Evansville Thrifty Nickel's Summer Fun 2015

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LOOK INSIDE FOR FUN SUMMER ACTIVITIES! • GOLF • MUSIC LESSONS • MINIATURE GOLF • SWONDER CAMP • TENNIS CAMP • BOWLING • AND FUN ACTIVITIES FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY!


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SERVING THE EVANSVILLE & TRI-STATE AREA • WWW.EVANSVILLETHRIFTYNICKEL.COM

MAY 7-MAY 13, 2015

ANGEL MOUNDS STATE MEMORIAL The 600+ acres that comprise Angel Mounds State Historic Site were purchased in 1938 by the Indiana Historical Society with financial assistance from Eli Lilly. In 1947, the Indiana Historical Society transferred ownership to the State of Indiana. It is now managed and interpreted by the Indiana State Museum and Historic Sites. Indiana University is responsible for excavations and research on the site. HISTORY OF THE AREA Five to seven hundred years ago, the area we now call Angel Mounds State Historic Site was a thriving Mississippian Indian town. Built between A.D. 1100 and 1300, the town was occupied by one thousand to three thousand inhabitants until its abandonment around 1450. Throughout that time, it was the largest settlement in Indiana. It served as the center of trade, government and religion for smaller satellite communities within a 70-mile radius. Mississippian culture originated in the southeastern United States between A.D. 700 and 800, and in some places survived as late as 1700. The culture was very innovative. It was the first to extensively exploit agriculture and build permanent communities with thousands of residents. This economic and social system was made possible by the widespread cultivation of corn, a crop nutritious enough to be a dietary staple and capable of being harvested and stored in large quantities. The large and important town at Angel Mounds lends its name to the Angel phase, the period of Mississippian culture found near the confluence of the Wabash and Ohio Rivers from the late 11th through the early 15th century. After more than 200 years of constant occupation, the town at Angel Mounds was abandoned, and by 1450, the site was empty. There is no evidence to show why the inhabitants left. Over a long period of occupation, the local supply of wood for building and fire would have been severely depleted. Intense agriculture may have overworked the soil. Game may have been scarce from over hunting. Although there is no indication of attack from outside, there may have been political upheavals from within. Some combination of these factors, or perhaps all, may have played a role in the town?s desertion. The Mississippian people did not disappear entirely from Indiana; however, their lifestyle changed. The center of population also shifted 30 miles to the west of Angel Mounds where dispersed farmsteads and villages continued to exist along the Ohio River through the early 1600s. These later Mississippians were also gone before the arrival of Europeans in Indiana.

BROWN COUNTY STATE PARK P.O. Box 608 Nashville, Indiana 47448 Phone: 812-988-6406 Toll Free: 800-457-8283 Reservations: 812-988-6406 Located in the beautiful hills of Brown County off Highway 46, you will especially enjoy the variety offered in Indiana's largest state park, including nearly 20 miles of roads, with numerous scenic vistas. Comfortable accommodations at the rustic Abe Martin Lodge, large campgrounds, hiking trails, mountain bike trails, interpretive services, and extensive horse riding facilities are some of the things that make Brown County State Park popular year round. HISTORY OF THE AREA Abe Martin has become a favorite son of Brown County and of the State Park, which includes Weed Patch Hill and its surroundings. The Abe Martin Lodge commemorates his connection with the county. For twenty-five years, from 1905-1930, "Abe Martin" was the mouthpiece for Kin Hubbard's daily quips in The Indianapolis News, which, accompanied by sketches of Abe and his friends in action, were syndicated across the nation. Hubbard was born in Bellefontaine, Ohio, and settled in Indianapolis, starting the Abe Martin Character in 1904. At first Abe Martin belonged to no particular locality, but on February 3, 1905, he announced, "I'm goin' ter move ter Brown County Tewmorrow," and the next day he was depicted in a wagon piled high with household goods. His comment was, "By cracky, it's sum travelin' ter git ter Brown County." The reason for the move lay in the fact that the steep hills and the general "picturesque-ness" of that area lent themselves to humerous exaggeration and provided the material Hubbard liked for his pictorial backgrounds. Gradually many of Abe's neighbors came into being, to appear in the pictures and text. The cottages of the Abe Martin Lodge in the Park bear the names of these characters. Much of Hubbard's humor is as timely now as it was during its heyday, from 1905 to 1930. Will Rogers called Kin Hubbard "America's greatest humorist." Hubbard's cartoons played a significant part in drawing the attention of artists and tourists to Brown County. They, in turn, have made the area world famous. In dedication to his memory, the Department of Natural Resources built Abe Martin Lodge in 1932 on Kin Hubbard Ridge, naming the cottages after his principle characters.


