Juan’s Mill Street Place is better than the original

Read time: 7 min.

I’ve written before about Juan’s Mexican Grill & Bar in Chesterfield, the restaurant inside a former Ben Franklin store that’s become my favorite spot. When Juan’s announced that it had purchased another local institution -Gaston’s venerable Mill Street Inn- I was intrigued! The new place was closer to my house, but the real question was whether it could capture the magic of the original. It took me a couple of visits to find out, but I think it did. In fact, it even improved on it.

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The ancient Chrysler Enclosure

Read time: 6 min.

I’ve visited five or six Native American mounds and earthworks over the years, but I’ve deliberately avoided writing about them. There’s a lot to unpack, and I’m keenly aware that I’m not an expert on Indigenous cultures. It’s an easy subject to oversimplify or get wrong, but New Castle’s Chrysler Enclosure is too fascinating to ignore: without any exaggeration, it may be 2,000 years old. 

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The SemiQ coinage is finally showing up around here

Read time: 6 min.

As far as I’m concerned, the 2026 Emerging Liberty dime is the best circulating coin the U.S. Mint has produced in generations. I bought my first on a whim for a couple bucks at a local flea market but, almost immediately, they started turning up in my pocket change everywhere I went. Before long, the rest of the Semiquincentennial coinage began appearing too! After months of keeping an eye out, I’ve finally assembled a full set of every denomination, including the three commemorative quarters released so far.

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A good ol’ schoolhouse wild goose chase

Read time: 5 min.

I was flipping through some new-to-me files the other day when I stumbled across History of the Mt. Pleasant Township School System by Anna Williams. I figured I had a pretty solid grasp on that subject, especially after untangling the whole Cammack brouhaha. Still, one detail jumped off the page as I read: had I somehow overlooked a schoolhouse all this time? I couldn’t have!

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Indiana’s Historic Fire Towers by Dean Alger

Read time: 6 min.

I’m a sucker for obscure history, especially when it’s Hoosier history. I love to fall down abstruse rabbit holes and disappear into research vortices that most people don’t bother with! That’s why I’m always excited to meet someone else who’s just as willing to chase their own obscure interest, like Dean Alger. The result, his brand-new book Indiana’s Historic Fire Towers, makes everything richer for those who appreciate the overlooked.

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Elkhart’s old Holiday I and II

Read time: 4 min.

I’m curious about places where people once gathered. That interest often leads me to schoolhouses and courthouses, but I’ve got a soft spot for movie theaters, too. They don’t even have to be particularly old to catch my eye, and case in point is the long-shuttered Holiday I and II in Elkhart. I found myself slowing down there on my last visit, camera in hand. I couldn’t resist grabbing a few photos of a place that once flickered with life.

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Eel River Township’s Eel River schoolhouse in Allen County

Read time: 2 min.

My mom and I were crawling through traffic on the old Lincoln Highway between Fort Wayne and Churubusco when she pointed out what looked like an old schoolhouse. I couldn’t believe I’d never noticed it before- that stretch of highway was practically stitched into my childhood! Maybe I had seen it once upon a time, back before one-room schools hijacked my brain. Either way, the building finally caught my attention, and once it did, I had to know its story.

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It looks like Sears is next on the chopping block

Read time: 6 min.

A few days ago, Lost Muncie member Tom Stark sent me a tip about a growing mound of concrete debris and detritus near the former Sears Auto Center at Muncie Mall. Construction fencing has surrounded both Sears and JCPenney since last October, but after the three-screen cinema was recently demolished, that fresh activity suggests Sears could be next.

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