Zoom-In Evansville program to Focus on Historic Images of the City

Street car on 400 block of Main Street, Evansville, Indiana 1924


On Thursday, January 18 at 6 pm join us for the program Zoom-In Evansville in the Evansville Museum’s Koch Immersive Theater and Planetarium. In this program, VCHS Board Members Tom Lonnberg and Savanah Summerfield will zoom in on select photographs featured in the current Evansville Museum exhibition Evansville Then & Now. Savanah and Tom will “walk” through interesting facets of each image and will explore these historic photographs of our city from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

THIS PROGRAM IS NOW AT ITS SEATING CAPACITY. ANY NEW RESERVATIONS WILL BE PLACED ON A WAITLIST FOR A POTENTIAL SECOND SHOWING AT A DATE TO BE DETERMINED.

Tom Lonnberg serves as the chief curator & curator of history at the Evansville Museum of Arts, History & Science. Savanah Summerfield is a history and archaeology major at the University of Evansville and in 2023 was an intern in the history department at the Evansville Museum.
For complimentary reservations, please click on this link. https://emuseum.org/rsvp.
This program is presented in partnership with the Evansville Museum of Arts, History & Science.

VCHS Logo

VCHS Annual Meeting: In Two Parts

This program is presented in partnership with the Evansville Museum of Arts, History & Science

Part I: The Annual Meeting and Dinner — November 16, 2023 at 6:00 PM in the Richardt Room at the Evansville Museum of Arts, History and Science. This part includes a catered dinner from the Bauerhaus and costs $30 per person.

Part II: The Annual Speaker — Dr. James MacLeod on “Evansville in a Time of Revolutionary Change” based on his new book Lost Evansville.
1945 to 1975 was one of the most impactful, traumatic, and transformational periods in American history, and it changed Evansville forever. This lecture examines the numerous massive changes that took place in the city in this period and how the citizens reacted.

Dr. MacLeod will be signing copies of his new book available for $26.50 each. Having the correct change will speed up the proceedings.

November 16, 2023 at 7:00 PM in the Old Gallery at the Evansville Museum of Arts, History and Science. This part is free and open to the public. For complementary reservations to James MacLeod’s talk, please visit  https://emuseum.org/rsvp and select this option from the dropdown menu.

Details about the Annual Dinner
The dinner is catered by the Bauerhaus. The dinner includes: Country Style Buffet – 2 pc fried chicken, whipped potatoes and gravy, green beans, cole slaw, roll w/ butter, Iced Tea (Sweet), Iced Tea (Unsweet), Lemonade, Double Chocolate Cake or Carrot Cake. Vegetarian or vegan choices are available upon request. The cost is $30 per person. We prefer payment via PayPal (click the donate button to the right and type in the amount equal to payment for the number of dinners for which you are paying). If you prefer to pay by check, send your check payable to VCHS C/O Dr. James MacLeod, Treasurer, 2510 Gavins Lane, Evansville, IN 47725.

About Dr. James MacLeod
Dr. James MacLeod chairs the Department of History, Politics, and Social Change at the University of Evansville. He is the author of Evansville in World War Two, which was published in 2015, and The Cartoons of Evansville’s Karl Kae Knecht, published in February 2017. In 2016 he wrote and co-produced a 2-part documentary on Evansville in World War II for WNIN PBS titled Evansville at War. In 2000, he published a book on 19th century British religion, The Second Disruption, and has also written over 30 other scholarly publications. He has delivered hundreds of public lectures, has won many awards for his teaching and scholarship, and was UE’s Outstanding Teacher in 2009. MacLeod is an active local historian, and serves on the Boards of the Vanderburgh County Historical Society, the Southwestern Indiana Historical Society, and the History Committee of the Evansville Museum of Arts, History and Science. In 2021 he received the Indiana Historical Society’s Hubert Hawkins History Award in recognition of his distinguished service and career in local history. His fourth book is a history of the city of Evansville for the History Press entitled Lost Evansville, and it is being launched officially tonight!

Deeds/Glasscock 8″ x 10″ Glass Plate Negatives

Presented by Terry Hughes and Jon Carl at Willard Library’s Browning Gallery on October 23, 2023 at 6:00 PM.

