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Conner Prairie

Conner Prairie is a living history museum in unincorporated south-central Hamilton County, Indiana, United States, which preserves the William Conner home. The home is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and the museum recreates 19th-century life along the White River. The museum also hosts several programs and events, including outdoor performances by the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra and summer camps.

Conner Prairie
Established1934[1]
LocationEast bank of White River, Hamilton County, Indiana
Coordinates39°59′04″N 86°01′44″W / 39.984530°N 86.028864°W / 39.984530; -86.028864Coordinates: 39°59′04″N 86°01′44″W / 39.984530°N 86.028864°W / 39.984530; -86.028864
TypeLiving history museum
Visitors414,342 (2019)[1]
DirectorNorman O. Burns, II[1]
Websitewww.connerprairie.org
William Conner House
William Conner House
Location13400 Allisonville Road
Fishers, Indiana
Coordinates39°59′3.5″N 86°1′52.8″W / 39.984306°N 86.031333°W / 39.984306; -86.031333
Built1823 (1823)
Architectural styleFederal
NRHP reference No.80000038[2]
Added to NRHPFebruary 8, 1980

History and development

 
1886 baseball demonstration at Liberty Corner

The property and William Conner house were purchased by pharmaceutical executive Eli Lilly in 1933[3] or 1934.[4] With the aim of connecting "people with history in ways that books cannot," Lilly restored the house, and opened it to visitors.[5] The property was initially known as Conner Prairie Farm. Lilly appointed resident Vern H. Fisher manager.[6] By 1940, Lilly had added several structures to the property, including a still, a loom house, and a trading post.[4] After Fisher's death in 1942, Tillman Bubenzer was appointed farm manager until 1977. The farm was unprofitable and depended on Lilly's support.[7]

In 1964, Lilly transferred the house and its outbuildings to a charitable trust of $150 million.[5][7] Earlham College, a Quaker liberal-arts college in Richmond, Indiana, was named as trustee. In transferring the property to the college, Lilly provided an endowment for its operation and continued to offer support with the provision that the property would be open to the public.[4] He also transferred 1,371 acres (555 ha) of surrounding farmland to the college, suggesting that Earlham could sell the land and use its proceeds for the museum.[8] Earlham elected to retain the farmland and expand the museum, constructing an 1836 village (Prairietown) with funds provided by Lilly for the purpose. The museum grew in scope and popularity, and attendance increased by 22 percent from 1975 to 1976.[9]

In 1999, tensions began to develop between the board of directors and the college about the museum's governance and the college's financial policies. The dispute culminated in Earlham's dismissal of the museum's president and board of directors in June 2003. The Indiana attorney general intervened and, after a lengthy and contentious dispute, a settlement was reached in which Earlham resigned as trustee of the charitable trust, the Lilly endowment was allocated between Conner Prairie and the college, and the museum became independent.[citation needed] Conner Prairie has a board of directors, and maintains its finances and endowment fund. In 2009, it joined the Smithsonian Affiliations program.[10] After restructuring, the museum had an endowment of $91 million and an operating budget of $9 million by 2011.[5]

On December 17, 2010, Conner Prairie received the National Medal for Museum and Library Service and a $10,000 prize in a ceremony at the White House.[11] The museum opened another exhibit in June 2011, "The 1863 Civil War Journey: Raid on Indiana". This exhibit documents Morgan's Raid with live action, video, and interactive activities.[12] The installation and design of the exhibit required a 4.3 million dollar investment.[5]

Layout and concept

 
Welcome Center exterior

The museum grounds are divided into several sections in which different historical eras are recreated in a living timeline. Staff in historical clothing demonstrate the way early inhabitants of the area lived. They explain their lifestyles in character while performing chores such as cooking, chopping wood, making pottery, and tending to animals. Visitors are often invited to join in the activities.

The museum's main building, the Welcome Center, contains the entrance lobby, ticket-sales counter, "Create.Connect" (history and science exhibits), Discovery Station/Craft Corner indoor play area, banquet hall, and gift shop. The gift shop sells pottery made by the museum's costumed staff in addition to more conventional souvenirs.

