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 he 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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You CAN go back home again, at least to Elkhart’s La Esperanza

Read time: 5 min.

I lived with my dad in Elkhart during my sophomore year of high school and spent chunks of several summers there. Somewhere along the way, we discovered that we had a serious weakness for Mexican food. First, it was El Toro- a true hole-in-the-wall with tacos de lengua marked by an upside-down Toro lawnmower sign. Next was La Esperanza: it was the best food I’d ever eaten, and I finally made it back two decades later. 

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A hundred years of Indiana Beach

Read time: 9 min.

Yesterday, Jim Grey compared finding work to riding a roller coaster: all you can do is hang on and trust that it will eventually end. Jim’s post hit pretty close to home for two reasons: on one hand, I’m deep into a frustrating and fruitless job search. On the other, I just unearthed a treasure trove of photos I took of the roller coasters at Indiana Beach. Somehow, it all felt fitting.

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I got taken for a ride by a plastic Santa train

Read time: 6 min.

My brain is packed to the brim with facts that come in handy for what I write about here: old schoolhouses, historic courthouses, flowing wells, and all the rest. Unfortunately, if there’s one glaring gap in that mental archive, it’s vintage blow mold Christmas decorations. I recently learned that the hard way.

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A last look inside Muncie’s Harrison School

Read time: 10 min.

After it closed, Muncie’s old Harrison Elementary spent nearly half a century as the educational center of Full Gospel Temple. Now, that chapter is coming to a close: with a brand-new youth center in place, the church is preparing to sell the school so it can be converted into apartments1! Last Saturday, its doors opened one last time to host a massive rummage sale. I stopped by with the knowledge that it might be a last chance to see inside.

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