Steve Newvine Steve Newvine

Faded Images, Clearer Memories

Digital Film Transfer Offers Family Insight

 
My Grandma Vera Newvine shot dozens of reels of Super 8 home movies.  This is a frame from one of those reels.  Here, she is shown with my Grandpa in footage shot by my uncle Billy.  Newvine Personal Collection.

My Grandma Vera Newvine shot dozens of reels of Super 8 home movies. This is a frame from one of those reels. Here, she is shown with my Grandpa in footage shot by my uncle Billy. Newvine Personal Collection.

 

I recently had some film my grandmother shot with a Kodak Super 8 camera transferred to a digital format. Grandma would shoot home movie film at lots of family events when I was growing up the 1960s.

We always knew she was filming indoors because she would turn on a powerful light that, some might argue, nearly blinded her subjects. Outdoors, she relied on daylight for illumination, and as a result, I think the film from picnics, amusement parks, and parades captured the Newvine family along with life in the sixties at its best.

 
My brother and I from an early birthday party on home movie film my grandmother shot. Newvine Personal Collection.

My brother and I from an early birthday party on home movie film my grandmother shot. Newvine Personal Collection.

 

I’m featured in some of the film. Among the highlights, there’s a birthday gathering with relatives where my brother is helping me open presents.

It was a challenge to pull freeze frames from the movies to make into prints. Grandma came from the “we’re paying by the second” school of family filmmaking, and as a result a lot of the footage is kind of shaky.

At times, it appeared she was trying to get a little bit of everything happening in the room rather than shooting one particular scene.

 
Here is a shot from the home movie film showing sister taking early walking steps with a little bit of help from my mother. Newvine Personal Collection.

Here is a shot from the home movie film showing sister taking early walking steps with a little bit of help from my mother. Newvine Personal Collection.

 

One exception to the “spray the scene” rule my grandmother used was the time she captured her granddaughter’s attempts at walking. My sister, who at the time was the only granddaughter, is featured shortly after taking some of her first steps as an infant.

Here, the film really helps the viewer see the beauty of an infant discovering a new form of mobility.

Also featured were four male cousins who grew up on a farm. We also see two male cousins who accompanied my grandparents on day trips to amusement parks in northern New York.

My mom and dad are shown in many of the scenes from birthday parties or other family gatherings.

 
My dad joined in on the snowmobile craze that introduced this pastime to the otherwise brutal cold and snow-filled days of an Adirondack Region winter. Newvine Personal Collection.

My dad joined in on the snowmobile craze that introduced this pastime to the otherwise brutal cold and snow-filled days of an Adirondack Region winter. Newvine Personal Collection.

 

The film shows a relatively new phenomenon in northern New York: the snowmobile. I recall most of my family members had at least one snowmobile.
The home movies make it clear that the snowmobile was a game changer for winter life in a region of the state that saw lots of snow from December through April.

By the time I was in high school my dad, brother, and I each had one.

 
My uncle Billy was usually seen in military fatigues in several columns here on MercedCountyEvents.com. But before he was drafted in the mid-sixties, he was featured prominently in my Grandma Newvine’s home movies. Newvine Personal Collection.

My uncle Billy was usually seen in military fatigues in several columns here on MercedCountyEvents.com. But before he was drafted in the mid-sixties, he was featured prominently in my Grandma Newvine’s home movies. Newvine Personal Collection.

 

It was great to see my uncle Billy featured in the more than ninety minutes of film I had transferred.

My writing about Billy focused primarily on his time in the US Army where he served in Vietnam. Six months following his honorable discharge, Billy was killed in a car accident.

The film shows Billy in his late teens. We see him walking with his dad, running to first base in a family softball game, operating a small fishing boat, and engaging in horseplay with his nephews.
In other scenes, he’s trying to set up a camera on a tripod he received for Christmas, standing next to a pick-up truck (probably the first vehicle he owned), and even taking a puff on a cigarette.

The film is special in being so ordinary. Showing Billy enjoying everyday life brings a lot of comfort to me. He only lived to be twenty-three, so seeing him content makes me happy.

Grandma put away the movie camera after Billy’s death, and it would be many years before she would even play the movies for the family.

Grandma and Grandpa bought the movie camera in the early 1960s. Some twenty years later, I would extend the tradition of recording family memories by buying one of the first home video cameras that came on the market.

I remember purchasing the camera when my first daughter was born. Over the years, we recorded lots of fun times with both girls. We’ve transferred a lot of the birthday parties, Christmas mornings, family get-togethers, and school concerts onto digital media.