Attractions

Conner Prairie has several permanent attractions and a number of semi-regular events, including monthly programs such as "Taste the Past", a Headless Horseman ride in the autumn, candlelight tours, and a country fair. It hosts American Civil War reenactments, Hearthside Suppers, and Christmas events and dinners.

Create Connect

Create Connect is an indoor attraction, open year-round, that "Celebrates Hoosier Innovation". This attraction offers activities such as building a windmill, experimenting with circuits, building a model plane, and building a chain reaction. The area consists of smaller exhibits that explore wind energy at the turn of the century, flight in the early 1900s, rural electrification in the 1930s, and the role of science during the space race of the 1950s and 1960s. The area is usually facilitated by a blue-shirt staff member, but may occasionally have a first-person interpreter dressed in costume.[13]

Makesmith Workshop

Makesmith Workshop's theme changes through the seasons. In the winter, it focuses on textiles; in the summer, it turns to metalworking; and in the spring and fall it changes to woodworking. Children of all ages can participate in basic trade activities such as sewing on a button, hammering in a nail, or molding a piece of metal.[14]

Animal Encounters

Animal Encounters is a functioning barn on Conner Prairie grounds across from the Conner House. It houses more than eighteen kinds of chickens, goats, sheep, cows, ducks, and horses. Children and adults can learn about the different aspects of the barn and the animals it houses by using all five senses. The barn's activities include milking goats and cows, collecting eggs from chickens, and shearing sheep.[15]

William Conner House

Built in 1823, the William Conner House is a two-story, Federal-style brick residence on the terrace edge of the west fork of the White River. It is believed to be one of the first brick buildings built in central Indiana. Seven of William and Elizabeth Conner's ten children were born in the home. The house was used as a meeting place for the Hamilton County commissioners, other county officials, and the circuit court, and contained a post office in the county's early days.[16] Conner lived in the house until 1837. William and Elizabeth's children and their families (or their tenants) continued to live in the house until its ownership left the family in 1871. During the 1860s, Conner's Lenape children with Mekinges Conner (his first wife) unsuccessfully attempted to gain title to the family's Indiana land.[17][18][19]

Subsequent owners lived in the house until 1934, when Eli Lilly Jr. purchased Conner's former farm and the then-dilapidated house. Lilly, president and CEO of Eli Lilly and Company and president of the Indiana Historical Society, intended to restore the house and turn it into a museum.[18][20] Local architect Robert Frost Daggett and contractor Charles Latham supervised the home's stabilization and restoration and the addition of a six-columned porch overlooking the White River (the porch was removed in a later renovation). Lilly donated the house and farm to Earlham College in 1963, and it became part of Conner Prairie.[17] In 1980, the house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[2]

The Conner House has undergone additional restoration, and is preserved as representative of an 1820s home. Its function as a house museum continues to evolve.[21]

1863 Civil War Journey

"The 1863 Civil War Journey: Raid on Indiana" documents Morgan's Raid, the longest raid of the Civil War behind enemy lines and the only Civil War battle event in Indiana.[5] Using live action, video, and other interactive activities, the Civil War Journey documents the raid through the eyes of historical figures Attia Porter, Confederate brigadier general John Hunt Morgan, and Albert Cheetham.[12] Visitors can walk through a reconstruction of the town of Dupont and be a part of the Civil War; children can board a replica steamboat and play in the water area.[22]

The Civil War Journey is set in Dupont, a southern Indiana town which was invaded by Confederate raiders in 1863. Visitors can stop by the Mayfield and Nichols dry-goods store, the Porter family home, a telegraph station, a soldiers' camp and a field hospital. Although much of the Civil War Journey is presented with modern technology, historic interpreters also play a large part in its presentation. Visitors can talk to soldiers from the 103rd Indiana Regiment and residents of Dupont, who share their views of the war and Morgan's raid. Reenactors of Union and Confederate units may be present, painting a more in-depth portrait of the raid.

