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CEDARBURG, 1946-1964: AN
INTRODUCTION
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he
transformation of Cedarburg from a small country town into a
growing suburban community is |
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the
central theme of this fascinating collection of 174 images
created by local photographer Harold C. Dobberpuhl between the
late 1940s and the mid-1960s |
Dobberpuhl
became a free lance photographer while still a student at
Cedarburg High School and pursued this calling until he was
elected Ozaukee County Clerk in 1964. He used either a Brownie
Reflex, Roloflex, 2 ¼ x 3 ¼ Graphic or 4 x 5 Graphic camera to
take most of his photographs. Some of the images were made while
Dobberpuhl worked for the Ozaukee Press, while others were
taken on behalf of the Cedarburg News. The Dobberpuhl Collection,
generously donated to the Cedarburg Cultural Center by its
creator, provides and excellent complement to the Center’s Edward
A Rappold Collection, which consists of 1,500 images of Cedarburg
in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
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obberpuhl’s early photographs present an overview of Cedarburg
as a quiet community of 2,245 |
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people,
nestled along the banks of Cedar Creek as it had been for over
100 years. With their special attention to the community’s
historic architecture, the photographs offer a sense of what
walking down Washington Avenue in the 1950s would have been
like. From their locations in landmark buildings along
Cedarburg’s main street, small, family-owned shops like
Jochem’s Grocery Store, Lehmann Bros. Hardware Store,
Hickman’s Variety Store and Guse’s Drug Store met the needs of
area residents. Curbside gas pumps in the front of the
Tri-Par service station and the Nash dealership dispensed fuel
for motorists. The Turner Hall served as the community’s
cultural and entertainment center, and Firemen’s Park was the
site of Cedarburg High School football games, the annual music
festival, and motorcycle and stock car races.
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Harold
Dobberpuhl’s photographs also capture the people of the community
and their social life. Portraits present the notables of the
period, including the mayor, the fire chief, the newspaper
publisher, the doctor and the dentist. Other Dobberpuhl
photographs people the streets of Cedarburg with mid-century
residents, fill its shops and stores with employees and customers,
and gather together its citizenry for celebrations ranging from
the county fair to skating parties on the community ice rink. The
images also capture the exuberance of Cedarburg’s high school
athletic teams, the excitement of parades which marked most
holiday celebrations, and the back-breaking exercise required to
clean up after the winter’s worst snowfalls.
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ater
photographs in the Dobberpuhl collection reflect growth and
change in the Cedarburg |
community
as it occurred over a period of eighteen years. Landmarks
like Turner Hall and Bohrtz’s Blacksmith Shop were torn down.
The Hacker Building On Hanover Street and the new Cedarburg
High School on Evergreen Boulevard replaced the aging
Washington and Lincoln buildings as the community’s
educational facilities. A swimming pool constructed in 1959
near Firemen’s Park took the place of the swimming hole just
above the Woolen Mill dam. And Paulus’ Super Market and the
Super Valu on the corner of Keup and Columbia Roads competed
with the smaller stores for the grocery business of area
residents. |
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n the
thirty-one years that have passed since Harold Dobberpuhl took
the last of the |
photographs included in this collection, Cedarburg has grown
into a community of over 10,000 people, many of whom commute
regularly to Milwaukee for work and other activities. During
this same period, Cedarburg has also become one of the state’s
most popular tourist attractions, noted for its country charm
and distinctive stone architecture. While some of the
buildings in Dobberpuhl’s photographs have disappeared, the
majority continue to fulfill functions not unlike those
portrayed around mid-century. Some still look much the same;
others actually look older, having been restored to their
original appearances through concerted historic preservation
efforts. |
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arold
Dobberpuhl’s photographs clearly suggest that Cedarburg’s
carefully preserved structures |
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have
provided an island of stability for the community throughout
nearly fifty years of growth and change. Hopefully, their
continued maintenance and use will provide safe harbor for
Cedarburg as future waves of change roll in upon the
community. |
Robert T.
Teske, Director Cedarburg Cultural Center |
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