Inside Smith-Esteb

Read time: 15 min.

The landmark Smith-Esteb Memorial Hospital has stood along US-27 and Potter Shop Road south of Richmond for decades. Last year, I shared the story of how it became the Wayne County Home before falling silent in the 1970s. A few days later, I received an unexpected invitation from Donald Reed of Cross Road Christian Recovery Center for Women: would I like to see the inside? It wasn’t an offer I was about to refuse! Armed with flashlights and accompanied by some backup -my mom- I finally got the chance to explore one of Indiana’s most fascinating institutions. Here’s what I found.

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Wolf Lake’s eclectic house on the hill

Read time: 5 min.

Beginning when I was a kid, I took frequent trips from Fort Wayne to Elkhart. I always admired this remarkable house which, depending on which way we were going, signified that we were either leaving or coming into Wolf Lake, Indiana. I never knew much about it, but snapped some photos when I was last in the area. Now, a little research has revealed some of its story. 

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The dime is finally cool again 

Read time: 7 min.

Dimes are finally cool again! That’s important, because I might be genetically predisposed to dislike the Roosevelt version. The whole thing starts with my great-grandfather, Howard H. Shideler. As a young man, he was appointed assistant cashier at a bank in Huntington- a remarkably prestigious position for someone his age. After serving as a corporal during World War I at twenty, Howard returned to Citizens State Bank. Then came the Great Depression.

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Muncie’s golden arch

Read time: 4 min.

Most people drive past the McDonald’s at Charles and Madison in Muncie without giving it a second thought. After all, it’s just another fast-food restaurant. Look just to the left, though, and you’ll find one of Indiana’s most remarkable surviving roadside landmarks: a giant neon sign from 1958 featuring a grinning mascot with a hamburger-shaped head! Long before Ronald McDonald and supersized meals, this downtown corner marked the arrival of a fast-food revolution in Muncie.

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The New Garden Academy

Read time: 5 min.

I’m normally pretty good at researching old common schoolhouses, but those operated by religious organizations tend to stymie me. Their histories rarely show up in the records I rely on, and the paper trail often fades fast. That was the case with the old New Garden Academy a mile south of Fountain City! I spun my wheels for a while before an unexpected breakthrough in the form of an obscure book tucked away in my mom’s office.

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The site of Indiana’s old Huntington County Home

Read time: 7 min.

My latest statewide history project has involved tracking down Indiana’s surviving county homes. By my count, thirty-eight of the state’s ninety-two are still standing, and I’ve visited twenty-seven of them so far. Today, though, I’m taking a different approach: instead of highlighting one that survived, I want to tell the story of one that didn’t: Huntington County’s Evergreen Manor.

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Concord Mall today

Read time: 9 min.

Concord Mall felt like a ghost town when I last visited Elkhart and Goshen. Near the end of 2022, back then, the only hint of life was a small cluster of cars huddled outside J.C. Penney! After that anchor pulled out a few months later, most of the mall’s remaining tenants prepared for a future that wouldn’t involve them. By 2025, much of the property had been transformed into a business park. Here’s what the complex looks like today.

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The Curtisville gym

Read time: 3 min.

As an unincorporated village in rural Tipton County away from nearly every highway, Curtisville is the kind of place you don’t venture to unless you’re really looking for stuff. As it happened, I was! A stray social media post mentioned an old gym in town, which was enough to send me digging. It took some effort to track down, but once I did, parts of a story started to come into focus.

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