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On the record ... with Donald Krehl

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(Curtis Clegg - cclegg@shawmedia.com)

DeKALB – Donald Krehl grew up on the north side of Chicago. Like many city-dwellers, he spent much of his life walking past monuments and sculptures without stopping to appreciate the statues or read the inscriptions near them.

When Krehl, a retired dentist from DeKalb, wanted to find a statue in Chicago’s Lincoln Park of a pioneer in the dental field, he had difficulty finding it. After inquiring at several museums and bookstores, he was surprised to learn that there was not a guide book about the statues and memorials in his hometown.

”I was told that ‘We really need one,’ and I said ‘Fine, if you need one, I’d like to make one.’ That’s how it came about,” Krehl said.

Krehl embarked on a two-year project to find, photograph and write about 240 of the most beautiful and significant statues and memorials in Chicago. He finished his 166-page self-published book, “Monumental Chicago,” earlier this year. The book is now available online and at the Chicago Architectural Society’s gift shop.

Krehl sat down with MidWeek reporter Curtis Clegg last week to discuss the process of researching, publishing and marketing his first book.

MidWeek: Do I understand correctly that you were a dentist before you published this book?

Donald Krehl: Yes, I’m a retired dentist. I was here in DeKalb for 33 years.

MW: What led you to writing a book about statues in Chicago?

DK: I was looking for the statue of G.V. Black, who is known as the father of modern dentistry. He established a lot of the procedures and principles that were being used when I was in (dentistry) school in the 60s and 70s. I had always heard there was a statue of G.V. Black in Lincoln Park, but going through Lincoln Park I couldn’t find it. I stopped in several stores in downtown Chicago and inquired about a guide, and nobody had one.

MW: How did you get around Chicago to do your research?

DK: It depends on the area. In Lincoln Park and Grant Park, I rode around on a bike. I even did a little downtown (on a bike). …I put my bike in the back of my van and in the downtown area I would park in the museum complex. …Sometimes my wife would drop me off and go around the block.

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