springtime luncheon spring exhibit opening
Transcription
springtime luncheon spring exhibit opening
SPRINGTIME LUNCHEON Spring is approaching and that means it’s time for our Springtime Luncheon! See old friends, make new ones, and share your love of local history and community at the Carmel Clay Historical Society’s Springtime Luncheon at the Palladium, featuring guest speaker, Carolyn Goolsby, director of the Carmel Clay Public Library, on April 28th from 11:30 -1:30pm. A delicious and elegant luncheon will be served, and wine will be available for purchase. Included in your ticket price is a tour of the Palladium and a behind the scenes look at the Michael Feinstein Great American Songbook Exhibit and Archives. As a thank you to the members who support their local historical society, please accept our discount price, and get a second ticket for half price if you bring a friend who is not a member! You can reserve your seat today by mailing a check, payable to the Carmel Clay Historical Society, and include “Springtime Luncheon” in the memo. Please include a list of guests who will be attending. TICKET PRICE Non-Members $30 Members $25 Members can purchase tickets for non-member guests for $15 This will be a lovely time of good company in a beautiful setting and supports an important local cause that truly shapes our community. We hope to see you on April 28th; and, members: don’t forget to bring a friend! SPRING EXHIBIT OPENING – MAY 8TH The Hoosier Centennial: A Look Back at the 1916 Celebration, a traveling exhibit from the Indiana Historical Society, debuts on May 8th. The exhibit showcases the pageantry and spectacle surrounding Indiana’s 1916 statehood centennial, which proved to have a lasting effect on the state, establishing the first state parks, spurring the production of lavish historical pageants and prompting steps toward an improved highway system. Members are invited to preview the exhibit on Saturday, May 7, from 5 to 7pm. Light refreshments will be served. SPEAKER SERIES We’ve got a full schedule of speakers lined up for 2016. Don’t miss the panel discussion “A g r i c u l t u r a l Roots”, featuring John Graves on Saturday, April 9th at 2pm, in the program room of the Carmel Clay Public Library and “Quakers and the Underground Railroad in the mid-19th century” by Thomas Hamm on May 11th, 6:30pm at the Museum of Miniature Houses. Visit our website for the full schedule of programs. BUTLER UNIVERSITY CAPSTONE PROJECT We are very excited about an opportunity to work with Butler University students this spring. Students in the College of Communications have chosen the Carmel Clay Historical Society as the subject of a senior capstone project. The students will create an integrated communication strategic plan to improve our brand awareness in the community along with a dozen or more fully developed communications materials to that end. The project requires the students to conduct three types of primary research (focus groups, depth interviews, survey research) as well as a background case study of similar organizations to provide additional insights on how we can improve. Specifically they will be working with us to improve our volunteer program and increase our brand awareness in the community. Many substantial Indianapolis based non-profits have benefitted from this partnership over the past 18 years. We are eager to see the final report to learn what strategies we can implement to increase awareness of the CCHS. FOUNDERS’ WEEK – MAY 8TH–15TH In commemoration of our State’s 200th Birthday, the Carmel Clay Historical Society is celebrating history with a week of ac t i v it ie s a nd programs during our first annual Fo u n d e r s ’ We e k ! This celebration of our roots will occur throughout the Carmel Arts & Design District. You’ll hear a per-formance by the Wendy Reed Band, have the chance to see children en-gaged in history in our History Kids’ Area, meet a Hoosier Pioneer in person, and experience our new digital addition to the Monon Depot Museum’s permanent exhibit, The Story of Carmel, Indiana. Take a stroll down to the Museum of Miniature Houses on May 11th to hear speaker Thomas Hamm’s program, “Quakers and the Underground Railroad in the mid-19th century,” coinciding with the Hoosier History told in miniature exhibit at the Museum of Miniature Houses. Check our website and Facebook