John McCarty
Larry E. Dahl and Don Norton, comps., Modern Perspectives on Nauvoo and the Mormons (Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University, 2003), 145-64.
Nauvoo, Illinois
Birthday: December 2, 1959
Interview on November 24, 2001, in Outlaw Tee鈥檚 Video Store and Print
Shop by Jayson Edwards
Q. [Jayson Edwards] What brought you to Nauvoo?
A. [John McCarty] I was born and raised here. My dad was born and raised here. My mother was from Niota鈥攖hey met in high school, and settled here when they married. My Grandpa McCarty was from the Carthage area and moved here after marrying my grandmother, who was from the Carthage area as well. My mother鈥檚 parents were from the Niota area. My grandfather William Jennings Bryan McCarty was in the military. After the military, most of his jobs were police related. He was a guard at some of the prison camps in the area and ended up being the city marshal in Nauvoo until he died from a heart attack in his sixties.
Q. Where were they originally from?
A. I couldn鈥檛 tell you that. Beyond my grandfather, I don鈥檛 know. I鈥檓 pretty sure they were in the Illinois area when he was a kid.
Q. So you are the second generation to live in Nauvoo?
A. Right.
Q. Tell me more about your grandfather.
A. Well, like I said he was the town marshal鈥擨 couldn鈥檛 tell you the exact years on that. He was also the state fire marshal for a while. During the war he was the prison guard when they had POWs across the state.
Q. How about your mother鈥檚 side?
A. He was the depot agent in Niota for the Santa Fe Railroad. That鈥檚 all I know he ever did.
Q. How have you liked growing up in Nauvoo?
A. It鈥檚 limited, but it was fun. Everybody knew everybody. You could ride from one end of town on your bicycle and back and not get tired. It was a small town, so you could enjoy every little piece of it. If Dad and Mom wanted me to go out and play, they didn鈥檛 have to worry about me getting abducted or something happening to me. There was nobody here, and that鈥檚 just how it was.
Q. Now as it has grown, how have you liked it?
A. It seriously hasn鈥檛 changed that much since I was a kid, size-wise. New businesses come and go, but as far as the general town there is nothing that has changed. When I was a kid, we never did do much down on the flat because that was down the hill, and back up again on a bike鈥攊t was a long ways to go. The grade school was our domain, and we usually would play baseball there or different things. The town that I used as a kid is still the same. There鈥檚 no big change there.
Q. What鈥檚 the nicest thing you found about living in Nauvoo? What do you like about it?
A. It鈥檚 that small-town feeling of knowing your neighbors. Well, I shouldn鈥檛 say that鈥攗sed to know your neighbors. Now they do come and go quite a bit. The safety net feeling鈥攜ou don鈥檛 have to worry about a lot happening. Everybody talks about the traffic, you know鈥攊t鈥檚 minimal. You can complain about little things here and there, but it鈥檚 still so simple here. Everything鈥檚 just so laid-back.
The economy is not the greatest. It鈥檚 not the best place to get rich. You can make a living and you can raise your kids, but that鈥檚 about as far as it鈥檚 going to go.
Q. Have you found that being able to get by is your biggest challenge in living here?
A. Right. The financial end of it is always a challenge here. We market ourselves out quite a ways. If we had to depend on business from Nauvoo, we鈥檇 never be doing what we are doing. Only 10 to 15 percent of my sales [T-shirt printing] are Nauvoo related.
Q. Where does the rest come from? Around the area?
A. Yes. We also do a lot of Internet sales too. We are coast to coast, with clients in Florida to California. The majority is within a two-hundred-mile radius. Years ago as we got started, we tried to capitalize on what鈥檚 here, and it鈥檚 grown. But still, only 15 percent are here.
Q. Do you expect the temple to bring in more sales from the area?
A. I would think so. I mean if everyone has shirts to sell in their business, one鈥檚 going to step on the other one鈥檚 toes鈥攊t鈥檚 not going to really gain them anything. I would think it鈥檚 got to increase. The sales have got to get better because of the amount of people coming in. For how long? Will it be just after the hype of the temple, and then just die back down? It will be just basically what we have now. I don鈥檛 know鈥攊t鈥檚 all speculation.
Q. As you have lived in Nauvoo, have you had opportunities to serve in civic groups or any other service-related organization?
A. I鈥檝e been in business seventeen years, and for all but two years I have been on the chamber of commerce. During this time I was also involved with the first planning commission, which was appointed by the mayor.
I started doing a little complaining about the way things were done in town鈥攖hat鈥檚 when my dad said, 鈥淵ou ought to run for city council,鈥 so I did that. Of course nobody else was running, so I got elected easy enough.
Q. What were the things you complained about?
A. Lack of anything being done. It seemed like the town was just staying stagnant all the time. There was no possibility of growth, which nobody seemed to want anyway. Roads and sewer systems were just staying the way they were.
