Alert was important enough to merit its own map in that Atlas (that's it above). In 1882, it was a town of about 100 souls (probably triple the number who currently call it home), the second largest in Jackson Township after Sardinia, which had twice as many residents. The town had one local merchant, J. W. Spears, who was also Alert's biggest landholder and a breeder and purveyor of fancy chickens. Spears' general store, shown in the 1882 lithograph below, no longer stands. Though his house appears to still be the one that's falling down in the spot shown on the lithograph.
The location of the former Spears store is now occupied by a Masonic lodge constructed in the 1920s when the town still had enough residents to populate Alert Lodge #395. Sadly the lodge building has been worked over extensively and badly in the years since it membership died off or left town.
But there are a couple of buildings in Alert that are cool enough to justify the drive there.
The first is a round barn right at the edge of town (of course the edge of town is only four buildings from the center of town). Sitting on a rusticated concrete block foundation this barn must date to around 1910. It's horizontal siding could use a coat of paint but look at those great 9-light windows, not to mention the fabulous cupola on top. Its original owner must have been proud of the state-of-the-art choice he made when he opted for an innovative cutting-edge round barn. Perhaps he was sold on the idea by Benton Steele, Indiana's renowned round-barn designer/builder/promoter. In 2011, the shiny new standing-seam metal roof is a happy sign that someone feels proud of this beauty again.
A round barn was a representation of modernity and innovation in agriculture. Just a couple of doors north of this barn is Alert's other interesting building. On the main street of this town centered on one rural intersection, this bank building was a built environment metaphor for growth and potential when it was constructed around 1900. The limestone frieze in the bank's brick facade announces it the "Alert State Bank."
Nowadays, the Alert State Bank is someone's house--a nice reuse of the town's fanciest remaining building---aside from the round barn, that is.
In this tiny corner of Decatur County, Indiana, be Alert, there's interesting stuff in unexpected places.
Is there an old train depot in Alert?
ReplyDeleteLaura, hm...if so, it's disguised enough that I didn't notice it.
ReplyDeleteYes, there is. It's been moved a few hundred feet north of it's original location.
ReplyDeleteHere are some photos and info: http://indianarailroads.org/board/index.php?topic=10873.msg81116#msg81116
The round barn in Alert Indiana belongs to my father in law. The bard was actually built alittle over 20 years ago. It was a project that my husband and father-in-law built together. They made each concrete block and hand made every step to the very top. It is a very precious jewel for the little town of Alert, IN. I'm sure he would be very proud to know that so many people admire his hard work and achievement in making it look as though it has been there forever. I do recommend that before an article is published that someone should ask about the subject at hand so that the details can be correct. My father-in-law is a wonderful very talented man who would have loved to share his story of the building of the round barn if anyone had just asked.
ReplyDeleteNichole Caddell
I was driving through town and found the barn and the bank remarkable. Hardly a research project. I guess your father in law can feel good that he fooled an architectural historian if that's what his hope was. Cute barn.
ReplyDelete