Puneet Varma (Editor)

James Whitcomb Riley Museum Home

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Location
  
Indianapolis, Indiana

NRHP Reference #
  
66000799

Opened
  
1872

Phone
  
+1 317-631-5885

Function
  
Museum

Built
  
1893

Designated NHL
  
December 29, 1962

Area
  
4,047 m²

Architectural style
  
Victorian architecture

Added to NRHP
  
15 October 1966

James Whitcomb Riley Museum Home

Address
  
528 Lockerbie St, Indianapolis, IN 46202, USA

Similar
  
Morris–Butler House, Benjamin Harrison House, Oldfields, Indiana Medical History M, Indiana World War Memorial

Season s greetings from the james whitcomb riley museum home


The James Whitcomb Riley Museum Home, one of two homes known as the James Whitcomb Riley House on the National Register of Historic Places, is a historic building in the Lockerbie Square Historic District of Indianapolis, Indiana at 528 Lockerbie Street. It was named a National Historic Landmark in 1962.

Contents

History

An Indianapolis baker, John R. Nickum, had the building built in 1872. Nickum had the money to build the house as he had supplied the Union Army in Indianapolis with hardtack, a form of cracker despised by soldiers, during the Civil War. Nickum's daughter, Magdalena, and her husband Charles Holstein, a lawyer, would possess it when, in 1893, they invited noted poet James Whitcomb Riley to live with them. Riley had a bedroom on the second floor in this building for 23 years, helping the Holsteins with expenses.

After Riley and the Holsteins died, William Fortune bought it in 1916. He would later, presumably at the behest of Booth Tarkington, transfer ownership to the James Whitcomb Riley Memorial Association five years later. Due to so little time having passed from Riley's death to its preservation, most of the items of the household items of Riley's day, except for the kitchen, remain within the domicile.

Due to Riley's fame, it is the best known of the domiciles in the Lockerbie Square Historic District. The Riley Children's Foundation operates the museum. Noted items are the wicker chair which he frequently used after his stroke in 1911, and the bed on which he died on July 22, 1916.

References

James Whitcomb Riley Museum Home Wikipedia


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