Same Subject, Different Focus

What interests you most when thinking about a screen legend? The person behind the legend or the legend itself? There are two museums in Fairmount, Indiana that are dedicated to James Dean. I liked them both for different reasons.

The first I visited was the James Dean Gallery. Located in a grand old home that was built on Main Street by the local doctor, this place has lots of stuff that celebrates the celebrity of James Dean and that memorializes the larger than life celebrity.

It’s a large private collection in a compact space. A few things caught my eye including the personal effects of California Highway Patrolman Ron Nelson who was first on scene of the crash that killed Jimmy. They have his hat, badge and other items.

There’s this record store display.

And here’s something different. It’s the concrete from the gas pump island at the Sherman Oaks gas station where he gassed up for the last time.

A small theater shows a looping collection of clips from film and commercials.

There’s also a nice vintage store in the back with lots of glass and ceramics, records, books and more. The prices are reasonable and the merchandise is good quality.

Oh, and remember the front porch I showed you? It’s here!

I imagine that when James Dean fans are coming to town, this is what they’re celebrating – the man, the myth, the legend!

However, just down the street you’ll find the James Dean Museum. It’s part of the local history museum, also in an old house and also an enormous collection.

This collection is different because it is focused more on Jimmy Dean the small town boy rather than James Dean the icon. Here you’ll find some surprising things like a sweater with a cowboy embroidered on it that he wore as a toddler.

There’s a childhood train set and his basketball uniform. He was quite the artist and they have drawings as well as a self portrait bust that he created. There’s even a photo of him working on that bust.

You’ll find a set of small busts he carried when he traveled. They are of classical musicians- turns out the Rebel Without A Cause was a classical music aficionado.

They also have a number of pictures I had never seen before including one with his father when he was a young boy. There was something sad about that image like he was clinging to his dad. He was kind of an emotional handful but was much more intellectual, more artistic and more sensitive than meets the eye. Movie items, racing awards and other items depict his public life.

Here’s his first motorcycle and his letterman sweater.

Notice the top picture? He was a cat person!

They have several clothing pieces along with pictures of him wearing the items either on set or in real life. He carried bongo drums when he traveled and enjoyed bull fighting. This is his favorite drum.

They say you shouldn’t judge someone until you’ve walked a mile in his shoes. Check out these boots.

This museum has all these items thanks to the generosity of Marcus Winslow, Jimmy’s cousin who he thought of as a little brother.

I was quite taken with all those personal items that paint a picture of the boy and the man behind the legend. Maybe I’m wrong but I imagine that most people traveling to Indiana to celebrate James Dean aren’t all that interested in his baby clothes and childhood toys. They’re probably probably interested in the motorcycles, the movie memorabilia and the gas pump concrete. All the same, I like that you can get the full picture of his story. Of course, I am always curious about how people become who they are.

Incidentally, they also have this picture of Marcus and Ortense Winslow, the aunt and uncle who raised him. They were a vital part of his story and I found this picture charming.

Both museums are worth a visit. If you go, let me know what you think! Find the James Dean Gallery here and the James Dean Museum here.

Carter’s Motorcycle Shop

Today it’s owned by the 9th Street Gang Car Club. Back in the day, it was Carter’s Motorcycle Shop. Located near the Winslow farm where James Dean spent his formative years, it was a favorite hangout of his.

The car club keeps it looking like it did in the fifties. Notice the Indian Motorcycle sign over the door.

Jimmy’s uncle Marcus Winslow gave him his first motorcycle which he purchased here. He was just fifteen at the time.

That bike can now be viewed at the James Dean Museum in Fairmount. It’s one of two on display.

If you go, you’re welcome to pull into the parking lot for pictures. You’re also very close to the Quaker Church he attended, the family farm he called home, and the cemetery where he is buried.

