This week in Indiana’s history…
1850 – Indiana Governor Joseph A. Wright requested that church bells be rung at noon on July 13 in mourning for the death of United States President Zachary Taylor. The President had died at the White House a few days earlier. He had become ill on July 4 while attending a ceremony for the laying of the cornerstone for the Washington Monument. Taylor was the country’s 12th President and a major general of the Army.
1883 – Lightning struck the science building at Indiana University. Fire destroyed the three-story structure and contents, including university records, a 14,000-volume library, and many valuable science collections. The building had been built 10 years earlier at a cost of $33,000.
1928 – A parade was held in downtown Indianapolis to honor Kate and Queen, two mules who had pulled wagons for the Polar Ice Company for 28 years. Among those in the procession was Mayor L. Ert Slack, who rode in a Victorian coach attended by high-hatted coachmen. The Indianapolis News said, “Throughout their careers, Kate and Queen have behaved as model citizens, braying an occasional protest, of course, but what citizen has not?”
1939 – Carl Fisher died in Florida. Born in Greensburg, he was a pioneer and promoter of automobiles. He owned one of the first car dealerships in America and was one of the founders of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. He led planning for the Lincoln Highway, the first road across America designed for cars. In later years, he was involved in real estate and introduced the world to Miami Beach.
1987 – President Ronald Reagan visited Danville and spoke in the rotunda of the courthouse. In his remarks, he said, “There is such a thing as common sense in America … and isn’t it good to know that you can still find it in places like the Hendricks County Courthouse?” Later in the day, he went to the Indiana Convention Center in Indianapolis to address members of the National Association of Counties.
1997 – Space Shuttle Columbia landed at the Kennedy Space Center. On board was astronaut Janice E. Voss from South Bend. In five missions, she logged 18.8 million miles in space, circling the earth 779 times. A Purdue graduate, she said she became interested in space at age 12 when she read A Wrinkle in Time from the Madison public library while she was visiting her grandparents in Jefferson County.