in the coming weeks for a complete schedule and description of events! All events and activities are free and suited for all ages. We’ll see you the second week of May to celebrate our State’s Bicentennial and the early years of our community. JANE F. ENGLERT BEQUEST The Carmel Clay Historical Society is especially thankful this year for the generosity and vision of a longtime member, whose impact will be felt in the betterment of CCHS events and programming. Jane F. Englert sat on the CCHS’ Board of Directors and served as recording secretary. She was a charter member and part of the first group who incorporated the organization as a legal non-profit, pushing the CCHS forward to the next level. Jane passed on August 4th, 2015, though her legacy will be remembered in the CCHS for years to come. In 2016, we will continue to forge through to our next chapter with the help of Jane’s substantial gift of $10,000. Her gift will be used to inspire interest in our local history through betterment of our special events and programs, which were most dear to Jane and her family. The Jane F. Englert Bequest will be the source of a matching gift challenge in 2016, during our Annual Campaign. The impact of your gift during the challenge will be doubled. Once again, Jane’s dedication to history will continue to drive the CCHS forward. Thank you, Jane. 2 3 GREETINGS LOCAL HISTORY LOVERS! Welcome to a new and exciting year for the Carmel Clay Historical Society, where we are looking forward to joining in the statewide celebration of the State of Indiana's Bicentennial celebration in 2016. As the new president of the CCHS Board of Directors, I'd like to warmly extend a greeting, share a little bit about my background and provide some highlights of what you can expect this year from your local historical society. Some of you may know I spent 25 years as a professional journalist (17 at The Indianapolis Star) before leaving nearly three years ago to strike out on my own. My time in daily newspapers gave me the love and passion of history that brought me to this wonderful organization. As a young reporter, I wrote articles about historic covered bridges in Franklin County, a then struggling historic Metamora and its canal; I wrote about old ghost stories at haunted bridges in Danville and haunted hollows in Fishers; I wrote about the history of a giant turtle in Churubusco and one of Indiana's most prolific serial killers in LaPorte. My first introduction to Carmel history was writing about the efforts to save the McShane house, one of the more successful efforts of historic preservation by local history lovers, whose relentless pushing and lobbying helped to bring about the preservation of the home on Westfield Blvd, which today has been beautifully restored and was featured on our Holiday Home Tour in 2014. My wife and I moved to Carmel eight years ago. I joined the CCHS board in early 2015, and I will admit I still have a lot to learn about local history. Thankfully, our board is filled with great people who have lived here a lot longer and have a depth of historic knowledge ... yes, a few of them know where all the bodies are buried. In 2016, we are looking forward to seeing you at our speaker series at Carmel Clay Public Library, a program that kicked off Feb. 11 with a speech by the wonderful Jane Reiman, a former Mayor who loves to share memories of her time at City Hall. The series also includes a talk on Carmel's agricultural roots, a chat with a popular local author, the history of the Carmel Dad's Club, a spooky October talk on the darker side of Carmel and a special program on Carmel's own Avriel Schull. In April, our first exhibit will feature "The Hoosier Centennial: A Look Back at the 1916 Celebration" where we will unveil a new and exciting project, an interactive presentation of Carmel history. The opening of the Depot will be followed by our annual Spring Tea. We will have a first-time observance of Founder's Week in May; and we are already working hard in planning our popular Holiday Home Tour later this year. Check out our website for all the details. Better yet, find us on Facebook, where we love to share current information and post fun historic photos that often leads to some lively conversation. We look forward to a busy and fun-filled year and we invite you to participate as little or as much as you'd like