Note: This web site, “Stone Quarries and Beyond Continues,” is a continuation of the original/legacy web site, “Stone Quarries and Beyond,” that was created over 20+ years ago by my late husband, Pat Perazzo. I can no longer add to or correct the original web site, although it will remain online as is. Future additions will be added to the new web site “Stone Quarries and Beyond Continues” and our Stone Quarries and Beyond Facebook page. Peggy B. Perazzo
Only the entry page for the Indiana state section is available at this time on the new web site. You will find the rest of the Indiana state page on the original web site Stone Quarries and Beyond using the links below.
Geology Resources – Indiana
- Indiana Geological Survey
- Following are some of the resources available on this web site:
- Indiana Mineral Industry News
- GIS Atlas for Southwestern Indiana
- Public Land Survey System Data
- GIS Atlas for Indiana
- Read the latest IGS Newsletter
- IGS Geologists Reach New Heights in Limestone Research, by Brian Keith and Todd Thompson.
- A Geographic Information System Atlas for Indiana is now available on this site. “The initial version of the atlas allows users to construct custom maps with layers showing information about coal, geology, and hydrology. New layers, including layers with information about geologic hazards, caves and karst, biology, history, and infrastructure, will be added each month over the next two years.”
- Following are some of the resources available on this web site:
- IPFW Geogarden Tour, presented by Indiana University, Purdue University, Fort Wayne, Indiana.. Virtual tour of the IPFW Geogarden. This site includes discussion of rock classifications and photographs of the rocks in the IPFW Geogarden. (This link is no longer available on the original web site, although it is available on the Internet Archive Wayback Machine.)
- Stone-Related Publications from the Indiana Geological Survey. According to author John Park (A Guidebook to Mining inAmerica: Volume 2: East (Minnesota,Iowa,Missouri,Arkansas,Louisiana, and farther East), Stonerose Publishing Co., 2000). The following publications are available from the Indiana Geological Survey:
- High Calcium Limestone and High Magnesium Dolomite Resources of Indiana (B42B, 20p.)
- Crushed Stone Aggregate Resources of Indiana (B42H, 38 p.)
- Dimension Sandstone Resources of Indiana (B42M, 28 p.)
- The Lime Industry of Indiana (B42J, 62 p.)
- “Abandoned Quarries (1998): Shows abandoned quarry locations that have adequate locational information. Derived from information in Indiana Geological Survey Computer Database 2.)
- Bedrock Geology of Indiana, Indiana Geological & Water Survey, Indiana University.
- “Bedrock Geology of Indiana, from the Regional Geologic Map Series of the Indiana Geological Survey: Indiana,” B1G Academic Alliance Geoportal.
- Compendium of Paleozoic Rock-Unit Stratigraphy in Indiana – A Revision, by Robert H. Shaver, Curtis H. Ault, Ann M. Burger, Donald D. Carr, John B. Droste, Donald L. Eggert, Henry H. Gray, Denver Harper, Nancy R. Hasenmueller, Walter A. Hasenmueller, Alan S. Horowitz, Harold C. Hutchison, Brian D. Keith, Stanley J. Keller, John B. Patton, Carl B. Rexroad, and Charles E. Weir. Modified From Indiana Geological Survey Bulletin 59. Indiana Geology Today, Indiana Geological Survey. This was presented by the Indiana University Bloomington Libraries – Geology Library. (This link is no longer available on the original web site, although it is available on the Internet Archive Wayback Machine.)
- Discover Cincinnati Geology, College of Arts and Sciences.
- The First Annual Report of the Geological Survey of Indiana, Made During the Year 1869, by E. T. Cox, State Geologist, Assisted by Prof. Frank H. Bradley, Dr. Rufus Haymond, and Dr. G. M. Levette, Indianpolist, Alexander H. Conner, State Printer, 1869. (This book is available on Google Book Search for reading or downloading to your computer.)
- “Geological map of Indiana, showing location of stone quarries and natural gas and oil areas,” Norman B. Leventhal Map & Education Center at the Boston Public Library Digital Collections. (Scroll down – the map is available at high resolution.)
