Back in July, word spread that a big piece of Muncie’s retail past was on the chopping block: the old J.C. Penney at Muncie Mall was headed for demolition. By September, the scope ballooned: nearly 255,000 square feet -including Sears and the long-shuttered cinema- were also slated to disappear! Fencing went up in October, then everything seemed to stall. What happened? At last, we have an answer.
Continue reading “Here’s why half of Muncie Mall is still standing”Beneath Ball State: hidden tunnels mapped in 1950
If you’re anything like me, you find tunnels irresistible. There’s something about hidden spaces -places I’m not really supposed to see- that flips a switch in my brain. Stumbling across Ball State University’s tunnels on a seventy-six-year-old Sanborn fire insurance map last night felt like rediscovering a secret! In a way, they hide in plain sight.
Continue reading “Beneath Ball State: hidden tunnels mapped in 1950”Muncie’s old Value City Furniture store
Big retail ideas that briefly landed in mid-sized cities and then quietly moved on are fascinating to me. Places like that tend to leave behind oversized buildings, bold promises, and a paper trail full of optimism. Muncie’s Value City Furniture is one of those stories. For a short time in the 1970s, it represented modern retailing at full throttle!
Continue reading “Muncie’s old Value City Furniture store”The Hoosier Boys and the Mystery of Otter Creek
I’ve been to Terre Haute maybe five times in my life, most recently to take photos of a Long Line tower and snarf down a wet plate at Taco Casita. Still, I recently got a chance to do some virtual globetrotting there when my friend Brett reached out with a question about a mysterious old school. Here’s what we discovered.
Continue reading “The Hoosier Boys and the Mystery of Otter Creek”The Delaware County Infirmary just east of Muncie
A week or so ago, I shared plans to visit all thirty-seven of Indiana’s remaining county homes, poorhouses, infirmaries, and whatever other names they went by. What survives in Delaware County is only a modern addition, but the property it sits on carries a significant amount of history. Beyond the present structure, I’m convinced there’s more just waiting to be uncovered.
Continue reading “The Delaware County Infirmary just east of Muncie”The old Albany Theater
It’s almost unthinkable today when cities the size of Anderson, Elkhart, and Marion no longer have a movie theater to call their own, but once upon a time, even the smallest towns could boast a cinema. Albany, Indiana, was one of them. For a time, it had its own little window into Hollywood.
Continue reading “The old Albany Theater”The rest of Oakville from the window of my car
I wrote about the site of the old Oakville schoolhouse in rural Delaware County last month. Almost immediately, I realized just how much context I’d left on the table. Armed with my sister and a renewed sense of curiosity, I made a return trip to the unincorporated community to see what remained. As it turns out, Oakville had been waiting for a second look: there’s far more left than I remembered!
Continue reading “The rest of Oakville from the window of my car”Delaware County Patriots: Benjamin Wallis
Some Revolutionary War stories arrive neatly packaged. They’re complete with crisp discharge papers, well-kept family Bibles with firm records, and a paper trail that ties everything together. Most, however, don’t. Instead, they survive in sworn statements, half-remembered marches, and the strong insistence of veterans who knew what they had endured. The story of Benjamin Wallis belongs in that second category.
Continue reading “Delaware County Patriots: Benjamin Wallis”My aunt and I braved the coldest day ever to track down our ancestors at Strong Cemetery
I’m neither a weatherman nor a groundhog, but I’m fairly certain Monday was the coldest day of the year so far. With the wind chill firmly into the negatives, I naturally chose to spend it outdoors traipsing through a snowy cemetery with my Aunt Jan. We were there to find the graves of two ancestors who died more than a century ago.
Continue reading “My aunt and I braved the coldest day ever to track down our ancestors at Strong Cemetery”My next statewide project will take me to all of Indiana’s old poor farms
Whether it’s every historic courthouse in the state, all the old schoolhouses in my area, or the full lineup of Indiana’s Long Line towers, I’ve always been drawn to big, sweeping projects. There’s something irresistible about trying to see the whole picture! It looks like old county infirmaries are up next.
Continue reading “My next statewide project will take me to all of Indiana’s old poor farms”