Just in general, the look of the town bothered me. Nobody was doing anything on the nuisance end of town; there was substantial debris and trash build-up. That鈥檚 one thing I鈥檓 against. I wanted to get involved with it. When I got on the city council I asked to be on that committee鈥攖hat was probably the dumbest thing I did. I found out right away that it is one of the most thankless jobs you could get. Everyone in town hated you if you sent them a letter in the mail telling them to clean their yard up鈥攁nd then 90 percent of the time they wouldn鈥檛 do it. You would have to go through the court process, which would take over a year鈥攕till nothing was getting done. It never seemed like anything was getting accomplished there either. This was all within my first year of being on the council.
Right after I got elected, it wasn鈥檛 within a month later that they announced the building of the temple鈥攁nd that鈥檚 when I thought, there went four easy years. Sure enough, that was true. The temple was supposed to be started on the following year, but they came to us in September and started talking about possibly starting on it earlier.
Of course, when we first were told about it, a gentleman came to see us, and met with a bunch of business people and city officials over a luncheon at Blimpie. He made the comments that a small town like this is going to really have some problems with this big of a construction project, and of course the Church is willing to do an impact fee to help subsidize the problems in town. When I first heard that I had no idea what an impact fee was; I鈥檇 never heard of it before. I talked to a few others who said that it would help the town cope with what all鈥檚 going to happen here鈥攖he town can鈥檛 raise that kind of funds on their own. All of a sudden we were thinking we have a year to think this all out and do a little planning, and bam鈥攖hey were right back in here in a couple months wanting to start on it.
So we started doing a little crash course on what we needed, but we weren鈥檛 really sure because no one was giving us information. And they really weren鈥檛 sure either. They had no idea what to expect. We would ask them, 鈥淲ell, how many people would be here day-to-day, and for how many years?鈥 We weren鈥檛 getting good answers鈥攚e were getting guestimates. And of course if the guess is low you鈥檙e in trouble, and if the guess is way high you鈥檝e way overdone it.
So what we did was sat down and started crashing some numbers around. When I said we, there was just two or three of us鈥擪aren Ihrig, myself, and the mayor, Tom Wilson, who really wasn鈥檛 extensively involved鈥攈e just listened to a few of the proposals we came up with. We also talked with Jerry Floyd, the chief of police, and Barry Cuthbert, the public works director. We wanted to get an idea from them about what to expect as well. Everyone was in the dark; they had no idea.
We finally sat down and started meeting with the officials from the Church. I don鈥檛 know why this happened, but the first thing they did was throw a price at us of $108,000, and said, 鈥淵ou know, we could give the city this much to get going.鈥 To me, at first I thought that sounded like a lot, but what do we have to do? What do we have to build to get ready for this? I started by going to the Internet and finding some other towns where temples were built鈥攁nd I contacted city officials in pretty much all the ones that were built in the last four or five years. The first thing I would ask them is the size of their town and the size of the temple, because there are a lot of different sizes of temples that arc being built. None of the towns really compared to the size of Nauvoo, so that put us in another dilemma. We didn鈥檛 really know what to do now and to what scale this was going to be.
When I started to ask a few of them, especially this small one out in Utah鈥擯ark City, I think it was鈥攖hey told us that they were pretty creative on their permit fees. There really was no way to get an impact fee on it, so they just had a twenty thousand dollar water hookup, a forty thousand dollar sewer hookup, and, you know, it came out to like two hundred thousand dollars in permit fees. I was in awe with that, because our water hookup and sewer hookup would have been probably fifteen hundred bucks [chuckles], and a building permit would have been about five hundred.
So I say, 鈥淲ell, I think we are a little under the gun on this one.鈥 So we talked to some other towns and basically we found the same things. They said, 鈥淲ell, we needed a road to go out there,鈥 so they put the road in, or the water and sewer lines鈥攜ou know, it was big projects that were done. The difference with Nauvoo was that it was in town, and roads to it, and water to it, and sewer to it鈥攕o those things weren鈥檛 going to be done. What we worried about was how many people were going to move here. Were we going to have water and sewer capabilities for that? Were we going to have streets that were adequate enough for the crowds that would be coming in and would they hold for the crowds? Those were the numbers we started kicking around.
The first thing I asked the Church officials, 鈥淵ou know, other towns you鈥檝e given over two hundred thousand in permit fees鈥濃攁nd they just come right out and said. 鈥淲ell, just double that!鈥 I mean there was no discussion or nothing, it went from 108 to 216. And I went, 鈥淲ow, that was pretty simple [chuckles], there must be more to this.鈥
Nauvoo is in a unique situation鈥攊n Illinois, towns under twenty-five thousand people cannot assess an impact fee. They legally can鈥檛 do it. Really the Church had us if they wanted to鈥攖hey could have just paid for a building permit and went on, but they wanted to work with us鈥攚hich was good. In the middle of all this, we kept getting this pressure of, 鈥淲e gotta get more money, we gotta get more money.鈥 Well, we couldn鈥檛 ask for anything that was astronomical because we had no grounds for it.
