Indiana Landmarks

{{Short description|Non-profit historic preservation organization in U.S. state of Indiana}}

{{Infobox organization

| name = Indiana Landmarks

| named_after =

| image = Indiana-Landmarks-Center-Indianapolis.jpg

| image_size =

| alt =

| caption = Indiana Landmarks Center, located in the former Central Avenue United Methodist Church in Indianapolis.

| logo = Indiana_Landmarks_Logo.png

| logo_size =

| logo_alt =

| logo_caption =

| map =

| map_size =

| map_alt =

| map_caption =

| map2 =

| map2_size =

| map2_alt =

| map2_caption =

| abbreviation =

| motto =

| predecessor =

| merged =

| successor =

| formation = {{start date and age|1960}}

| founder = Eli Lilly

| founding_location = Indianapolis, Indiana

| extinction =

| merger =

| type =

| tax_id =

| registration_id =

| status =

| purpose = Historic preservation

| headquarters = Indiana Landmarks Center

| location = 1201 Central Avenue
Indianapolis, Indiana, United States

| coords =

| region =

| services =

| products =

| methods =

| fields =

| membership =

| membership_year =

| language =

| owner =

| sec_gen =

| leader_title = President

| leader_name = J. Marshall Davis[https://projects.propublica.org/nonprofits/organizations/351162873 Historic Landmarks Foundation Of Indiana Inc.], Nonprofit Explorer, ProPublica, 2024.

| leader_title2 = Vice President and CFO

| leader_name2 = Madonna Wagner

| leader_title3 = Vice President of Preservation Services

| leader_name3 = Mark Dollase

| leader_title4 = Vice President for Development

| leader_name4 = Sharon Gamble

| board_of_directors = 34

| key_people =

| publication = Indiana Preservation

| parent_organization =

| subsidiaries =

| secessions =

| affiliations =

| budget =

| budget_year =

| revenue = $4,186,400

| revenue_year = 2019

| disbursements =

| expenses = $4,137,900

| expenses_year = 2019

| endowment = $85.6 million

| endowment_year = 2019

| staff = 40

| staff_year = 2020

| volunteers =

| volunteers_year =

| website = {{URL|IndianaLandmarks.org}}

| remarks =

| formerly = Historic Landmarks Foundation of Indiana

| footnotes =

}}

Indiana Landmarks is a private non-governmental heritage preservation organization focused on the U.S. state of Indiana. It is America's largest private statewide historic preservation organization. Founded in 1960 as Historic Landmarks Foundation of Indiana by a volunteer group of civic and business leaders led by Indianapolis pharmaceutical executive Eli Lilly, it has nearly 6,000 members.The Encyclopedia of Indianapolis By David J. Bodenhamer, Robert Graham Barrows, David Gordon Vanderstel, pg 685 At the end of 2023, an independent auditor reported a total endowment of 67.8 million for the organization.[https://www.indianalandmarks.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/2023-Final-Financial-Statements.pdf Independent Auditor’s Report and Consolidated Financial Statements]. Historic Landmarks Foundation of Indiana, Inc. d/b/a Indiana Landmarks, August 31, 2023 and 2022. p. 26. The organization simplified its name to Indiana Landmarks in 2010.{{Citation needed|date=July 2024}}

Indiana Landmarks owns and restores historic buildings, buys and sells vacant and endangered property, and helps people throughout Indiana save and restore historic places through a variety of programs including grants, loans, and advocacy.File:Morris-Butler-House-Indianapolis.jpg

File:Veraestau Historic Site.jpgIndiana Landmarks employs staff at its state headquarters in Indianapolis and in regional offices throughout the state of Indiana. Regional offices are located in South Bend, Gary, New Albany, Aurora, Evansville, Cambridge City, Wabash, and Terre Haute. The organization's state headquarters are located at the former Central Avenue United Methodist Church in Indianapolis, now known as Indiana Landmarks Center. In addition to Indiana Landmarks Center, Indiana Landmarks owns and operates two historic properties as event and rental venues: the Morris-Butler House in Indianapolis and Veraestau historic site in Aurora, Indiana. Landmarks' honorary board chair is Indiana's former Chief Justice Randall T. Shepard. The organization's first project was restoration of the 1865 Morris-Butler House in Indianapolis. Eli Lilly personally underwrote the acquisition and restoration of the house as a museum of Victorian decorative arts. Though the Morris-Butler House no longer operates as a museum, it is part of the Indiana Landmarks Center campus and functions as an event and rental facility.{{Citation needed|date=July 2024}}

One of Indiana Landmarks' largest projects was the $30 million+ restoration of the West Baden Springs Hotel's exterior and public spaces. Indiana Landmarks helped lead the effort to bring riverboat gaming to Orange County, Indiana, as a way to revitalize the French Lick Resort Casino and the West Baden Springs Hotel.{{Citation needed|date=July 2024}}

