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Morgan's Raid historical marker
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Muscatatuck River
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Jennings County Courthouse
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The Vernon "Hack," horse-drawn taxi
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Vernon's
"Standing Army"
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A
U.S.C.T. grave in Vernon Cemetery
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Originally
Published in the Spring 2000 . . .
Bordered on three sides by the winding waters of
a river called the Muscatatuck, this little Southeastern
Indiana town maintains a rich and distinguished
heritage. Vernon was founded in 1815 by Col. John
Vawter, a United States surveyor who surely knew
a good spot for a town when he saw one. From the
beginning, Vernon was a planned community, as John
Vawter's detailed plat set aside spaces for schools,
churches and recreation. This was possibly the first
town in American history in which a portion of the
proceeds from each lot sold was used to finance
the county library.
Vernon can claim many firsts. The elevated railroad
and underpass, known locally as "the culvert",
were the first west of the Alleghenies and are still
in use. It also was the first Indiana town, thanks
to Vawter's plat, to have a public playground. This
green field on the Muscatatuck's banks was called
"the commons" and is today a popular spot
for watching the annual canoe race. Other Hoosier
firsts for Vernon include the first all-woman jury
trial, held on June 6th, 1921, just after the ratification
of the 19th amendment, the first woman's club, the
"Clionian Society" established before
1859, and the first Christian Church. This new denomination,
the "Disciples of Christ," was organized
in 1831 in a Vernon cabinet shop run by Hickman
New, an obviously dissatisfied Baptist.
Vernonites have a tradition of doing things differently.
Like Hickman New, they go against the grain. In
1851, Vernon adopted a unique town charter that
still has them holding elections unlike any others
in the state. Indiana law says that towns under
2,000 cannot elect a mayor. Vernon, population 170,
does anyway. The charter requires an elected mayor
with a two-year term; every other mayor in Indiana
serves for four. There are no partisan restrictions,
no primaries. To run for office in Vernon, you need
only toss your hat in the ring. This is almost literally
the case, as Baron Wilder, the current mayor, found
out when he first came to the county courthouse
in Vernon and asked how the town election process
worked. "Put your name in the tin can,"
he was told.
Attempts to abolish the 1851 charter were made in
the 19th and early 20th centuries, mostly by those
who also wanted to move the Jenning's county seat
from Vernon to North Vernon. But the town fought
back hard, and in 1948 the Indiana Supreme Court
ruled that Vernon, the smallest county seat in the
entire state, would be able to keep the authority
of its courthouse and the quirky requirements of
its 1851 charter intact.
During the Civil War era, the people of this town
fought against another injustice- slavery. Vernon
was an important stop along the Underground Railroad.
Citizens sheltered escaping slaves and aided them
in their flight north to freedom. For the Confederates,
though, Vernon was the northernmost point reached
in Indiana. On July 11th, 1863, Gen. John Hunt Morgan
and his raiders approached the town from the south,
demanding its surrender. The demand was refused.
Morgan, wrongly thinking himself to be outnumbered,
turned away and continued his raid into Ohio, where
he was ultimately captured.
Civil War soldiers and two Revolutionary War veterans
are laid to rest in the Vernon cemetery, a well-kept
graveyard bounded, like the rest of town, by the
meandering Muscatatuck River. Also buried here is
hometown car racing hero Pat O'Conner, who was killed
in the 1958 Indianapolis 500.
Other notable figures affiliated with Vernon are
Jessamyn West, author of The Friendly Persuasion,
Carol Spurlock Layman, author of Growing Up Rich
in Vernon, Indiana, and artist T.C. Steele, who
wrote in 1895:
I wonder if the crimson oaks will ever look so
fine, burn with such inward fire,
and toned with such an envelope of ashen gray as
those we used to see at Vernon.
Somehow the things at Vernon seem to be the standard
by which things are judged.
In
1976, Vernon, Indiana was added in its entirety to
the National Register of Historic Places. With
a stately courthouse square, streets lined with old
homesteads, scenic river bends where the outcropped
ruins of Tunnel and Vinegar Mill mingle with the bluebells,
Vernon certainly deserves outside recognition. But
the town that founder John Vawter named after the
home of George Washington was designed to be self-reliant.
Its citizens honor their heritage by continuing to
be the same stubbornly independent thinkers they have
always been. You have to admire a community that refuses
to make any amendments to their 1851 Charter--the
one giving their town marshal sole responsibility
for "seizing and impounding wild hogs, suppressing
riots and rounding up unruly chickens and ducks."
Resource
Sources:
Taken in part from Historic Vernon (published
in 1938 by the Vernon Clionian Society), Bill Shaw's
Mayberry on the Muscatatuck (published in the
Indianapolis Star, Jan. 26, 2000) and Carol Spurlock
Layman's Growing Up Rich in Vernon, Indiana
(published 1992, Still Waters Press.) For information
on Carol Spurlock Layman's book celebrating life in
1940's-50's Vernon, e-mail Still Waters Press: stillwaters@seidata.com
For information on historic Vernon and its many special
events, such as the "Sassafras Tea Festival," please
go to the County Visitor's Center website at: www.jenningsco.org
Photography Credits ~ Vernon Historical Society
& InHeritage
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