Greetings from Indiana


Book Description

During the first half of the twentieth century, nearly every store in Indiana had a rack of postcards for sale. In the years leading up to World War I, postcard collecting became a national craze. Reed's book features classic postcards from the early 1900s to the 1950s, featuring more than ninety Indiana communities. Depicting street scenes, landmarks, fine homes and roadways, the postcards capture the state's rural and urban past. -- adapted from back cover.







Road Trip America


Book Description

Describes fast-food restaurants, motels, and unique roadside attractions in each of the fifty states, and features color photos of artifacts and vintage images.




To the Literary Clubs of Indiana, Greetings ...


Book Description

A letter asking the clubs to consider some phase of Indiana history as a topic for programs for the next two years.




Holly Jolly Wishes From Indiana


Book Description

Holly Jolly Wishes From Indiana! Season's Greetings! This Holly Jolly wishes from Indiana Journal: 6x9 Inch, 120 Pages, Blank Lined Notebook For Anyone To Write In This beautiful and inspirational holiday gift. This traditional Christmas eve Season Greetings favorite is sure to please! A great way to make memories by writing down your thoughts while decking the halls and shaking up the Snow Globe! Great Gift Under 10 For Anyone that loves Indiana!




More Real American Stories


Book Description

More Real American Stories contains: Travels of a seaman and his sea chest. Celebrating New Years in China. Diary of a Civil War Soldier. 125,000 come to a corn husking contest in Newtown, Indiana. School Days in 1930's and 40's. Shopping 50 and 60 years ago. A teacher who taught for 69 years. A boy going from a Fountain County to Commandant of the United States Marine Corps. Homer Stonebraker leads Wingate to two State Basketball Championships




Greetings ...from Home


Book Description







Indiana's Covered Bridges


Book Description

Once there were hundreds of 19th-century and very early 20th-century covered bridges in Indiana--so many in fact, that the state ranked third in the nation in the number of structures still standing. By the early 1930s and 1940s, a movement was afoot to preserve those magnificent structures that had not already disappeared due to desertion and deterioration. Some were saved, but many were not. What was saved and cherished, however, was an abundance of vintage black and white images taken by pioneer photographers who willingly trekked from bridge to bridge decades ago. Captured in this volume are nearly 200 of those photographs from the mid-20th century and before, representing more than 36 Indiana counties from Adams County to Wells County.