Prairietown

 
1836 pottery wheel demonstration in Prairietown

Prairietown is a recreated 1836 pioneer community. Unlike the Civil War Journey, Prairietown is not an actual Indiana settlement but a recreation of what such a settlement may have been like in the early days of Indiana statehood. In addition to several homes, Prairietown has blacksmith and pottery shops, an inn, a doctor's office, a store, a carpentry shop, and a schoolhouse. Visitors arriving early in the day can help with morning chores, and all visitors are invited to play a role in Prairietown society with a character card found at the entrance.[15]

Prairietown aims to demonstrate what day-to-day life was like for residents of frontier Indiana. Historic interpreters in period clothing, presenting first-person impressions of the people of Prairietown, offer a unique perspective. Although these interpreters will not discuss events (or inventions) after 1836, blue-shirted museum employees can help visitors approach Prairietown from a modern point of view.

1859 Balloon Voyage

On June 6, 2009, Conner Prairie opened its 1859 Balloon Voyage, which allows visitors to take 15-minute rides in a tethered balloon to a height of 377 feet (115 m). The balloon is filled with 210,000 cubic feet (5,900 m3) of helium and is 105 feet (32 m) tall, making it the world's largest tethered gas passenger balloon.[23] Its gondola can carry up to about twenty people, and the balloon (manufactured by Aerophile) can lift up to 4.5 tons. It is one of five such balloons in the United States.[citation needed]

An educational exhibit accompanies the balloon ride, recreating a Lafayette street and including hands-on, interactive elements that teach the historical context and technology of ballooning. The attraction is based on the August 17, 1859 trip by John Wise, who made the first airmail delivery in the United States – 25 miles (40 km), from Lafayette to Crawfordsville, Indiana – of 123 letters and 23 circulars.[24][25]

Sunset and nighttime flights are made on weekends when the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra plays its Symphony on the Prairie summer series. The balloon ride is weather-permitting, and does not operate in high winds. With the rest of the park, it is open from April to October.

Lenape Indian Camp

 
Wigwam in Lenape Indian Camp.

The Lenape (Delaware) Indian Camp recreates bark and cattail-mat wigwams and a fur trade camp with a log cabin, as well as Lenape trades such as pottery, cooking, gardening, hunting, games, beading, weaving, and more. Visitors can learn how the Lenape Indians lived in Indiana, hunting and trapping animals to trade with European fur traders. There are tomahawk throws once every day and pendant-making once a day in the summer as well as bracelet-making with beads in the winter.[citation needed]

Programs and events

Camps

Conner Prairie offers many different types of summer camps including, Adventure Camp, Science Camp For Girls, Science Camp For Boys, Archaeology Camp, Photography Camp, Maker Camp, and Art Camp. In this camp, participants use diverse media to create various types of art.

Preschool on the Prairie

Preschool on the Prairie, which opened Fall 2019, is held in the president's house and is suitable for children ages 3–5.[15]

Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra

The museum is the summer home of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra. The Friday-Saturday Symphony on the Prairie concert series attracts over 100,000 concertgoers per year, a substantial portion of Conner Prairie's visitor count.[citation needed] There are tables and chairs set up on the prairie and there is an option to bring a blanket and sit on the grass.

