Author Archives: Adam Harness

Indiana Historical Society Announces New Exhibit and Collection Honoring Holocaust Survivor Eva Mozes Kor

Collection will include several artifacts donated by Eva’s son, Dr. Alex Kor INDIANAPOLIS — During a January 27 reception honoring Eva Mozes Kor, Indiana’s most prominent Holocaust survivor, Indiana Historical Society (IHS) President and CEO Jody Blankenship announced a new exhibit focused on Kor’s legacy opening at the IHS in 2021. The exhibit will be […]

More Than 40,000 Madam C.J. Walker-related Items Now Accessible from Anywhere in the World

IHS completes digitization project with help from grant INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.  — More than 40,000 items relating to one of Indiana’s icons are now accessible from anywhere in the world. The Indiana Historical Society (IHS) is pleased to announce the completion of the Madam C.J. Walker Digitization Project, supported by a $79,928 Digitizing Hidden Collections grant […]

You Are There: Eli Lilly at the Beginning

Colonel Eli Lilly began a new business in Indianapolis in 1876 manufacturing drugs for wholesale distribution – a business that became Indiana’s most successful start-up. A Civil War veteran who saw fierce combat and overcame deep personal loss, he applied his past experiences and entrepreneurial abilities to successfully establish Eli Lilly and Company with his […]

What Is a Hoosier?

It’s safe to conclude the Hoosher and Hoosier nickname adopted by Indiana residents and for them by their nearby neighbors was derived from the dialect term (probably traceable from England) not uncommon among southern immigrants to Indiana and the Ohio Valley several years before [John] Finley arrived and penned his famous poem [The Hoosier’s Nest]. […]

You Are There 1943: Italian POWs at Atterbury

In one of our most moving You Are There exhibits to date, talk to Italian prisoners of war in the chapel they built at Camp Atterbury – their home away from home. In 1943, approximately 3,000 Italian POWs were held at Atterbury during World War II. That it held prisoners of war is surprising to […]

The 500 and the Photographer

Before the Indianapolis Motor Speedway was completed in 1909, a national balloon race was held there in June to generate revenue and interest in auto races. Thirty-five hundred paying customers were inside the track, while outside, 40,000 spectators watched the balloon race for free, causing a huge traffic jam. In August, the track held inaugural […]

The Weather Challenge

We love showing off our original materials, and several original maps are on display in Mapping Indiana: Five Centuries of Treasures from the Indiana Historical Society until April 2. But it is, of course, important to carefully care for these original works. Our conservation staff uses methods to provide the conditions necessary for fragile paper […]

Ransom Family Papers Tell Business and Civil Rights Stories

Freeman Briley Ransom was born in 1884 and moved to Indianapolis from Grenada, Miss., around 1910. He worked as a lawyer and the business manager for Madam C.J. Walker and her hair care company. Ransom’s son, Willard, known as Mike, was born in 1916. Freeman also served as legal counsel for several organizations and was […]

Ten Years with John Herbst at the Helm

In 1974, a college graduate embarked on his career goal of teaching history to high school students in a Paterson, New Jersey, classroom. Not content to take a break from his students in the summers, John Herbst began applying for grants ranging from $75 to $500 to support student-created exhibits, brochures and walking tours. After […]

Meet Stan Hurt

Stan Hurt is a longtime and active member of IHS. He and his wife, Sandy, donated a set of photographs of his grandfather’s Fort Wayne photo studio and then helped us create You Are There 1904: Picture This. Stan not only supported the fabrication of the exhibit, but during its two-year run, he wrote encouraging […]