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Showing posts from September, 2025

Featuring Carroll County Patriot, James Johnston: Freedom, Family, and Faith

  Thank you to Mark Smith, Carroll County Historian, for providing historical information and stories related to our border county to the northeast.  Tippecanoe County and Carroll County pioneers had close connections during the canal days. This blog will be regularly featuring posts from the Carroll County Historian in commemoration of the America/Indiana 250 Celebration. By Mark A. Smith, Carroll County Historian              Our honored patriot, James Johnston, had three parts to his being: freedom, family, and faith.         His entrance into the world was on October fifth of 1755 on the Delaware River. His service came as he served as a volunteer from Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, 1780 under Captain Samuel Flanegin. He also fought in South Carolina in the battle of Hanging Rock. His second enlistment came in 1781 under James Osburn, and Colonel Hobert Ervine’s Regiment of riflemen. Documentati...

Past Local DAR Chapter Member Served as 2nd Lieutenant During World War II

  By Diana Vice Diana Vice is an Honorary Regent and Historian for the General de Lafayette Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution. Evelyn Rosemary Frantz preferred to be called Rosemary.   She was a spunky gal who enjoyed her independence. She wasn’t afraid to share an opinion, and she loved a good laugh.   Born in 1921 to John and Velma Frantz, Rosemary graduated from Dayton High School and later the Home Hospital School of Nursing.   After graduation she worked her way to become the head of Home Hospital’s pediatric division. Rosemary’s deep love for her country inspired her to enlist in the United States Army Nursing Corp. where she served as 2 nd Lieutenant after completing basic training at Fort Knox, Kentucky. After her service in WWII, she continued her duties in the Army throughout the Korean War. I first met Rosemary at the Reformed Presbyterian Church in 1995. She was a founding member there and actively involved in the life of the congregati...

The Dewey Club Enjoyed the Steamboat Era on the Wabash River

Dewey Club Sidelined by Judge after Violating Liquor Laws, or Not? Descendants of Early Tippecanoe County Pioneers Remain in Tippecanoe County: Kirby Risk, Del Bartlett, Herman Lodde, James O'Connor, John Cuppy, Dan Storms & Others By Diana Vice Have you ever wondered what it would be like to journey along the Wabash River during the early 20 th century in a steamboat? There was a short-lived Dewey Club that was established in 1898 by a group of fun-loving friends from Montmorenci, Indiana, who did just that.   On June 14, 1898, the Journal and Courier reported that around twenty people formed the Dewey Club to honor the hero of Manilla. [ Dewey was best known for his victory at the  Battle of Manila Bay  during the  Spanish–American War , with the loss of only a single crewman on the American side.]   Articles of Incorporation were drafted and filed with the Tippecanoe County Recorder by Philip Booher, George Burkley and Martin V. Erwin, with its object l...

Has the Vault Burial Mystery at St. Mary's Cathedral Been Solved?

  Could a Native American Benefactor Be Buried Alongside Father Hamilton? By Diana Vice There has been a decades-long mystery about who is entombed in a second burial vault in the church basement of St. Mary’s Cathedral in Lafayette, Indiana. The Reverend R. A. Hamilton, a local pioneer priest, is buried in one of the vaults, but the identity of a second person buried alongside the pioneer priest has been the subject of speculation since 1951 when the vaults were re-discovered during remodeling. A 1956 Journal and Courier news article revealed that during a remodeling and redecorating phase of the church building, the floor of the sanctuary was torn out, and it was then that the sealed vaults, side by side, were visible. Church officials were not certain in which vault Father Hamilton was buried as the contents of the remains were not marked. February 15, 1956, Journal & Courier News Father Hamilton, a pioneer missionary, was responsible for the erection of St. Mary’s Cathed...