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  • An Amish worker gathers leather to be sewn into a horse collar inside Brodhead Collar Shop near  Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish13.JPG
  • Floating on a sea of hands above joyous faces, Ankeny senior Tom Wignes body surfs the crowded Val Air ballroom floor at the 2008 Ankeny prom.
    portfolio_life16_GV.JPG
  • Mike O'Connor, second from left, of Waterloo and his grandson, Brett, 7, raise their hands during a blessing over the soldiers of Iowa Army National Guard's Troop C, 1st Squadron, 113th Cavalry during a send-off ceremony Sunday at Camp Dodge.  Mike's son, Spc. Matthew O'Connor of Cedar Falls is one of about 135 Iowa Army National Guard troops now being deployed to Iraq.
    2010_portfolio_news06_GV.JPG
  • Heather Jacobs clasps hands in bedtime prayer with her son, Justin, 10.   Bedtime is cherished by Heather, as it is about the only time in the day where she will get one-on-one time with each of her children. Heather lost her husband, Eric, in a plane crash in 2006 when she was eight months pregnant with their youngest, Ella, and has since been raising her five young children on her own.
    EricsLastWishes019.JPG
  • An Amish man operates a press cutting large sections of leather inside Brodhead Collar Shop, where horse collars are made by hand near  Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   The Amish live life without modern-day conveniences such as electricity, and most businesses conduct their work with hand tools by window light.  Davis County is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish14.JPG
  • A worn pair of work gloves lies near a scale inside Brodhead Collar Shop, where the Amish make horse collars by hand near  Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish10.JPG
  • Handwritten messages on a tabletop mix with buckles and leather straps inside Brodhead Collar Shop, where the Amish make horse collars by hand near  Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish11.JPG
  • Scraps of leather cover the floor as an Amish worker uses a foot pedal to drive a sewing machine inside Brodhead Collar Shop, where the Amish make horse collars by hand near  Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish12.JPG
  • Mike Cassler holds the hand of his daughter, Elizabeth while in prayer over her bed at Blank Children's Hospital.   Elizabeth is recovering from a severe brain injury she sustained in an auto accident.  Once an elite soccer player, she has emerged from a drug-induced coma and is in the process of re-learning all of her motor skills.
    Cassler0000.JPG
  • m0813flooding - shot 08/12/10 Ames, IA.  Christopher Gannon/The Register  --  Ryan Kauffman of Urbandale stands with a mud-caked hand while taking a break from flood clean up at LOF Express on South Duff Avenue in Ames on Thursday.  Clean up from flooding in Ames, Iowa Thursday, August 11, 2010. (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    2010_floods21_GV.jpg
  • Ryan Kauffman of Urbandale stands with a mud-caked hand while taking a break from flood clean up at LOF Express on South Duff Avenue in Ames on Thursday.  Clean up from flooding in Ames, Iowa Thursday, August 11, 2010.
    2010_floods21_GV.JPG
  • Veteran Gary Gezel, 94, US Army's 168th Infantry, 34th Division, met his future wife, Dorothy, a cook in the Royal Air Force, while aboard a train in England during World War II.  After proposing to her, he took a German parachute that he found during the war, sent it to her, and she made it into her wedding dress.  Now a widower, he keeps the dress (held in hand) and their wartime medals in the same Pella house the couple moved into after the war.     (Christopher Gannon/The Register)  --  des.f01xxvets - shot by Christopher Gannon/The Register on 1/3/13 in , IA
    des.f01xxvets_gezel03cg.jpg
  • Catrina Dixson, 4, right, tries her hand at roping with a lasso while (from left) Jacob Derrer, 6, of Portales, New Mexico, his brother Bryce Derrer, 8, and Freeman Detweiler, 8, of Stoughton, Wisc., watch her performance Friday at the Iowa State Fair.
    2010_portfolio_life26_GV.JPG
  • Mud-caked wheels on horse carriages line up outside Brodhead Collar Shop, where horse collars are made by hand near  Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish16.JPG
  • With his victory speech in hand, governor-elect Terry Branstad is embraced by his wife, Chris, backstage before joining a throng of supporters at the Republican party election night rally at the Hy-Vee Conference Center in West Des Moines on Tuesday night, November 2, 2010.
    2010.11.08_branstad_44gannonvisuals.JPG
  • Stage hand RICHIE BEANAN of Milwaukee, Wisconsin irons the American Flag while preparing the Iowa caucus rally site for Republican Presidential hopeful MITT ROMNEY on Tuesday, January 3, 2012 in Des Moines, Iowa.
    Gannon_Ironing_Flag2.JPG
  • With his victory speech in hand, governor-elect Terry Branstad kisses his wife, Chris, backstage before joining a throng of supporters at the Republican party election night rally at the Hy-Vee Conference Center in West Des Moines on Tuesday night, November 2, 2010.
    2010.11.08_branstad_43gannonvisuals.JPG
  • With his victory speech in hand, governor-elect Terry Branstad is embraced by his wife, Chris, backstage before joining a throng of supporters at the Republican party election night rally at the Hy-Vee Conference Center in West Des Moines on Tuesday night, November 2, 2010.
    2010.11.08_branstad_42gannonvisuals.JPG
  • A horse and buggy travels past a business in Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish26.JPG
  • An Amish store, lower left, playground and schoolhouse fill the horizon along a country road south of Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish25.JPG
  • A horse and buggy travels a roadway west of Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish03cg.JPG
  • An Amish farmer walks along a clothesline on his farm near Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.
    f04xxamish22.JPG
  • An Amish man rides a horse carriage south of Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish23.JPG
  • An Amish farmer walks along a clothesline on his farm near Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish22.JPG
  • An Amish farmer pitchforks heaps of alfalfa to his goat herd in his barn near Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish20.JPG
  • A horse and buggy shares a gravel road with an automobile south of Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish19cg.JPG
  • Notched wood panels wait to be constructed into dresser drawers inside the shop at the Amish-owned T-Corner Furniture store in Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish09.JPG
  • An Amish farmer rides a disc plow drawn by six horses west of Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish05.JPG
  • Amish schoolchildren play outside their schoolhouse south of Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish24.JPG
  • An Amish farmer leans on his pitchfork while feeding alfalfa to his goat herd on a farm near Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish21.JPG
  • An Amish woman walks a gravel road south of Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish17.JPG
  • A horse and buggy travels a roadway east of Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish08.JPG
  • An Amish farmer rides a disc plow drawn by six horses west of Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish06.JPG
  • An Amish man in a horse carriage shares the road with a vehicle east of Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish02cg.JPG
  • A horse and buggy travels past a row of cars outside a business in Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish01cg.JPG
  • An Amish farmer rides a disc plow drawn by six horses west of Drakesville in southeast Iowa's Davis County.   It is among only a handful of rural Iowa counties in the 2010 Census to gain population (2.4 percent).  Much of that population growth is due to a steadily growing Amish population.  (Christopher Gannon/The Des Moines Register)
    f04xxamish07.JPG