Back Creek Friends Church

The Quaker church that James Dean attended with his aunt and uncle sits just down the road from the Winslow farm Jimmy called home. The Back Creek Friends Church or Meetinghouse was built in 1899. It has been preserved but they have added onto the church. Their website says that addition houses a pastor’s study, classrooms, fellowship hall and restrooms. Their church history also says that the first meetings were held in the log cabin home of Joseph Winslow – I assume a relative of James Dean’s family.

Can we pause a moment to appreciate that James Dean was raised a Quaker?

I have long been interested in the Quaker faith and their beliefs that we all have a unique value and that there is something of God in us all. Quakers seek religious truth from within.

It makes me wonder how faith informed Jimmy’s development. Incidentally, he attended Fairmount High School where the mascot was a Quaker.

To this day, this church holds a memorial service for their most famous friend every September. Want to visit? I’m sure they welcome guests. Learn more about them here.

James Dean’s Family Farm

When you think about James Dean, you probably think about the troubled persona, the race car driving risk taker who still epitomizes cool.

You probably don’t think about him out in nature, working on a farm, playing with animals. In fact, you probably don’t think about him as a kid at all.

He arrived by train at the age of nine, sent by his dad to stay with relatives after his mom died of cancer. Those relatives were Ortense and Marcus Winslow, an aunt and uncle who are said to have sores on their nephew. They raised Jimmy alongside their young son Marcus in a Quaker household.

Here, he tried his hand at sports including baseball and basketball. If you go to the town museum, you’ll find his basketball uniform and team picture. He also became involved in the school’s drama program and studied public speaking. He had a stable family life that seemed reasonably happy.

This is the place he called home.

If he had lived, Jimmy would be 92 years old. That makes his little cousin Marcus an elderly man now. Marcus still lives on the family farm and the local museum says he has kept the farm looking as it did firing his own childhood.

He understands the legacy of his famous cousin and the importance Jimmy will always have to the town. In addition to maintaining the farm, he has donated many of Jimmy’s possessions to the local museum.

Marcus invites visitors to stop and take pictures and to look around a bit as long as they don’t approach the house.

James Dean’s Hometown

Hollywood legend James Dean hailed from rural Indiana. Fairmount still celebrates the legend and tells the stories of the young man behind the persona.

He was born in Marion, Indiana and lived in California for a while until his mother died. His father sent him back to Indiana to live with relatives in Fairmount.

Here he lived on a farm with an aunt and uncle who doted on him and their young son who he thought of as a little brother.

James, or Jimmy as they call him around town, graduated from Fairmount High School before moving back to California to live with his father and stepmother. Believe it or not, he enrolled in Santa Monica College to study pre-law before transferring to UCLA to study drama. He eventually dropped out of college entirely to pursue acting.

But I think Jimmy always considered Fairmount his home and he certainly was the town’s favorite son.

There’s the James Dean Gallery, located in a historic home and filled with movie memorabilia, clippings and some rather unusual artifacts. Then there’s the Fairmount Historical Museum with an outstanding collection of James Dean’s personal possessions that have been given to them by that young cousin who he thought of as a brother. That little boy is now an elderly man who still lives on his family’s farm. It is a working farm but he still welcomes visitors to stop for pictures.

Close to the farm is the motorcycle shop where Jimmy hung out, the Quaker church where he worshipped with his family and the cemetery where he is laid to rest.

There are sign murals like the one pictured above and a remnant of his high school – the old stage where he first discovered acting. He’s even on the water tower.

Agriculture, rails, patriotism and small town spirit are alive and well in this town of about 2,900. I really liked it there because it’s quaint and small and hasn’t succumbed to the commercialism some other places might embrace in favor of making a buck off their legendary former resident.

And make no mistake, people do come – both young and adult James Dean fans come looking for more about the screen legend who died too young.

I’m going to break up my day in Fairmount in a few stories because there’s a lot more to say than meets the eye.

Tomorrow we begin at the beginning with the family farm he called home.