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Indiana Landmarks, a historical preservation nonprofit, has announced important federal funding has yet to be released.
The two organizations are also seeking volunteers to help cleanup the former Theodore Roosevelt High School from June 2-6.
Marsh Davis, the longtime head of Indiana Landmarks, a not-for-profit that has helped preserve scores of historic buildings across the state, plans to retire in April 2025 after 19 years at the ...
INDIANAPOLIS — History looms all around us. But it also crumbles. Standing on street corners, sitting in your neighborhood, rising from a far hill: Historic buildings dot Hoosier communities ...
Indiana Landmarks Northwest Field Director Blake Swihart now occupies an office first used by former Valparaiso University President O.P. Kretzmann. Linwood House, which formerly housed VU ...
African Americans’ presence in Indiana has been documented to the mid-1700s by St. Francis Xaiver Church in Knox County. Births, deaths, baptisms and marriages of both free and enslaved African ...
Since being founded in 1960, the nonprofit group Indiana Landmarks has promoted and supported historic preservation efforts, often positioned at or near the center of major projects or helping ...
Indiana Landmarks has been fighting to save the historic buildings that contribute to the Hoosier State’s heritage. The statewide historic preservation organization, with a Northwest Indiana ...
International Harvester’s former engineering building appears for the second time on an annual list of Indiana’s 10 most endangered landmarks “too important to lose.” The red brick ...
Indiana Landmarks on Monday released its 2024 10 Most Endangered list — an annual effort to advocate for sites that could potentially be lost because of neglect, new development, lack of funding ...
A historic preservation nonprofit is sounding the alarm that important federal funding hasn’t been released. It said this ...