Monday, January 13, 2020

Your Morgan County Travel Adventure

Want to be a roving reporter for Mooresville Public Library, just like Cauli Le Chat?






Cauli Le Chat
Official MPL Feline Roving Reporter
(2010-2019)

Visit the library's Indiana Room to pickup your "Flat" Cauli Le Chat, and then travel to your favorite Morgan County, Indiana destination, where you could take a "selfie" with "Flat" Cauli (showing your destination, too)--something like the photo below.

This Could Be Your (and "Flat" Cauli's) Travel Selfie

After taking your "selfie," you could upload it to social media (Facebook, Twitter, Instagram), using the following hashtags:


  • #morgancountytraveler
  • #MPLrovingreporter

Now you're an official MPL roving reporter!  Sorry, you have to provide your own hat.

There are written instructions available in the library's Indiana Room, or just click the image below to enlarge.

Click Image to Enlarge
 

Your travel adventure awaits!  Morgan County excitement beckons!

Watch the library's promo trailer below (for fun):


 Morgan County (Indiana) Travel Adventure 2020,
by Mooresville Public Library




P.S.  Don't forget to return "Flat" Cauli to the MPL Indiana Room so others may join the fun.

  

Tuesday, January 7, 2020

Founder Stone Back Where It Belongs

Sometime in late December, 2019, Mooresville's "Founder Stone" was returned to its rightful place on the northeast corner of Indiana and Main Streets downtown.  The stone had stood at this location from its placement in 1924 until 2017.

Mooresville-Decatur Times
Tuesday, December 31, 2019, page A1
Click Image Above to Enlarge, or
Click Here to See PDF


The Founder Stone was removed in 2017 during construction of Mooresville's Bicentennial Park, which had been the site of Paul Hadley Memorial Park, and, before that, of the I.O.O.F. building, and, before that, of town founder Samuel Moore's general store, built in 1824.  The Founder Stone was stored in the Mooresville Street Department's facilities until January, 2018, when it was relocated further northeast on what had once been Samuel Moore's residential lot, but was (in 2018) part of the northeast corner of Bicentennial Park, next to Citizens Bank's parking lot.


The Founder Stone's original (and, now restored) position is historically more appropriate, since it commemorates Samuel Moore's general store, the first wood-frame structure in Mooresville.  The building survived the Great Fire of 1842, which destroyed all of Mooresville except Samuel Moore's home and business, and the structure was replaced in 1869 by the first I.O.O.F. brick-and-masonry building.  The stone once again sits in front of what once had been Samuel Moore's foundational business in the heart of town.


If you have not visited Bicentennial Park and seen the Founder Stone, drop by one day when the weather is nice.  You will be standing at the very root of Mooresville's history.