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HARMONIE STATE PARK 3451 Harmonie State Park Road New Harmony, Indiana 47631 Phone: 812-682-4821 Toll Free: 800-457-8283 Reservations: 812-682-4821 Harmonie State Park is located "on the banks of the Wabash," 25 miles northwest of Evansville. A beautiful swimming pool, shady picnic areas, ravines and pristine landscape await you here. This is a trail lover's paradise! Trails for walking, biking and nature hikes will lure you for a visit. Nearby Historic New Harmony honors two unique communities from the early 1800s. The Rappites located here in 1814. They were fleeing from religious persecution and awaiting the impending millennium. In 1824, the Owenites brought many great scientists and philosophers into the area when they purchased the Rappites holdings. FACILITIES AND ACTIVITIES OVERVIEW Day-UseFishing yes Hiking Trail yes Picnicking yes Picnic Shelters yes Swimming Beach yes Bike Trails yes Mountain Bike Trails yes Bridle Trails yes Nature Center yes Nature Programs yes BoatingLaunch Ramps yes CampingPrimative yes Electric Sites, # 200 Flush Toilets yes Dumpstation yes Showers yes Camper Cabins yes Youth Group Camp yes WinterActivities yes AccommodationsOutdoor Swimming Pool yes CAMPING * Electric / 200 sites * Youth Tent Areas * Camp Store * Campground Reservations * Dumping

HOOSIER NATIONAL FOREST 811 Constitution Avenue Bedford, Indiana 47421 The Hoosier National Forest, in the hills of south central Indiana, provides a wide mix of opportunities and resources for people to enjoy. Rolling hills, back-country trails, and rural crossroad communities make this small but beautiful Forest a favorite! Forest managers work with the public to develop a shared vision of how this 200,000 acre Forest should be managed. The challenge is to provide a Forest with the values and benefits people want while protecting the unique ecosystems on the Hoosier National Forest.

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LINCOLN BOYHOOD NATIONAL MEMORIAL P.O. Box 1816 Lincoln City, Indiana 47552-1816 Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial preserves the site of the farm where Abraham Lincoln spent 14 formative years of his life, from the ages of 7 to 21. He and his family moved to Indiana in 1816 and stayed until 1830 when they moved on to Illinois. During this period, Lincoln grew physically and intellectually into a man. The people he knew here and the things he experienced had a profound influence on his life. His sense of honesty, his belief in the importance of education and learning, his respect for hard work, his compassion for his fellow man, and his moral convictions about right and wrong were all born of this place and this time. The time he spent here helped shape the man that went on to lead the country. This site is our most direct tie with that time of his life. Lincoln Boyhood preserves the place where he learned to laugh with his father, cried over the death of his mother, read the books that opened his mind, and triumphed over the adversities of life on the frontier.


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FERDINAND STATE FOREST In 1933, a local conservation club raised funds to buy 900 acres to build a lake and establish an area to hunt and fish. They offered management of the project to the Indiana Department of Conservation the following year, and this marked the establishment of Ferdinand State Forest. HISTORY OF THE AREA Established in 1934 as a Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) camp, CCC workers built roads, service buildings, and one of the most beautiful forest lakes in the state. Ferdinand State Forest is well known for its excellent deer and squirrel hunting. The area surrounding Ferdinand is rich in German heritage, including St. Meinrad Archabbey, the Monastary Immaculate Conception and many other local landmarks and seasonal community festivals.

FACILITIES AND ACTIVITIES OVERVIEW GeneralLand, acres Day-UseFishing Hunting Hiking Trail Picnic Shelters Swimming Beach Mountain Bike Trails, miles BoatingBoat Rental Boating Limits Launch Ramps, # CampingPrimative, # Flush Toilets Showers CAMPING

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7657 yes yes yes yes yes 8.8 yes -1 1 69 yes yes

Primitive(class C) camping is available for a fee. Campsites are available on a first come, first serve basis; please self-register for camping at the campground check-in booth. Vault toilets and seasonal drinking water are available. There is a picnic table and grill located on each of the campground's 69 sites. SWIMMING Swimming is permitted in Ferdinand Lake beach area only. The swimming beach is available from the Saturday of Memorial Day weekend through Labor Day. Restrooms, dressing facilities and showers are available to visitors. BOATING A boat launch ramp is located on Ferdinand Lake; boat motors are limited to electric trolling motors only. Rowboat and canoe rental is available on Ferdinand Lake from mid-April through October.

