From Magic City to
Middletown: Exhibit Celebrates Muncie History
Ball State University
Libraries will be celebrating the 150th anniversary of the city of
Muncie with a reception for a new exhibit.
The Archives and Special Collections on the second floor of Bracken
Library is hosting “From Magic City to Middletown: 150 Years of Muncie History” on Thursday,
August 6 from 5-7 p.m.
The exhibit includes
photographs and memorabilia depicting Muncie history. Some unique local history items from the
Archives and Special Collections include early diaries of Muncie residents
describing the gas boom, a pardon signed by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt
for Muncie Mayor George R. Dale, an 1885 inventory for the Star Drug Store, a
photograph of the Congerville Flyers professional football team—one of the
original teams in what would become the NFL.
The GIS Research and Map
Collection (GRMC) across the balcony in Bracken Library will be featuring maps
showing Muncie history: A bird’s
eye-view map of the city from 1872; a 1907 map showing the city’s steam
railroads, interurban lines, and street car lines; a pictorial map showing Muncie
merchants in 1985.
The GRMC created a custom
map for the exhibit—A Year in the Life of
Magic City: The Thomas Neely Diaries.
This map uses historic Sanborn Fire Insurance maps and photographs and
advertisements from Muncie city directories (available in the Archives and
Special Collections’ Digital Media Repository) to show locations of happenings described
by Thomas Neely, a city founder, in his diaries including the location of his
doctor, bootmaker, and an important community gathering location—the roller skating
rink.
Another map (above, click
to enlarge) exhibit shows the growth of the Ball Brothers Glass Factory over
time. This map also uses historic
Sanborn Fire Insurance maps to detail the changes in this important company in
Muncie history.
The exhibits will remain on
display through September. Visitors may
park in the Emens Garage directly behind Bracken Library.
For more information,
please contact the Archives and Special Collections at 765-285-5078.
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