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Results for subject term "Hoosiers and the Arts": 17

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Vincennes Fortnightly Club

By Indiana Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology
The Fortnightly Club in Vincennes is an educational, social, and humanitarian club for women. Before women were allowed to vote (1917 in Indiana, 1920 nationally), clubs and organizations were the only accepted way for women to take an active role…

House Designed by Joel Roberts Ninde

By Indiana Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology
Joel Roberts Ninde was a self-taught architect in Fort Wayne. Her first design was the house that she and her husband, Lee J. Ninde, lived in. She refused to live in his family home due to the dark and drafty rooms, and they could not find a home…

The Propylaeum

By Indiana Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology
The Propylaeum was founded in 1888 by a group of seven Indianapolis women. The original purpose of the meeting was to find a headquarters for the Indianapolis Woman’s Club. However, the chairperson, May Wright Sewall (a nationally known educator,…

Carnegie Center for Art and Culture

By Indiana Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology
The Carnegie Center is housed in the former Carnegie Free Public Library (constructed in 1902) and is a division of the New Albany-Floyd County Public Library. Staff at the Center have developed a permanent interactive exhibit about the Underground…

Allen County Courthouse

By Indiana Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology
The Allen County Courthouse is among the most ornate and intact county courthouses in the Midwest, completed in 1902 to the plans of architect Brentwood Tolan, a Fort Wayne architect. An outstanding example of the Beaux Arts style, the building is…

Overbeck House & Pottery Studio

By Indiana Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology
The Overbeck sisters—Margaret, Hannah, Elizabeth, and Mary Frances, started a pottery studio in 1911 in the basement of their parents’ home. They created functional pieces and small figurines utilizing metal, wood, fabric, water colors, and oil. The…

Hazelden (George Ade House)

By Indiana Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology
Hazelden, known as “The House Where Laughter Dwelt”, was the home of writer George Ade. He started as a weather reporter for the Chicago Record in 1890. In 1893, he was assigned to cover the Columbian Exposition in Chicago and his series “All Roads…

Indiana Avenue

By Braden Catt, Carey Nigh, Jonnie Fox, Indiana Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology
One of the four original diagonal streets of the 1821 plan for Indianapolis, Indiana Avenue tells an important part of the story of African American life in Indianapolis, much of which was centered here on the near northwest side of the downtown…

Paul Dresser Birthplace

By Indiana Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology
Paul Dresser gained notoriety both nationally and internationally as a songwriter. His early career started with a part in a medicine show in Indianapolis. From there he worked as an actor, playwright, songwriter, producer, and music publisher. His…

General Lew Wallace Study

By Indiana Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology
Lew Wallace is probably best known as the author of Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ, but his long and storied life goes far beyond his literary work. Wallace also served as a first lieutenant in the Mexican War in 1846 prior to being admitted to the…

Marie Webster House

By Indiana Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology
Marie Webster revolutionized quilt making at the beginning of the 20th century. Previously quilt designs were passed down through families by women. These predominantly geometrical designs were pieced together and often had regional similarities.…

The Hermitage

By Indiana Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology
Located outside of Brookville along the east fork of the Whitewater River, the Hermitage was the home of Hoosier School artist J. Ottis Adams. Adams and fellow Hoosier School artist T. C. Steele, happened across the house in 1897 and purchased it,…

“The Cabin in Wildflower Woods” (Gene Stratton-Porter Cabin)

By Indiana Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology
In 1913, Gene Stratton-Porter designed the family’s second home near Rome City on Sylvan Lake. She intentionally designed the house to blend in with the natural setting. “The Cabin in the Wildflower Woods” is a two-story log cabin and originally…

Limberlost Cabin

By Indiana Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology
Geneva “Gene” Stratton was born in 1863 on a farm near Wabash to nature-loving parents. It is because of their strong influence that nature was a continuous theme throughout their daughter’s life as an author, naturalist, photographer, and…

James Whitcomb Riley Home

By Indiana Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology
James Whitcomb Riley’s writing opportunities increased with his move to Indianapolis. He worked for the Indianapolis Journal and continued writing on his own. His first real success came with a series entitled “Benjamin F. Johnson of Boone”. Riley…

James Whitcomb Riley Boyhood Home

By Indiana Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology
James Whitcomb Riley was born in 1849 in a log cabin. That cabin, constructed in 1847, is now the kitchen wing of the current house. The two story main portion of the house was built by James’ father, Reuben, from 1850-1853. Reuben Riley was a…

“The House of the Singing Winds” (T.C. Steele House and Studio)

By Indiana Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology
Theodore Clement “T.C.” Steele and his second wife, Selma Neubacher Steele, purchased the land in 1907 and constructed a home there. Known as “The House of the Singing Winds,” the property also housed a studio and acres of landscaped hillside and…
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