I’ve loved Hot Wheels for as long as I can remember. Honestly, what kid doesn’t? Lately, I’ve rediscovered the YouTube channel baremetalHW, where battered old die-cast cars -Hot Wheels Redlines, Matchbox, Johnny Lightning, and even more obscure brands like Siku and Corgi- are carefully restored back to life. Watching those tiny survivors get a second chance has stirred up a few die-cast memories of my own. Here’s one of them.
Continue reading “The Bugatti incident “A new clock for Redkey’s tower?
I pass through Redkey every now and then. For years, it was my quickest way past the landmark Oak Grove Schoolhouse. Recently, though, I learned the town has been working to restore a 117-year-old clock downtown! Once I heard the story behind it, I realized the place was far more interesting than a quick drive around its outskirts might suggest.
Continue reading “A new clock for Redkey’s tower?”The first Dollar General in Muncie
My brain often brims with burning questions of no real consequence. One recent obsession was where Muncie’s first Dollar General store was. Here alone, there are at least ten today. That works out to roughly one Dollar General for every 6,500 people! That sheer density made me curious. It didn’t just happen overnight, so where did the phenomenon begin? As it turns out, Muncie’s first Dollar General was in the old Southway Plaza.
Continue reading “The first Dollar General in Muncie”Apparently I’m not meant to watch the full Berne clock tower show
Sometimes a simple roadside curiosity turns into an unexpected adventure. In this case, the culprit was a 160-foot clock tower in Berne, Indiana. All I wanted to do was watch the little glockenspiel show that comes out of the doors near its base. That seemed reasonable enough. As it turns out, though, timing a Swiss-inspired clock tower in rural Indiana is much harder than it sounds.
Continue reading “Apparently I’m not meant to watch the full Berne clock tower show”Indiana’s Adams County Home
I’ve always been drawn to big, sweeping statewide projects. There’s something irresistible about assembling a collection than informs the bigger picture! A few months ago, I decided my next long quest would be to visit each of Indiana’s old county infirmaries. I’d already been to six when I set out for the Adams County site just southeast of Decatur. For many years, it went by another name: Golden Meadows.
Continue reading “Indiana’s Adams County Home”Jefferson Township’s I. P. Gray marker in Jay County
A single high school serves Jay County today, but things weren’t always that simple. Not so long ago, eight separate high schools dotted the county, each one anchoring its own community. Time and consolidation have erased them all, but one exception stands in New Mount Pleasant: there, a modest marker commemorates the site of I. P. Gray High School.
Continue reading “Jefferson Township’s I. P. Gray marker in Jay County”Muncie’s Southview Thunderbolt
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.
Continue reading “Muncie’s Southview Thunderbolt”My first run-in with the Pay Less robot
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!
Continue reading “My first run-in with the Pay Less robot”Indiana’s Wayne County Home
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.
Continue reading “Indiana’s Wayne County Home”Ten more gyms, as seen in Sanborn Maps
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.
Continue reading “Ten more gyms, as seen in Sanborn Maps”