- Geology of Indiana (Category), section of Wikipedia.
- “The Geology of Sculpting Stone: Indiana Limestone,” by Michael E. Yeaman, on the Northwest Stone Sculptors Association web site.
- “Henry Gray’s decades of geology research laid the bedrock for Indiana earth science,” by Sara Clifford, Indiana Journal of Earth Sciences, March 31, 2022, The Herald-Times.
- Indiana geologic map data: A GIS database of geologic units and structural features in Indiana, with lithology, age, data structure, and format written and arranged just like the other states. , U. S. Geological Survey.
- Indiana Geology, presented by the Indiana Geological Survey.
- “Indiana Geology,” by John R. Hill, Indiana Geological and Water Survey, Indiana University, Bloomington.
- Indiana Geology Questions and Answers – Search Results Where are good mineral-collecting sites in Indiana?: Where are good mineral-collecting sites in Indiana?, FAQ 14, October 8, 1998, presented by the Indiana Geological Survey.
- Indiana Karst Geology – Lapiés, Grikes and Terra Rosa presented by the Indiana Karst Conservancy. “When limestone is disintegrated by solutional processes, it leaves behind a clayey, residual soil known as terra rosa (Latin for ‘red earth’).Note the color of the terra rosa soil. Similar features may be seen near the large quarry north of the town of Oolitic.” (The link to theIndianaKarst Geology site is still active, but the other link – from which the above description originated – appears not to be available any longer.)
<http://www.caves.org/conservancy/ikc/slide15.htm> - “Indiana Limestone” [Official Name: Salem Formation; Location: Monroe and Lawrence counties, Indiana; Lithology: Limestone (Calcarenite/Grainstone/Biosparite)], Wayne G. Powell, 2004.
- “Indiana Limestone” section of Wikipedia.
- Indiana State Minerals Information (USGS)
- Indiana’s Geologic Economy (This link originally presented by the Michigan State University Department of Geology is no longer available at the original link, although it is available on the Internet Archive Wayback Machine.)
- Joseph Moore Museum, Earlham College, Richmond, Indiana. (This museum, located on the Earlham College campus, offers geological information, with emphasis on the local limestone outcroppings near Richmond, Indiana.)
- “Journey in Time Through Quarries: Exploring evidence of the past with geologists,” on Pit and Quarry.
- Jugg Rock – “One Of The Oddest Geological Wonders Is Located Right Here In Indiana,” by Courtney Johnston, July 5, 2021, on Only in Your State.
- Landscapes of Indiana, by John R. Hill, Indiana Geological & Water Survey, Indiana University.
- “Learn About the Geology, History, and Artistry of Limestone,” June 6, 2016, on Travelin, Indiana’s travel and lifestyle magazine.
- List of YouTube videos relating to Indiana Geology.
- A Location Guide for Rockhounds, Collected by Robert C. Beste, PG, St. Louis, Missouri: Hobbitt Press, 2nd ed., December 1996, 148 pp. (Includes chapters on “Mineral Locations by State,” “Appendix and Glossary,” and “Bibliography.”)
- “Mineral Resources,” Indiana Geological and Water Survey, Indiana University, Bloomington. (Aggregates, Limestone, Aglime, Crushed Stone, Sand and Gravel, & Gypsum.)
- “Monroe County Commission Plans Limestone Quarry Heritage Park,” by Laurie D. Borman, January 21, 2020, Limestone Post.
- National Geologic Map Database, presented by the United States Geologic Survey.
- “Overview of Indiana Geology,” YouTube video by the Indiana Geological and Water Survey, April 15, 2021.
- “Rock Hounds Drawn to Indiana Road Cuts,” by ABC News, March 15, 2004.
- Some Geological Aspects of the Carboniferous of Southern Indiana, Compiled by Thomas E. Hendrix, National Association of Geology Teachers East, Central Section, Annual Meeting April 1-2, 1966. Indiana University Bloomington, Indiana Field Trip Saturday, April 2, 1966. Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana, Geological tour of Southern Indiana.
