Brown Bag Lunch & Lecture Event

Marshall County Historical Society & Museum 123 N. Michigan Street, Plymouth, IN, United States

Marshall County is chocked full of interesting buildings and even more interesting stories that go with them. Come hear the history of Bremen's Dietrich Bowen house, the Argos Foker stone porches and how Bourbon ended up with so many beautiful brick Victorian homes. Learn how Culver Academies buildings gained their castle-like structures and how two Plymouth buildings put on whole new facades.

Free

Historical Home Tour – Hoham-Klinghammer-Weckerle House

Hoham-Klinhammer-Weckerle Home 1715 Lake Avenue, Plymouth, IN, United States

The Marshall County Historical Society & Museum is hosting a special Home Tour at a Plymouth landmark, the Hoham-Klinghammer-Weckerle house. The tour will be on Sunday, September 15th. Tickets will be sold for four time slots, hourly at 1:00, 2:00, 3:00 and 4:00 to allow visitors unhurried tours.
Located at 1715 Lake Ave. the property has a long and storied history beginning during the Civil War. Our recent fundraiser featured one interesting period of its past as “The Pine Tree Inn,” a prohibition era speakeasy.
Kyle Davis and Tracey Blendowski purchased the property, recently restored by Schoberg & Schoberg and have finished an additional renovation of the house and grounds. An artful blend of old and new make this Queen Anne gem a stylish and comfortable home.
Tickets are $!5 each and available at the Museum, 123 N. Michigan St., Plymouth. Museum hours are 10:00 until 4:00, Tuesday through Saturday. For questions, call 574-936-2306. Proceeds raised support MCHS community programs. Unfortunately, with multiple staircases, the house is not ADA accessible. On-site bathrooms will not be open to the public.

$15

Brown Bag Lunch & Lecture Event

Marshall County Historical Society & Museum 123 N. Michigan Street, Plymouth, IN, United States

Join the Marshall County Historical Society on Friday, October 11th, from Noon – 1:00 p.m., for a Brown Bag Lunch & Lecture event featuring Marshall County Historical Society & Museum’s Communications Manager, Anita Boetsma. The topic is Spooky Marshall County. Our area has had many alleged hauntings, bizarre deaths and unsolved mysteries over the years. […]