It got down to the point of us getting rushed鈥攊t was in a matter of days to get all this done. I didn鈥檛 know what the rest of the council was going to do, 鈥榗ause nobody else had even met. It was me and the mayor basically when it came down to the meetings, so I just made the comment to them, 鈥淲hat happens tonight if we turn you down?鈥 (we already did it once to get more time). They said, 鈥淲ell, we鈥檒l come back in the spring and start this process again鈥攂ut you can guarantee you won鈥檛 get anywhere close to that kind of money.鈥 At first, it made me mad if anything, 鈥榗ause I thought basically what they鈥檙e coming down to is that there is a price on your town, and this is the price鈥攜ou either do it tonight, or you don鈥檛 get it.
The money wasn鈥檛 the issue as much it was the attitude of 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to do it, and we don鈥檛 care what happens to your town.鈥 That鈥檚 the way I took it, and whether I took it wrong I don鈥檛 know鈥攂ut I got mad. [laughs] You know, I just thought, 鈥淲e just sat down and did all this talking or days, I have a job to do, and I鈥檓 taking time away from it to go down and listen to this?鈥 I talked to Karen and Jerry, and everyone that had been working on it, and said, 鈥淥kay, worst case scenario鈥攋ust give me a figure.鈥 Because the whole time they kept telling us, 鈥淛ust give them [the Church] a price.鈥 Well, we never did. They would come and give us a price, like the first 108, then they said 鈥渏ust double it鈥 every time.
So I said, 鈥淭hey wanted a price from us鈥攍et鈥檚 give 鈥榚m a price.鈥 Jerry figured out the police force and extra man, another car down the road for the next three years, and he figured his extra wages over and above for different things involved. They took in account for water hookups and sewer hookups, as well as the equipment we鈥檇 have to buy to do all these鈥攋ust different things. We started throwing all these numbers together, and I threw in the fact that we needed a city planner to come in, because we don鈥檛 have anybody here that is going to be able to tell us what job to do first. We鈥檝e got engineers, but that鈥檚 not really their position to be planners.
We put together a package, with a city planner for two years factored in, and it came out to be $560,000. That was the price, and I was like 鈥淲hoa, that was quite a bit more than what we were talking about.鈥 But I thought, 鈥淵ou know, they wanted a price, we鈥檒l give them a price鈥濃攁nd then now they have something to work with.
We went back and met with them, threw it on the table, and they looked at it. Their first comment was, 鈥淗ey, we鈥檙e not Santa Claus鈥攖his isn鈥檛 a Christmas list time.鈥
I was like, 鈥淵ou wanted a list, we gave you a list. We gave you a price.鈥 I said, 鈥淵ou made us mad earlier by saying there鈥檚 a price on our town.鈥
He said, 鈥淲ell, that鈥檚 not what we meant.鈥
Well, that鈥檚 how it came out. That鈥檚 the comments that were made; it鈥檚 either do it tonight or else. I said, 鈥淵ou didn鈥檛 give us time to do this. We鈥檙e in the dark.鈥
On the contract we also said that we wanted an open-ended contract鈥攖hat within three years we can review it and see if we arc okay or if there are areas that need help yet, and then again in five years, after it鈥檚 built, and the crowds are starting to come in鈥攕o we have an idea of how we are sitting.
Another reason why I supported that idea was, what do you build in Nauvoo that would look right for that temple?鈥攚e need a lot of work. I would love to redo the streets, take all the telephone and light poles out downtown and replace it with nice street lighting, and get a really nice clean-lookin鈥 town. You can鈥檛 do that overnight, and you can鈥檛 do that on the limited budget we got. You are looking at things that are going to be down the road to beautify the town鈥攖o equal what that鈥檚 going to be. In one sense, you have to look at what that鈥檚 going to bring to the town, and on the other sense, you have to look at the negative that鈥檚 going to bring to town. How many people are going to come in here and tax the streets, tear up this, tear up that. We are fixing it constantly, at our cost. Those reasons are why we came up with some numbers.
We shot it to them鈥攖hey came back and told us they鈥檇 have to think about it. They went across the street, and it wasn鈥檛 a half an hour鈥攖hey came back and said, 鈥淭he Church will furnish the city planner, we鈥檒l get someone on a mission here for two years if that鈥檚 all right. Take that price out of there (which we figured at $70,000鈥攁nd if you could get a city planner for $70,000, you鈥檙e not getting a very good one) so it comes to be $490,000. They said, 鈥淭his is the most the Church has ever paid to anybody.鈥
It wasn鈥檛 like a victory鈥攚e just thought, 鈥淲ell, face the facts. We鈥檙e a city of twelve hundred people, what are we going to do? Do you want us to keep raising the taxes year after year to keep repairing roads and putting in water and all those things?鈥
Hopefully it starts out where we use the money and use it right. We haven鈥檛 used it all up yet, but we are getting close. There鈥檚 only like ninety-some thousand dollars left in that account. We鈥檝e done some streets. We remodeled city hall, which was the best thing we could have done鈥攊t looked like you was in Hicksville when you walked in there. It was pretty bad. There were extension cords hanging from the ceiling. It wasn鈥檛 the prettiest of sites. That was the first project; we wanted to modernize and make it look as professional as we could. We got new computer systems, which we networked together, as well as built a small office for the city planner. We pretty much did everything you could do to make it look a little more professional and a lot more efficient.
