The landmark Smith-Esteb Memorial Hospital has stood along US-27 and Potter Shop Road south of Richmond for decades. Last year, I shared the story of how it became the Wayne County Home before falling silent in the 1970s. A few days later, I received an unexpected invitation from Donald Reed of Cross Road Christian Recovery Center for Women: would I like to see the inside? It wasn’t an offer I was about to refuse! Armed with flashlights and accompanied by some backup -my mom- I finally got the chance to explore one of Indiana’s most fascinating institutions. Here’s what I found.
Continue reading “Inside the old Smith-Esteb Memorial Hospital”Wolf Lake’s eclectic house on the hill
Beginning when I was a kid, I took frequent trips from Fort Wayne to Elkhart. I always admired this remarkable house which, depending on which way we were going, signified that we were either leaving or coming into Wolf Lake, Indiana. I never knew much about it, but snapped some photos when I was last in the area. Now, a little research has revealed some of its story.
Continue reading “Wolf Lake’s eclectic house on the hill”Coming soon: the final curtain
If the excavator and towering mound of dirt are any indication, the next chapter of Muncie Mall’s transformation is about to begin. It looks like its old cinema will finally be demolished any day now.
Continue reading “Coming soon: the final curtain”The dime is finally cool again
Dimes are finally cool again! That’s important, because I might be genetically predisposed to dislike the Roosevelt version. The whole thing starts with my great-grandfather, Howard H. Shideler. As a young man, he was appointed assistant cashier at a bank in Huntington- a remarkably prestigious position for someone his age. After serving as a corporal during World War I at twenty, Howard returned to Citizens State Bank. Then came the Great Depression.
Continue reading “The dime is finally cool again “Muncie’s golden arch
Most people drive past the McDonald’s at Charles and Madison in Muncie without giving it a second thought. After all, it’s just another fast-food restaurant. Look just to the left, though, and you’ll find one of Indiana’s most remarkable surviving roadside landmarks: a giant neon sign from 1958 featuring a grinning mascot with a hamburger-shaped head! Long before Ronald McDonald and supersized meals, this downtown corner marked the arrival of a fast-food revolution in Muncie.
Continue reading “Muncie’s golden arch”The New Garden Academy
I’m normally pretty good at researching old common schoolhouses, but those operated by religious organizations tend to stymie me. Their histories rarely show up in the records I rely on, and the paper trail often fades fast. That was the case with the old New Garden Academy a mile south of Fountain City! I spun my wheels for a while before an unexpected breakthrough in the form of an obscure book tucked away in my mom’s office.
Continue reading “The New Garden Academy”The site of Indiana’s old Huntington County Home
My latest statewide history project has involved tracking down Indiana’s surviving county homes. By my count, thirty-eight of the state’s ninety-two are still standing, and I’ve visited twenty-seven of them so far. Today, though, I’m taking a different approach: instead of highlighting one that survived, I want to tell the story of one that didn’t: Huntington County’s Evergreen Manor.
Continue reading “The site of Indiana’s old Huntington County Home”Concord Mall today
Concord Mall felt like a ghost town when I last visited Elkhart and Goshen. Near the end of 2022, back then, the only hint of life was a small cluster of cars huddled outside J.C. Penney! After that anchor pulled out a few months later, most of the mall’s remaining tenants prepared for a future that wouldn’t involve them. By 2025, much of the property had been transformed into a business park. Here’s what the complex looks like today.
Continue reading “Concord Mall today”The forgotten Marsh of Southdale Plaza
At first glance, Bourbon Street Sports Bar & Grill in Anderson’s Southdale Plaza looks like just another watering hole. It may well be, but buried behind its facade is a reminder of the building’s fascinating history: in the early 1960s, it was home to a cutting-edge Marsh supermarket!
Continue reading “The forgotten Marsh of Southdale Plaza”The Curtisville gym
As an unincorporated village in rural Tipton County away from nearly every highway, Curtisville is the kind of place you don’t venture to unless you’re really looking for stuff. As it happened, I was! A stray social media post mentioned an old gym in town, which was enough to send me digging. It took some effort to track down, but once I did, parts of a story started to come into focus.
Continue reading “The Curtisville gym”