TERRE HAUTE — Dorothy Jerse looks back at local history from 10, 25 and 50 years ago as reported in the Tribune and Tribune-Star.
1998
• Turner Coaches stopped its shuttle run from Terre Haute to the Indianapolis International Airport. Co-owner John Turner said the service didn’t generate enough riders to operate five runs each day.
• A study commissioned by U.S. Rep. Lee Hamilton (D-Ind.) reported “substance abuse among youth in the state’s 71 rural counties is higher than the state’s urban areas or the national average.”
• Dan Tanoos, principal at Chauncey Rose Middle School, was named Vigo County School Corp. interim superintendent to succeed Betty Poindexter.
• The team of Duane Klueh of Terre Haute and Tom Frew of Carmel won the men’s 55 doubles in the Duane Klueh Senior open tournament played in the Wabash Valley Tennis Club’s bubble because of rain.
• Allen and Mara Hayne, Chris and April Newton and Dan and Susan Newton opened Edgemaster, a continuous concrete curbing business.
• A Design and Construction Subcommittee, appointed by Mayor James Jenkins, concluded it would cost $6.31 million to renovate the basement and first and second floors of the vacant Terre Haute House.
1983
• Mary Elizabeth Smith, retiring in July, was honored by the Wabash Valley Chapter of the American Guild of Organists. She presented her farewell concert at the First Baptist Church, 4701 E. Poplar St.
• Service awards were presented to Max G. Miller, Vigo County extension agent, and to Patrick R. Ralston, superintendent of Terre Haute parks and recreation, at the graduation ceremony for the fifth class of Leadership Terre Haute.
• Martha Van Laningham, Barbara Eletson, Elmer Porter, Susie Dewey and Mardelle Haas were the new officers of the Pen & Brush Club.
• The 10th annual Banks of the Wabash Festival was under way at Fairbanks Park. All concerts were performed in the new amphitheater.
• Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology graduated its largest class. Of the 250 who received degrees, 23 were men from Vigo County.
• Robert Kadel succeeded James McDonald on the Hulman Regional Airport Authority Board.
• Charles Kuralt was in the Turkey Run State Park area filming future segments for his “On the Road” television series.
1958
• The Wabash Valley Pilots Association sponsored an Air Show at Hulman Municipal Airport in celebration of the 31st anniversary of the first flight across the Atlantic Ocean by Charles Lindbergh.
• C. L. Bartley Sr. put all the furniture in stock on sale to empty his Bartley Furniture Mart located seven miles north of Terre Haute on U.S. 41. Plans called for the construction of a new and larger store with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Frey as managers.
• The first public offering of a limited number of building lots in the new Woodgate subdivision was listed. The development bordered the No. 6 fairway of the Terre Haute Country Club in Allendale. A. K. “Kish” Hert was the general manager.
• The 30th anniversary of the founding of the High Twelve Masonic luncheon club was observed at a dinner meeting at the Kerman Grotto home on North Eighth Street. Leroy A. Francis was the president.
• The annual Vigo County 4-H forestry and wildlife tour was conducted on the A. D. Luers farm in Honey Creek Township.
History
LOOKING BACK: 1998: Tanoos named interim superintendent
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GENEALOGY: Virginia Historical Society takes on ambitious project
Over the past few months, the Virginia Historical Society has launched an ambitious project to scrutinize more than 8 million 17th, 18th, and 19th century documents in order to identify the enslaved population of those times.
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HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE: The Legacy of ‘The Old Silkworm House’
In 1837, and for several years thereafter, a gray sandstone obelisk was installed next to a one-story frame residence at the northwest corner of Sixth and Eagle streets.
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HISTORICAL TREASURE: A blast from valentines past
Valentine’s Day — it brings to mind simple paper valentines and the elaborate, fancy store-bought cards with multiple verses and glittery covers.
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LOOKING BACK: 1962: Flu outbreak forces Schulte closed
Dorothy Jerse looks back at local history from 10, 25 and 50 years ago as reported in the Tribune and Tribune-Star.
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Original copy of 13th Amendment at Lincoln Library & Museum
A fully signed and recently restored copy of the Congressional resolution for a 13th Amendment to the Constitution, the official act that would abolish slavery in the United States, will be on display in the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library & Museum’s Treasures Gallery.
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BRUCE'S HISTORY LESSON: Freedom of religion — beliefs and actions
Because religious faith is, arguably, the quintessential example of our right to privacy, to say nothing of its prominent place in our First Amendment, throughout our history court cases involving the free exercise of religion have been handled with great trepidation and with particular care. One of the milestone “free exercise” religion cases, Davis v. Beason, was decided by the Supreme Court this week (Feb. 3) in 1890.
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GENEALOGY: SoCal Genealogical Jamboree coming up in June
The Southern California Genealogical Society announces its 43rd Annual Jamboree, to be staged for three days on June 8-10, at the Los Angeles Marriott Burbank Airport Hotel in Burbank, Calif.