Next we tackled the issue of roads and tour bus routes. People in town had been complaining about buses forever鈥攁nd it was just getting worse as the years went on. The biggest problem with the tour buses is the Nauvoo Family Motel. It is built right next to a bunch of houses, and buses would run constantly鈥攖here was a lot of complaints. So to address that issue, we used quite a bit of the funding on the legal and engineering work of the roads. All of this work wasn鈥檛 directly because of the temple, but we knew that the temple was going to bring more people in. The impact of the roads and people was a concern, so that鈥檚 what we鈥檝e spent most of our money on right now.
It didn鈥檛 work out with the city planner. The Church brought Ken Millard in on a mission, and half the town was hesitant about that because they thought he was only going to do what the Church tells him to do. I think he caught wind of that, and at first there were some things he did do that left you a little uneasy about which direction we were going here.
But then it was almost like he reversed his role to have an 鈥渁gainst the Church鈥 type attitude. He inspected everything the Church did and he鈥檇 have complaints about it. so he鈥檇 make the Church redo some things. There were a lot of hard feelings being brought up. The problem with Ken. too. was his health鈥攈is situation was pretty bad. I knew that he had cancer and was in treatment for that, but he was working himself so hard and trying to get so much done in a short amount of time that I think it was just weighing on him too much. He neglected himself more than anything, and that got to him. His health got in the way, I believe; that was the biggest problem. So there were a lot of hard feelings between different groups, and nobody wanted to work together anymore.
Towards the end of his time here, Time magazine came to do a story on the river. He made a comment during an interview and was quoted as saying, 鈥. . . the sinners in the draft house.鈥 That went over real well with the Church, of course, and was probably one of the nails in his coffin [chuckles] as far as getting him out of the way. The tavern of course capitalized on it鈥攖hey held no grudge against him or anything. At first they were thinking, 鈥淲ell, who鈥檚 he thinkin鈥 we鈥檙e sinners,鈥 but then as it went on it become the town joke. They printed T-shirts up even鈥斺滻鈥檝e sinned at the draft house鈥濃攁nd they鈥檝e sold a ton of those things.
Q. So it helped you out a little bit.
A. Oh yeah, [chuckles] Every time something happens in town I sell a T-shirt because of it鈥攚hich always helps. But they took advantage of the situation there, and it was like, 鈥淥h my God.鈥 That shows the split of the town. The Alyan house will sell a shirt commemorating the exodus, and now they do one saying they鈥檝e sinned at the draft house鈥攋ust a little difference in taste, I guess.
Well anyway, it was the opinion of the city and the Church that it was just best to relocate him and get a private firm to finish out the project. We went ahead and got a city engineer from Poeping, Stone, and Bach. They took over and appointed one guy to work with the planning commission to try to get the zoning in effect. We had all these little projects going, and it worked a little better. But it was a lot more costly, of course.
Because the Church supplied a guy on a mission and all of a sudden it didn鈥檛 work out, now they would have to pay for somebody. And they did pick up the cost of that to an extent, and that ran out pretty quick. We found out real quick what it was going to be like to plan for the future: it was going to cost a lot of money.
What we have a problem with is that the Church has never sat down and said, 鈥淭his is what we hope to accomplish in five years, this is our ten-year plan, and this is what we want in twenty years.鈥 If we had some kind of an idea how far they want to build, how many more homes they want to put in and what other amenities they want to bring here, it would be helpful to us. I know their ideas are already there鈥攖his isn鈥檛 an overnight building process that they do. These things are thought out way in advance, and might sit on the table for ten years. And then they bring them in, just like the temple.
I know that he [President Hinckley] announced that they were going to build it Easter Sunday, but they鈥檝e been talking about building that thing for a lot of years. It wasn鈥檛 just, you know [snaps his finger], on Easter Sunday that he says, 鈥淗ey, I think we鈥檙e going to rebuild that.鈥 They鈥檝e looked into it and seen what they鈥檇 have to do to rebuild it.
That鈥檚 what bothers the city officials and the people of Nauvoo right now. Nobody knows what the Church wants and how far they want to go. Just like with the Academy. When they bought that, 90 percent of the people knew that they were going to bulldoze that down. They knew they didn鈥檛 want that鈥攅specially the priory where the sisters were at. When the temple was announced, we really knew that it was going to go鈥攖he view of the river would be blocked otherwise.
So the town has a rough idea judging by the way things have went since the seventies. You know how they鈥檝e been building, but in our opinion, we鈥檇 like to know more. I don鈥檛 know why it鈥檚 such a problem to say, 鈥淭hese are our plans, whether we do them or not. But this is what we want to do.鈥 It鈥檚 not going to hurt anybody鈥檚 feelings; it鈥檚 going to help.
Like the Brattle Street. They want to put a bypass road in鈥攖hat鈥檚 been on the books since the sixties and seventies too. The city is trying to get involved with it and they are not getting a lot of effort out of the state right now, which is bad. It鈥檚 a five million dollar road. If we have to do matching funds on that, two and a half million dollars is what we鈥檇 have to come up with to put a bypass road in. That鈥檚 probably why the city is dragging their feet: we don鈥檛 have two and a half million, and we鈥檙e not going to get two and a half million. For a while the Church was coming in, asking, 鈥淲hat鈥檚 going on with the bypass; what鈥檚 going on with the bypass?鈥 The bypass is needed for two things: it keeps the trucks out of the main streets and also hopefully develops an area of growth on the edge of town.