- U. S. Geological Survey Fact Sheet on Indiana
- University of Southern Indiana – Department of Geology
- Urban Geology of Madison County, Indiana, Special Report 10, by William J. Wayne, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska – Lincoln, 1975.
The Indiana Stone Industry
- 1856 – The following excerpt is from the 1856, “The Marble-Workers’ Handbook,” pg. 251:
“In Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois little pains have yet been taken to develop the mineral building materials.”
- 1869 – The First Annual Report of the Geological Survey of Indiana, Made During the Year 1869, by E. T. Cox, State Geologist, Assisted by Prof. Frank H. Bradley, Dr. Rufus Haymond, and Dr. G. M. Levette, Indianpolist, Alexander H. Conner, State Printer, 1869. (This book is available on Google Book Search for reading or downloading to your computer.)
- 1882 – The Indiana Stone and Building Industry in 1882 (transcription), Excerpts from Mineral Resources of the United States, Calendar Year 1882, J. S. Powell, Director, Department of the Interior, United States Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1883. Excerpts from the chapters on 1) “Structural Materials” and 2) “The Useful Minerals of the United States.”
- 1883 and 1884 – The Indiana Stone Industry, Excerpts from Mineral Resources of the United States – Calendar Years 1883 and 1884, Department of the Interior, United States Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1885.
- 1885 – The Indiana Stone and Building Industry in 1885 (transcription), Excerpts from Mineral Resources of the United States, Calendar Year 1885, David T. Day, Geologist, Department of the Interior, United States Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1887. Excerpts from the chapters on 1) “Structural Materials,” by H. S. Sproull; and 2) “Abrasive Materials.”
- 1885 – “The Building Stones of Indiana” (April 1885) in The Manufacturer and Builder, Vol. 17, Issue 4, April 1885, pgs. 82-83. (Stones mentioned in this article are: North Vernon Blue Stone, Greensburg, or Flat Rock, Stone, and many others.)
- 1886 – The Indiana Stone and Building Industry, 1886 (transcription), Excerpts from Mineral Resources of the United States, Calendar Year 1886, David T. Day, Chief of Division of Mining Statistics and Technology, Department of the Interior, United States Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1887. Excerpts from the chapters on 1) “Structural Materials,” by William C. Day, and 2) “Novaculite,” by George M. Turner.
- 1887 – The Indiana Stone and Building Industry, 1887, Excerpts from Mineral Resources of the United States – Calendar Year 1887, J. W. Powell, Director, David T. Day, Chief of Division of Mining Statistics and Technology, Department of the Interior, United States Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1888.
- 1887 – Indiana Quarry Industry circa 1887, “Our Building Stone Supply” (Quarrying in the United States circa 1887), by George P. Merrill, Scientific American Supplement, No. 577, January 22, 1887, & “Our Building Stone Supply” Conclusion, Scientific American Supplement, No. 578, January 29, 1887.
- 1888 – The Indiana Stone and Building Industry, 1888, Excerpts from Mineral Resources of the United States – Calendar Year 1888, J. W. Powell, Director, David T. Day, Chief of Division of Mining Statistics and Technology, Department of the Interior, United States Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1890.
- 1889 and 1890 – The Indiana Stone and Building Industry, 1889, Excerpts from Mineral Resources of the United States – Calendar Year 1889 and 1890, J. W. Powell, Director, David T. Day, Chief of Division of Mining Statistics and Technology, Department of the Interior, United States Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1892.
- 1891 – The Indiana Stone and Building Industry, 1891, Excerpts from Mineral Resources of the United States – Calendar Year 1891, J. W. Powell, Director David T. Day, Chief of Division of Mining Statistics and Technology, Department of the Interior, United States Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1893.
- 1892 – The Indiana Stone and Building Industry, 1892, Excerpts from Mineral Resources of the United States – Calendar Year 1892, J. W. Powell, Director, David T. Day, Chief of Division of Mining Statistics and Technology, Department of the Interior, United States Geological Survey Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1893.