by becoming a volunteer to help during our events. I would add that I am also open to hearing your suggestions on how we can do a better job of serving our members in the coming year. Feel free to send me an e-mail at [email protected] with any questions, concerns or suggestions. My inbox is always open for good ideas! Please know that your membership is very much appreciated, as is your donation of time, talent and treasure. I hope you can join us in 2016 as we continue our mission to celebrate our history in Carmel, Indiana. Dan McFeely President, Board of Directors THE ‘DRUBBING’ OF THE 1932 GREYHOUNDS Carmel fans surely took notice of their team’s two year dominance in the county as well as their wins against much larger Indianapolis schools. Their interest must have been piqued for the 1932 season opener against Sheridan. However, as stated before this is not the story of a victorious underdog. Whatever magic worked in the two previous seasons was gone as Sheridan defeated Carmel 24-0. If fans were disappointed after the game, they must have been devastated when Carmel traveled to Indianapolis to face the Washington Continentals the following week. Our readers are likely familiar with Carmel’s athletic legacy (139 state championships, 6 in the last year alone), so this article will not regale you with another victory story. This article is about Carmel’s worst athletic season, which included the most lopsided defeat in the school’s history, the "drubbing" of the Greyhounds during the 1932 football season. On September 16, 1932, Carmel’s squad of less The earliest record of Carmel's football program than 20 took on Washington’s 44. The Greyhound’s goes back to November 30, 1899, when Carmel lost fate was sealed when Washington scored on their to Manual Training High School’s JV squad 7 to 5. second play. Washington would not run another The team played a few games a year until Carmel play from scrimmage that quarter as they returned joined the IHSAA in 1904, allowing for a more three consecutive Carmel punts for touchdowns. complete schedule through the 1908 season. Carmel The Continentals began to rotate their 44 players, did not field a team the following year. Unfortunately, allowing Carmel to get their only first down of the not much is known about these early years as many half against Washington's 3rd string. By the time of the newspapers and yearbooks that would have the game was over, the score was 104-0. The “drubbing”, as the Indianapolis Star reported it, should recorded team results have been lost. have set a local record, but Noblesville lost a game 105-0 twelve years prior. The second iteration of the program began in 1926 when geography teacher Roy Fosbrink put together a team and acquired some old uniforms from Purdue. The Greyhounds were winless their first year. In fact they would not pick up a win until they upset Westfield 35-6 in the last game of the 1927 season. In 1928, the team was 1-5-1 with many lopsided defeats. They fared about the same the following year. After four abysmal seasons, all the pieces came together in 1930. The team finished with a record of 5-1-1. In 1931 Carmel outscored their opponents 136-38 with four shutouts, and finished with a 6-2 record. That season included back-to-back wins over Broad Ripple (32-0) and Noblesville (35-0). 4 Carmel’s woes continued with losses to Broad Ripple, New Castle and Noblesville before surprising a strong Westfield team with a tie. They tied Noblesville the following week. By the end of the season, Carmel was outscored 219-19 and winless. The team showed improvement the following season with a blowout win (46-0) against Frankfort but finished with a record of 1-3-1. The 1934 season was Carmel’s last until 1951. It is hard to imagine that a program whose players today are so numerous they stretch the length of the field and whose accomplishments in the last decade are unrivaled in the state was once an underdog, undersized and struggling. Our city has gone through a similar transformation. Carmel was a small town of less than 700 surrounded by farmland in 1932; today it is Indiana’s 5th largest city. These are our humble roots. Hopefully we will make an effort to rediscover them as our city continues to change. CALENDAR OF EVENTS April 9, 2pm “Agricultural Roots” by John Graves and Panel May 14 “Visit with a Hoosier Pioneer”, by