Detail from a glass plate negative
Detail from a glass plate negative

William E. Deeds was a photographer for the Evansville Journal in the early years of the 1900s. He used an older (to current viewers) box camera that recorded images on an 8″x10″ glass plate. Eventually, many of the glass plates ended up in the hands of Robert Glasscock who published many of them in his book Pictorial History of Evansville, Indiana. Glasscock maintained possession of the plates until his death. Upon his death, Glasscock’s family donated Glasscock’s collection to the archives of Willard Library. Terry Hughes volunteered to scan the plates into digital format. He did so under the guidance of then Willard Archivist Pat Sides.

A unique characteristic of the glass plate negatives is their incredible detail. The clock to the left is a detail from a much larger image. Both Terry Hughes and Jon Carl use digital photographs in presentations and productions they do.

The presentation on October 23rd will highlight many of the photographs in the Deeds/Glasscock collection. The presentation is free and open to the public at 6:00 PM in the Browning Gallery of Willard Library.

Jon Carl and Terry Hughes are co-creators of the Feel the History Class at FJ Reitz High School, a class Carl teaches to this date. Hughes retired from the local school corporation in 2011.

Glenn Black Home Open House at Angel Mounds

Glenn Black at his home at Angel Mounds
Glenn Black house at Angel Mounds in 1939

September 16, 2023 from 1:00 to 5:00 PM at Angel Mounds State Historic Site

The historic home of Angel Mound’s archaeologist Glenn Black will be temporarily vacant. Mike Linderman, Western Regional Director of State Historic Sites, Indiana State Museum, is offering us a chance to look inside the historic home. In addition to the home itself, the open house will feature enlarged photographs and displays highlighting the famous visitors to the home while Black lived there.


The house was built in 1937 by John and Lula Grimm. Black moved in on April of 1939 after IHS purchased the site and lived there until his death in 1964. This is the first time the home has ever been open to the public. It will be undergoing some restoration during this period. The home is on the National Register and is a contributing component to the overall National Historic Landmark status of the site.

Lost to the Wrecking Ball: Urban Renewal in Downtown Evansville, Indiana 1960s and 1970s

Wednesday, May 31, 2023 at 6:00 PM. Tour starts at Second Street and Sycamore (Old Post Office Side).

Vendome Hotel, Grand Theater, and The Evansville Businessmen’s Association

Join Tom Lonnberg and Terry Hughes on the tour of lost Evansville – 1960s and 1970s. This tour focuses on changes to the urban landscape of downtown primarily in the 1960s and 1970s, a period of great transition for downtown Evansville. Take this opportunity to explore and learn about one of downtown Evansville’s most interesting periods when many landmarks met their demise. Tour stops include the Evansville Business Men’s Association, Grand Theater, Vendome Hotel, the Rookery, Central High School, Assumption Cathedral, Cook’s Brewery, Evansville and Terre Haute Railroad Depot (USO and Community Center), Bethel Temple, the old City Hall, Lincoln Hotel, Majestic Theater, and more. Since all buildings discussed on the tour are gone, we will provide a printed booklet with photos of each wrecking ball victim.

The event is free and open to the public. We do appreciate advanced notification if possible. Click the link provided here and let us know. https://emuseum.org/event-details/downtown-urban-renewal-tour

Tom Lonnberg is the Chief Curator and Curator of History at the Evansville Museum of Arts, History and Science. He is also the Vice President of the Vanderburgh County Historical Society.

Central High School Sixth Street Side 1940 (The Bell Tower is on the Seventh Street [MLK Jr.] side

Terry Hughes is a retired educator from the EVSC. In retirement he serves as President of the Vanderburgh County Historical Society. He is also on the Board of Directors of the Southwestern Indiana Historical Society.

Historian in Residence Talk with Dr. Matthew Pinsker

Dr. Matthew Pinkser

Noted historian and Abraham Lincoln scholar Dr. Matthew Pinsker, the Evansville Museum’s 2023 Historian in Residence, will present the talk “Getting Right with Lincoln, Now More than Ever” on Tuesday, April 18, at 6:30 pm at the Museum. He will discuss what Americans today might learn from Lincoln’s response to the challenge of national division and partisan polarization during the secession crisis of 1860-61. Pinsker will draw upon his expertise in Lincoln studies to help shed fresh light on the great president’s political leadership while also highlighting some new materials from his free summer program for low-income high school students: the Knowledge for Freedom seminar.

