
Where EAST meets the Northwest

SCENIC ACQUISITION. The Longhorn Saloon (top photo) in Scenic, South Dakota
is still adorned with cattle skulls and emblazoned with the building’s founding
date of 1906. While never a booming metropolis, Scenic once boasted a saloon,
three gas stations, a dance hall, and a school. Today, just one business
remains: the U.S. Post Office. The city was recently sold by ailing owner Twila
Merrill to Iglesia ni Cristo, a Filipino church whose intentions are a complete
mystery to area residents. Pictured below are swings at a playground amidst
overgrown grass. (AP Photos/Amber Hunt)
From The Asian Reporter, V21, #20 (October 17, 2011), page 9.

Future unknown for U.S. ghost town bought by church
By Amber Hunt
The Associated Press
SCENIC, South Dakota — The saloon is long empty. The roadside jail cells,
rusted and worn. Even the swing sets peek from behind knee-high brush after
decades of neglect.
The tiny exclave just west of South Dakota’s badlands is officially an old
ghost town. But its future is shrouded in new mystery.
"We don’t know what’s coming," said Kathy Jobgen, 50, the only employee
remaining at the only business still in town: the U.S. Post Office.
The town of Scenic — once a popular stop for people travelling to Rapid City
from the badlands to the east or Pine Ridge Reservation to the south — was
recently purchased by an unusual buyer for less than $800,000. The Iglesia ni
Cristo church, established in the Philippines in 1914, bought the town and
surrounding acreage from longtime resident and area rodeo legend Twila Merrill,
who had gathered the land bit by bit over several decades.
The church isn’t divulging its plans for the property. A person answering the
phone at its offices in Daly City, California, said he couldn’t share any
information, as did staffers of church spokesman Bienvenido Santos.
"They’ve got a non-disclosure agreement, and I’m a signatory to that," said
David Olsen, the real-estate agent who represented Merrill’s family in the sale.
He was only comfortable offering bits of detail — the saloon and other
boarded-up buildings still standing along Main Street will stay, he said — but
he said he couldn’t give specifics.
"The gas station will be open for business again soon enough," said Olsen, of
Coldwell Banker in Rapid City. The church purchasers are "interested in it being
a benefit to the community."
The church, which translates in the Tagalog language to Church of Christ, has
been steadily spreading west since it was founded in the Philippines by Felix
Manalo, a former minister of the Seventh-Day Adventist Church who experienced
what he claimed to be a call similar to those of ancient prophets. He died in
1963.
Often described as one of the fastest-spreading international religions, its
foothold in the Philippines grew from about 1.4 million followers in 1990 to 1.7
million in 2000, according to the 2011 figures released by the National
Statistics Office in Manila.
Iglesia ni Cristo rejects the Christian doctrine of trinity and believes
Christ is one of several prophets. The church is focused on the end times,
believes Manalo is a prophet, and considers the Catholic Church apostate.
It has a divisive reputation. The church’s backing has been viewed as crucial
in Filipino presidential elections, and it has been accused of organizing bloc
voting in that country. It also is known for its secrecy, rarely commenting on
its activities.
So far, there has been no church activity in Scenic to hint at what’s to come
— no construction permits have been sought nor have any development plans been
presented to the county. The lack of information surrounding the sale has some
neighbors uneasy and rumors are circulating among the scattering of residents.
"They bought it sight unseen," said Shirley Kudrna, whose father-in-law was
born in 1916 on a ranch about seven miles east of Scenic.
"Some people say maybe they’re a cult," said her father-in-law, Tony Kudrna,
95, who has lived on the ranch nearly his whole life.
The church has expanded to more than 5,000 congregations in the Philippines,
and more than 600 abroad in more than 60 countries and territories, according to
the Manila Times. It has held neighborhood events to praise the
hospitality of the communities where it has purchased land to build homes and
churches, including Los Angeles, Orlando, and Union County, New Jersey.
Other congregations are established nationwide in more than 40 states,
according to the church’s website. Dozens are listed in California, 10 in
Washington state, 12 in Texas, and seven in New York.
Jobgen said she’s hopeful the church will make for a good neighbor.
"I’m excited about the possibilities," said Jobgen, who also runs the Jobgen
Ranch with her husband.
The intersection of flourishing religion and foundering town is perplexing:
In 1915, the state Highway 44 pit stop of Scenic enjoyed its largest population
of 155 residents, according to records kept by the South Dakota State Historical
Society.
At its peak, the town that’s pure Old West had two restaurants, three gas
stations, two bulk filling stations, a hotel, a school, a bank, and a post
office. Tony Kudrna’s sister worked at one of the restaurants, he recalled. To
travel from his homestead to the comparatively bustling town, he went by
horse-drawn wagon.
The remnants still dot the 12 acres that qualify as deserted town. The
buildings that remain are padlocked closed and have plywood over the windows and
doors, but the flavor of the time is still very much present: The sign above the
Longhorn Saloon is lined with aged cattle skulls and emblazoned with the
structure’s year of construction — 1906.
The wooden general store is adorned with rusted wagon wheels and a carved
sign that reads: "ASHES TO ASHES — DUST TO DUST— IF WE DON’T HAVE IT — IT ISN’T
A MUST."
Merrill, a rancher and rodeo regular, began buying Scenic property in 1963.
Olsen said her health began to fail about two years ago, and as cancer took
hold, Merrill was forced to put the land — 46 acres in total — on the market.
It languished for two years with a $3 million price tag. In July, Olsen
stepped in and dropped the cost to $799,000.
Suddenly, prospective buyers stepped forward from all over the world, said
Olsen, estimating that he took more than 500 phone calls and 200 e-mails about
the property. He appeared on television programs in Australia, London, Montreal,
Chicago, and Atlanta, he said.
The offer from the Filipino church was one of several.
"It was Twila’s decision as to who she chose," Olsen said. "She seems to be
real happy with it."
What happens next is not known publicly. Olsen said the property will be
cleaned of dilapidated buildings and overgrown brush, but he said the buildings
at the town’s heart will remain. Not even Merrill and her family know more than
that, he said.
"They do not know the plans," he said. "They’re as eager as everybody else."
Jennifer Farrar of The Associated Press News Research Center and Associated
Press writers
Oliver Teves and Hrvoje Hranjski in Manila, the Philippines contributed to
this report.
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