Someday, I hope to pull out those disks for my grandchild to look back on those happy times when his mom and aunt were growing up.

I’m sure that’s how my Grandma Newvine felt nearly six decades ago when she decided to shoot some home movies of her family.

Steve Newvine lives in Merced.

His latest book, Can Do Californians, is now available at Lulu.com and at BarnesAndNoble.com

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Steve Newvine Steve Newvine

Revitalizing a Park while Reinforcing Legacies

Del Hale and Emory O’Banion.   O’Banion Park in Dos Palos was named after former Merced County Supervisor Emory O’Banion in 1966.  The community center inside the Park was named after former Parks and Recreation Commissioner Del Hale.   Photo: Count…

Del Hale and Emory O’Banion. O’Banion Park in Dos Palos was named after former Merced County Supervisor Emory O’Banion in 1966. The community center inside the Park was named after former Parks and Recreation Commissioner Del Hale. Photo: County of Merced

Parks are much more than just open spaces.

In addition to the expanse of outdoors for families to gather or as a venue for recreational sports, parks can serve as community gathering sites for a variety of other activities such as food bank distributions and festivals.

Maximizing that potential is exactly what community leaders are hoping for in a grant request currently being proposed for enhancements to O’Banion Park in Dos Palos The County is seeking $8.5 million in state grant funding for a project renovation that would include adding picnic shelters, building on the existing Del Hale Hall, and moving the County Library branch in Dos Palos to the expanded space.

Another $3.5 million is being sought in Community Development Block Grant monies for the project.

Del Hale Hall in O’Banion Park. Photo: County of Merced

Del Hale Hall in O’Banion Park. Photo: County of Merced

County grant writer Patti Dosetti says the request offers four alternatives for the Park that entail the rehabilitation of the existing Del Hale building all the way up to replacing the fifty year plus structure. “We’re excited about the prospects,” Patti says. “The current building was constructed in the 1960s.”

The County got a planning grant for designing the proposed changes.

Work with that planning grant is already underway. Patti Dosetti says the key to success for the grant is community involvement. The County has been seeking input from area residents and others about how the Park can maximize use by the public.

It’s hoped the state grant will come through in spite of heavy competition for the funds, including some competition within the County. In the last round, sixty-two projects received funding from four-hundred, seventy-eight applications.

The proposed for enhancements to O’Banion Park and Del Hale Hall offer a lot more than what is written in the grant application. Improving the community space may also draw attention to the legacies of the two men whose names are part of the Park and community hall.

Some of the architectural sketches of the proposed renovation of O’Banion Park. Photo: County of Merced

Some of the architectural sketches of the proposed renovation of O’Banion Park. Photo: County of Merced

Often, parks are named after respected community leaders.

The names of Emory O’Banion and Del Hale do not immediately bring back memories from their work on behalf of Merced County citizens.

They were honored in the mid-1960s, so a long time has passed since the County Board of Supervisors dedicated the Park and community center in their respective names.

Emory O’Banion served on the Merced County Board of Supervisors for nineteen years. He represented the district that includes Dos Palos and Los Banos. He also served on the elementary school board and the War Ration Board.

His life work was farming and politics. Emory’s son Jerry served in the same district as Supervisor from 1990 to 2018. Emory’s grandson Jeremy is the current President of the Dos Palos Joint Unified School District Board of Trustees.

“My grandfather passed before I was born,” said Jeremy O’Banion. “But I know he and Del Hale were partners on some projects.”

Those partnerships included a cattle company and land holdings.

Del Hale was a County Parks and Recreation Commissioner who served from 1945 to 1975. His life work was in an insurance business now known as Stocking and Cozzi in Dos Palos.

In his lifetime, he was highly respected and well-liked by his colleagues and friends. Patti Dosetti shared a story she found about Del Hale in her work on the grant proposal.

“He was known to go to area hospitals on Christmas to bring presents and companionship to those who were unable to be at home for the holiday.”

Jeremy O’Banion says Emory and Del donated the original ten acres that helped establish the Park back in the 1960s.

After Emory passed, his children sold the remaining ten acres to the County. The Park spans twenty acres.

If the grant is approved, work could begin right away. The job would be completed by the year 2025.

When that happens, the community will once again know a little bit more about the two men who were honored more than fifty years ago with the naming of O’Banion Park and Del Hale Hall.

Just like the Park and community center, the legacies of Emory O’Banion and Del Hale will be revitalized as well.

Steve Newvine lives in Merced

His book Can Do Californians is available at BarnesandNobel.com and at Lulu.com

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