Wednesday, September 18, 2024

Belt Branch to have local history, pop culture events in October

Local architectural history, fossils, local ghosts and ghost stories are the topic of four programs this fall at the Belt Branch.

Edmond Jacques Eckel, one of St. Joseph’s most prolific architects, will be the topic of a history program at 7 p.m. Monday, Oct. 7, by Shelly Haynes from St. Joseph Museums.

Eckel was born in France in 1845 and studied architecture as a young man. He came to the United States in 1868 and in 1869 was traveling to Kansas City. When his train was delayed in St. Joseph due to a washed-out bridge, he explored the town and decided to stay because of the town’s post-Civil War economic boom. He began working as a draftsman and would design many of the mansions of that era, including the Wyeth-Tootle Mansion.

Eckel went on to form his own architectural firm and had many partnerships through the years. It’s estimated he or his firms are responsible for 75% of the public and private buildings of that era in St. Joseph.

At 6 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 10, Missouri Western professors Dr. Evan Hart and Dr. Ed Taylor will discuss their podcast, which explores “the spooky, the haunted and the occasionally laughable world of the paranormal and supernatural.” This program for adults and teens is presented in partnership with Missouri Western’s Pop Culture Club.

In celebration of National Fossil Day on Wednesday, Oct. 16, retired Northwest Missouri State geology professor Dr. John Pope will discuss fossils and our region’s natural history in a program at 7 p.m. If you have fossils you’d like to know more about, bring them along so Dr. Pope can evaluate them.

Just in time for Halloween, Missouri Western professor Dr. Michael Charlton will discuss the books and career of the “King of Horror,” author Stephen King at 6 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 24. King has published more than 60 horror, mystery, suspense, crime, science fiction and fantasy novels, 12 collections of shorter stories and five non-fiction books, not to mention screenplays and essays. This program is presented in partnership with Missouri Western’s Pop Culture Club.