News Articles

There have been more articles written throughout the years from the Episcopal Diocese of Wyoming, but none have been scanned yet..  So, it’s going to be a minute since they’re packed away for safe keeping.

Google Reviews

David Gilley

✴✴✴✴✴Sep 8, 2018

Christie is a true artist. Her work is amazing. Pictures don’t completely capture the true beauty of the window. The window changes depending on the time of day. She replicated a stained glass work by Greene and Greene from ~1906 for our old house. It looks like it has always been in place! The entire process was a joy. She is totally dedicated to her craft/art. The final product totally exceeded our expectations.

Tanker Ross

✴✴✴✴✴Sep 2, 2018
Christie made an awesome stained glass elephant for my girlfriend, serious craftsmanship and TLC went into this piece

Older news

The Spearfish Ambassadors are a welcoming committee to greet new businesses in the area.  My welcoming committee greeted me in November of 2008, holding my work for pictures and having fun.

After having done a few years of work in the area, it’s hard to say how this came to be, but it had an audience.

This article appeared in the Black Hills Pioneer about my studio and some of the work I do.

This interview is about the honor of building flag cases with the Black Hills Woodworkers Guild of Spearfish for the families of deceased military veterans.

https://sdpb.org/Archives/ProgramDetail.asp?ProgID=7175

Program Name: Dakota Digest

Flag Cases

Related Topics:
    Military
Originally aired Friday, June 13, 2008

(The archives of this file no longer exists)

The first photo is Navy veteran Paul O’Donnell’s sons, Dale (left) and Dean, holding their father’s burial flag and the hickory flag case donated to them by the Black Hills Woodworkers Guild of Spearfish. The second photo is of a bronze sculpture of a veteran’s burial flag in the hands of a family member. Photos courtesy of Jim Kent.

Tomorrow is Flag Day, established by presidential proclamation in 1916 as the time to honor the symbol of our nation. For those men and women who serve in the military, Flag Day holds a special significance. On today’s Dakota Digest, SDPB’s Jim Kent visits with woodworkers who are donating flag cases to the families of deceased military veterans. These cases will hold the last symbol of their nation’s gratitude to their loved ones – the veteran’s burial flag.

Media files:
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© 2008 SDPB ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

(The archives of this file no longer exists)

This is a brief interview with SDPB’s Jim Kent about the restoration of an antique window that will bring joy to this family for many years to come.

Program Name: Dakota Digest

Family Window

Related Topics:
    Art & Culture
    Family
 
Originally aired Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Heirlooms from parents and grandparents are often treasured symbols of a family’s history and can be an inspiration for future generations. However, those heirlooms often can be lost or damaged with time. One South Dakota family recently rediscovered a piece of their past and shared it with SDPB’s Jim Kent for today’s Dakota Digest.

Color pictures to the right show the window before it was restored and after. The artist who restored the window is Christie Jensen – her web site is www.Terrastu.com

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(The archives of this file no longer exists)

Corky Witt, left, and David Talsma of the Black Hills chapter of the South Dakota Woodworkers Guild work on a prototype for memorial flag cases. They will donate the cases to military honor guards to give to families of veterans. (Photo courtesy of John English)

This is a story about my volunteer work with the SD Woodworkers Guild, Spearfish Chapter and our decision to donate time for making flag cases for the families of veterans.  These cases will be given to the Honor Guard to be distributed to families in the area who want to pay homage to a loved one.

Woodworkers Honor Veterans with Flag Cases

Death of a good friend inspires Spearfish man

By Kayla Gahagan, Journal staff Thursday, December 13, 2007

SPEARFISH — Putting time and talent into honoring an old friend was an easy decision for Larry Reuppel.

With the recent death of Don Burdick, a good friend who was a Vietnam veteran, Reuppel decided he would put his woodworking skills to use.

In many cases, the family of a deceased veteran buys a wooden case to house the complimentary flag that a military honor guard presents to them at the funeral.

Reuppel did some research and decided to design and build the flag case that would carry Burdick’s flag.

“We were both woodworkers,” he said. “His wife asked me if I would make this for him. I said, ‘Sure; I’d be happy to.'”

It was about that time that the Black Hills chapter of the South Dakota Woodworkers Guild was starting to take root. He decided to join and shared his vision with them.

“It was kind of a coincidence,” he said.

His project became their project, and the guild has committed to building more of the cases using Reuppel’s design. Members plan to build 40 flag cases this year and donate them to honor guards, who will then distribute them to families, guild member John English said. On average, a hardwood flag case costs about $150.

Part of the reason for the project comes from the history of its members.

“We have a lot of veterans in our group,” English said.

He said Ketel Thorstenson, an accounting and investment-planning firm, and FoxHammer, a dental-vacuum and compressed-air consulting firm, are donating the materials for the cases, which will be made of walnut.

Reuppel’s design includes an area under the flag where pins, medals, pictures or shell casings can be displayed.

“They can put whatever they want in there,” he said.

The cases are an appropriate gift for a family that has recently lost a loved one, guild secretary Christie Jensen said.

“It’s a good thing,” she said. “It’s of the heart. There’s enough hardship with a death.”

Reuppel said the first case he made took “several, several hours” but that the process would be quicker now.

He said it is a good project because it honors a group of people who deserve it.

“It’s a group that’s rapidly disappearing,” he said. “It’s really the tail end of them.”

There are currently 40 guild members, with 16 of them active. Eric Edwards and Eric Lie serve as co-presidents.

The group meets at the Black Hills School of Woodworking on U.S. Highway 14, near the Veterans of Foreign Wars chapter in Spearfish. English said everyone is invited to attend the meetings or join the guild.

“It’s one of the best things about the guild,” he said. “You don’t have to know anything; you just have to be interested.”

Reuppel’s flag case is nearly finished now, and he hopes to give it to his Burdick’s wife, Pearl, before Christmas.

When Burdick died, his family had an auction, and Reuppel bought his sander. He didn’t need to buy the wood, though — Burdick had given him some walnut, which he used to craft the flag case, smoothing it with that sander.

He plans to invite Pearl Burdick and her family over for supper and give them the case.

“I think she will be kind of overwhelmed with it, really,” he said.

Contact Kayla Gahagan at 394-8410 or kayla.gahagan@rapidcityjournal.com