Kevin Stonerock April 28, 11:30-1:30pm Springtime Luncheon May 14 HistoryKids Activity Area, brought to you by Sugarbuzz May 7, 1-4pm Members’ Only Exhibit Preview Day, “The Hoosier Centennial: A Look Back at the 1916 Celebration” & “The Story of Carmel” MAY 8-15 – FOUNDERS’ WEEK May 8, 1-4pm Exhibit Opening – “The Hoosier Centennial: A Look Back at the 1916 Celebration” & “The Story of Carmel” May 11, 6:30pm “Quakers and the Underground Railroad in the mid-19th century” by Thomas Hamm May 14 Performance by the Wendy Reed Band 5 June 7, 7pm Phil Dunlap August 30, 7pm “The History of the Carmel Dad's Club” by Dan Chapman October 20 “The Darker Side of Carmel” by Andy Wright November 30 “Carmel's Mid-century Modern Architect, Avriel Schull” by Connie Ziegler December 2-3 2oth Annual Holiday Home Tour ANNUAL REPORT 2015 ANNUAL INDIVIDUAL CONTRIBUTORS Joe & Chris Clark Robert Compton Charles & Ann Conrad Thank you to our Annual Contributors! Your gifts Gordon Dennis have totaled $16,628 in 2015, and allowed us to James & Sue Dillon pay our bills and our staff, keep our collection safe, Jane F. Englert and get our creative juices flowing for new projects Matt Frye to come in 2016. Our sincerest thanks for your Jack & Debbie Gangstad generosity and your commitment to preserving our Gail L. Gentry Rebecca Geyer local history. Fred & Alice Hecker J.C. Heed $2000 Carol Hinkley John & Annette Graves Craig Ito Sally Kerr $1500+ Michaelann McIlwraith Charles & Roxanna Morgan David & Barbara Mitchel Ethel O’Conner $1000+ Ersal Ozdemir Carmel Lions Club Charlene Park Karri Phelan, Phelan Family Foundation Kenneth Peterson Cherie Piebes $500-$999 Edna May Reilly Julie Holloway, in memory of Vivian Garman June Ann Roberts Steve & Jacqueline Kirsh Myron & Phyllis Rockhill Virginia & Bob Terpening Marcia Runkel Michael & Marianne Schafer $300-$499 Judi Silverman Dan Chapman Jim & Judy Singleton Nick & Cheryl Davis Karl Swain Joan Wischmeyer $200-$299 Lilly Endowment Rose Schnell Cole Ron & Judy Hagan Jane Herndon Bob & Judy Huber Charles Johnson Jean Kyle Joni Scott Vicki Shaw $100-$199 Anonymous Nancy Blondin Kathy Bolander Lisamaria Burkhard Jim Burrell Donna Bussell $50-$99 Hamilton County Highway Employees Nancy Childs June Clair Jay Cotton Dick & Barbara Gibson Janet Guildenbecher Jennifer Hershberger, in honor of Paul and Elnora Osler’s 75th Anniversary Kelly Hindman Toni Hoffman Judy Inskeep Craig & Sharyn Kaiser Jack King Verda Klemm Fire Buffs Museum Buddy McCart 6 ANNUAL REPORT 2015 Kitty McGinnity Thomas Mitchel Justin Moffett Wendy Noble Betsy North Edward & Rosie Pursel Neal & Jan Randall Cindy Small Marjorie Stubbs Steve & Beverly Weaver Timothy & Dianne Yale $25-$49 Marlin Anderson George & Nancy Badgero Joan & William Ball Ellen Barmore Susan Bock Lois Bowen George Davis Megan & Martin Gregor Hilda Hadley Jennifer Hershberger Jack & Elly Hoffman Alan & Ann January Donald Jeffries Jim & Clella Lewis Roll McLaughlin Marilyn Melangton Terry & Donna Prather Joyce Rogers Belinda Rulon Joy Stafford MOFFITT EXHIBIT FAMILY TREE CONTRIBUTORS Thank you to the families who generously funded the creation and printing of the 40+ foot long Moffitt family tree that lined the walls of the Monon Depot Museum during our “My Life Story: The Moffitts” exhibit this summer. Craig & Sharyn Kaiser Jim & Judy Singleton Rick & Cindy Small Michael & Marianne Schafer 7 NEW LIFE MEMBERS Charles & Roxanne Morgan Steve & Jacqueline Kirsh Bill Pursel GRANTS Our deepest thanks goes to the organizations who have invested in the Carmel Clay Historical Society with generous grants, which helped us execute some of our most exciting special projects. In 2015, we earned a total of $10,750 in grants. These allowed us to: •Develop a new digital exhibit that will update the Depot’s permanent exhibit and celebrate the Bicentennial Year, “The Story of Carmel, Indiana”, which will debut in 2016 •Research and coordinate a new historic walking tour app, with Ball State University and Carmel Clay Parks & Recreation to be completed in 2016. •Complete an inventory of our textile collection and an assessment of the condition and relevance of each piece in our collection. •Research and put on two original exhibits, “The Art of the Love Letter” and “My Life Story: The Moffitts” •Prepare an educational presentation to be used in third grade classrooms •Process, catalog, and