Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Northwest Neighborhood Association (NNA) updates

Here's a note I received from the Northwest Neighborhood Association (NNA) recently:

Date: Tuesday, November 16 @ 7pm

The Northwest Neighborhood Association (Center to the railroad tracks; Division to Locust) invites its neighboring associations to attend its next association meeting to hear a special guest speaker: Epiphany Farms Enterprise, a farm-to-fork operation based in Downs, IL.

They are opening a restaurant in downtown Bloomington next spring and are hosting educational dinners about their sustainable and "more than organic" farming practices until then.

Please RSVP to Cheryl Ball (cball@ilstu.edu) if you'd like to attend. We will also have a cookie recipe swap at the meeting that night!

Thanks,

Cheryl

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Neighborhood Yard Sale this Saturday

Just a quick reminder that our annual yard sale event is planned for this Saturday, August 21st from 8 am to 1 pm. A classified ad will appear in the Pantagraph. This event usually generates a lot of traffic, so here's your chance to part with your valued but neglected possessions. With two open houses scheduled, expect the neighborhood to be hopping!

Weather on Saturday is calling for a high in the upper 80s with a 40% chance of rain through the early afternoon.

Saturday, August 14, 2010

2010 Whites Place Block Party

Thanks to everyone who attended this year's block party . . .a great time was had by all. Our sympathy goes out to Millie -- she's a tough little girl!

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Diseased Magnolias In the Neighborhood . . .

How many neighbors have wondered what those white spots are all over some of the magnolia trees in the neighborhood? I have one sick magnolia in my very own back yard.

I visited a local garden center two summers ago and applied the treatment they advised, but saw no results. A recent post to GardenWeb.com came up with a likely culprit: magnolia scale, or Neolecanium cornuparvum (Thro). Read all about it and find treatment options here.

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Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Neighborhood Criminal Activity

Neighboring Alderwoman Karen Schmidt sent an email recently announcing that the Bloomington Police Department is now sharing reports for the following types of crimes on raidsonline.com: Aggravated Assault, Arson, Burglary, Homicide, Larceny, Motor Vehicle Theft, Robbery, Other.

You can view crimes down to the address level and request to receive alerts for crimes within 1000 feet of your home address. I've requested to do so and will post those alerts to the blog as a test. If it gets to be too much, I'll discontinue . . .

The site does not show sexual assault crimes. However, the Illinois State Police website's sex offender registry shows where offenders live.. As of today, there are:
  • 117 offenders within 5 miles of White Place
  • 18 within 1 mile of White Place
  • 0 within 1000 feet of White Place
Thanks for helping to make our neighborhood a safe place!

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Sunday, July 4, 2010

Independence Day Party

Despite the errant rain shower, neighbors from Fell, Clinton and Whites Place all had a good time . . .see pictures below:



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Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Breaking News: White Place a Beautiful Place to Live

The Pantagraph published a story last Sunday, June 27th titled, "White Place one of Bloomington’s signature neighborhoods."

