Starke County (Ind.) ; Advertisements; Restaurants;
Advertisement for a restaurant popular in the 1930s and 1940s called Van's Inn. The advertisement is taken from a 1932 issue of the Bass Lake Times. Van's Inn had what was then called "legal beer", gas, oil, food, cabins, a merry-go-round and even...
Business enterprises -- Indiana -- South Whitley; Restaurants -- Indiana -- South Whitley; Pizza
Brick, two-story commercial building with "Pizza / Subs" on awning. This was the 1940s and 1950s location of Johnson Brothers Sign Company and a note on the back reads: "Early 40's / S. State St. / So. Whitley." The print is time dated "6 / 29 /...
Business enterprises -- Indiana -- South Whitley; Restaurants -- Indiana -- South Whitley; Pizza
Brick, two-story commercial building with "Pizza / Subs" on awning. This was the 1940s and 1950s location of Johnson Brothers Sign Company and a note on the back reads: "Early 40's / S. State St. / So. Whitley." The print is time dated "6 / 29 /...
Business enterprises -- Indiana -- South Whitley; Restaurants -- Indiana -- South Whitley; Pizza; Insurance companies -- Indiana -- South Whitley
Brick, two-story commercial building with "Pizza / Subs" on awning. This was the 1940s and 1950s location of Johnson Brothers Sign Company. The print is time dated "6 / 29 / '00." To the north is Glassley Insurance.
Copy of the Brownsburg Record from August 15, 1890. Believed to be the oldest copy of the record known about. The Brownsburg Record was published by Walter L. Burns until September of 1890. The paper transferred hands many times. The last issue...
George Dickinson had a livery stable here as early as 1886. The site served as a livery under Pickney Craig, James Phillips, Will Moyers, and Robert Bingham until the early 1920s. Between 1923 and 1925 the Coleman-Larimore Motor Company located...
In the 1940s C.D. Morrow established a cleaning business here. Mr. Morrow had previously been located at 218 East Third Street. The store motto was rather "catchy", being a play on the name Morrow. It was "BRING YOUR CLOTHES TO MORROW AND GET THEM...
In the early to mid 1880s this address was a photography studio run by Manson R. Lanham and William W. Wagner. In 1889, Crozier Monuments was at the same address havng moved from the SE corner of First and Mulberry Streets. The monument company was...
Located at 214 Jefferson St., this dwelling served as a boarding house run by Delia Miles in the 1940s. However, the house was demolished around 1960 when the city leveled the block to make way for a parking lot on Jefferson Street from Second...
Main Street School, built in 1888, was located on the corner of Twelfth and Main Streets. It was demolished in the 1940s. Sears Roebuck was built on this site; later that building became the Anderson Public Library