Sunday, April 21, 2024

Birdhouses of Ainsworth

An incredibly talented photographer has managed to capture the heart of Ainsworth for the Project Birdhouse blog. I wonder who it could possibly have been.

Sunday, April 14, 2024

"Destroying Church"

In September 1963 the old Trinity Lutheran Church at Main and Second was demolished. The Gazette printed a photo of the beginning of the end …

2024-04-14. Destroying Church, Gazette, 12 Sept. 1963
(Click on image to enlarge)
Hobart Gazette, 12 Sept. 1963.


… and the very end, as the last wall fell.

2024-04-14. Open Cornerstone, Gazette, 19 Sept. 1963
Upload pic Open Cornerstone
(Click on image to enlarge)
Hobart Gazette, 19 Sept. 1963.




On a personal note, it appears that I am too old and tired to do everything I've been doing and still maintain a history blog. I'm hoping that when the spring yard and field work is done, and the foster kittens have gone back to the shelter, I'll be able to post more often.

Thursday, April 4, 2024

Hobart Then and Now: The Bale House/A Pink Boutique

Many years ago, I posted a then-and-now shot of the Bale house. Here is another version.

Circa 1900, and 2024:
2024-04-04. Bale002
(Click on images to enlarge)
Historical images courtesy of the Hobart Historical Society, Hobart, Indiana.


2024-04-04. Bale house location 2024 01

2024-04-04. Bale003

2024-04-04. Bale house location 2024 02

The people standing in front of the house in the top photo are not identified, but I'm guessing they are B.B. and Emily Bale. I get the circa-1900 date from handwritten notes on a copy of one of the photos in the historical society's file indicate, and there is nothing in the photos to contradict that. The home was built in 1870.[1] I do not know why the Bales waited some 30 years after construction to get photographs of their house. You'd think they'd do that sort of thing in the first flush of new-home pride. But, of course, photographs were a little more difficult to get in 1870.

Nor do I know when the house was demolished. Per the county assessor's records, the building that houses A Pink Boutique was built in 1950.

Here is a detail from the 1902 Sanborn map showing the area, with the Bale house circled in red, to give us some idea of what we may be seeing in the background of these photos.

2024-04-04. Bale house on 1902 Sanborn map
(Click on image to enlarge)

The only thing I actually recognize is the steeple of Augustana Lutheran Church, above the head of the man holding the horse in the second photo. Between him and the church, we may be looking at the old wooden Pennsy station.

_______________
[1] That's according to two sources, the Gazette obit of 1927 and the undated 60th-anniversary article, reproduced in my post about the Bales; but the News obit (also reproduced in my post) says the Bales "bought" the house in 1870, suggesting that it had been built earlier.

Monday, April 1, 2024

Inside a Hornet's Nest (Minus the Hornets)

I might as well post these photos since apparently my brain is broken and I can't do history at the moment. This is a hornet's nest that was built in an elm tree over my back yard last summer. I never knew it was there until the leaves dropped in the autumn. It has been slowly deteriorating all winter, and then recently a strong wind blew most of it down from the tree.

2024-04-01. Hornet's nest 01
(Click on images to enlarge)

2024-04-01. Hornet's nest 02a

2024-04-01. Hornet's nest 02b

2024-04-01. Hornet's nest 03

2024-04-01. Hornet's nest 04

2024-04-01. Hornet's nest 05


I hope my brain rights itself pretty soon.