Muncie Mall hangs on by a thread

Read time: 10 min.

Make that thirteen threads: in February, people in Muncie learned that all of our mall would be demolished, beginning with the long-vacant Sears, J.C. Penney, and old three-screen cinema. At first, the wrecking ball was supposed to arrive in March1. Later, the timeline was pushed back to April2. Now, with two-thirds of May already gone and no visible signs of demolition outside, a strange limbo has settled over the property. Curious, I ventured in. A baker’s dozen of tenants are still hanging on compared to sixty-seven in 2004.

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Betty’s Lunch in Fowlerton

Read time: 4 min.

The tiny Grant County community of Fowlerton isn’t on the way to anywhere, but 268 people still call it home. An old schoolhouse anchors the north end of town, but much of Leach Avenue -Fowlerton’s main drag- has long shed its commercial storefronts. All except one, that is: a lone survivor anchors the southeast corner of Leach and West Second Street. On a recent drive through town, I found myself slowing down and wondering about it.

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Farewell to Richmond’s Tivoli Theatre

Read time: 7 min.

You wouldn’t know it today since a single AMC Classic is all that operates in town, but Richmond, Indiana, once boasted a remarkable collection of movie theaters. Early venues like the Gennett or Lawrence, the Murray/Indiana, and the Murette established a rich cinematic tradition that also included the State, Palace, Ritz, and others. One theater stood above the rest, though, and it was the Tivoli. Unfortunately, most of Richmond’s grand movie palace and crown jewel of downtown entertainment is slated to be torn down soon.

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Indiana’s Laporte County Home

Read time: 4 min.

The county homes of Indiana don’t come in one shape. Some are weathered stone saltboxes standing for a century. Others spread out like a trident when you see them from above. Plenty take a familiar T-shape, too, and LaPorte County’s follows that last layout and runs with it. The building sprawls! Of all the infirmaries I’ve tracked down, it may be the largest.

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My trip back to Muncie’s Gresham Thunderbolt

Read time: 3 min.

Muncie is home to three old Thunderbolt tornado sirens. One of them, at Southview Elementary, still works as intended! Another at the old Riley Elementary has a broken chopper and sort of just languidly wheezes there. I thought the last one, at what was once Morrison-Mock Elementary School, was still in sterling standing! Unfortunately, it no longer rotates. 

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Spotted in the wild: an old Village Pantry in Kokomo

Read time: 2 min.

In 1966, Marsh Supermarkets caused a stir across the Midwest when it jumped into the rapidly growing convenience-store business. Over the next four decades, the company built its Village Pantry brand into a regional powerhouse by opening 154 locations across Indiana and Ohio! Today, some have taken on new lives under different names. Whenever I stumble across one, I can’t resist snapping a photo.

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When a schoolhouse isn’t a schoolhouse

Read time: 5 min.

Five years ago, I launched a mission to track down every old schoolhouse in Madison County, Indiana. By the time I finished, I’d located forty-five of them. Some were standing, some were hanging on, and others were crumbling into ruins. Unfortunately, my total of forty-five has dropped by one: I recently discovered that the house I believed was Fall Creek Township’s old Spring Valley School wasn’t the school at all. It was close, though! Let me explain:

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East Washington Plaza in Indianapolis

Read time: 6 min.

I was cruising through the retail apocalypse that is East Washington Street in Indianapolis not long ago when a massive, empty building near the bypass caught my eye. It looked like it had a story to tell, but I didn’t know what it was. I took photos anyway! I later found out that the shell once housed a store you’ve probably forgotten, followed by one you definitely haven’t.

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A Modern Woodsmen hall in Eaton

Read time: 4 min.

Most of us have probably heard of the Masons, the Moose, the Elks, and the Eagles- fraternal organizations mostly named after animals whose lodges dot our local landscape. Some may have even heard of more obscure groups like the Odd Fellows or the Knights of Pythias! I’d only ever known Modern Woodmen of America through the distinctive grave markers left by some of its members, and it wasn’t until I stumbled across an old lodge hall in Eaton that the organization suddenly took on more of a physical presence. 

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