Follow the North Star

For 20 years, Conner Prairie hosted the "Follow the North Star" experience, a slavery reenactment experience in which students as young as 12 years old would participate in a recreation of the Underground Railroad. In 2003, the program won the national award for Excellence in Programming from the American Alliance of Museums, as well as the national Award of Merit from the American Association for State and Local History in 2012. However, organizations such as the American Civil Liberties Union and academics have criticized the reenactment, saying it "presents a sanitized version of history, lacks depth in connecting the impact of slavery to present day race relations, and can traumatize children, specifically children of color."[26] In 2019, Conner Prairie announced they would "reimagine" the experience in response to the criticisms, with the program not being presented since 2019.[27]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Most Popular Indianapolis-Area Attractions". Indianapolis Business Journal. Retrieved November 15, 2020.
  2. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  3. ^ Sylvester, Lorna Lutes (1969). "Conner Prairie Pioneer Settlement and Museum". Indiana Magazine of History. 65 (1): 1–24. JSTOR 27789556.
  4. ^ a b c The Encyclopedia of Indianapolis. Indiana University Press. 1994. p. 472. ISBN 978-0253112491.
  5. ^ a b c d e Rothstein, Edward (June 21, 2011). "Where Park Visitors Answer a Call to Battle". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved November 24, 2022.
  6. ^ "Conner Prairie Manager Passes Away at Florida Resort". The Berkshire News. May 1942.
  7. ^ a b Allison, David B. (2010). Entertaining the Public to Educate the Public at Conner Prairie: Prairietown 1975-2006. pg. 41. http://hdl.handle.net/1805/2499
  8. ^ Duck, Berkley W. (2011). Twilight at Conner Prairie: The Creation, Betrayal, and Rescue of a Museum. Rowman Altamira. p. 8. ISBN 978-0759120105.
  9. ^ Allison, David B. (2010). Entertaining the Public to Educate the Public at Conner Prairie: Prairietown 1975-2006. pg. 72. http://hdl.handle.net/1805/2499
  10. ^ Alpha Garrett (2009). . Indianapolis Star. Archived from the original on March 27, 2012. Retrieved July 15, 2011.
  11. ^ Reason, Betsy (December 15, 2010). "First lady to honor Conner Prairie at White House". Indianapolis Star. Retrieved December 18, 2010.
  12. ^ a b . Inside Indiana Business. December 1, 2010. Archived from the original on December 8, 2010. Retrieved December 18, 2010.
  13. ^ "Conner Prairie: Create.Connect". Conner Prairie. Retrieved March 12, 2019.
  14. ^ "Conner Prairie: Makesmith Workshop". Conner Prairie. Retrieved March 12, 2019.
  15. ^ a b c "Conner Prairie". Conner Prairie. Retrieved March 12, 2019.
  16. ^ Larson, John Lauritz, and David G. Vanderstel (December 1984). "Agent of Empire: William Conner on the Indiana Frontier, 1800–1835". Indiana Magazine of History. Bloomington: Indiana University. 80: 318. Retrieved January 19, 2018.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) See also: David G. Vanderstel, “William Conner” in David J. Bodenhamer and Robert G. Barrows, ed. (1994). The Encyclopedia of Indianapolis. Indiana University Press. p. 471. ISBN 978-0-253-31222-8. Retrieved December 29, 2008.
  17. ^ a b Cox, Stephen (Winter 1993). "New Life: Eli Lilly and the First Restoration". Traces of Indiana and Midwestern History. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society. 5 (1): 24–27. Retrieved January 23, 2018.
  18. ^ a b Huser, William A. (September 15, 2003). . Glenn Black Laboratory of Archaeology and The Trustees of Indiana University. Archived from the original on March 11, 2009. Retrieved June 5, 2009.
  19. ^ "Indiana State Historic Architectural and Archaeological Research Database (SHAARD)" (Searchable database). Department of Natural Resources, Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology. Retrieved April 1, 2016. Note: This includes Myron Vourax (November 1979). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: William Conner House" (PDF). Retrieved April 1, 2016. and Accompanying photographs.
  20. ^ Madison, James H. (2006). Eli Lilly: A Life, 1885–1977 (2nd ed.). Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society Press. pp. 83, 154, 172 –82. ISBN 978-0-87195-197-7.
  21. ^ Cox, Stephen (Winter 1993). "Back to the 1820s: The Re-restoration". Traces of Indiana and Midwestern History. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society. 5 (1): 28–33. Retrieved January 23, 2018.
  22. ^ Conner Prairie. . 1863 Civil War Journey: Raid on Indiana. Conner Prairie. Archived from the original on April 14, 2011. Retrieved April 18, 2011.
  23. ^ . WTHR Eyewitness News. June 2, 2009. Archived from the original on June 29, 2011. Retrieved June 5, 2009.
  24. ^ . Inside Indiana Business. May 5, 2009. Archived from the original on February 29, 2012. Retrieved June 5, 2009.
  25. ^ Ritchie, Carrie (June 2, 2009). "Conner Prairie balloon goes up Saturday". The Indianapolis Star. Archived from the original on January 26, 2013. Retrieved June 5, 2009.
  26. ^ Lewis, Olivia. "Conner Prairie slavery re-enactment draws criticism". The Indianapolis Star. Retrieved December 16, 2020.
  27. ^ "Conner Prairie to change its Follow the North Star program". Retrieved December 16, 2020.

