Greene County capsule from 1969 to be opened

Greene County Administrator Brandon Huddleson, left, Sheriff Gene Fischer, middle, and County Records Manager Robin Heise stand with the 1969 time capsule that was recently removed from the cornerstone at the Greene County Jail. The time capsule will be opened Friday June 21. CONTRIBUTED

Credit: Contributed

Credit: Contributed

Greene County Administrator Brandon Huddleson, left, Sheriff Gene Fischer, middle, and County Records Manager Robin Heise stand with the 1969 time capsule that was recently removed from the cornerstone at the Greene County Jail. The time capsule will be opened Friday June 21. CONTRIBUTED

A time capsule hidden in the cornerstone of the Greene County Jail will be opened on the day it was put away 50 years ago.

On Friday, June 21, county officials will open the 1969 time capsule, which was placed in the cornerstone when the jail was built off East Main Street in downtown Xenia.

The items inside will be removed and put on display for the public before being stored at the Greene County Archives building, 535 Ledbetter Road.

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The publications and artifacts placed in time capsules typically represent the cultural, political and religious beliefs of the time period, said Greene County Records Manager Robin Heise.

“Upon opening these copper boxes, it’s almost like traveling back in time,” Heise said. The artifacts symbolize what was important to the generation who sealed the box and provides the generation opening it with a sense of continuity, identity, and their cultural heritage.”

Former Greene County Prosecutor Reynold Hoefflin addressed the crowd at the original ceremony and his speech was included in the time capsule.

Hoefflin, now 84, will be attending Friday’s event and has been asked to say a few words. He said he’s looking forward to reading the speech he gave in 1969 and seeing the capsule’s other contents.

Hoefflin, who only served one term as the prosecutor before entering private practice, said he can’t remember what he said 50 years ago, but he remembers some aspects of the prosecutor’s office used to be like.

“In those days, the county prosecutor was a part-time job,” he said. “I want to say I had three assistants to begin with and four when I was done in four years. … What was really being neglected at that time was the civil side.”

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As part of the ceremony, the county archives department has put together an exhibit to highlight local and national events from the “year everything changed.”

In addition to the county jail being built, other notable local events from 1969 include Xenia’s first black mayor being elected, James T. Henry; Beavercreek was hit with a tornado in May of that year; and a section of Arrowhead Acres in Xenia was approved for construction, according to county archives.

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