TURKEY RUN STATE PARK 8121 East Park Rd. Marshall, Indiana 47859 Phone: 765-597-2635 Toll Free: 800-457-8283 Reservations: 765-597-2635 You'll marvel at the natural geologic wonders of this beautiful park as you hike along its famous trails. Nestled along State Road 47 southwest of Crawfordsville, you'll want to explore the deep, sandstone ravines and walk along the stands of aged forests, and enjoy the scenic views along Sugar Creek. Visit the Colonel Richard Lieber Cabin which commemorates the contributions of the father of Indiana's state park system. HISTORY OF THE AREA In terms of history, the geology of Turkey Run offers a unique view into the past. A walk into one of the ravines takes the visitor on a trip through time when the sandstone gorges represent 600 to 300 million years of nature's handwork. Mansfield sandstone, named after Mansfield, Indiana, is the main material which forms Turkey Run's cliffs. Many years ago, flowing water deposited sand, then pressure and cementation changed the grains of sand into sedimentary rock. Later, wind and water began to cut the sandstone after it was exposed to the air, but it was the ice age and glacial action that shaped the sandstone into familiar forms. Glacial ice did at one time cover the north portion of the park. As the glacier melted, the debris collected by the moving ice was deposited. Stones of many shapes and sizes were ground against the softer sandstone by the rushing melt-water. This grinding action helped carve the Sugar Creek stream bed as well as many of the canyons of Turkey Run. Remnants of these hard round stones, called glacial till, may be found in the stream beds today. In the last few hundred years, the erosion of the sandstone has continued at a slower pace. The gorges are very similar to what was seen by Native Americans and pioneers. The Miami Indians walked many of the trails that today's park visitors still use. The last Native American, Johnny Green, is said to have died while fishing from Goose Rock. The early pioneers have left traces of their heritage. The historical Lusk Home and Mill site are reminders of early enterprise and ambition. Acquiring the land in 1825, Captain Lusk built a grist mill that was completed in 1829. The Lusk's stewardship of the


LOTS OF FUN AND INTERESTING ACTIVITIES FOR THE KIDS!

TURKEY RUN STATE PARK (Continued from page 4B) land preserved the pristine nature of the land. Also, the log cabin museum, located on Sunset Point, was built in 1848. It was moved to Turkey Run in 1918, and the large tulip logs serve as a reminder of the large tulip tree forests that supplied builders of early America. The log church across the concrete bridge near the Inn was originally constructed in 1923. It stands as a reminder of the religious heritage left by our forefathers. Non-denominational services are still conducted through the warmer months every Sunday at 10:00A.M. FACILITIES AND ACTIVITIES OVERVIEW Day-UseFishing yes Hiking Trail yes Picnicking yes Picnic Shelters yes Swimming Beach yes Bridle Trails yes Nature Center yes Nature Programs yes

GEORGE ROGERS CLARK NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK 401 S. 2nd St. Vincennes, Indiana 47591-1001 A classic memorial stands on the site of Fort Sackville to commemorate the capture of the fort from British Lt. Governor Henry Hamilton and his soldiers by Lt. Col. George Rogers Clark and his frontiersmen on February 25, 1779. The heroic march of Clark's men from Kaskaskia on the Mississippi in mid-winter and the subsequent victory over the British remains one of the great feats of the American Revolution. Adjacent to the memorial there is a visitor center where one can see interpretive programs and displays. HISTORY OF THE AREA An intense interest in commemorating the great accomplishments of George Rogers Clark had developed among the citizens of Vincennes and the state of Indiana during the early 1920s as the 150th anniversary of the American Revolution neared. After various proposals had been considered, President Calvin Coolidge signed into law a resolution establishing the George Rogers Clark Sesquicentennial Commission on May 23, 1928. The 15-member commission was created for the purpose of "designing and constructing at or near the site of Fort Sackville . . . a permanent memorial, commemorating the winning of the Old Northwest and the achievements of George Rogers Clark and his associates. " President Franklin Delano Roosevelt dedicated the memorial June 14, 1936. In 1940, the memorial became a unit of the Indiana Department of Conservation. In 1966, Congress made the building and grounds a part of the National Park Service. The measure was signed into law by President Lyndon B. Johnson during a ceremony at the memorial on July 23, 1966. The Clark Memorial is more than 80 feet high and is 90 feet across at the base. The walls are two feet thick. The exterior is composed of granite from Vermont, Minnesota, and Alabama. Towering over the entrance is an eagle with outspread wings. Above the 16 Doric columns is an inscription which reads: "The Conquest of the West - George Rogers Clark and The Frontiersmen of the American Revolution." Inside the rotunda are seven murals, each created on a single piece of Belgium linen 16 feet by 28 feet. They were painted by Ezra Winter dur-

