Posts Tagged ‘Indiana’

Remembering Happy Days

January 30, 2012

Dad, Virginia Smith and Mom, Boonville, Indiana. October 5, 2006.

(Note:  All pictures may be enlarged by clicking on them once or twice.)

One advantage of cold, wet winter days is that I have more time to work at my computer.

I recently came across some pictures that I took back in October, 2006.  Betsy and I had driven Mom and Dad up to Mom’s hometown of Winslow, Indiana.  On the way we stopped in Boonville, Indiana, to visit their friend, Virginia Smith.

Virginia was Mom’s best friend in school.  When they were seniors, Virginia started dating Leonard Smith, who was Dad’s best friend in the CCC.  Dad and Leonard were stationed at a CCC camp outside Winslow, working on what would become a state park.  Needless to say, it wasn’t long before Virginia and Leonard and Mom and Dad were double dating.

Virginia and Leonard got married shortly after Virginia graduated from high school, but my grandmother made Mom wait until she was twenty before she married.  Mom was a good daughter and didn’t get married until three days after she turned twenty.

Mom and Dad and the Smiths remained friends through the years.  Leonard died in the mid 1980s, but Mom, Dad and Virginia remained in touch and visited whenever possible.

Virginia died in 2010, and Mom died last year.  Now Dad — 99 years young — is the only one left.  But it was a blessing back in 2006 for Betsy and me to be there as these three remembered the happy days gone by.

198 Years Ago: The Battle of Tippecanoe

November 7, 2009
05-29BattleGround-TippecanoeMonument

The Tippecanoe Battlefield Monument

Did you learn about ‘Tippecanoe and Tyler too’ in school?  I not only learned about  the slogan but I also got familiar with  the site of the battle that gave William Henry Harrison the nickname Tippecanoe.  The battleground was adjacent to a church camp that I attended several years as a youngster.

The Battle of Tippecanoe came about because of the efforts of two Shawnee indian brothers, Tecumseh and the Prophet.  The Prophet led a spiritual movement to encourage the Indians to return to traditional ways, while Tecumseh worked to form a confederation  among the various tribes.  In 1808 the brothers moved their followers to Prophetstown near the Tippecanoe River in the Indiana Territory.  By 1811 such a large number of natives lived at Prophetstown that white settlers in Ohio and the Indiana Territory demanded that the government do something to proptect them.  William Henry Harrison, governor of the Indiana Territory led an army against Prophetstown in the fall of 1811.

The Prophet, against the advice of Tecumseh who was absent, attacked the Americans after telling his followers that the white’s bullets would not harm them.  The Indians attacked Harrison’s men before daybreak  on the morning of November 7, 1811.  Harrison’s army defeated the Indians, but they suffered heavy losses:  62 men killed and 126 wounded.  The Indian’s losses are not known, but the Americans did drive off the natives and burn Prophetstown to the ground.

Battle

The Battle of Tippecanoe

The defeat fatally weakened Tecumseh’s confederation, but Harrison became known as “Old Tippecanoe”.  In 1840 Harrison used his reputation as a successful Indian fighter to  run for President of the United States.  His campaign slogan was “Tippecanoe and Tyler too!”

My World # 35

June 9, 2009
The shore at Indiana Dunes State Park.

The shore at Indiana Dunes State Park.

This is my post for the My World meme.  It is hosted by Klaus, Ivar, Sandy, Wren, Louise and Fishing Guy.  Last week there were 100 people sharing their worlds.  To see more of our world or to join and share your part of the world, click HERE.

The picture above is a scan from a slide made about 40 years ago.  The slide was made at Indiana Dunes State Park, which includes more than three miles of Lake Michigan’s south shore.  The park consists of 2,182 acres of primitive, beautiful, historical and unique landscape.  Eighteen hundred acres are wooded and contain some of the most diversified flora and fauna in the Midwest.  Other area are made up of drifting sand hills, the dunes which give the park it’s name.  One of the tallest dunes, Mt. Tom, is nearly two hundred feet tall.

It was always a treat when Mom and Dad would take us to the Dunes to go swimming.  We lived about 40 miles from the park and would get to go once or twice each year.

Indiana Dunes State Park is still there, but it is now completely surrounded by the Indiana Dunes National Seashore.

My World # 34

June 2, 2009
The old Lake County Courthouse, Crown Point, Indiana.  July, 2000.