New name and headquarters

File:"Decoding_Downtown_Indy"_walking_tour_by_Indiana_Landmarks.jpg

In April 2010, in conjunction with the organization's 50th anniversary, Indiana Landmarks announced its name change from Historic Landmarks Foundation of Indiana. At the same time, it announced that medical device entrepreneur Bill Cook and his wife, Gayle had pledged $17 million to renovate the former Central Avenue United Methodist Church at 12th Street and Central Avenue in the Old Northside Historic District of Indianapolis as a performance space and new headquarters for the organization, to be known as Indiana Landmarks Center.{{Citation needed|date=July 2024}}

Endangered landmarks

Each May (National Historic Preservation Month), Indiana Landmarks announces a list of the state's 10 Most Endangered landmarks. Circumstances that cause properties to be named to the list generally involve one or more of the following factors: demolition threat, abandonment, neglectful owner, dilapidation, obsolete use, lack of money for repairs, unreasonable above-market sale price, out-of-the-way location, or encroaching sprawl. Indiana Landmarks uses the 10 Most Endangered list to bring public attention to the imperiled sites and mobilize support for their preservation.{{Citation needed|date=July 2024}}

class="wikitable"

|+10 Most Endangered

!Year

!Name

!Location

!Photo

rowspan="10" |2015 {{Cite web|title = Indiana Landmarks - 10 Most Endangered landmarks in Indiana|url = http://www.indianalandmarks.org/NewsPhotos/10most/Pages/default.aspx|website = www.indianalandmarks.org|access-date = 2016-01-05}}

|Bedford Elks Building

|Bedford

|

Camp Chesterfield

|Chesterfield

|File:ChesterfieldIN ChesterfieldSpiritualistCampHousing.jpg

First Presbyterian Church & Lafayette Building

|South Bend

|

Indiana County Homes

|Statewide

|

Indiana Medical History Museum

|Indianapolis

|File:Indiana Medical History Museum.png

IOOF United Brethren Block

|Huntington, IN

|

McCurdy Hotel

|Evansville

|File:McCurdy Hotel.jpg

McDonald House

|Attica

|File:James and Lucinda McDonald House.jpg

Mills House

|Greenwood

|

Rivoli Theater

|Indianapolis

|File:Rivoli Theater in Indianapolis.jpg

rowspan="10" |2016 {{Cite news|url=http://www.insideindianabusiness.com/story/31840828/indiana-landmarks-lists-10-most-endangered|title=Indiana Landmarks Lists '10 Most Endangered'|last=Brown|first=Alex|access-date=2018-07-12|language=en}}

|Beech Church

|Carthage

|File:Front Face of Beech Church.jpg

Rivoli Theater

|Indianapolis

|File:Rivoli Theater in Indianapolis.jpg

Hazelwood

|Muncie

|File:Alva Kitselman House.jpg

Speakman House

|Rising Sun

|

Washington County Courthouse

|Salem

|File:Washington County Courthouse, Salem.jpg

Monon High Bridge

|Delphi

|

Pryor’s Country Place

|Fox Lake (near Angola)

|

Ford Motor Company Assembly Branch

|Indianapolis

|

South Side Turnverein Hall

|Indianapolis

|File:South Side Turnverein Hall.jpg

Camp Chesterfield

|Chesterfield

|File:ChesterfieldIN ChesterfieldSpiritualistCampHousing.jpg

rowspan="10" |2017 {{Cite news|url=https://www.indianalandmarks.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/IP-3-2017-May-June.pdf|title=Indiana Landmarks Lists '10 Most Endangered 2017'|access-date= 2023-11-22|language=en}}

|Marion National Bank Building

|Marion

|

Newkirk Mansion

|Connersville

|File:Newkirk Mansion, Connersville, IN (48483830587).jpg

Former Fire Station 18

|Indianapolis

|

Old Marquette School

|South Bend

|File:Marquette School in South Bend, eastern side.jpg

Old YMCA

|Terre Haute

|

Pryor's Country Place

|Fox Lake (near Angola)

|

Round and polygonal barns

|Statewide

|

Simpson Hall, Indiana School for the Deaf

|Indianapolis

|

Speakman House

|Rising Sun

|

Washington County Courthouse

|Salem

|File:Washington County Courthouse, Salem.jpg

rowspan="10" |2018 {{Cite news|url=https://www.indianalandmarks.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/IP3-18-May-June.pdf|title=Indiana Landmarks Lists '10 Most Endangered 2018'|access-date= 2023-11-22|language=en}}

|Cannelton Historic District

|Cannelton

|

Commandant’s Row at Indiana Veterans’ Home

|West Lafayette

|

The Courtyard Inn

|Rising Sun

|

Cravenhurst Barn

|Madison

|

Muncie Fieldhouse

|Muncie

|

National Bank Building

|Marion

|

North Christian Church

|Columbus

|File:North Christian Church, Columbus, Indiana, 1959-64. Exterior - 00807v.jpg

Old Masonic Hall

|Knightstown

|

Rocky Edge

|Terre Haute

|

Saint Joseph’s College campus

|Rensselaer

|File:Photo of flowers, fountain, and the Chapel Building of Saint Joseph's College Summer 2011.jpg