- 1893 – The Indiana Stone and Building Industry, 1893, Excerpts from Mineral Resources of the United States – Calendar Year 1893, J. W. Powell, Director, David T. Day, Chief of Division of Mining Statistics and Technology, Department of the Interior, United States Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1894.
- 1894 – Indiana Stone Industry in 1894 (transcription), Excerpts from the Sixteenth Annual Report of the United States Geological Survey, Part IV.-Mineral Resources of the United States, 1894, Nonmetallic Products. Department of the Interior, United States Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1895. Excerpts from the chapter on “Stone,” by William C. Day. (Click here if you wish to read the entire chapter on “Stone.”)
- 1895 – The Indiana Stone and Building Industry, 1895, Excerpts from Seventeenth Annual Report of the United States Geological Survey, Part III. Mineral Resources of the United States, 1895, Nonmetallic Products, Except Coal. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1896.
- 1896 – The Indiana Stone and Building Industry, 1896, Excerpts from Eighteenth Annual Report of the United States Geological Survey, Part V. Mineral Resources of the United States, 1896, Nonmetallic Products, Except Coal. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1897.
- 1897 – The Indiana Stone and Building Industry, 1897, Excerpts from Nineteenth Annual Report of the United States Geological Survey, Part V. Mineral Resources of the United States, 1896, Nonmetallic Products, Except Coal. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1898.
- 1898 – The Indiana Stone and Building Industry, 1898, Excerpts from Twentieth Annual Report of the United States Geological Survey, Part VI. Mineral Resources of the United States, 1898, Nonmetallic Products, Except Coal and Coke. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1899.
- 1899 – The Indiana Stone and Building Industry, 1899, Excerpts from Twenty-first Annual Report of the United States Geological Survey, Part VI. Mineral Resources of the United States, 1899, Nonmetallic Products, Except Coal and Coke. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1901.
- 1900 – The Indiana Stone and Building Industry, 1900, Excerpts from Mineral Resources of the United States – Calendar Year 1900, Charles D. Walcott, Director, David T. Day, Chief of Division of Mining and Mineral Resources, Department of the Interior, United States Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1901.
- 1901 – The Indiana Stone and Building Industry, 1901, Excerpts from Mineral Resources of the United States – Calendar Year 1901, Charles D. Walcott, Director, David T. Day, Chief of Division of Mining and Mineral Resources, Department of the Interior, United States Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1902.
- 1902 – The Indiana Stone and Building Industry, 1902, Excerpts from Mineral Resources of the United States, Calendar Year 1902, Charles D. Walcott, Director, Department of the Interior, United States Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1904.
- 1903 – The Indiana Stone and Building Industry, 1903, Excerpts from Mineral Resources of the United States, Calendar Year 1903, Charles D. Walcott, Director Department of the Interior, United States Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1904.
- 1904 – The Indiana Stone and Building Industry, 1904, Excerpts from Mineral Resources of the United States, Calendar Year 1904, Charles D. Walcott, Director, Department of the Interior, United States Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1905.
- 1905 – The Indiana Stone and Building Industry, 1905, Excerpts from Mineral Resources of the United States – Calendar Year 1905, Charles D. Walcott, Director, Department of the Interior, United States Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1906.
- 1906 – The Indiana Stone and Building Industry, 1906, Excerpts from Mineral Resources of the United States – Calendar Year 1906, George Otis Smith, Director, Department of the Interior, United States Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1907.
- 1907 – The Indiana Stone and Building Industry, 1907, Excerpts from Mineral Resources of the United States, Calendar Year 1907, Part II. Nonmetallic Products, George Otis Smith, Director, Department of the Interior, United States Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1908.
- 1908 – The Indiana Stone Industry, 1908, Excerpts from Mineral Resources of the United States, Calendar Year 1908, Part II – Nonmetallic Products, Department of the Interior, United States Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1909. Excerpts from the book are from the chapters on: 1) “Stone,” by A. T. Coons, and 2) part of the chapter on “Abrasive Materials,” by W. C. Phalen.