I鈥檇 personally love to see it; I think it would be one of the best assets to Nauvoo. To have a bypass road on the edge of town would take all of the elevator and cheese factory trucks out of the main street area for safety issues. With all those people there and the trucks coming in, I鈥檓 surprised over the years somebody hasn鈥檛 got hit, killed, or hurt really bad鈥攖here鈥檚 just too many trucks for a little bitty town.
It would help an area for growth as well. We have no more area to grow as it is. If another motel or two come in, we couldn鈥檛 put them in here. Right now they鈥檙e putting one on the edge of town possibly, which is great because it stretches your town out and gives you another business district away from the crowd that鈥檚 down there now. Then turn the downtown into more of a historical district, with the uptown shopping more 鈥渨alker friendly,鈥 where pedestrians can walk anywhere without much worry. It鈥檚 going to take a lot of time to develop it because we have some council members that really aren鈥檛 too excited about pushing the issue. 鈥淚f it happens, it happens鈥-type thing.
The only ones that want to get it done鈥攖hat have a desire to do it鈥攁re the Church and the tourist-based businesses like the motels. The grain elevator and the cheese factory haven鈥檛 shown a ton of support. They think it鈥檒l be great, but you鈥檙e not seeing them jump in on it. It鈥檚 sad to say, but they鈥檙e hoping someone else takes care of the problem for them. They just sit back. Why should they invest the time and the money when someone else is gonna do it? Whether it gets done, I don鈥檛 know; I hope it does. We just need some kind of drive to get it going.
The city is split right now. There鈥檚 a handful of people that are against any kind of growth. Those are the ones you hear: the loudest ones. They鈥檙e not really anti-Mormon as much as they don鈥檛 want to change their way of life. It could be the largest Jewish group you鈥檝e ever seen, and move into Nauvoo and take over and build some massive synagogue, and have two hundred thousand Jews coming in here, and that would bother them. It鈥檚 just the impact of the people. It鈥檚 not as much the Mormon Church as it is the change of life.
Some of us, like myself and people my age that have businesses or kids, want to see the growth. They want to see more people here to keep the schools up and get income coming into this town. I can sec on the other hand, too, why people are the way they are. When you鈥檝e lived here for sixty or seventy years, and now it takes you twenty minutes to go downtown where it used to take you five鈥擨 can see where that would be a problem.
People would complain about privacy all the time; people will be in the yards, walk in their house, or taking bricks or whatever because their great-great-great-great-uncle used to live there. That鈥檚 been brought up at council meetings.
Q. You鈥檝e seen that firsthand?
A. Yes. Right across the road here from the shop, there鈥檚 a house on the corner with a little bronze plaque on it, which means 鈥渟top here, look, take pictures, and check it out.鈥 Tell you what, I鈥檝e been here for eight years in this shop and I have never read that plaque, I don鈥檛 know what that says on that building over there [laughs], but everybody else in town stops there.
I caught some people going into the house one time, when a guy and his wife lived there. I yelled over and told them, 鈥淗ey, that鈥檚 a private residence, you can鈥檛 go in!鈥
鈥淲ell that鈥檚 okay, my great-great-great-great-uncle used to live here or whatever.鈥 I鈥檓 like, 鈥淪heez, that鈥檚 pretty bold!鈥
The guy also had a pet alligator inside his house, too, in a little swimming pool, which didn鈥檛 take them too long to find. They were in and out of that place real fast.
I鈥檝e seen people go around the back and take bricks, walk around looking in windows. Just on this house here is the only time I鈥檝e witnessed it, but that鈥檚 the only one I鈥檓 around. We get complaints on that all the time.
Lori, my secretary, her folks were gone on vacation one time and she went down to check on their house one day, and on the back of their house there is like a little brick garage with a deck built off of it. and there鈥檚 a family sitting there having a picnic on their deck. This [house] isn鈥檛 off the street or anything; it鈥檚 back in an alley in the middle of nowhere.
Lori is like. 鈥淐an I help you guys?鈥
鈥淥h, it鈥檚 such a beautiful day, so we thought we鈥檇 just have a picnic.鈥 I couldn鈥檛 do that: I couldn鈥檛 go to St. Louis and stumble on someone鈥檚 house, walk on their deck, and set up and have a picnic. I鈥檇 have a problem with that.
Those are the little things, and again, it鈥檚 not the anti-Mormon, it鈥檚 the anti-privacy: I want my life, and I want my private life, and I want my peace and quiet. The buses are noisy. People don鈥檛 like that, so that鈥檚 what they complain about. It wasn鈥檛 a fact of who鈥檚 on that bus鈥攊t鈥檚 the bus!
