Seven old courthouse postcards

I started collecting courthouse postcards after I wrapped up visiting every historic courthouse in Indiana. Often, the postcards I found featured courthouses that were no longer standing. Then, out of the blue, someone reached out with hopes of publishing a modern update to the classic The Magnificent 92 Indiana courthouse book. He wanted to use my writing, and before I knew it, a proof copy showed up at my door. I mailed him my entire postcard collection -six or seven years ago now- and never heard a peep after that.

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Delaware County Patriots: Andrew Ice

Many Hoosier Patriots served far from the spotlight, and Andrew Ice was one of them. His war was fought in blockhouses and forts in the wilderness, and his service was recorded years later only through sworn recollections. Nearly two centuries after his death, though, his name resurfaced! Carried forward by descendants and preserved by the Daughters of the American Revolution, it was ultimately etched into public memory here near home.

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Not fooling anyone: this Muncie liquor store used to be a…

Driving through town, one of my favorite games is spotting businesses that have clearly moved into buildings with a past life. Often, you can tell right away- maybe it’s the distinctive windows of an old Pizza Hut, the roofline of a Walgreens, or the sprawling layout of an old Kmart. One such building, a liquor store, on the south side of Muncie, tells a similar tale: it was once a Taco Tico! 

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A new old bell for the Madison County Courthouse

Indiana is rife with historic courthouses. More than ninety percent of our ninety-two counties are home to one! Still, some of our modern structures retain pieces of history as well: in downtown Anderson, the 1973 Madison County Government Center and Courts Building recently saw the installation of a historic bell that hadn’t rung in more than half a century. 

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The Peterson Ford Bridge at Granville

Metal truss bridges have a way of catching you off guard. There you are, cruising through the countryside, expecting the usual mix of cornfields and culverts. Suddenly, a lattice rises into view as a reminder that not everything built a century ago has given up the ghost. Delaware County’s Peterson Ford Bridge is one of those surprises.

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Ohio’s Butler County Courthouse in Hamilton (1889-)

If there’s one Ohio courthouse that stopped me in my tracks on my travels, it’s Butler County’s in downtown Hamilton. It may not be the biggest, flashiest, or most photographed in the state, but it’s probably my favorite of the forty or fifty I’ve visited. Maybe it’s because of its mix of elegance and endurance: this building has seen nearly everything a courthouse can see: fire, flood, lightning strikes, and over a century of civic life unfolding right outside its doors! Or maybe it’s its weird clock tower.

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The Economy Gym got an impressive new mural

I love basketball and probably always will. Here in Indiana, though, it’s a rough time to be fan since the Pacers are off to such a sluggish start thanks to injuries and the Fever aren’t back yet. I’m a fair-weather fan to be sure, but what I like most about basketball is the history behind my state’s zealous participation in it. A trip to Richmond the other day led me past the old gymnasium in Economy, which recently was adorned with an unbelievable mural.

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Delaware County Patriots: William Williams

William Williams didn’t leave behind a diary, letters, or a tidy biography. What we know comes from his pension declaration and a few memories preserved by neighbors and early county historians. Even so, those fragments reveal a man who fought through the final years of the Revolution, roamed the early Midwest, and helped shape Delaware County before it officially existed on paper.

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Spotted in the wild: yet another old Village Pantry in downtown Anderson

Back in 1966, Yorktown-based Marsh Supermarkets jumped headfirst into the booming convenience-store market. Within four decades, their gamble paid off as Village Pantry had grown into a 154-store network stretching across Indiana and Ohio! Today, many of the earliest Pantries have reinvented themselves as entirely new businesses, each one a tiny relic of mid-century retail hiding in plain sight. Whenever I spot one, I can’t resist trying to snap a photo.

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