Some places in the countryside don’t look like much at first glance. There’s no historic marker, no crumbling brick, and no story spelled out in bronze. Sometimes, just a patch of grass along a rural road and the faint suggestion that something unusual is happening underground is enough for me to stop! Most often, those are flowing wells. Unfortunately, the one I most recently passed isn’t flowing.
Continue reading “Seems like a bad time to be a flowing well”The Meadows of Muncie
A handful of smaller centers came first, but Muncie didn’t get its first true shopping hub until Northwest Plaza opened in 19561. Another, Southway Plaza, opened in 19582. In between, brothers Rolland and Floyd Stephens announced plans for another major shopping center that’s slipped into quiet obscurity: the Meadows3.
Continue reading “The Meadows of Muncie”So long to Terre Haute’s Otter Creek gym
Last month, I wrote about my friend Brett and our hunt for the old Otter Creek High School in Vigo County. After some virtual sleuthing and a little stubborn curiosity, we finally found it- or at least what was left: a lonely old gym and a few attached classrooms standing against the odds. By now, even those remnants are probably gone.
Continue reading “So long to Terre Haute’s Otter Creek gym”Little Salamonie seems safe- for now
I’ve been tracking the fight to save Little Salamonie Christian Church -often called the first congregation in Jay County- for a month now. On January 14, social media lit up: the church was about to be torn down. Late last Sunday, a new post warned that wrecking crews would roll in the following morning! The call went out- bring your trucks, your tractors, and your farm equipment. Circle the church. Form a barricade! It was urgent, scrappy small-town resistance, and I wanted to be there.
Continue reading “Little Salamonie seems safe- for now”This was the Blackford County Jail
Old jails and sheriffs’ residences are intriguing. Unfortunately, I didn’t catch the bug until I’d already traveled to all of Indiana’s historic courthouses! Some are close enough to easily take pictures of, though, like the Old Blackford County Jail in Hartford City. It looks deceptively domestic from the street, but it’s a building that tells a complicated story about punishment, family life, and the slow march of reform in a small Indiana county.
Continue reading “This was the Blackford County Jail”What’s in store for the Muncie Mall?
East-Central Indiana waits with bated breath over the future of our forlorn Muncie Mall. I got curious about the company now holding its fate, so I took a closer look at Hull Property Group and the rest of its portfolio. The organization says it has a “long track record of successfully reimagining properties that have lost their dominance and relevance1!” I wondered what Hull’s efforts might consist of. What might they mean for Muncie Mall?
Continue reading “What’s in store for the Muncie Mall?”Ten old high school gyms, as seen in Sanborn Maps
I’m a big basketball fan living smack-dab in the heart of Hoosier Hysteria. My obsession goes well beyond game nights and box scores- I’m fascinated by the places where the game was played! Lately, I’ve been digging into the history of high school gyms, using old Sanborn Maps to see how they were built, expanded, and used over time. Here’s some of what I’ve uncovered.
Continue reading “Ten old high school gyms, as seen in Sanborn Maps”My trip to The Toast
The Toast has been an Anderson, Indiana, institution for seventy-five years. It’s one of those diners everyone seems to know even if they’ve never made it inside. Despite my own long history with the city, I’d somehow managed to miss it! That changed one recent morning when my Mom and I found ourselves in Anderson with breakfast on the brain. We each pulled up a chair, and here’s how it went.
Continue reading “My trip to The Toast”The Aladdin lamp factory I just wrote about is being demolished
I took some photos of Muncie’s old Aladdin Manufacturing Company property on the day after Christmas. As it turns out, I did that just in time- someone told me that the place is being demolished! I headed back for some final pictures before the southeast corner of Hackley and 18th becomes bare ground and open sky. By the time I made it there, old warehouse to the north was completely gone. An excavator was ripping down the rest.
Continue reading “The Aladdin lamp factory I just wrote about is being demolished”The Kirkwood well is broken
Back in October, I swore to you that there was a flowing well hiding in the tall grass of a Grant County pasture. I’d visited the old Kirkwood well before, but this time something felt different: beneath the weeds, I could hear water gurgling at the base of the casing instead of trickling down its trough. Something had changed! I left that day with a promise to return and figure out what was really going on. In December, I finally did.
Continue reading “The Kirkwood well is broken”