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The Southside Times is a weekly newspaper that began publishing in 1928. The newspaper delivers community news to Beech Grove, Greenwood, Southport, and Center Grove, and Franklin, Perry, and White River townships.
Curtis Terry had a jewelry and watch store in Indianapolis. [1] As a young woman, Louise was a friend of pianist Nerissa Brokenburr Stickney; they were both active in the Ethical Culture Society in Indianapolis as teenagers. [2] Terry earned a bachelor's degree from Indiana University and a master's from Butler University in 1931.
During the war, when the city served as a major transportation hub and as a camp for Union troops, the soldiers who died at Indianapolis were initially buried at Greenlawn Cemetery. [2] Confederate prisoners who died at Camp Morton , a large prisoner-of-war camp north of Indianapolis, were also interred at Greenlawn. [ 3 ]
William Herbert Hudnut III (October 17, 1932 – December 18, 2016) was an American author and politician who served as the 45th mayor of Indianapolis from 1976 to 1992. A Republican, his four terms made him the city's longest-serving mayor.
Eric Holcomb, Governor of Indiana; William A. Ketcham, Indiana Attorney General (1894–1898), Commander-in-Chief of the Grand Army of the Republic (1920–1921). Jon Krahulik, Justice of the Indiana Supreme Court (1990–1993) Daisy Riley Lloyd, first female African American to serve in the Indiana legislature; Richard Lugar, U.S. Senator from ...
The title changed to Indianapolis Morning Journal in 1853, then to Indianapolis Daily Journal the following year, and ultimately to Indianapolis Journal in 1867. Berry R. Sulgrove, who had joined the Journal in 1854 as editor, acquired controlling interest in the paper a few years later and transitioned the paper from the Whig to the Republican ...
The Archdiocese of Indianapolis (Latin: Archidioecesis Indianapolitana) is a Latin Church diocese of the Catholic Church in Indiana in the United States. When it was originally erected as the Diocese of Vincennes on May 6, 1834, it encompassed all of Indiana as well as the eastern third of Illinois .
The Propylaeum building, also known as the Schmidt-Schaf House, is located at 1410 North Delaware Street in Indianapolis, Marion County, Indiana.It was built in 1890–91 [9] as a private residence for its original owner, John William Schmidt, his wife, Lily, and their four children.