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LOOKING BACK: 2002: Disco Ernie featured on Maury
Dorothy Jerse looks back at local history from 10, 25 and 50 years ago as reported in the Tribune and Tribune-Star.
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HISTORICAL TREASURE: Flashing the mayor's badge
This mayoral badge was presented to the Vigo County Historical Society by Elizabeth K. Schultz, the granddaughter of Samuel E. Beecher Sr., who served as mayor of Terre Haute from 1936 to 1940.
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HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE: Deadly tornado devastates York in 1907
John T. Staff loved water and, particularly, the Wabash River.
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HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE: Notorious Western desperado Ellsworth Wyatt captured in Clay County
In October 1892, Terre Haute police received a circular from the State of Kansas containing a description of Ellsworth Wyatt and offering a $1,200 reward for his capture.
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LOOKING BACK: 2002: ISU students honor Martin Luther King Jr.
Dorothy Jerse looks back at local history from 10, 25 and 50 years ago as reported in the Tribune and Tribune-Star.
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HISTORICAL TREASURE: News letter filled with wonderful local news
We recently received five bound volumes of copies of the “Terre Haute Onizette,” the Owen-Illinois Glass Company news letter for the Terre Haute Plant.
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GENEALOGY: Peyton, Downey, Fifer queries and a plea for help from Scotland
This week, we have several queries.
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Extension plans seminar on land use
The Purdue Extension Land Use Team is hosting a video seminar titled “Welcome to the Plan Commission and Board of Zoning Appeals” from 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday.
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BRUCE'S HISTORY LESSON: Kennedy, Camelot, and other myths
This week (Jan. 20) in 1961, John F. Kennedy was inaugurated as our 35th president, and his tragic death by assassination notwithstanding, his was a mediocre presidency that, undeservedly, became the stuff of legend — in part because of his assassination.
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Actor to portray Lincoln at dinner for historical society
A special program, “And Lincoln Wrote,” is coming to Harlan Hall in Marshall, Ill., with a featured presentation by Dick Benach as Abraham Lincoln and Chuck Hand as the publisher of the Prairie Beacon.
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GENEALOGY: Celebrate MLK Day with the Indiana Historical Society
On Monday, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., the Indiana Historical Society will offer free admission to celebrate Martin Luther King Day.
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HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE: Light Guards savor military and social experiences
Never during the Civil War was there a time when the City of Terre Haute was in danger of hosting an armed conflict involving one or more armies.
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LOOKING BACK: 1962: 87 high school hoops teams compete in 47th annual Wabash Valley Tournament
Dorothy Jerse looks back at local history from 10, 25 and 50 years ago as reported in the Tribune and Tribune-Star.
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HISTORICAL TREASURE: A bottle of clove oil at the pharmacy
The Historical Treasure for today is a bottle of Clove Oil.
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LOOKING BACK: 1987: St. Mary’s Parish congregation celebrates 150th anniversary
Dorothy Jerse looks back at local history from 10, 25 and 50 years ago as reported in the Tribune and Tribune-Star.
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HISTORICAL TREASURE: Fire up the jukebox for a great night
The jukebox existed long before Glenn Miller’s “Juke Box Saturday Night” swing version.
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GENEALOGY: 1752 is one memorable year for genealogists
The year 1752 is one to remember if you have ancestors who lived in areas controlled by Great Britain; and this includes the American colonies.
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HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE: Terre Haute teenager arrested in Cincinnati brothel
A newspaper headline in the Terre Haute Gazette on Jan. 3, 1895, grabbed your attention: “A Terre Haute Girl Goes to Cincinnati to Lead a Life of Shame.”
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BRUCE'S HISTORY LESSON: Ford’s five dollar days increase productivity
This week (Jan. 5) in 1914, Henry Ford, the head of the Ford Motor Company, stunned the business world by announcing that, henceforth, Ford employees would not only share in the car company’s profits, they also would be paid the unheard of sum of $5 a day. That doubled their previous wage.
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HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE: Some events not given adequate attention
On May 25, 2011, a large white oak tree — one of the 2,000 or so numbered trees on 324 platted lots in “Edgewood Grove Beautiful” subdivision — fell on our residence.
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LOOKING BACK: Carty, Skelly, Oxford celebrate with first baby of the year in 1962, 1987, 2002
Dorothy Jerse looks back at local history from 10, 25 and 50 years ago as reported in the Tribune and Tribune-Star.
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HISTORICAL TREASURE: Greetings from the historical treasures
As we begin a new year, we feature greeting cards sent long ago to express good wishes for the New Year.
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GENEALOGY: ‘Chronicling’ changes newspaper searches
One of the great resources for family historians is local newspapers.
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GENEALOGY: Virginia Historical Society takes on ambitious project