External links

  • Conner Prairie website
  • William Conner Farm Architectural Drawings Collection, a digital collection of site plans and architectural drawings created by architect Robert Frost Daggett of the William Conner Farm.
  • Conner Prairie Historic Clothing Collection
  • Conner Prairie Historical Almanac Collection
  • Conner Prairie Museum Textile Collection
  • Conner Prairie Rural History Project
  • Conner Prairie Traditional Crafts: Preservation and Reproduction
  • Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS) No. IN-46, "William Conner House, Highway 234, Noblesville, Hamilton County, IN", 4 photos

conner, prairie, living, history, museum, unincorporated, south, central, hamilton, county, indiana, united, states, which, preserves, william, conner, home, home, listed, national, register, historic, places, museum, recreates, 19th, century, life, along, whi. Conner Prairie is a living history museum in unincorporated south central Hamilton County Indiana United States which preserves the William Conner home The home is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and the museum recreates 19th century life along the White River The museum also hosts several programs and events including outdoor performances by the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra and summer camps Conner PrairieEstablished1934 1 LocationEast bank of White River Hamilton County IndianaCoordinates39 59 04 N 86 01 44 W 39 984530 N 86 028864 W 39 984530 86 028864 Coordinates 39 59 04 N 86 01 44 W 39 984530 N 86 028864 W 39 984530 86 028864TypeLiving history museumVisitors414 342 2019 1 DirectorNorman O Burns II 1 Websitewww wbr connerprairie wbr orgWilliam Conner HouseU S National Register of Historic PlacesWilliam Conner HouseShow map of IndianaShow map of the United StatesLocation13400 Allisonville RoadFishers IndianaCoordinates39 59 3 5 N 86 1 52 8 W 39 984306 N 86 031333 W 39 984306 86 031333Built1823 1823 Architectural styleFederalNRHP reference No 80000038 2 Added to NRHPFebruary 8 1980 Contents 1 History and development 2 Layout and concept 3 Attractions 3 1 Create Connect 3 2 Makesmith Workshop 3 3 Animal Encounters 3 4 William Conner House 3 5 1863 Civil War Journey 3 6 Prairietown 3 7 1859 Balloon Voyage 3 8 Lenape Indian Camp 4 Programs and events 4 1 Camps 4 2 Preschool on the Prairie 4 3 Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra 4 4 Follow the North Star 5 References 6 External linksHistory and development Edit 1886 baseball demonstration at Liberty Corner The property and William Conner house were purchased by pharmaceutical executive Eli Lilly in 1933 3 or 1934 4 With the aim of connecting people with history in ways that books cannot Lilly restored the house and opened it to visitors 5 The property was initially known as Conner Prairie Farm Lilly appointed resident Vern H Fisher manager 6 By 1940 Lilly had added several structures to the property including a still a loom house and a trading post 4 After Fisher s death in 1942 Tillman Bubenzer was appointed farm manager until 1977 The farm was unprofitable and depended on Lilly s support 7 In 1964 Lilly transferred the house and its outbuildings to a charitable trust of 150 million 5 7 Earlham College a Quaker liberal arts college in Richmond Indiana was named as trustee In transferring the property to the college Lilly provided an endowment for its operation and continued to offer support with the provision that the property would be open to the public 4 He also transferred 1 371 acres 555 ha of surrounding farmland to the college suggesting that Earlham could sell the land and use its proceeds for the museum 8 Earlham elected to retain the farmland and expand the museum constructing an 1836 village Prairietown with funds provided by Lilly for the purpose The museum grew in scope and popularity and attendance increased by 22 percent from 1975 to 1976 9 In 1999 tensions began to develop between the board of directors and the college about the museum s governance and the college s financial policies The dispute culminated in Earlham s dismissal of the museum s president and board of directors in June 2003 The Indiana attorney general intervened and after a lengthy and contentious dispute a settlement was reached in which Earlham resigned as trustee of the charitable trust the Lilly endowment was allocated between Conner Prairie and the college and the museum became independent citation needed Conner Prairie has a board of directors and maintains its finances and endowment fund In 2009 it joined the Smithsonian Affiliations program 10 After restructuring the museum had an endowment of 91 million and an operating budget of 9 million by 2011 5 On December 17 2010 Conner Prairie received the National Medal for Museum and Library Service and a 10 000 prize in a ceremony at the White House 11 The museum opened another exhibit in June 2011 The 1863 Civil War Journey Raid on Indiana This exhibit documents Morgan s Raid with live action video and interactive