The old Lake County Courthouse, Crown Point, Indiana. July, 2000.

This is my post for the My World meme.  It is hosted by Klaus, Ivar, Sandy, Wren, Louise and Fishing Guy.  Last week there were at least 74 people sharing their worlds (problems with Mr. Linky).  To see more of our world or to join and share your part of the world, click HERE.

The picture above was taken in 2000 of the old Lake County Courthouse in Crown Point, Indiana.  The courthouse was built in 1878 and served as the seat of the county government during the time I lived in Crown Point.

A new courthouse was built in 1970s  and for a while it seemed that the old courthouse would be torn down in order to create a parking lot.  But a group of citizens succeeded in getting the courthouse listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1973 and the building was saved.  It now contains shops and a museum.

At the bottom of the picture you can see the a tablet containing the Ten Commandments.  The tablet used to be vertical, but was broken off its pedestal by vandals.  The tablet was then preserved in this position and is still there.

My World # 33

May 26, 2009
My boyhood home on Court Street.  July, 2000.

My boyhood home on Court Street. July, 2000.

This is my post for the My World meme.  It is hosted by Klaus, Ivar, Sandy, Wren, Louise and Fishing Guy.  Last week there were 100 people sharing their worlds.  To see more of our world or to join and share your part of the world, click HERE.

The house in the picture above is the first house I remember from my childhood.  It’s on Court Street in Crown Point, Indiana.  This picture is a scan from a slide made in 2000, but we moved from that house when I was six.  I was amazed to find that it was still standing.

When we lived in the house there were two large trees in front between the sidewalk and the street.  Mom, Dad, my little brother and I lived on the second floor.  Another couple with two children the ages of my brother and me lived on the first floor.  During good weather we would all play together in front of the house and on the porch.

The kindergarten that I attended was on Court Street and my grandmother also lived on that same street.  So Court Street was a major part of my world for a few years.

My World # 27

April 13, 2009
Crown Point High School, circa 1960.

Crown Point High School, circa 1960.

This is my posting for the My World meme.  Last week over 120 people shared their world through this meme.  To see more of our fascinating world, or to join and share your world, click HERE.

The picture above is another taken from a slide made many years ago.  The school is Crown Point High School from which I graduated in 1960.  CPHS  was a city school and I lived out in the country, so I had to take the bus each day.  The school had about a thousand students when I was there.

I have to admit that the athletic teams were not very good while I was a student there.  An addition to the school which included a new gymnasium was completed in time for my senior year.  Our basketball team celebrated by losing every game that season!  The football team wasn’t that much better.  Fortunately our marching band (and other musical groups) was very good.  It was said in town that people went to the football games to see the band.

I wasn’t involved in either the athletic or music programs.  I did, however, write for the school newspaper my last two years.  Our school mascot was a bulldog, named George.  My senior year I had a column titled ‘George Sez…’, but they used a drawing of the bulldog in the header.  The editor said the bulldog looked better than I did!  (I hope she was kidding).

A new Crown Point High School as built about ten years ago, but this building was an important part of My World.

My World # 25

March 30, 2009
The Courthouse Square, Crown Point, Indiana, circa 1963.

The Court House Square, Crown Point, Indiana, circa 1963.

This is my post for the My World meme.  Last week there were over 120 people sharing their worlds.  To see more of our world or to join and share your part of the world, click HERE.

The picture above is not very good, but it is a scan of a slide taken in the mid-1960s.  The scene is the Court House square of my hometown of Crown Point, Indiana.

I actually lived in Crown Point for a little more than five years.  I lived on the small farm outside of town (see that post here) all through the time I was in the first grade until I graduated from high school.

Crown Point is the county seat of Lake County, Indiana.  Although a new county administration center has been built on the outskirts of town, the courthouse is still standing and is now a mall with small shops.  But it was still the courthouse while I was going to school.  But to give you an idea of how long ago that was, during Christmas they would play Christmas carols from the courthouse which could be heard throughout much of the town.  Can you imagine that happening today?  My Latin teacher, Miss Swartz, would get very upset with Bing Crosby’s pronunciation on his recording of Adeste Fideles.

Crown Point was noted for three things when I was growing up.  One of the first road races in the Midwest was held at Crown Point  on June 19, 1909.  The race, a forerunner of the Indianapolis 500, was won by Louis Chevrolet.  The Chevrolet automobile was later named in his honor.

