It’s hard to believe nearly a year and a half has passed since officials floated the idea of converting Muncie’s old Harrison Elementary School into apartments. Progress on the site has been slow, but the news brought back memories of the time I slipped inside the historic building to take a few photos before its next chapter -whatever that may be- finally begins.
Continue reading “Muncie’s old Harrison Elementary awaits its next chapter”College Corner is fading fast
Recently, a fellow fan posted photos of the old College Corner schoolhouse in a Facebook group we share. The images stopped me cold. College Corner had been a ruin for as long as I’ve known it, but the latest pictures showed just how far it’s slipped since my last visit a few years ago. Knowing its time is running out, I was determined to document it before the schoolhouse disappears for good.
Continue reading “College Corner is fading fast “Thank you, Aunt Sue
One of my favorite people, my Aunt Sue, died unexpectedly. She was my grandpa’s little sister, but to me, she was more than just a branch on the family tree: Aunt Sue helped shape my life more than she probably ever realized! She left an imprint that time won’t easily erase.
Continue reading “Thank you, Aunt Sue”Delaware County Patriot: John Gordon
For many Revolutionary War patriots, it was old age and hardship instead of battlefield glory that ultimately preserved their stories. The paper trail created decades after the fighting ended often tells us more about men like John Gordon than the war itself ever did.
Continue reading “Delaware County Patriot: John Gordon”The home of Jay County’s oldest church may soon be demolished
Yesterday morning, a flurry of posts lit up social media with unsettling news: the Little Salamonie Christian Church in Jay County was about to be torn down. I grabbed my camera and keys. An hour later, I was standing in front of the old church, trying to take in as much as I could before it slipped from the landscape for good.
Continue reading “The home of Jay County’s oldest church may soon be demolished”ShowBiz in Anderson
You might not know them by name, but I’m sure you remember pizza robots, those animatronic avatars that danced and sang before a piping-hot pie arrived at your family’s table. They were loud, uncanny, and absolutely unforgettable! Unfortunately, we never had a ShowBiz Pizza where I grew up in Muncie. Just down the road, though, Anderson hosted one of its own for three glorious years in the early 1980s
Continue reading “ShowBiz in Anderson”Jefferson Township’s Lyon schoolhouse in Grant County
I cruise State Road 26 in rural Grant County, Indiana, every so often. When I’m out in the area, there’s one landmark that never fails to snag my attention: an old schoolhouse-turned-home three miles south of Upland. I’ve snapped photos of several former Grant County schools over the years, but tracking down their histories has been surprisingly tricky. Still, after a little digging, I finally uncovered a little bit about the neat, tidy building I’ve been noticing for years.
Continue reading “Jefferson Township’s Lyon schoolhouse in Grant County”Clancy’s giant bowling pin
I spent my time in college working underneath the shadow of a giant bowling pin at Fort Wayne’s Gateway Plaza. Because of that, or maybe in spite of it, I harbor an unlikely appreciation and affinity for supersized sporting goods. Fortunately, Muncie’s home to another giant pin above Clancy’s Village Bowl.
Continue reading “Clancy’s giant bowling pin”Where the Oakville school once stood
Oakville is one of those tiny hamlets that somehow refuses to blend into the landscape. For a place with just a handful of streets, it announces itself with a massive grain elevator visible from miles in every direction! A couple of old commercial buildings and a post office across the street hint at the community’s past, but Oakville once had something else, too: its very own schoolhouse.
Continue reading “Where the Oakville school once stood”My first ever trip to MCL
Thirty-five years in, it somehow never crossed my mind to eat at MCL Restaurant & Bakery. Honestly, I’d forgotten Muncie even had one! With a speaking engagement looming there in a couple of weeks, I figured it was time to correct my oversight and see what I’d been missing. It was also a good opportunity to poke around the moribund Muncie Mall, so there was that, too.
Continue reading “My first ever trip to MCL”