activities 12 The installation and design of the exhibit required a 4 3 million dollar investment 5 Layout and concept Edit Welcome Center exterior The museum grounds are divided into several sections in which different historical eras are recreated in a living timeline Staff in historical clothing demonstrate the way early inhabitants of the area lived They explain their lifestyles in character while performing chores such as cooking chopping wood making pottery and tending to animals Visitors are often invited to join in the activities The museum s main building the Welcome Center contains the entrance lobby ticket sales counter Create Connect history and science exhibits Discovery Station Craft Corner indoor play area banquet hall and gift shop The gift shop sells pottery made by the museum s costumed staff in addition to more conventional souvenirs Attractions EditConner Prairie has several permanent attractions and a number of semi regular events including monthly programs such as Taste the Past a Headless Horseman ride in the autumn candlelight tours and a country fair It hosts American Civil War reenactments Hearthside Suppers and Christmas events and dinners Create Connect Edit Create Connect is an indoor attraction open year round that Celebrates Hoosier Innovation This attraction offers activities such as building a windmill experimenting with circuits building a model plane and building a chain reaction The area consists of smaller exhibits that explore wind energy at the turn of the century flight in the early 1900s rural electrification in the 1930s and the role of science during the space race of the 1950s and 1960s The area is usually facilitated by a blue shirt staff member but may occasionally have a first person interpreter dressed in costume 13 Makesmith Workshop Edit Makesmith Workshop s theme changes through the seasons In the winter it focuses on textiles in the summer it turns to metalworking and in the spring and fall it changes to woodworking Children of all ages can participate in basic trade activities such as sewing on a button hammering in a nail or molding a piece of metal 14 Animal Encounters Edit Animal Encounters is a functioning barn on Conner Prairie grounds across from the Conner House It houses more than eighteen kinds of chickens goats sheep cows ducks and horses Children and adults can learn about the different aspects of the barn and the animals it houses by using all five senses The barn s activities include milking goats and cows collecting eggs from chickens and shearing sheep 15 William Conner House Edit Built in 1823 the William Conner House is a two story Federal style brick residence on the terrace edge of the west fork of the White River It is believed to be one of the first brick buildings built in central Indiana Seven of William and Elizabeth Conner s ten children were born in the home The house was used as a meeting place for the Hamilton County commissioners other county officials and the circuit court and contained a post office in the county s early days 16 Conner lived in the house until 1837 William and Elizabeth s children and their families or their tenants continued to live in the house until its ownership left the family in 1871 During the 1860s Conner s Lenape children with Mekinges Conner his first wife unsuccessfully attempted to gain title to the family s Indiana land 17 18 19 Subsequent owners lived in the house until 1934 when Eli Lilly Jr purchased Conner s former farm and the then dilapidated house Lilly president and CEO of Eli Lilly and Company and president of the Indiana Historical Society intended to restore the house and turn it into a museum 18 20 Local architect Robert Frost Daggett and contractor Charles Latham supervised the home s stabilization and restoration and the addition of a six columned porch overlooking the White River the porch was removed in a later renovation Lilly donated the house and farm to Earlham College in 1963 and it became part of Conner Prairie 17 In 1980 the house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places 2 The Conner House has undergone additional restoration and is preserved as representative of an 1820s home Its function as a house museum continues to evolve 21 1863 Civil War Journey Edit The 1863 Civil War Journey Raid on Indiana documents Morgan s Raid the longest raid of the Civil War behind enemy lines and the only Civil War battle event in Indiana 5 Using live action video and other interactive activities the Civil War Journey documents the raid through the eyes of historical figures Attia Porter Confederate brigadier general John Hunt Morgan and Albert Cheetham 12 Visitors can walk through a reconstruction of the town of Dupont and be a part of the Civil War children can board a replica steamboat and play in the water area 22 The Civil War Journey is set in Dupont a southern Indiana town which was invaded by Confederate raiders in 1863 Visitors can stop by the Mayfield and Nichols dry goods store the Porter