Here's a reprint of that article, just in case it slips off of their home page:
With visitors in town and showing off the Twin Cities in order, it’s always a safe bet to drive down White Place. Stretching four blocks from Emerson to Empire streets on Bloomington’s near northeast side, few if any of the city’s streetscapes offer a more attractive view. With out-of-town guests craning their necks as the car rumbles slowly down the brick street, one is likely hear the refrain, “Why can’t we make our newer neighborhoods as lovely as this?”
Dating back more than a century, White Place (the subdivision also includes the east side of Clinton Boulevard) is recognized as one of the city’s first developments with a distinct suburban feel.
It’s difficult for present-day residents to appreciate how small— geographically speaking —Bloomington was in the late 1800s. Before it became a neighborhood of physicians, ministers, grain dealers and college professors, the area that includes White Place was a no-man’s land between the city of Bloomington and the sleepy college town to the north. The Pantagraph once described this stretch of ground situated west of the Illinois Central Railroad (today’s Constitution Trail) as presenting “an unsightly appearance, a part being grown up to weeds and the remainder a swamp hole.”
The White in White Place comes from its developer, Samuel R. White. Arriving in Bloomington in 1870, White enjoyed success in a variety of related occupations, ranging from building contractor to insurance appraiser. He patterned his development after similar neighborhoods (or residential “places”) popular in St. Louis and other cities. These proto-suburban developments typically included deed restrictions, initial work by a single architect, and a decorative gate at the entrance.
Most White Place lots run about 50 feet wide and 160 feet deep, meaning the substantial two-story homes stand shoulder-to-shoulder, presenting an aesthetically pleasing “wall” of various architectural styles, housing materials and colors. For added effect, twenty-five-foot-wide landscaped boulevards run down the center of both White Place and Clinton Boulevard.
Perhaps the best known structure in all White Place is the gate at the street’s south end. Designed by Bloomington architect Paul O. Moratz, the elaborate entryway of ashlar-faced stone once included three sets of wrought iron gates (see accompanying image). Moratz also served as the architect for 27 White Place, the first house built in the subdivision. Dating to 1899, this Queen Anne-style residence is known for its distinctive Romanesque rock-faced piers.
Of the development’s earliest residences, the most expensive was 22 White Place, built for a cool $10,000 (or around a quarter of a million dollars now, adjusted for inflation). White’s son-in-law and daughter, Elizabeth, lived there, and around 1904 they were joined by Samuel White and his wife, Minerva. The University Street entrance to the house includes an attractive doorway topped by a cut-stone lintel with “S.R. White” etched in the transom window.
White Place also boasted its very own heating plant, located across Emerson Street. Shut down for good before the winter of 1949, residents had to turn to the city to heat their homes. The plant’s 110-foot-high smokestack is long gone, but the rectangular concrete block building remains, though six decades removed from its intended purpose. The two-story (and still-standing) frame house to the immediate west served as the residence for the heating plant’s caretaker.
Although White Place was slow to grow, the opening of the heating plant helped spur a mid-1910s building boom. Many of the mixed Colonial, Craftsman and Revival-style residences from this period came from stock plans often printed and sold by mail order architectural companies.
Long after White’s death, bourbon-fueled residents removed the “S” of the entryway gate, making the statement (or so the story goes) that the developer could no longer claim possession of the street. Thus “Whites Place” (the sign always lacked the necessary possessive) became simply White Place, and even today longtime residents remain confused over what to call the boulevard.
By the late 1960s, early 1970s, White Place had lost some of its luster. Fortunately, the formation of a neighborhood association in 1974 helped spark the development’s renewal. The boulevard was cleaned up, for example, and the arched sign over the gate repainted and repaired (it was also placed five feet higher on its piers to prevent vehicles, mainly delivery trucks, from smacking into it). And the trend of converting the dignified homes into apartments was put to an end with an overdue revision in the zoning code.
Today, White Place is back to its rightful place as one of the premier residential districts in the Twin Cities.


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Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Annual Street Clean Up Day

Mark your calendars:

We will have our annual White Place Cleanup day on Saturday, June 26th. For those that are new or unfamiliar, this is a morning that we dedicate to cleaning up leaves, dirt and debris from the street. It's amazing how much junk collects over the fall and winter months! This is a great way to help our great neighborhood and usually only takes a couple of hours. If you can help, please bring one of these: rake, push broom, shovel for scooping.

Annual White Place Cleanup Day
Saturday, June 26th 9:00 am @ center circle

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Upcoming Events & Info

Summer is here and our annual events are being planned at this time. There will be a meeting this coming Saturday, June 12 @ 3:00pm at The Hogensons #28 (sorry for the short notice). This will be a meeting to discuss upcoming events, but also to discuss any issues that may be important to our neighborhood. If you have anything you would like to see addressed or if you have suggestions to improve our neighborhood please come and share your thoughts.

Quick Notes:

Our annual 4th of July celebration will be held on July 4th this year beginning at 1:00 pm. This is always a fun time . . .

Also wanted to remind everyone that Whites Place Dues notices will be sent out soon. A newsletter detailing upcoming events will also be created.


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Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Selling our Home

We are getting ready to sell our home, #19, and plan on listing it around the end of May. I thought I'd take a moment though to say how much Joy and I have enjoyed our time here. This is a really great neighborhood thanks in no small part to some really great neighbors. We will miss you all, but it's time to move on. If you know anyone looking for a home though, feel free to send them our way, thanks! Here's a link to some pictures from this spring,
http://www.flickr.com/photos/28613795@N00/sets/72157623946908356/show/

Friday, April 30, 2010

Ray Mueninghoff funeral

Ray Mueninghoff lived at #7 Whites Place from 1955 to 1999. His son, Bob Mueninghoff, purchased the house from him and continues to live there.

Ray passed away the night of April 28, 2010 in Dallas, Texas. He is being brought home to Bloomington, IL for funeral services. The funeral is scheduled for 10:00am on May 3, 2010 at Holy Trinity Church.

We pass along our condolensces to the Mueninghoff family.

Thursday, April 29, 2010

condolences for Mueninghoff family

I would like to let eveyone know that Bob Mueninghoff's (#7) father, Ray Mueninghoff passed away last night (04/28/2010). No arrangements have been confirmed yet.

Monday, March 1, 2010

Vandalism

On Saturday night there were several garages, vehicles and other property vandalized using spray paint. This affected the west side/Clinton residents mainly to the south of University. Please be aware and on the lookout for suspicious activity in our area.