Steven R. Barnett’s Story Archive

Call to the Colors

If you are a direct descendant of a Marion County, Indiana resident who answered the call to the colors to help preserve the Union during the Civil War, then you may be eligible for membership in the new lineage society being offered by the Genealogical Society of Marion County (GSMC). … Read More

100 Years Ago: July 22-28

From The Indianapolis Times, Wednesday, July 26, 1922: What will be one of the finest open air natatoriums in this section of the Mid-West is nearing completion at Douglass Park. The new community swimming pool, costing $70,000 (2020:  $1,100,569), has an oval basin measuring 192 feet in extreme length, and … Read More

100 Years Ago: July 15-21

From The Indianapolis Times, Tuesday, July 18, 1922: Indianapolis may once again have a public zoo. Walter Jarvis, superintendent of parks and recreation, will ask the city park board for $5,000 (2020: $78,612) next year to build cages in Riverside Park and buy a few animals. Indianapolis once boasted a … Read More

100 Years Ago: July 1-14

From The Indianapolis Star, Thursday, July 6, 1922: The city council voted 7 to 2 last night to prohibit dancing and professional theatrical performances in the city’s parks. Children’s folk dances and amateur theatricals are exempted. The original ordinance prohibited dancing in the parks and was favored by South Side … Read More

When Greeks Came to Irvington

Greeks came to Irvington in 1875. No, not those from the classical lands of Socrates and Plato, but the collegiate Greek lettered secret societies of North Western Christian University (Butler University) when that school relocated to Irvington from its near northside Indianapolis campus. The oldest of these societies was Gamma … Read More