Delaware County Patriot Widows: Anna Smith Custar

Read time: 6 min.

Revolutionary War widows like Anna Smith Custar didn’t make casual requests when they stepped forward decades after the battles ended and their husbands had passed. Instead, they were survivors seeking long-overdue recognition! The war shaped the entirety of their adult lives, which were marked by uncertainty, frontier hardship, and persistent instability. Still, formal acknowledgment of their husbands’ service often came only at the very end of life, if it came at all.

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Spotted in the wild: Muncie’s seventh Village Pantry

Read time: 2 min.

In 1966, Marsh Supermarkets caused a stir across the Midwest by venturing into the rapidly expanding convenience store market. By the time it was acquired by a private equity firm four decades later, Marsh owned 154 Village Pantries spanning across Indiana and Ohio! Some of the original locations have been repurposed, and I take a photo when I find one.

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The rise and fall of Concord Mall

Read time: 13 min.

For a certain stretch of my life, the Concord Mall felt like a constant. It was one of those places so woven into the background of growing up that you never imagine it could disappear. The mall rose from open fields outside Elkhart, evolved with the region and the retail world around it, and eventually became something else without entirely letting go of what it had been. Here’s some of its story. 

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Taking a break from blogging

Read time: 4 min.

You didn’t ask for it, but Hiding in Plain Sight is my gift to you and the internet at large. Publishing here is rewarding in its own right, but the real joy comes when we stumble onto something together and get to chat about it. Those shared discoveries, and the conversations that follow, are what make this blog come alive! Unfortunately, I need to step back for a while. Don’t worry, though- new posts will continue to go live every morning.

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The Marhoefer Spe-De Wee-Ne

Read time: 7 min.

If there’s ever been a more bizarre brand name than the Marhoefer Happy Wiener, I haven’t encountered it. I was born too late to sample one firsthand, but if you grew up in the right part of Indiana and hit the proper age bracket, odds are that name still rattles around in your brain. As if “Happy Wiener” wasn’t enough, the company briefly ventured into truly surreal territory with a tabletop hot dog cooker known as the Marhoefer Spe-De Wee-Ne. 

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Railcar spotting: the best of three years

Read time: 6 min.

From 2023 through just last month, I shared my favorite pieces of graffiti I spotted when I worked at a place that received most of its material by rail. That chapter recently came to a close- and with it, the series itself. Flipping back through those photos reminded me just how much fun the hunt had been, though, so I couldn’t quite let it end there. Here’s one last look back at the standouts in a retrospective send-off for a series I wasn’t quite ready to say goodbye to.

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Delaware County Patriots: John McConnell

Read time: 5 min.

For every general issuing orders during the American Revolution, there were countless forgotten laborers hauling supplies, guiding teams, and keeping the army alive one wagonload at a time. John McConnell was one of them. Pieced together, oral tradition reveals a young man thrust into the brutal logistics of war at an age when most of us are still figuring out who we are.

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Hancock County’s former jail and sheriff’s residence

Read time: 4 min.

I went on a mission to visit every historic courthouse in Indiana about a decade ago. Along the way, and especially toward the end, I began to notice how many old county jails survived as well. I only managed to take photos of a few of them, but I did stop in Greenfield for a look at Hancock County’s. The Second Empire structure remains impressive more than a century and a half after it was completed!

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