Everyone says that there鈥檚 a lot of anti-Mormonism in Nauvoo鈥攊t鈥檚 not that as much as a change of life. That鈥檚 been the biggest thing to deal with in Nauvoo. I personally haven鈥檛 seen that change. I鈥檝e lived here all my life; I鈥檝e grown accustomed to it. The town is the same as when I was a kid, as far as the amenities. Nothing鈥檚 really changed, just the amount of people coming here. You can let it bother you, or you can just blow it off.
Q. Do you see it changing in the future?
A. I hope it changes. I would love to sec Nauvoo be twenty-five hundred to three thousand people. It would make the town grow in the school system. Community pride鈥攚hich would get more people involved in the town to get more projects done, especially in the park systems鈥攖hat鈥檚 what I鈥檇 love to sec.
But I don鈥檛 know if we鈥檒l sec that big of growth. The problem right now is that the growth we鈥檙e getting is elderly couples moving here, so there are no kids and there鈥檚 no involvement. I mean, the community involvement鈥檚 there, possibly, but we鈥檙e not seeing that base we need to get it built up to see a strong future here.
Q. Down on the flats there are mostly Mormon tourists. Do the Nauvoo residents have a place to call their own?
A. Not really. The flats never were. I mean when I was a kid they were nothing I ever went to anyway鈥攊t was too far to go, and you had to ride your bike all the way up that hill when you were done. The city park was used minimal. The grade school was used more than anything; we鈥檇 play ball there all the time. The new park district out on the edge of town just has a softball and little league there鈥攖hat鈥檚 it, that鈥檚 all it gets used for.
I think if there was more to it out there like walking paths, basketball courts, and more activities鈥攖here鈥檚 tennis courts at the one, but they haven鈥檛 been kept up鈥攖he townspeople would use it. It would pull them away from downtown and get them out there where they could utilize all the facilities for them. It would be off the beaten path, so the tourists are not going to find it easily too. The state park is basically tourist oriented in the summer months.
There really is no section of town that we can call our own. Of course, there are two taverns in town where people go and hang out. How long are they going to be there? With the population swing as it鈥檚 going to be, it鈥檚 probably close to seventy-thirty now. It鈥檚 starting to slow, and when it gets fifty-fifty, those taverns aren鈥檛 going to be in business. There鈥檚 not going to be anybody in them.
Q. Overall, have the feelings changed at all within the city council since the planning and construction started?
A. I think it has. Yes, there was a lot of negativism at the start鈥攁 little apprehension on what to expect. Now that we鈥檙e seeing how it鈥檚 done and seeing the ways things are looking closer to completion, and especially the housing too, things are better. It鈥檚 being done right鈥攖hey are not going cheap on anything. They鈥檙e not trying to get the city to do more than they have to do. They鈥檝e done more for us then they said they would: they鈥檝e fixed roads, done sidewalks, drainage systems, all this stuff they鈥檝e worked on and done.
It鈥檚 inevitable that the temple is going to be here. We had to accept that and go on. We couldn鈥檛 stop it. We could not stop it no matter what. People will still say today, 鈥淲hy did you let them build that temple?鈥 Well, they own the property, and if they have a building permit, and as long as that building鈥檚 structurally safe, which we had to prove, but I think that after two-hundred and fifty million tons of concrete in there鈥擨鈥檇 say it鈥檚 a safe enough building, [laughs]
Those are the comments we keep hearing: 鈥淵ou let them build that; you shouldn鈥檛 let them build that.鈥 I don鈥檛 know how you鈥檙e supposed to stop that, you know. Once that was accepted and it鈥檚 being built and it鈥檚 getting built and it鈥檚 almost done鈥攖he closer it gets I think everybody鈥檚 realizing 鈥淚t鈥檚 here. Let鈥檚 go with it and make it work.鈥
I see a little more positive attitude with new council. I鈥檇 personally love to see one or two Mormons on there鈥攖hat would straighten the thing out a little bit.
Q. How did you feel the first time when the boys from the Church paid the council a visit to talk about the temple? What was their reaction, and what was your reaction?
A. There were four or five suits [Church officials] with the mayor and myself at the one meeting. I was in my painter鈥檚 pants and a T-shirt, and the mayor鈥檚 over there in his fanner duds with a little cup spittin鈥 his tobacco in it, and I鈥檓 like, 鈥淏oy, if this isn鈥檛 Beverly Hillbillies time right here, man.鈥
Oh, it was pretty sad; these guys were just sitting there trying to be as professional as possible, and they鈥檙e probably thinking the whole time, What are we doing here?
Ron Price, who I think is the project director (I call him the Head Honcho, who鈥檚 been probably the easiest to work with and the most accommodating), he will also tell you the truth up front too: if the city is asking about something, or someone brings up a comment like, 鈥淲ell, they need to do that,鈥 he鈥檒l go, 鈥淲ell, why do they feel we have to do it, haven鈥檛 we done enough?鈥 He鈥檒l come out and be honest with you, and yet he鈥檒l listen to you too鈥攚e couldn鈥檛 ask for a better person to work with. He鈥檚 helped make this a really smooth transition. I鈥檓 glad he was here. I just wish he鈥檇 stay.