Dr. Pinsker holds the Brian Pohanka Chair of Civil War History at Dickinson College and earned his Bachelor of Arts degree from Harvard University and Doctor of Philosophy from the University of Oxford.

Native Fascism: Evansville’s 1948 Wallace Riot

VCHS in conjunction with Willard Library
March 13, 2023 at 6:00 PM in the Browning Gallery at Willard Library.

Dr. Denise Lynn
Dr. Denise Lynn

Description of the Program: In April 1948, Progressive Party candidate for President Henry Wallace arrived in Indiana to much controversy. The conservative state did not welcome Wallace and veteran’s organizations actively organized to disrupt his speaking engagements. On April 6 at the Progressive Party’s Evansville event, a mob attacked the Wallace supporters causing injuries and pushing Evansville into the national spotlight. In the wake of the riot, a local professor was fired for his involvement in the Wallace campaign and the radical CIO Local 813 became the subject of House committee hearings. This anticommunist hysteria gripped the Evansville community and led to populist fascist reaction beginning with the violence at the riot. This presentation argues that what happened in Evansville on April 6 was part of a populist fascism in the United States propelled by anticommunism and enacted by veteran’s organizations. While national politicians dominate histories of anticommunism, some of the greatest damage done during that period occurred when other Americans, specifically veteran’s groups, violated the constitutional rights of their fellow citizens.

About Dr. Lynn: Originally from Upstate New York, she attended SUNY Binghamton, State University of New York where she received her MA and PhD. Her research focuses on women in the American Communist Party. Dr. Lynn is the Vice-President of the Historians of American Communism and the editor of its journal American Communist History. She has written a regular blog for Black Perspectives and has written for Nursing Clio, Marxist Sociology, and Lawrence & Wishart. Her articles have appeared in American Communist History, Women’s History Review, Journal of Cold War Studies, Radical Americas, Journal of Intersectionality, and Journal for the Study of Radicalism. Dr. Lynn is the author of Where is Juliet Stuart Poyntz? Gender, Spycraft, and Anti-Stalinism in the Early Cold War from the University of Massachusetts Press. Her current book project is on radical Black women in the anti-Korean war movement and a biography of Claudia Jones.

President’s Report for VCHS Activities for 2021-2022

VCHS programming actually runs from November to November

Programs for 2021-2022

  • Tom Lonnberg and Terry Hughes – From Here to Eternity (motion picture) (December 2022)
  • Kelley Coures – From the Closet to Main Street: a Look at Evansville’s LGBTQ+ History (June 2022)
  • Erick Jones – Wide Open Evansville (September 20202)
  • Dr. James MacLeod – Lost Evansville: the Transformation of a City, 1945-1975 (September 2022)
  • James Madison — The Klu Klux Klan in the Heartland (April 2022)
  • Jon Carl – Bullets by the Billions (March 2022)
  • Oak Hill Twilight Tour (October 2022)

Walking Tours

  • Main Street in the 1960s – (October 2022)

History Celebration at the Evansville Museum  November 2022

Letter of Support for Old Courthouse Bell Tower

Letter of Support for Browning Genealogy

Maturity Journal Articles

•           December 2021: Tom Lonnberg – the Vendome Hotel

•           January 2022: Steve Appel – Cooke’s Park

•           February 2022: Dr. Stella Ress – Four Freedoms Monument

•           March 2022: Chris Cooke – Oak Hill Cemetery

•           April 2022: Joe Engler — the Coliseum

•           May 2022: Amber Gowen – Evansville Nurses during WWI

•           June 2022: Dr. Denise Lynn – Albion Fellows Bacon, pt. 1

•           July 2022: Dr. Denise Lynn – Albion Fellows Bacon, pt. 2

•           August 2022: Tom Lonnberg – Evansville’s Inter Urbans

•           September 2022: Terry Hughes – Marilyn Miller

•           October 2022: Shane Raenschert – Evansville’s LGBTQ+ history (not published)

