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The Corydon Democrat is a community newspaper in Corydon, Harrison County, Indiana, U.S., which has approximately 6,250 copies in circulation. [1] It is published every Wednesday [2] by the O’Bannon Publishing Company, and has been family-owned since 1963. [3] Frank O'Bannon served as the 47th Governor of Indiana and worked for the newspaper ...
Thomas Hoatson Jr. c. 1911. The house was designed by Charles W. Maass and brother, Frederick A. Maass and built in 1908 for Thomas Hoatson Jr. [3] Hoatson's father, Thomas Sr., emigrated from his native Scotland to Canada in 1852. [4] Thomas Sr. arrived in Bruce Mines, Ontario, where, on October 20, 1861, Thomas Jr. was born. [5]
Lynch then went to university and mortuary school, from which he graduated in 1973. He took over his family's funeral home in Milford, Michigan in the 1970s, though he has since stepped back from the role. [1] [2] Lynch married in 1972 and divorced in 1984. He later remarried to Mary Tata in 1991. He has a daughter and three sons.
Several other historic structures in Corydon date from the early statehood era, including the Governor's Mansion and the Old Treasury Building (Indiana's first state office building), which were built in 1817, and the Colonel Thomas Lloyd Posey home, among others. [34] [35] Corydon's Grand Masonic Lodge, the first in the state, was built in ...
The Posey home was included in the district's original National Register designation in 1973. [11] Allan D. Thom and Thomas Lloyd Posey were the original owners of the home when its construction began in 1817. [14] Colonel Posey was the son of Thomas Posey, governor of the Indiana Territory from 1813 to 1816. Colonel Posey, who was active in ...
Mortuary and crematorium – Groundbreaking for a $1.5 million mortuary took place in May 1992. Architect J. Stuart Todd drew up the plans. The funeral home opened on March 1, 1993. Gibralter Remembrance Services, LLC, who purchased the mortuary in 2006, built a 9,500 square foot expansion. A new crematorium was added in 1990. [60]
Corydon: Corydon Battle Site is a memorial to both sides that fought in the Battle of Corydon, the only Civil War battle in Indiana. It contains Corydon's Civil War Museum. [244] Evansville: The Confederate monument (1904) at Oak Hill Cemetery marks the burial site of 24 Confederate prisoners who died at Evansville. [245] Indianapolis:
David Ray Camm (born March 23, 1964) [1] is a former trooper of the Indiana State Police (ISP) who spent 13 years in prison after twice being wrongfully convicted of the murders of his wife, Kimberly, and his two young children at their home in Georgetown, Indiana, on September 28, 2000.