Muncie’s Southview Thunderbolt

Read time: 4 min.

The only good thing about not working lately has been that I have Fridays off. I technically have every day off, but Fridays are different around here: that’s when Delaware County tests its outdoor warning sirens. A handful of them -our Thunderbolts- are incredible relics! One stands perched above Southview Elementary School. 

Photo taken December 26, 2025.

The day after Christmas seemed like the perfect chance to catch Southview’s Thunderbolt on video. I parked, waited for 11:00 to roll around, and then kept waiting. The sirens never sounded! Sometimes the test is skipped when the weather turns sour, and with the sky heavy and overcast that day, it just wasn’t meant to be. With kids still out of school, a week later was another opportunity. Glory be, the siren sounded! 

At least in local lore, nearly everywhere I’ve lived in the post-industrial Midwest seems to have landed on Khrushchev’s hit list during the Cold War. In that climate, six Federal Signal Thunderbolts arrived in Muncie on January 9, 1958. They were installed at Riley Elementary, Roosevelt Elementary, Franklin Middle School, Covalt Dairy, Broderick Company, and Ball Stores. The sirens were first tested at 11:00 a.m. on Monday, March 24, 19581

The Federal Signal Thunderbolt 1000 at the former Riley Elementary School. Photo taken March 19, 2023.

The Thunderbolt was the world’s first supercharged siren, and it sounds like it. Even during a routine test, hearing one is genuinely unsettling, with a distinctive wind-up followed by a deep, throaty roar that feels less like a warning and more like the sky itself clearing its throat.

Here’s how they worked: once activated by a phone signal from the police radio station on North Broadway Street in Muncie2, three assemblies -a blower, a chopper, and a rotator- began to move. The blower, or supercharger, forced air up a pipe towards the chopper- a high-speed axial fan called a rotor within a stationary component called a stator.

The Federal Signal Thunderbolt 1000 at the Suzanne Gresham Center in Muncie. Photo taken March 19, 2023.

The spinning rotor opened a series of integrated holes called ports, which caused air from the blower to project into the big trumpet at the end. The tone that came out varied based on how fast the rotor was spinning and the number of ports.

At full speed ahead, a Thunderbolt can generate sound across an overall frequency range of about 128-700Hz. They’re very powerful: single-tone units can reach intensities of 127dB from 100 feet away! Thunderbolts typically produce two tones, a steady signal called “alert,” and “attack,” a wail that varies in pitch. Thunderbolt 1000-Ts, like the one at Southview, sound off with a dual-tone signal. 

Only three Thunderbolts exist in Muncie today. They’re at the old Riley Elementary School, the old Morrison-Mock Elementary School, and the current Southview Elementary School. Nowadays, most of Delaware County’s sirens are boring Federal Signal SRN-2001s, which succeeded the more complex Thunderbolt series in 1988. 

For all their Cold War purpose and bone-rattling power, Muncie’s Thunderbolts have settled into a quieter role now. They no longer stand guard against the unthinkable; instead, they mark time. Hearing one today feels less like an alarm and more like an echo, a mechanical voice from an era when danger felt both distant and oddly specific.

Photo taken January 2, 2026.

That’s probably why I keep showing up on Fridays, camera in hand, waiting for 11:00 to strike. In a world full of sleek, interchangeable infrastructure, the Thunderbolts still have personality. They’re loud, temperamental, over-engineered, and unapologetically dramatic, just like the moment that created them. Sort of like me, too!

Sources Cited
1 Downtown Siren Last in CD Link (1958, March 17). The Muncie Evening Press. p. 1.
2 Sirens’ Wails Are Check on CD Warning (1958, March 24). The Muncie Evening Press. p. 1.

My first run-in with the Pay Less robot

Read time: 6 min.

Kroger comes in two flavors here in Muncie: Ruler Foods, a no-frills ALDI competitor, and Pay Less, a full-service alternative. Pay Less began in Anderson in 1947, but Kroger snapped it up in 19991. Muncie was never kind to Kroger, but it re-entered the market with Ruler in 20132. A bigger investment came in 2017, when the company bought two closing Marsh supermarkets and reopened them as Pay Less3. I recently ran into its wandering robot. It was weird! 

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Indiana’s Wayne County Home

Read time: 7 min.

I’m a loner drawn to places where people once gathered. Lately, Indiana’s old county homes and infirmaries have captured my attention. They weren’t places people chose to be; they were places people ended up- communities of necessity where the poor, the elderly, and the ill spent the final chapters of their lives together. In Wayne County, an infirmary still stands off U.S. 40 -the old National Road- quietly removed from the traffic that speeds past. It’s easy to miss but hard to forget.

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Ten more gyms, as seen in Sanborn Maps

Read time: 7 min.

I’m a basketball fan who lives in the middle of Hoosier Hysteria, but my love for the game goes beyond buzzer-beaters and obscure stats: I’m fascinated by the history of the gyms themselves! Recently, I’ve been diving into old Sanborn Maps to see how high school gymnasiums were laid out, built, and changed over time. Here’s some more of what I’ve found.

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Mixed signals at the High Banks wells

Read time: 4 min.

A recent drive through the frozen backroads of Delaware County sent me chasing a winter mystery: how were the old artesian wells holding up in the cold? There, near one of three “high banks” in the area, the Lennington well was still doing what it’s always done! Over at Mt. Pleasant Church Cemetery, though, the story was different. Just a third of a mile south, it was dry. 

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A sad, strange story at the Abington well

Read time: 9 min.

When they’re flowing, artesian wells are dynamic things. They’re so much so, that sometimes I miss the forest for the trees when I visit them! The dry well at Abington in the hills of Wayne County is a perfect example. Behind its unusual geology lies a strange human story. I’m still figuring out how to tell it, but I’ll try my best.

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It takes more than a giant lemon to cover up this Marsh labelscar

Read time: 2 min.

Back when I still had family to visit in Fort Wayne, I almost always chose State Road 3 to venture there over the interstate. It was a slower route, but the drive rewarded me with a changing landscape instead of concrete and guardrails. One familiar landmark along that drive was the old Marsh Supermarket in Hartford City. Even today, the ghost of its old sign remains strikingly evident.

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All of Muncie Mall will be demolished

Read time: 5 min.

Last summer, we learned the old JCPenney at Muncie Mall was slated for demolition. By September, the plan ballooned to JCPenney, Sears, and an abandoned movie theater. Fencing went up, then progress seemed to freeze in place. Yesterday, shocking news spread across social media: the entire mall will be torn down! It’s the end of an era- one that, if I’m being honest, may have lingered longer than it ever should have.

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Gaston’s witchy water tower

Read time: 3 min.

I loved to draw as a kid and even won some art contests. I was also endlessly fascinated by water towers. Somewhere around age seven or eight, those two interests collided when I proudly assembled a handmade book cataloging every water tower I’d ever seen! Nearly thirty years later, I still can’t help but notice old or unusual water towers. One of my favorites looms over Gaston. It’s known as a “witch’s hat1.” 

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