•           November 2022: Tom Lonnberg – James Bethel Gresham

•           December 2022 Joe Engler – Helder-Brandon Residence

Reminisce with Tom and Terry: Main Street in the 1960s

Sunday, October 9th at 2:00 PM, starting at the intersection of Riverside Drive and Main Street in Evansville, Indiana

Please reserve a spot to let us know how many are coming. Click the link following to go to the Museum reservation site, fill in the info, and select Main Street Walking Tour. https://emuseum.org/rsvp

Main Strdeet, Evansville, Indiana c 1965
Main Street from Fourth Street Looking toward the River

Tom Lonnberg and Terry Hughes will lead a guided tour of Main Street as it looked in the 1960s. Starting at the intersection of Riverside Drive and Main Street, the tour will walk the seven blocks to Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. We will return via Sycamore.

Tom and Terry will provide a printed pamphlet to illustrate buildings we pass. We invite tour members to share their memories and assist in locating various business along the route. For instance, Terry remembers having his feet X-rayed in the Evansville Store’s shoe department, and Tom remembers Christmas shopping at the Evansville store.

As can be seen in the photo, in the 1960s Main Street was still intact as a four lane street with another lane on each side for parking. Although change was threatening the downtown district in the 1960s, Main Street was still a thriving area. In the picture, we can see Baynham’s (shoes), the Evansville Store (department store), Bon Marche'(department store), Barkers (shoes), the Farmer’s Daughter (restaurant) and WROZ Radio, all businesses gone today from the downtown district.

By the end of the decade, Main Street was its current-day box canyon with the new Civic Center blocking it at Seventh Street, the present day Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. In the next decade the city further choked Main by narrowing it to the serpentine passage it is today. Much of what was is now gone. It can only remain in our memories and photos that have survived. Join us in recreating Main Street in the 1960s. You don’t have to be an older person with memories. Anyone of any age can enjoy the tour. The tour is free and open to the public.

Please reserve a spot to let us know how many are coming. Click to go to the Museum reservation site, fill in the info, and select Main Street Walking Tour. https://emuseum.org/rsvp

Tom Lonnberg is the Chief Curator and Curator of History at the Evansville Museum of Arts, History and Science. He is also the Vice President of the Vanderburgh County Historical Society.

Terry Hughes is a retired educator from the EVSC. In retirement he serves as President of the Vanderburgh County Historical Society. He is also on the Board of Directors of the Southwestern Indiana Historical Society.

Wide Open Evansville by R. Erick Jones

Sunday, September 25th at 2:00 PM in the Browning Room of the Evansville-Vanderburgh Public Library, 200 S. E. Martine Luther King Jr. Blvd, Evansville, IN in conjunction with Your Brother’s Bookstore, 504 Main Street Evansville, Indiana.

In the words of the author: My presentation will cover prohibition coming to Indiana, key liquor violators that the feds were looking into, the booze boat incident/whiskey conspiracy, the Courier‘s turning on Bosse. I’ll also talk about Benjamin Bosse’s involvement and how he escaped indictment.

The author’s description of his book:

What began as a genealogy
search grew into an in-depth
investigation of a period in
Evansville history when
Indiana instituted prohibition
while Kentucky, just across the
Ohio River, did not. Evansville
earned a reputation for being
wide open when its Chief of
Police, Edgar Schmitt, was
accused of selling confiscated
liquor from the police station
and using the police boat for
bootlegging.

This authentic account
provides a remarkable insight
into the investigation and trial.
It covers the forgotten details
of the story and reveals things
that were never brought to
light. Finally, you can read the
truth about this historic event
and get answers to key
questions such as who was
involved.

Copies of the book will be available for purchasing and signing.

Author’s Biography

Photo of author R. Erick Jones
Author R. Erick Jones

Erick Jones is the great-grandson
of Evansville, Indiana Police
Captain Andy Friedle, the officer in
charge of the infamous police
“booze boat” which was used for
bootlegging. His debut book, Wide
Open Evansville
, is the result of
several years of research and
reveals the true story of the 1920
whiskey ring conspiracy in
sensational detail. But his family’s
ties to prohibition don’t end there.
He is also the great-grandson of
former Vanderburgh County
sheriff’s deputy Jesse Jones, who
later became a federal prohibition
agent.
Although he currently lives in Ohio,
he has fond memories of spending
summers as a child with his
grandparents in Evansville.