Sunday, December 11, 2011

Deed Transfer: Wright to High

Anderson Herald, Anderson, Indiana, June 21, 1969, page  16



Deed Transfers
As Shown in Madison County Recorder's Office

Virgil L. Wright to John M. High and wife, South Side, Alexandria.

Black Sheep Sunday: Posey Bank Bandits Get $10,000





Source: Evansville Courier, Evansville, Indiana March 11, 1925 page 1.


POSEY BANK BANDITS GET $10,000


NEW HARMONY IS SHOCKED BY BOLD DAYLIGHT ROBBERY


Four Unmasked Men Loot Trust Company of Cash and Bonds


BANK OFFICIAL IS BEATEN


Four Occupants of Building Locked In Vault; Robbers Flee in Auto


New Harmony March 10 - Four unmasked men held up the New Harmony Bank and Trust company shortly before four o'clock this afternoon, beat one of the officials of the company with the butt end of an automatic pistol, locked the four occupants of the bank in the vault, and escaped with $10,000 in cash and bonds.  The men fled in a large grey sedan, going in the general direction of Evansville on the Wadesville road.


So quietly did the bandits work that the quiet little town was unaware a bank holdup had occurred until an hour after the happening.


Four persons, Frank Steelman, secretary and treasurer, Mrs. Greg Schultz, assistant cashier, the Rev. J.A. Sumwalt, and John Watson were in the bank at the time.


Driving quietly up to the building, the four men left the motor of their car running and walked into the bank.  Three of them entered the cashier's room while one stood guard at the door.  With guns drawn, the bandits commanded the occupants of the bank to hold up their hands, then forced them to lie on the floor, face downward, while they scooped up all available cash in the cash drawer and on the counter.


Locked in Safe


Steelman was then ordered to open the steel safe in the vault, and when he refused was struck over the head with the butt of a revolver in the hands of one of the bandits.  He sustained a severe scalp wound.


Mrs. Schultz, assistant cashier, opened the door of the safe, which contained $4,000 in bonds.  The robbers emptied the safe.


All four were then ordered into the vault and the doors closed behind them.  Mrs. Schultz, overcome by the excitement, fainted and has been in a serious condition since, being under the care of a physician.


On leaving the bank, the bandits encountered Leslie Steelman, son of the secretary-treasurer, at the door.  The youth was forced at the point of a gun to enter a room at the rear of the building.  The bandits then fled in the awaiting machine, going in the direction of Evansville.


Young Steelman, within a minute after the bandits departed, opened the vault and released those imprisoned and telephones and telegraphs flashed the news to police authorities in adjoining cities and towns.


Frank Steelman, secretary and treasurer of the bank, said: "There were only four of us in the bank when the bandits entered.  Mrs. Schultz and I, and two patrons.  I was at the window of one of the cages and Mrs. Schultz was at the window of another.  The Rev. Mr. Sumwalt was at a counter.  The other patron in the bank was John Watson, ferryman.


Tells Story of Robbery


"I noticed a young man walk into the bank and enter my private office.  I walked to the door to see what he wanted and found myself covered with two automatics.  Another young man was behind him.  He immediately covered Mrs. Schultz.  The third covered the two customers while the fourth stood guard at the entrance.


"We were all forced to lie down on the floor, face downward, while the men rifled the cash drawer and took all the money on the counter.  There was about $6,000 in cash there at the time.


"They then told me to open the steel safe in the vault.  I replied that I couldn't do it and one of them struck me with the butt of an automatic causing a severe scalp wound.  Mrs. Schultz then opened the safe and then dropped to the floor in a faint.


"In the safe was about $4,000 in bonds.


"The four of us were then commanded to enter the vault.  They took the keys from us and locked the gates.  On leaving, they met my son, Leslie, at the door.  One of them covered him and took him to the rear of the building where they locked him in a room.  They then left the building, entered their car, and sped away.


"We called to Leslie and he opened the gates behind which we were locked.  I don't believe the bandits car could have been out of town by the time we got busy on the telephones calling the authorities of neighboring towns.


Escape In Grey Sedan


The car they were driving was a large grey sedan and was seen near Wadesville a few minutes after the robbery.


The story of the robbery, told by the Rev. Mr. Sumwalt coincides with that of Steelman.  The pastor said he was a customer in the bank when the robbers entered.  He said he did not see them enter the building.


"The first thing I knew of the affair was when I felt a gun punched into my ribs.  I looked up and the man holding the gun on me commanded me to hold up my hands.  I then saw the others in the bank covered.  I was forced to lie down on the floor with my face downward as were the others.  After the cash had been scooped up we were all locked up in the vault.  We were released by Leslie Steelman, son of Frank Steelman.


The loss is fully covered by insurance, Steelman said last night.


"We carried ____ insurance", Steelman said.  "I always provided for to cover _____ [last sentences illegible copy]


----
This article is another in a series of stories of Indiana bank robberies by a group of robbers, led by my paternal cousin, Harry PIERPONT (1902-1934).  Harry later became famous as a member of the "Terror Gang" with John Dillinger.  These earlier robberies terrorized Indiana during 1924-25.

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Only Shop In Point Isabel Is A Draw

undated, Marion Chronicle-Tribune, Marion, Indiana
ONLY SHOP IN POINT ISABEL IS A DRAW


Crossroads town also can boast new fire station


Point Isabel - Billie Conaway, 65, runs the only shop in town.  


And it's not a typical, run-of-the-mill place, either.  The building, nestled on the corner of Ind. 26 and Ind. 13, is home to a giant garage sale.


Guests can find hubcaps, Christmas ornaments, a sink, clothes and much more as they weave around piles of unusual artifacts scattered inside and outside the building.


"People love going through old boxes," Conaway said as she warmed herself Sunday in front of a wooden stove that heats the building.  "They think they are going to find some treasure or some antiques.  Who knows?  Maybe they will."


The unnamed business attracts a good number of customers because of its location, according to Conaway.


But the same can't be said for the town.


What many people do when they approach the busy highway intersection in town is just keep driving.


"There's not much to do here," said LP Cummings, 72.  "It's pretty quiet out here other than the traffic and those semis that are awfully noisy."


Cummings and his wife, Edith, own two acres in town.  The land is used for gardening and a small pond that Cummings stocks with bass, bluegill and crappies.


"I don't know how many people live around here," the 12-year resident said as he counted the number of neighbors on his fingers.  "Maybe 15.  Maybe a few more.  There's only a few houses, no big businesses.  It's just a quiet place."


Other than traffic, nothing much ever happens around Point Isabel.  It's been a quiet little place ever since it was first established in 1859.


The post office closed shortly after it opened and residents now receive their mail through Fairmount.


Point Isabel was named for an Ohio town of the same name.


Across the street from Conaway's rummage sale business is the town's new volunteer fire department firehouse.  It was dedicated earlier this year and houses four fire trucks.  The volunteer fire department first opened its doors July 18, 1948.


"But I like it here," Cummings said.  "I wouldn't live anyplace else if I had a choice.  I like the rural area.  It feels good to be out in the open."


---
This undated article, likely from the Marion Chronicle-Tribune, quotes my father-in-law, Luther Patrick Cummings (1926-2004).