Reminisce with Tom and Terry: Main Street in the 1960s

Sunday, October 9th at 2:00 PM, starting at the intersection of Riverside Drive and Main Street in Evansville, Indiana

Please reserve a spot to let us know how many are coming. Click the link following to go to the Museum reservation site, fill in the info, and select Main Street Walking Tour. https://emuseum.org/rsvp

Main Strdeet, Evansville, Indiana c 1965
Main Street from Fourth Street Looking toward the River

Tom Lonnberg and Terry Hughes will lead a guided tour of Main Street as it looked in the 1960s. Starting at the intersection of Riverside Drive and Main Street, the tour will walk the seven blocks to Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. We will return via Sycamore.

Tom and Terry will provide a printed pamphlet to illustrate buildings we pass. We invite tour members to share their memories and assist in locating various business along the route. For instance, Terry remembers having his feet X-rayed in the Evansville Store’s shoe department, and Tom remembers Christmas shopping at the Evansville store.

As can be seen in the photo, in the 1960s Main Street was still intact as a four lane street with another lane on each side for parking. Although change was threatening the downtown district in the 1960s, Main Street was still a thriving area. In the picture, we can see Baynham’s (shoes), the Evansville Store (department store), Bon Marche'(department store), Barkers (shoes), the Farmer’s Daughter (restaurant) and WROZ Radio, all businesses gone today from the downtown district.

By the end of the decade, Main Street was its current-day box canyon with the new Civic Center blocking it at Seventh Street, the present day Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. In the next decade the city further choked Main by narrowing it to the serpentine passage it is today. Much of what was is now gone. It can only remain in our memories and photos that have survived. Join us in recreating Main Street in the 1960s. You don’t have to be an older person with memories. Anyone of any age can enjoy the tour. The tour is free and open to the public.

Please reserve a spot to let us know how many are coming. Click to go to the Museum reservation site, fill in the info, and select Main Street Walking Tour. https://emuseum.org/rsvp

Tom Lonnberg is the Chief Curator and Curator of History at the Evansville Museum of Arts, History and Science. He is also the Vice President of the Vanderburgh County Historical Society.

Terry Hughes is a retired educator from the EVSC. In retirement he serves as President of the Vanderburgh County Historical Society. He is also on the Board of Directors of the Southwestern Indiana Historical Society.

Wide Open Evansville by R. Erick Jones

Sunday, September 25th at 2:00 PM in the Browning Room of the Evansville-Vanderburgh Public Library, 200 S. E. Martine Luther King Jr. Blvd, Evansville, IN in conjunction with Your Brother’s Bookstore, 504 Main Street Evansville, Indiana.

In the words of the author: My presentation will cover prohibition coming to Indiana, key liquor violators that the feds were looking into, the booze boat incident/whiskey conspiracy, the Courier‘s turning on Bosse. I’ll also talk about Benjamin Bosse’s involvement and how he escaped indictment.

The author’s description of his book:

What began as a genealogy
search grew into an in-depth
investigation of a period in
Evansville history when
Indiana instituted prohibition
while Kentucky, just across the
Ohio River, did not. Evansville
earned a reputation for being
wide open when its Chief of
Police, Edgar Schmitt, was
accused of selling confiscated
liquor from the police station
and using the police boat for
bootlegging.

This authentic account
provides a remarkable insight
into the investigation and trial.
It covers the forgotten details
of the story and reveals things
that were never brought to
light. Finally, you can read the
truth about this historic event
and get answers to key
questions such as who was
involved.

Copies of the book will be available for purchasing and signing.

Author’s Biography

Photo of author R. Erick Jones
Author R. Erick Jones

Erick Jones is the great-grandson
of Evansville, Indiana Police
Captain Andy Friedle, the officer in
charge of the infamous police
“booze boat” which was used for
bootlegging. His debut book, Wide
Open Evansville
, is the result of
several years of research and
reveals the true story of the 1920
whiskey ring conspiracy in
sensational detail. But his family’s
ties to prohibition don’t end there.
He is also the great-grandson of
former Vanderburgh County
sheriff’s deputy Jesse Jones, who
later became a federal prohibition
agent.
Although he currently lives in Ohio,
he has fond memories of spending
summers as a child with his
grandparents in Evansville.