That鈥檚 the problem: you get some of the missionaries that come on to work on the town or work on the temple, and, my God, you want them to stay. Those are the people you want in your town鈥攂ut they are going to move on, and you鈥檙e right back to where you were before.
Q. So do you see the 鈥渟ame old, same old鈥 in the future for the downtown area?
A. I can鈥檛 see a major change. Physically. I can鈥檛 see what you can do downtown. With 75 percent of the main street owned by Danny Kraus (who doesn鈥檛 belong to the Church, and he鈥檚 not going to sell out, as far as I can see), how do you change the downtown business area? You don鈥檛.
The only thing that I see will change, which I hope does (basically because I have a business up here), is that the growth from downtown will spread this way [east]. Maybe build a nice minimart gas station, another motel or two, a nice restaurant鈥攕omething to span this town out. Someone was talking about a little strip mall. I don鈥檛 know how many stores you could support in this town, though.
There needs to be a lot of research put in regarding what鈥檚 in your [Church鈥檚] temple towns. What businesses are in there? I鈥檓 sure there are just little gift shops like we have here now, but we could find out what other areas we need to hit.
Q. When you mentioned earlier that you did research by calling the cities and asking for information about the temple and its impact, did you ever go and see one?
A. Yeah, what I did is when my nephew and I decided to start the video store, we located a video shop out in Nicholville, New York. We took off with a truck and trailer and bought all the contents of that shop. When we got done loading it, we dropped down to Burlington, Vermont, and spent a day down there visiting a friend of my nephew鈥檚.
When we drove back, I told him we were going right by Palmyra. I said, 鈥淲hy don鈥檛 we just kick off there and go check it out.鈥 Well, we鈥檙e flying down the road, and of course it starts snowing; it was the middle of winter and the wrong time to be out in New York. We decided to drive to Palmyra anyway; it was just a little bit off the freeway. As we went in we thought we surely would see the temple鈥攊t was going to stand out in the middle of the night when we were going in there. We drive right by it, never seeing it. We saw the monuments on that hill where they do the play but got all the way into town and never saw it. We drove and drove around town and we still didn鈥檛 sec it anywhere.
Well, near the Book of Mormon printing press there, across the street is the local tavern. I thought, 鈥淗ey, what better place to go to get true information, right?鈥 [chuckles] So we go rolling in there and sit down and say, 鈥淗ey, we鈥檙e trying to find the temple.鈥 They all looked at us real funny.
鈥淵ou鈥檙e trying to find the temple, and you鈥檙e in here. Okay, what鈥檚 going on?鈥 We told them the story: that we live in Nauvoo and they are building a temple and we just want to check yours out. Then we asked if anybody there had worked on the Palmyra temple or knew anything about it. Oh, we were just filled with information then. The comment that struck us the funniest the whole time, and again, there was never a negative Mormon comment, it was more of, 鈥淭hey are so picky! If you are going to build anything for them, you鈥檇 better be good at it! If they want them brads every 1/
I鈥檓 like, 鈥淲hat鈥檚 wrong with that,鈥 and yet we sensed the whole time that they did everything right, and they did everything right for the town. We didn鈥檛 hear anything where they [the Church] said, 鈥淏uild your own road, or do this鈥濃攏othing like that was ever said.
I felt better when I left there, knowing that. It didn鈥檛 cause any animosity in the town; if anything it brought a lot of income in, and a lot of people worked on it and made money. It was a good thing that way. I was enjoyable to do that. As we were leaving, they told us where it was at.
As we were driving out, here鈥檚 this beautiful thing up on the hill all lit up, and I thought, 鈥淗ow did we miss this thing?鈥 [laughs] Of course we drove up around there, and it was just a little overwhelming to see something like that, so clean and neat and well lit. Right then I knew and never had a doubt about the whole thing. To see one done in another town, and the way they did it, I knew that this one would be a welcome addition.
My father has lived here all his life. He is what I would call one of your moderate anti-Mormons. His problem with Mormons was that [imitates his father鈥檚 voice] 鈥淭hose dang missionaries coming down to my house again wanting me to . . . [laughs] You鈥檇 hear that all the time from him.
I just told him, 鈥淭ell them to go.鈥
He鈥檇 say, 鈥淚 just told them the other day, and, by God, I told 鈥榚m good too鈥攖hey won鈥檛 be back.鈥
And then there was the way the missionaries drive鈥攖hey鈥檇 park on any side of the road they want, or they pull right to the front of the grocery store and park right up in front of the door鈥攂locking traffic. [Imitates his father鈥檚 voice] 鈥淏y God, Idaho and Utah鈥攖hey must not have driver鈥檚 education, because they don鈥檛 know how to drive.鈥 Those are the comments he鈥檇 always make.