family home a telegraph station a soldiers camp and a field hospital Although much of the Civil War Journey is presented with modern technology historic interpreters also play a large part in its presentation Visitors can talk to soldiers from the 103rd Indiana Regiment and residents of Dupont who share their views of the war and Morgan s raid Reenactors of Union and Confederate units may be present painting a more in depth portrait of the raid Prairietown Edit 1836 pottery wheel demonstration in Prairietown Prairietown is a recreated 1836 pioneer community Unlike the Civil War Journey Prairietown is not an actual Indiana settlement but a recreation of what such a settlement may have been like in the early days of Indiana statehood In addition to several homes Prairietown has blacksmith and pottery shops an inn a doctor s office a store a carpentry shop and a schoolhouse Visitors arriving early in the day can help with morning chores and all visitors are invited to play a role in Prairietown society with a character card found at the entrance 15 Prairietown aims to demonstrate what day to day life was like for residents of frontier Indiana Historic interpreters in period clothing presenting first person impressions of the people of Prairietown offer a unique perspective Although these interpreters will not discuss events or inventions after 1836 blue shirted museum employees can help visitors approach Prairietown from a modern point of view 1859 Balloon Voyage Edit On June 6 2009 Conner Prairie opened its 1859 Balloon Voyage which allows visitors to take 15 minute rides in a tethered balloon to a height of 377 feet 115 m The balloon is filled with 210 000 cubic feet 5 900 m3 of helium and is 105 feet 32 m tall making it the world s largest tethered gas passenger balloon 23 Its gondola can carry up to about twenty people and the balloon manufactured by Aerophile can lift up to 4 5 tons It is one of five such balloons in the United States citation needed An educational exhibit accompanies the balloon ride recreating a Lafayette street and including hands on interactive elements that teach the historical context and technology of ballooning The attraction is based on the August 17 1859 trip by John Wise who made the first airmail delivery in the United States 25 miles 40 km from Lafayette to Crawfordsville Indiana of 123 letters and 23 circulars 24 25 Sunset and nighttime flights are made on weekends when the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra plays its Symphony on the Prairie summer series The balloon ride is weather permitting and does not operate in high winds With the rest of the park it is open from April to October Lenape Indian Camp Edit Wigwam in Lenape Indian Camp The Lenape Delaware Indian Camp recreates bark and cattail mat wigwams and a fur trade camp with a log cabin as well as Lenape trades such as pottery cooking gardening hunting games beading weaving and more Visitors can learn how the Lenape Indians lived in Indiana hunting and trapping animals to trade with European fur traders There are tomahawk throws once every day and pendant making once a day in the summer as well as bracelet making with beads in the winter citation needed Programs and events EditCamps Edit Conner Prairie offers many different types of summer camps including Adventure Camp Science Camp For Girls Science Camp For Boys Archaeology Camp Photography Camp Maker Camp and Art Camp In this camp participants use diverse media to create various types of art Preschool on the Prairie Edit Preschool on the Prairie which opened Fall 2019 is held in the president s house and is suitable for children ages 3 5 15 Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra Edit The museum is the summer home of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra The Friday Saturday Symphony on the Prairie concert series attracts over 100 000 concertgoers per year a substantial portion of Conner Prairie s visitor count citation needed There are tables and chairs set up on the prairie and there is an option to bring a blanket and sit on the grass Follow the North Star Edit For 20 years Conner Prairie hosted the Follow the North Star experience a slavery reenactment experience in which students as young as 12 years old would participate in a recreation of the Underground Railroad In 2003 the program won the national award for Excellence in Programming from the American Alliance of Museums as well as the national Award of Merit from the American Association for State and Local History in 2012 However organizations such as the American Civil Liberties Union and academics have criticized the reenactment saying it presents a sanitized version of history lacks depth in connecting the impact of slavery to present day race relations and can traumatize children specifically children of color 26 In 2019 Conner Prairie announced they would reimagine the experience in response to the criticisms with the program not being presented since 2019 27 References Edit a b