properly store various new artifacts and documents Thank you to the Conner’s Trail Questers, for their $250 grant, Hamilton County Tourism, for their support of $2500, and to Clay Township, for their grant of $8,000. CORPORATE PARTNERS Our corporate partners are a vital source of income for the CCHS, and allow us to better our brand awareness, increase our presence in the community, and secure crucial funding to execute our projects and events, like the Springtime Tea, the Holiday Home Tour, and other special events. Thank you to our partners for their continued support. If you would like to know more about how your organization can ANNUAL REPORT 2015 make a difference in the community by partnering with the Carmel Clay Historical Society, contact Whitney, at [email protected]. $5,000 Old Town Design Group $1,000 Senior Home Companions $500-$999 Leppert Mortuary Carmel Home Living Up to $499 Brown Day Mullins Dierdorf Architects Bussell Family Funerals Edward Jones, Kelly Hindman HOLIDAY HOME TOUR PROGRAM ADVERTISERS Antique Emporium Beyond Interiors Brown Day Mullins Dierdorf Bub’s Burgers Bub’s Cafe Camp Bow Wow Carmel Old Town Antique Mall Divvy Edwards, Smith & Prather Fearrin Insurance Agency Jay O’Neil, Sotheby’s International Jilly Jack Designs Joe’s Butcher Shop Kelly Hindman, Edward Jones Leppert Mortuary Media Factory Miller Auto Care Runyon Equipment Rental So Chic Home Design & Staging Soho Café & Gallery The Great Frame Up The Mitchell Group, Remax Westpoint Financial White’s Ace Hardware Woodland Terrace Woody’s Library Restaurant HOLIDAY HOME TOUR AUCTION DONORS AND SPECIAL CONTRIBUTORS Advantage Medical Bob and Sally Dennis Bob Evans Camp Bow Wow Christine Owens Cindy Teeters Dan and Sue McFeely Deb and Jack Gangstad Donatello’s Fire Buffs Museum Ginny Terpening Guillermo Albaladejo Harry Cooler Helen Wells Agency Hilda Hadley Indiana Historical Society Jennifer Hershberger Jilly Jack Designs Jim Burrell Langton’s Irish Pub Matt the Miller’s Tavern Media Factory Nick Davis Carmel Old Town Antique Mall Republic National Distributing Co Pure Barre ReStyled Salon 01 Susan Bock The Olive Mill The Pint Room Tina’s Traditional Tea Room Whitney Dennis BY THE NUMBERS Visitors 548 people visited the Monon Depot Museum during weekend open hours 1,040 people connected to their past in the archives and remotely with research assistance 592 people participated in our programs and special events 8 78 people attended our two exhibit openings that were featured on the front pages of two newspapers 58 scouts learned about their community at the Depot 973 students from 9 schools participated in our “Field Experience” at the Depot and throughout Old Town 2,000 students learned about Carmel with CCHS curriculum materials 4,000 students throughout Hamilton County learned about local history with CCHS-prepared curriculum materials 192 people enjoyed our Walking Tours of Old Town 145 people reached by a special program out in the community These postcards of the Carmel Horse Show were donated by Bill Pursel. They have been in the Pursel family since the postcards were printed in 1911. The Carmel Horse Show was perhaps the biggest annual event for our small town in the early 20th century. We are pleased to add these to our photograph collection! 9 Volunteers Volunteers are a major part of our organization and are the pulse that keeps us alive. Without them, none of our programming, exhibits, or special events would be possible. Thank you to our fantastic and dedicated volunteers! The Monon Depot Museum was open for 114 hours by volunteers and entirely free of charge for the public to enjoy. Volunteers contributed a total of 634 hours, or the equivalent of $11,412 in the archives, at special events, with scouts, on our walking tours and with our "Field Experience" with Carmel Clay School students. • RETURN SERVICE REQUESTED • Carmel Clay Historical Society 211 1st Street, S. W. Carmel, IN 46032 NONPROFIT ORG. U.S. POSTAGE PAID CARMEL, IN PERMIT NO. 146 SPECIAL THANKS IS EXTENDED TO OUR CORPORATE MEMBERS: Old Town Design Group Carmel Home Living - Angela Delise Media Factory BDMD Architects Edward Jones- Kelly Hindman Bussell Family Funerals Senior Home Companion CARMEL CLAY HISTORICAL SOCIETY 317-846-7117 • www.carmelclayhistory.org [email protected] Facebook: Carmel Clay HistoricalSociety Twitter: HistoryCarmel