ing a period of approximately two and a half years. Hermon Atkins MacNeil, designer of the Standing Liberty quarter, sculptured the bronze statue of Clark. Three of Clark's quotations are inscribed in the memorial: "Great things have been effected by a few men well conducted;" "Our cause is just . . . our country will be grateful;" and "If a country is not worth protecting it is not worth claiming." There are Roman numerals at three locations. Left of the steps are the numerals, 1931, the year construction of the memorial began. Above the memorial's entrance door are the Roman numerals for the years, 1779 and 1933. In 1779, Clark captured Fort Sackville from the British and in 1933, the memorial was completed. Clark's birth and death years of 1752 and 1818 encircle the statue's base. It is highly fitting that the nation honors the great individuals and deeds of the past. Certain things do not change. The virtues that Clark and his men exhibited transcend an era. A memorial such as this serves as a reminder that courage, fortitude, and valor do not go out of style. The truly great heroes of history age well and provide guidance for the future.


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Go For The Green! 2015 TRI-STATE

PRO-AM SCHEDULE WWW.TRISTATEPROAM.COM

DATE March

FOR INFORMATION & APPLICATIONS Go To: www.ejgainfo.com Masters Series Tournament Schedule June 29 ............................................... Oak Meadow Country Club July 9....................................................... Evansville Country Club July 13..................................................... Mt. Carmel Golf Course July 20.................................................... Henderson Country Club TBD ........................................ Victoria National G.C. Invitational Top 12 Boys / 4 Girls Qualify for the Masters Series Championship at Victoria National Golf Club Masters Series Entry Fees E.J.G.A. Members Non- Members Boys / 18 Holes $ 25.00 $ 55.00 Girls / 18 Holes $ 25.00 $ 55.00 All Masters Series Events include Food and Beverage Masters Series Eligibility 1. Boys and Girls that participate on their High School Golf Team (Varsity or Reserve) 2. Won on the E.J.G.A. Prep Tour in the 2014 or 2015 Season 3. Been approved by E.J.G.A. Officials or Host Golf Professional All Masters Series Events will have 3 Flights – Boys 14-18, 12&13 Girls 14 -18. Junior Golfers should be able to shoot under 95 to participate in these events.

Memberships Available • Lessons • On Target Golf School

Tri-State’s Preferred Club Repair

7800 Morgan Avenue

812.473.2010

GO TO OUR WEBSITE AND SIGN UP FOR OUR GO LOW CLUB FREE STUFF!

www.TeeTimeGolfComplex.com

23 30 April 6 13 20 27 May 4 11 18 25 June 1 8 15 22 29 July 6 13 20 27 August 3 10 17 24 31 Sept. 7 14 21 28 October 5 12 16 19 26 Nov. 2 9

SITE

CC of Old Vincennes (EST) Carmi CC Owensboro CC Quail Crossing GC Rolling Hills CC Links at Novadell Cambridge GC Washington CC (EST) Eagle Valley GC Memorial Day Boonville CC Breckinridge CC TBA Hopkinsville Golf & CC Sultan’s Run GC (EST) Henderson CC Oak Meadow CC Christmas Lake GC Western Hills CC TBA Country Oaks GC (EST) Rolling Hills CC Cambridge GC The Pearl GC Labor Day Owensboro CC Sultan's Run GC (EST) Oak Meadow CC Christmas Lake GC Henderson CC Challenge Cup Matches Breckinridge CC Links at Novadell Boonville CC Ben Hawes State Park GC

PHONE

812-882-9800 618-384-5011 270-683-3387 812-897-1247 812-925-3301 270-886-1101 812-868-4653 812-254-2060 812-867-7888 812-897-1370 270-389-3186 270-886-2498 812-482-1009 270-827-3444 812-214-4309 812-544-2271 812-838-5631 812-486-3300 812-925-3301 812-868-4653 812-868-4653 270-683-3387 812-482-1009 812-214-4309 812-544-2271 270-827-3444 812-482-1009 270-389-3186 270-886-1101 812-897-1370 270-687-7137

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MAY 7-MAY 13, 2015


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