Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_Indianapolis_500_deaths&oldid=587173118"
Central State Hospital, formerly referred to as the Central Indiana Hospital for the Insane, was a psychiatric treatment hospital in Indianapolis, Indiana.The hospital was established in 1848 to treat patients from anywhere in the state, but by 1905, with the establishment of psychiatric hospitals in other parts of Indiana, Central State served only the counties in the middle of the state.
The organization named itself Lakeshore Area Regional Recovery of Indiana, or LARRI. Reverend Steven Conger, senior pastor of Ridge United Methodist Church in Munster, worked to bring representatives of different faiths together from Lake , Porter and LaPorte counties to develop a long-term strategy to address those residents' needs.
Fidelity Trust Building (Indianapolis, Indiana) Flanner House Homes; Fletcher Place; Calvin I. Fletcher House; Forest Hills Historic District (Indianapolis, Indiana) Fort Benjamin Harrison; Fort Harrison Terminal Station; Foster Hall (Indianapolis, Indiana) Benjamin Franklin Public School Number 36
16-year-old school dropout Wong Ka-mui, who became a sex worker through a compensated dating network, was reported missing on 29 April 2008, and her last sighting was two days before. Nine days after her disappearance, following a tip-off, a 24-year-old transport worker Ting Kai-tai was arrested on suspicion of murdering Wong.
Until the start of 2024, WTHR broadcast the country network Circle on its sixth digital subchannel. When Circle switched from an OTA network to an ad-supported streaming channel, the 13.6 subchannel was deleted. [citation needed] The subchannel remained off the air for a month before it returned to the air with The Nest in February 2024. [31]
During the war, when the city served as a major transportation hub and as a camp for Union troops, the soldiers who died at Indianapolis were initially buried at Greenlawn Cemetery. [2] Confederate prisoners who died at Camp Morton , a large prisoner-of-war camp north of Indianapolis, were also interred at Greenlawn. [ 3 ]
Bob Heaton, Indiana House of Representatives, 2010–Present [29] Phillip Hinkle, Indiana House of Representatives, 2000–2012 [30] Cary D. Landis, Florida Attorney General (1931–1938) [31] Carolene Mays, member of Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission; former state representative, Indiana House, 2002–2008 [32]