Mural discovered in renovations at downtown building

Published 9:00 am Wednesday, June 1, 2016

By MICHAEL MURRAY
michael.murray@ americustimesrecorder.com

AMERICUS — A group of volunteers from the Alpharetta Presbyterian Church, who recently came to Americus to aid in renovation efforts at the Fuller Center for Housing’s downtown Americus office, received a big surprise on Tuesday morning.
While working upstairs in the building, located on West Lamar Street, downtown, the group uncovered a Ballard Obelisk Flour Co. mural that has, presumably, not been seen in decades.
Kirk Lyman-Barner, board chairman of the Americus-Sumter Fuller Center for Housing, spoke with the Times-Recorder about the discovery soon after it was uncovered.
“This is [the volunteer group’s] second year coming here,” Lyman-Barner said. “They came to work on houses, but we’re also looking to turn this space into an apartment complex.
“They were having trouble peeling the wallpaper off and Mark [the team’s construction volunteer] suggested that they just hit it with the crowbar,” Lyman-Barner continued. “As the wallpaper was falling off, I could see that there was something behind it.”
As the group continued to peel back decades’ of layers of wallpaper, it soon became evident that they had discovered something unique and, surprisingly, well-preserved.
“It held up really well to all of the abuse and pounding that it took to tear off all of the wallpaper,” Lyman-Barner said. “The plaster, remarkably, stayed in really good shape.”
Lyman-Barner contacted Heather Stanley, managing director of the Rylander Theatre, asking her to come and take a look at the discovery, as the building next door to the Fuller Center’s downtown office was previously used as a movie theater. “[Stanley] discovered, on the Internet, that it is the Ballard’s Obelisk Flour Co. logo. So, we know what it is but, how it got here, we don’t know.”
An Internet search by the Times-Recorder found that the Ballard and Ballard Co., Inc. was established in 1880, which  remained in business until the company was purchased in 1950. Though the mural did not immediately appear to include any definitive markings indicating when it had been painted, a collection of advertisements from the company, which use similar imagery and composition, is currently housed in the Virginia Tech Library’s special collections. These artifacts are said to have been created around 1925.
Lyman-Barner went on to say that he plans to ensure that the mural is preserved.