Time Capsule

Posted December 30th, 2009 by kerri and filed in small house living
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Office wallYou can’t take a pic­ture of this, it’s already gone,” Nate’s ghost whis­pers to Claire when she wants to pho­to­graph her fam­ily in the series finale of the HBO tele­vi­sion show “Six Feet Under.”

When I was a child, my par­ents remod­eled our Little Green Bungalow by tear­ing out walls to open more space. Before the wall was sealed with dry­wall, I placed a let­ter to the future in the new wall of the kitchen.

I was all of about 9 or 10 at the time, but the let­ter detailed the house’s his­tory (my par­ents pur­chased it brand spank­ing new in 1948), our family’s his­tory and our cur­rent fam­ily mem­bers and dogs names. I don’t know where I got the idea; mil­len­nium time cap­sules weren’t even on the radar in the early 1970s. Perhaps I had heard of some other time cap­sule project or maybe I got the idea from all of those arche­ol­o­gist books I scanned in my child­hood (my mother wanted me to grow up to be an arche­ol­o­gist in the worst way!)

Whatever gave me the ini­tial idea, it was renewed last year watch­ing a show called “If Walls Could Talk,” a show that doc­u­ments peo­ple find­ing cool reminders of their home’s his­tory. Old bot­tles, children’s toys lost in floor­boards and dropped into unsealed walls, even let­ters and pho­tographs hid­den away for decades and even centuries.

On this show, the walls really do offer a win­dow into the past.

When we were build­ing The Belle Writer’s Studio in 2008, I decided to write another let­ter to the future and drop it into an unfin­ished wall of my office.

I began the let­ter, “If you’re read­ing this let­ter, you most likely own the prop­erty that once was our dream. “Our” is my hus­band and me. We are Kerri (Fivecoat) Campbell and Dale Campbell…” I con­tin­ued with the his­tory of our fam­ily ties to the land, which goes back to 1984, who we are and why we wanted to build here. I tell them this is the office I’ve always dreamed of, my writer’s stu­dio in the woods.

I end the let­ter telling them that wher­ever we are as they are read­ing my let­ter, I hope that they too have found their heaven here among nature.

I sealed the let­ter in a plas­tic freezer bag (some­thing I don’t think I did with the one as a child), along with some pho­tos, a cou­ple of my pub­lished arti­cles and some web addresses. Since we’ve been told every­thing will live on the Internet for­ever, I assumed some­one in the future might still be able to access our online pres­ence if they desire.

Why? I don’t know. I’ve always been in love with his­tory and espe­cially love learn­ing about the places I’ve occu­pied and the peo­ple who were there before.

Perhaps it is a desire that our fam­ily is not for­got­ten; that lit­tle nag­ging in the back of our minds that wants some­one to know who we were and that what we did in our lives mat­tered, at least to us.

Should any­one in the future hap­pen upon these two time cap­sules, they will get a glimpse of our present. They will get the pic­ture of us that is already gone.

Have you ever buried or placed a time cap­sule any­where? Do you plan on doing so if you’re plan­ning on building?

10 Responses to “Time Capsule”

  1. Denise says:

    When my Husband & I built our home 8 yrs ago I wrote a let­ter telling about us, our prop­erty, our chil­dren, pets & our feel­ings about just being mar­ried & build­ing this place our­selves. I enclosed a wed­ding pic­ture of us, a favorite recipe for cheese­cake & put them in a masons jar in the wall along with a horse­shoe fac­ing up to catch the good luck.

  2. Rosie says:

    Fun post, Kerri!
    I never found a time cap­sule, but when I was a lit­tle girl we lived in an old farm­house in rural Illinois. My sis­ter and I would go into the dirt floored base­ment and dig for "trea­sures," and would find bits of dish­ware and bottles,etc. And when my dad tore out the old plas­ter walls to remodel, we found a vin­tage Valentine post­card with the scrib­bled words, "I love you." The Valentine always stuck in my mem­ory — I won­dered if the recip­i­ent hid the Valentine from her par­ents, or if the signer chose not to send it?

  3. I have lived in sev­eral dif­fer­ent houses out west, but when I moved to Arkansas where we pur­chased two dif­fer­ent houses in dif­fer­ent area's of the state was the first time I ever found any infor­ma­tion on any places left behind. The archi­tec­tural plans, back­ground of the builder and other sub­con­trac­tors were men­tioned. It was a won­der­ful sur­prise. I con­tinue to keep all updates and repair slips for the next owner.

  4. Bj says:

    Kerri,

    Those garbage heaps can be more of a time cap­sule than any of us real­ize. After all in an archae­ol­ogy dig site, those "dumps" give them the very clues that we base our facts of his­tory on! Papers, pot­tery shards, camp­fire ashes, etc.

    While I have never per­son­ally had a time cap­sule, I was part of a sec­ond grade project way back in the 60's on an air­base in New Jersey that did bury a time cap­sule to be opened in the year 2064 (100 years later). I won't likely be there for the undig­ging and open­ing, but it is nice to remem­ber I am part of that.

    Since the walls in my lit­tle cabin are still unfin­ished, this has given me pause to think of doing some­thing sim­i­lar to what you have in your walls. Thanks for the great idea!

    Have a great week! I have the rest of this week to play, and then go back to work on Monday!
    BJ

    • kerri says:

      That's a neat story about that time cap­sule. I cov­ered a story once where one was opened after 100 years. It had been placed in the cor­ner­stone of a build­ing when it was fin­ished. Unfortunately, it wasn't sealed and the con­tents were badly dam­aged.
      Anyway, you're wel­come for the idea. My dry­wallers thought it was the coolest thing, I bet they're still talk­ing about it! After writ­ing this post, I remem­bered that my sib­lings had all wrote their names in the con­crete of our base­ment stoop when it was poured. I think this is where I got the idea for the let­ter in the wall. Have a great rest of the week off. I was going to take this week off, but work came my way and I can't turn it down!

  5. kerri says:

    That is very cool about your land. My par­ents pur­chased the Brick Tudor in our town that was built by the rich­est man in town at the time. He owned the bank and local gro­cery, but was a very gen­er­ous per­son. It was neat for my mom, as the house was built for his wife, it was her dream and at the time, it was my mom's too. She felt a very deep con­nec­tion to that woman and to the past.
    The garbage dumps of old homes, which were usu­ally located within throw­ing dis­tance of the back door, is a trea­sure trove of the past. I love going through those!

  6. S.A.B.L.E. says:

    Kerri, I haven't much thought of doing a time cap­sule or let­ter. The last place I lived I researched through land records and found our 40 acers were part of 80 acers orig­i­nally pur­chased from the gov­er­nor of Texas through the General Land Office on the mid-1800's. Lots of his­tory there and found some inter­est­ing things in what was the old garbage dump on the place. I thought that was pretty inter­est­ing. Life changes have brought me to another loca­tion. I haven't researched it's his­tory to see what things of inter­est I might find, but now I just might go do "some dig­ging" at the land records office.