky each collected two hits.

This was a decent game for me, with plenty of pictures that met the rule of “show the face, the ball and the action.”

 Your baseball and softball fix

We’ve done a bunch of stories about softball and baseball. Here’s a sample.