rowspan="10" |2019 {{Cite news|url=https://www.indianalandmarks.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/IP3-19.pdf|title=Indiana Landmarks Lists '10 Most Endangered 2019'|access-date= 2023-11-29|language=en}}

|Crump Theatre

|Columbus

|File:Crump Theatre (Columbus, Indiana) - March 2013 - Jeff Hart.jpg

Pulaski County Courthouse

|Winamac

|File:Pulaski County Courthouse Winimac Indiana P1300092.jpg

Church of the Holy Cross

|Indianapolis

|

Mineral Spring Hotel

|Paoli

|

Downtown Attica

|Attica

|File:Attica Downtown Historic District.jpg

Peru Circus Winter Quarters

|Peru

|

Reid Memorial Presbyterian Church

|Richmond

|File:Church and house in the Starr HD.jpg

John Howe Mansion

|Howe

|

Commandant's Row

|West Lafayette

|

Cannelton Historic District

|Perry County

|File:Old Perry County Courthouse in Cannelton.jpg

rowspan="10" |2020 {{Cite news|url=https://www.indianalandmarks.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/IP5-20.pdf|title=Indiana Landmarks Lists '10 Most Endangered 2020'|access-date= 2023-11-29|language=en}}

|Tipton County Jail and Sheriff's Residence

|Tipton

|File:Tipton-indiana-county-jail.jpg

Romweber House

|Batesville

|

Union Literary Institute

|Union City

|File:Union Literary Institute.jpg

Church of the Holy Cross

|Indianapolis

|

Downtown Attica

|Attica

|File:Attica Downtown Historic District.jpg

Elwood Carnegie Library

|Madison County

|

Reid Memorial Presbyterian Church

|Richmond

|File:Church and house in the Starr HD.jpg

Falley-O'Gara-Pyke House

|Lafayette

|

Theodore Roosevelt High School

|Gary

|File:Theodore Roosevelt High School, Gary Indiana.jpg

Monon Station

|Bedford

|

rowspan="10" |2021 {{Cite news|url=https://www.indianalandmarks.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/IP5-21.pdf|title=Indiana Landmarks Lists '10 Most Endangered 2021'|access-date= 2023-12-06|language=en}}

|James M. Shields Memorial Gymnasium

|Seymour

|

Davis Clinic

|Marion

|

B.G. Pollard Lodge#1242

|Bloomington

|

Oxford Community Mausoleum

|Benton County

|

Kamm & Schellinger Brewery

|Mishawaka

|File:Kamm and Schellinger Brewery Stack 1.JPG

Monon Depot

|Bedford

|

Theodore Roosevelt High School

|Gary

|File:Theodore Roosevelt High School, Gary Indiana.jpg

Courthouse Annex

|New Castle

|

Tipton County Jail & Sheriff’s Residence

|Tipton

|File:Tipton-indiana-county-jail.jpg

Falley-O'Gara-Pyke House

|Lafayette

|

rowspan="10" |2022 {{Cite news|url=https://www.indianalandmarks.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/IP5-22.pdf|title=Indiana Landmarks Lists '10 Most Endangered 2022'|access-date= 2023-12-06|language=en}}

|Cades Mill Covered Bridge

|Fountain County

|

Hulman Building & Garage

|Evansville

|File:Central Union Bank.jpg

Stinesville Commercial Buildings

|Monroe County

|File:Stinesville Commercial Historic District from ground level.jpg

First Friends Church

|Marion

|

Knox County Poor Asylum

|Vincennes

|

Birdsell Mansion

|South Bend

|

Geter Means House

|Gary

|

Kamm & Schellinger Brewery

|Mishawaka

|File:Kamm and Schellinger Brewery Stack 1.JPG

James M. Shields Memorial Gymnasium

|Seymour

|

Courthouse Annex

|New Castle

|

rowspan="10" |2023 {{Cite news|url=https://www.indianalandmarks.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/IP5-23.pdf|title=Indiana Landmarks Lists '10 Most Endangered 2023'|access-date= 2023-12-12|language=en}}

|Starr Historic District

|Richmond

|File:Church and house in the Starr HD.jpg

Birdsell Mansion

|South Bend

|

Knox County Poor Asylum

|Vincennes

|

Historic Fraternal Lodges

|Vernon and Bedford

|

Thomas & Louisa Little House

|Plainfield

|

Hulman Building & Garage

|Evansville

|File:Central Union Bank.jpg

State Theater

|Anderson

|

First Friends Church

|Marion

|

Stinesville Commercial Buildings

|Monroe County

|File:Stinesville Commercial Historic District from ground level.jpg

International Harvester Engineering Building

|Fort Wayne

|

Annual awards

Indiana Landmarks issues several annual awards, including:

  • Cook Cup for Outstanding Restoration
  • Sandi Servaas Memorial Award
  • Williamson Prize

Together with the Indiana Farm Bureau, Indiana Landmarks co-sponsors the John Arnold Rural Preservation Award.{{Cite web|title = Indiana Landmarks - Awards|url = https://www.indianalandmarks.org/about/awards}}

References

{{Reflist}}