Preserved in time
1976 Prairie Elementary time capsule opened
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-Messenger photo by Hans Madsen
The first of two Coleman coolers containing time capsule artifacts from 1976 are removed from the sign base at the former Prairie Elementary School Saturday.
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-Messenger photo by Hans Madsen
A good-sized crowd gathered Saturday afternoon to watch a time capsule from 1976 be opened at the former Prairie Elementary School in Callender.
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-Messenger photo by Hans Madsen
Dennis Tucker, who was principal at the former Prairie Elementary School from 1966 to 1996, talks Saturday afternoon to a crowd gathered to watch the opening of a time capsule from 1976 being opened at the site in Callender. Tucker contributed a selection of New York Jets stickers that survived the past 50 years in pristine condition.
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-Messenger photo by Hans Madsen
Joyce Silvey, of Moorland, is all smiles as she waits for the a time capsule from 1976 to be opened Saturday at the former Prairie Elementary School in Callender. Silvey was part of the staff committee that helped organize the project.
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-Messenger photo by Hans Madsen
Russ Tucker, of Lanyon, cuts through some of the plastic and tape that sealed up a time capsule put away in 1976 at the former Prairie Elementary School in Callender. Tucker is the son of Dennis Tucker who was principal at the time it was put away.

-Messenger photo by Hans Madsen
The first of two Coleman coolers containing time capsule artifacts from 1976 are removed from the sign base at the former Prairie Elementary School Saturday.
CALLENDER — Dennis Tucker, who spent 30 years from 1966 to 1996 as the principal of the former Prairie Elementary School, wasn’t too sure if he would be around to help open the time capsule that was put into the school sign on May 26, 1976.
“I told the kids when we put the stuff in there I most likely wouldn’t be around,” Tucker said. “They’d need to speak loudly and look up. The good Lord let me be here today.”
Tucker said the credit belongs to the students.
“This was all the kids’ project,” he said.
So what did they put into the capsule back in 1976?

-Messenger photo by Hans Madsen
A good-sized crowd gathered Saturday afternoon to watch a time capsule from 1976 be opened at the former Prairie Elementary School in Callender.
“Messages on a cassette, essays on what we thought would be going on in 2026, lunch tickets, old textbooks,” he said.
Tucker made his own contribution, which survived in pristine condition.
“I put some Jets stickers in there,” he said. “I handed them out every year.”
Joyce Silvey, of Moorland, was part of an adult committee who helped the student council with the project. Her daughter, Kimberly (Silvey) Good, was among the students.
“We met and talked about different ideas.” Silvey said. “I look forward to seeing this again.”

-Messenger photo by Hans Madsen
Dennis Tucker, who was principal at the former Prairie Elementary School from 1966 to 1996, talks Saturday afternoon to a crowd gathered to watch the opening of a time capsule from 1976 being opened at the site in Callender. Tucker contributed a selection of New York Jets stickers that survived the past 50 years in pristine condition.
Sara (Bilstad) Harbacheck, of Boone, was in fourth grade in 1976.
“I think I had Mrs. Phillips,” she said. “I remember the day very clearly though. I remember we did things as a class, a recording and what it would be like in 50 years.”
So what was her prediction?
“Flying cars, robots that did homework, Jetsons type things,” she said.
Darrin Wooters ended up a member of the class of 1983. He was part of the student council that raised the money, got permission from the school board and organized the time capsule project.

-Messenger photo by Hans Madsen
Joyce Silvey, of Moorland, is all smiles as she waits for the a time capsule from 1976 to be opened Saturday at the former Prairie Elementary School in Callender. Silvey was part of the staff committee that helped organize the project.
“Five of us, as 10- and 11-year-olds, presented it to the school board,” Wooters said. “We raised the money. It was a big deal to save $500.”
Wooters helped open the capsules Saturday. Item by item, he showed the crowd a cassette, a tape player, a teachers’ supply catalog, tiles they sold to fundraise, an envelope with Tucker’s Jets stickers, textbooks and folders of written essays.
Everything looked almost new, including the Coleman coolers used to hold everything. They were molded in an odd organic yellow color that’s probably no longer in the company’s catalog.
Wooters remembered the day it was sealed up.
“We had a ceremony; the band played,” he said.

-Messenger photo by Hans Madsen
Russ Tucker, of Lanyon, cuts through some of the plastic and tape that sealed up a time capsule put away in 1976 at the former Prairie Elementary School in Callender. Tucker is the son of Dennis Tucker who was principal at the time it was put away.
As the event came to a close, a former student who may or may not have encountered one of the paddles Tucker had in his office, asked him if he was going to be laid to rest in the sign base.
Tucker was quick with a good comeback.
“They’d probably like that,” he said.
The time capsule items will be cataloged, then put on display at the Gowrie Historical Society.