c Most Popular Indianapolis Area Attractions Indianapolis Business Journal Retrieved November 15 2020 a b National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service July 9 2010 Sylvester Lorna Lutes 1969 Conner Prairie Pioneer Settlement and Museum Indiana Magazine of History 65 1 1 24 JSTOR 27789556 a b c The Encyclopedia of Indianapolis Indiana University Press 1994 p 472 ISBN 978 0253112491 a b c d e Rothstein Edward June 21 2011 Where Park Visitors Answer a Call to Battle The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 24 2022 Conner Prairie Manager Passes Away at Florida Resort The Berkshire News May 1942 a b Allison David B 2010 Entertaining the Public to Educate the Public at Conner Prairie Prairietown 1975 2006 pg 41 http hdl handle net 1805 2499 Duck Berkley W 2011 Twilight at Conner Prairie The Creation Betrayal and Rescue of a Museum Rowman Altamira p 8 ISBN 978 0759120105 Allison David B 2010 Entertaining the Public to Educate the Public at Conner Prairie Prairietown 1975 2006 pg 72 http hdl handle net 1805 2499 Alpha Garrett 2009 Conner Prairie releases documentary History Rising a Conner Prairie Balloon Adventure Indianapolis Star Archived from the original on March 27 2012 Retrieved July 15 2011 Reason Betsy December 15 2010 First lady to honor Conner Prairie at White House Indianapolis Star Retrieved December 18 2010 a b Conner Prairie to Launch New 4 3 Million Exhibit Inside Indiana Business December 1 2010 Archived from the original on December 8 2010 Retrieved December 18 2010 Conner Prairie Create Connect Conner Prairie Retrieved March 12 2019 Conner Prairie Makesmith Workshop Conner Prairie Retrieved March 12 2019 a b c Conner Prairie Conner Prairie Retrieved March 12 2019 Larson John Lauritz and David G Vanderstel December 1984 Agent of Empire William Conner on the Indiana Frontier 1800 1835 Indiana Magazine of History Bloomington Indiana University 80 318 Retrieved January 19 2018 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link See also David G Vanderstel William Conner in David J Bodenhamer and Robert G Barrows ed 1994 The Encyclopedia of Indianapolis Indiana University Press p 471 ISBN 978 0 253 31222 8 Retrieved December 29 2008 a b Cox Stephen Winter 1993 New Life Eli Lilly and the First Restoration Traces of Indiana and Midwestern History Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society 5 1 24 27 Retrieved January 23 2018 a b Huser William A September 15 2003 The William Conner Housesite Glenn Black Laboratory of Archaeology and The Trustees of Indiana University Archived from the original on March 11 2009 Retrieved June 5 2009 Indiana State Historic Architectural and Archaeological Research Database SHAARD Searchable database Department of Natural Resources Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology Retrieved April 1 2016 Note This includes Myron Vourax November 1979 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form William Conner House PDF Retrieved April 1 2016 and Accompanying photographs Madison James H 2006 Eli Lilly A Life 1885 1977 2nd ed Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society Press pp 83 154 172 82 ISBN 978 0 87195 197 7 Cox Stephen Winter 1993 Back to the 1820s The Re restoration Traces of Indiana and Midwestern History Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society 5 1 28 33 Retrieved January 23 2018 Conner Prairie 1863 Civil War Journey 1863 Civil War Journey Raid on Indiana Conner Prairie Archived from the original on April 14 2011 Retrieved April 18 2011 Helium balloon voyage over Conner Prairie WTHR Eyewitness News June 2 2009 Archived from the original on June 29 2011 Retrieved June 5 2009 Conner Prairie s Newest Exhibit Takes Flight Inside Indiana Business May 5 2009 Archived from the original on February 29 2012 Retrieved June 5 2009 Ritchie Carrie June 2 2009 Conner Prairie balloon goes up Saturday The Indianapolis Star Archived from the original on January 26 2013 Retrieved June 5 2009 Lewis Olivia Conner Prairie slavery re enactment draws criticism The Indianapolis Star Retrieved December 16 2020 Conner Prairie to change its Follow the North Star program Retrieved December 16 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Conner Prairie Indiana portalConner Prairie website William Conner Farm Architectural Drawings Collection a digital collection of site plans and architectural drawings created by architect Robert Frost Daggett of the William Conner Farm Conner Prairie Historic Clothing Collection Conner Prairie Historical Almanac Collection Conner Prairie Museum Textile Collection Conner Prairie Rural History Project Conner Prairie Traditional Crafts Preservation and Reproduction Historic American Buildings Survey HABS No IN 46 William Conner House Highway 234 Noblesville Hamilton County IN 4 photos Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Conner Prairie amp oldid 1123498113, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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