Well, here about six months ago, he goes, 鈥淏oy, that temple鈥檚 going to be beautiful.鈥
I looked at him and said, 鈥淲hat?鈥
He goes, 鈥淥h, I go down there every day. I drive around that block everyday, and I even get out sometimes and stand there and watch them for a while.鈥
鈥淵ou do what?鈥 [laughs]
鈥淥h, I go down there every day, and I think it鈥檚 gonna be the neatest thing in this town. I鈥檒l tell you what, that鈥檚 just a beautiful building.鈥
I said, 鈥淚t鈥檚 just going to bring in more of those people who don鈥檛 know how to drive.鈥
鈥淲ell, you got to put up with that. You know, I鈥檓 getting鈥 old, and I don鈥檛 know how to drive that good, either.鈥
Right then I thought that this was kind of a surprise! [laughs] Hopefully the mind-set of most people gets that way, and they see it as nothing but a plus to the town. It鈥檚 going to take a lot of adjusting鈥攅specially that first month when they do the open house and the dedication.
Q. What are the worries that are involved with the open house, besides the obvious ones?
A. Just taxing the physical property of the town. The town is the busiest during the City of Joseph pageant. It鈥檚 going to be like that everyday for thirty-five days鈥攐r how many days it ends up.
It鈥檚 good for the economy, but if you鈥檙e not in this town making money or have access to the amenities you want鈥攍ike right next door鈥攜ou鈥檙e going to have a problem. If you got to drive downtown every night and get groceries or do anything, you鈥檙e going to hate it here. It鈥檚 just going to be a mess. I know, because during the pageant I don鈥檛 even go downtown. I don鈥檛 even try to. I hate that time of year, so I don鈥檛 even fool with it. That鈥檚 a month I鈥檓 gonna have to sit here and not do anything.
Q. You鈥檝e got plenty of videos to watch though, so . . .
A. Well, that鈥檚 true鈥擨鈥檒l just stock up on that, [chuckles] No, the old wheels are turning; 1 got to come up with something to make some money. I can鈥檛 sell shirts, per se, myself. I could if I wanted to be the biggest dope in town. All my costumers that I deal with are here. I just walk all over them and say, 鈥淗ey, I鈥檓 selling my own shirts, you guys do whatever.鈥
I know that they are going to buy a lot of shirts from us. I hope to generate some business for us. as well as them. But I鈥檓 thinking of other ways, and trying to get something little going for a month to make some money. You know. I鈥檝e got five kids, and Nauvoo鈥檚 not loaded with money. If I can make a chunk of money in thirty-some days, I鈥檓 going to try it. Who knows? I might be shooting myself in the foot too.
There are five to ten other people in town that are thinking the same way. As long as they do it in good taste, I think it will be great. We just don鈥檛 need a bunch of tents set up鈥攕treets hawkers and that carnival attitude. There are church groups that come in with their food stands, which is fine鈥攖here鈥檚 not enough restaurants and things like that. But just getting people organized to do it鈥擨 don鈥檛 know if it will happen.
Q. Well, I think we hit it on the head this time, except for the kids talking about burning the temple.
A. Oh, the comments, yeah. You still hear that, and it shows their mentality. They say, 鈥淲e鈥檒l burn it down.鈥 First of all, you won鈥檛 get close to the building. Second of all, there isn鈥檛 probably ten things in there that will burn, so good luck. You鈥檙e a genius if you could鈥擨 don鈥檛 even think C-4 would bring this thing down. That thing鈥檚 built, and built well! To hear those comments hurts. I鈥檓 the first one who jumps right back on 鈥榚m by saying, 鈥淲hat did they do to you?鈥
I wait for that one comment that鈥檚 going to be truthful and meaningful to me鈥擨鈥檝e never heard one back yet. You know like, 鈥淲ell, they came to my house and told me I鈥檓 a sinner, or, they told me my religion鈥檚 wrong鈥濃擨鈥檝e never heard anything like that.
鈥淲ell, what have they done to you?鈥
[In a sneering voice] 鈥淲ell, there鈥檚 just so many of them in town鈥攖hey鈥檙e takin鈥 over.鈥
I鈥檓 like, 鈥淭akin鈥 over what? Can鈥檛 you go to the grocery store? Can鈥檛 you go to the park? Can鈥檛 you get gas? What have they done, what have they taken away from you?鈥 I try to get these kids to open up and tell me what鈥檚 wrong. And it鈥檚 just, 鈥淚 want to be cool; I want to hang with my buddies and be Mr. Cool and say, T can鈥檛 stand the Mormons.鈥欌 They鈥檒l turn right around and hang out with four of five Mormon boys and girls and go out and do stuff. They鈥檒l get with their other friends and make the comment, 鈥淥h, those dang Mormons.鈥
It hurts to a point when you got to put up with that; and it hurts even more when you try to talk to these kids, and say, 鈥淲hy?鈥 You can鈥檛 get an answer. A lot of it is coming from home鈥攄addy and mommy. Just like I told you before, the silent majority in this town needs to get louder. The ones who don鈥檛 have this animosity need to stand up to the others and just tell them to shut up and live your life鈥攇et over it.
So again, it鈥檚 not as much anti-Mormon鈥攊t鈥檚 just the crowd. They just don鈥檛 like the change of life. If we could just flip that around.
Q. Well, if it worked with your dad . . .
A. [Laughs] Yeah, he was a lost cause. I never figured he was gonna change. He鈥檇 come out of it though.