Crown Point was known as a marriage mill in the 1920s and ’30s.  Rudolph Valentino, Red Grange, and Tom Mix all got married in Crown Point.

On January 30, 1934, John Dillinger, escaped from the Lake County jail located in Crown Point.  He escaped using a fake gun stained with black shoe polish.

I hope you enjoyed your visit to my world.

My World # 24

March 23, 2009
My boyhood home near Crown Point, Indiana.

My boyhood home near Crown Point, Indiana.

My World Tuesday is a weekly meme in which bloggers show their parts of the world.  To see more of our wonderful world, or to join and post your views of your corner of our world, click HERE.

The picture above is a scan of a slide made over 40 years ago.  This is where I lived from the time I was in first grade until I went off to college.

My Dad built the house, mostly by himself.  He started building it the summer before I was in the first grade.  He finished the basement before Christmas and we moved in.  He then worked his way up and we moved up as he finished rooms on the upper floors.  By the time I went to college the house wasn’t finished, but there were bedrooms on the second floor for us kids.  My parents’ bedroom was on the first floor, but the kitchen and living room were still in the basement.

We lived on a small ‘farm’ — a little over five acres.  The picture was taken from the orchard where we had apple, pear, and peach trees.  Our vegetable garden was to the right in this picture.

On the other side of the house were two fields.  One was a pasture and the other used for growing grain, usually corn.  We alternated the fields every couple of years.  Out of the picture behind the house was our barn and chicken coop.  We usually had a milk cow and one or two steers and sometimes we had pigs as well.

Our farm wasn’t very big, but it kept us busy (and fed) and was a very important part of my world for 12 years.

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Just a reminder that you are invited to visit my photo blog, Photos by Senior Hiker, by clicking HERE.

My World # 15

January 26, 2009
The former Washington School, Crown Point, Indiana.  July, 2002.

The former Washington School, Crown Point, Indiana. July, 2002.

This building was a very important part of my world from 1948 – 1952.  Although it is now a private residence, back then it was Washington School in Center Township, the ‘farm country’ surrounding Crown Point, Indiana.  (The three car garage is a modern addition.)

I attended grades 1 – 4 at Washington School.  The most interesting thing about the school was that it was a two–room school.  Grades 1 & 2 met in one room, while grades 3 & 4 met in the other.

My first and second grade teacher was Mrs. Isolampe.  She was a formidable woman, but I liked her.  In the second grade she had a reading contest — who could read the most books over a multi-week period.  She started the contest by letting us go to the book shelf contra-alphabetically to pick out the book we would read.  By the time my turn came all the easy books were gone, so I had to pick one of the harder books to read.  This went on for a couple of weeks, but about half-way through the contest my classmates had to start reading the harder books while I had simple books I could read very quickly.  I won the reading contest — one of the few times in my life when I’ve won something.

Mrs. Laney was my third and fourth grade teacher.  I was pretty good at reading and arithmetic, so I could listen in on the fourth grade lessons while still in the third grade.  When I was in the fourth grade Mrs. Laney had me helping third graders with arithmetic.  She was one of the reasons I became a teacher.  I’ve always thought there were more advantages than disadvantages to going to that two room school.

Washington School was part of my world.  To see more of our wonderful world, or to join in sharing your world with us, click HERE.

Watery Wednesday 18

January 13, 2009
The Ohio River, Madison, Indiana.  August, 2008.

The Ohio River, Madison, Indiana. August, 2008.

The picture above was taken along the Ohio River in Madison, Indiana, in August, 2002.

Betsy and I were on a waterfalling vacation that would take us  to Niagara Falls and  other waterfalls in New York.  We had gone to Madison to visit Clifty Falls State Park, which contains several waterfalls.  We found the park to be very nice and we did some hiking, but there was very little water going over the falls.

Madison is a pretty historic town founded in 1809.  It became quite wealthy from the riverboat trade on the Ohio and many of the early homes built in the town are still standing.  Betsy and I explored the historic downtown area in the early evening, and then found a floating restaurant along the river front.  This picture was taken as we were leaving the restaurant after dinner.  I like this picture because of the way the colors in the sky are reflected in the river.  The picture can be enlarged to see more detail.

To see more of our watery world click HERE or on the logo below.

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