- 1910 – Oölitic Limestone Quarries – “Indiana Oölitic Limestone: Geology, Quarries, Methods,” by George D. Hunter, Bloomington, Indiana, in Mine and Quarry, Vol. V, No. 1, July 1910, pp. 410-419.
- 1994 through present day – The Mineral Industry of Indiana – United States Geological Survey (1994 through present day)
- Indiana Limestone and Sandstone Industries – Excerpts from A Guidebook to Mining In America: Volume 2: East (Minnesota,Iowa,Missouri,Arkansas,Louisiana, and farther East), by John Park, Stonerose Publishing Co., Miami, Florida, April, 2000.
- Indiana Limestone (and Quarry Industry) – An excerpt from John Park’s book, A Guidebook to Mining InAmerica: Volume 2: (Minnesota,Iowa,Missouri,Arkansas, Louisiana, and farther East), April, 2000.
- The Bedford (Indiana) Stone Quarries (December 1884) (The article includes a sketch of the Bedford stone quarries.) The Manufacturer and Builder, Vol. 16, Issue 12, December 1884, pgs. 277-278.) (Article in digital images viewed at American Memory, Library of Congress.)
- “The Building Stones of Indiana” (April 1885) in The Manufacturer and Builder, Vol. 17, Issue 4, April 1885, pp. 82-83. (Stones mentioned in this article are: North Vernon Blue Stone, Greensburg, or Flat Rock, Stone, and many others.)
- “Civilian Conservation Corps Company 517 Photographs, CA. 1934,” Collection # P 0442. Collection Information – Historical Sketch – Scope and Content Note – Contents – Cataloging Information, Processed by Barbara Quigley, 2 August 2004, Manuscript and Visual Collections department, William Henry Smith Memorial Library, Indiana Historical Society, Indianapolis, Indiana, available at:
(excerpt from the “Historical Sketch” section) “Company 517 moved to South Bend, Indiana, in 1937, and to Portland, Indiana, in 1939. The work done by this group included work in the limestone and sandstone quarries, construction of a shelter house and manager’s quarters, tree planting, and rescue operations in the flood of 1937…Company 517 was disbanded in 1941.”
- “A Columbarium, Indianapolis, Indiana,” The Monumental News, February 1897, pp. 130. (photo caption) The Gustav Bohn columbarium, Crown Hill Cemetery, in The Monumental News, February 1897. “The monument is built of Indiana stone, in the classic renaissance style. The small iron door in front, of Grecian design, is gilded over with leaf gold….”
- Dimension Stone (Stone, Dimension), by Lloyd E. Antonides and Robert L. Virta. (includes information on the Indiana stone industry) [PDF]
- Dimension Stone, by Jim F. Lemons, Jr. (includes information on the Indiana stone industry) [PDF]
- Dimension Stone (Stone, Dimension), by Thomas P. Dolley (includes information on the Indiana stone industry) [PDF]
- Dimension Stone in Indiana – Limestone Quarries. Indiana has out-produced all of the other United States for more than a century. The major areas are in south-central around the towns of Bloomington and Bedford.
Quarries in these areas have been in operation since 1827. The Indiana limestone is know by several names: Indiana Limestone, Indiana Oolitic Limestone, Bedford Oolitic Limestone, and Bedford Rock. The stone is a buff, gray, and variegated colors. (From Industrial Minerals and Rocks, senior editor, Donald D. Carr; associate editors, A. Frank Alsobrook, [et al.] 6th ed., Society for Mining, Metallurgy, and Exploration, Littleton, Colorado, 1994, pg. 26.) This book is presented on the American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers (AIME) web site.
- DiscoverySchool.com (Worldbook) – Indiana – Minerals and Mining. Indiana has many limestone quarries from Indianapolis to Fort Wayne. (This link is no longer available on the DiscoverySchool.com web site.) <http://school.discovery.com/homeworkhelp
/worldbook/atozgeography/i/275040.html> - e-Geo News – Indiana Geological Survey Newsletter
- “A Geologist’s Harvard,” by David B. Williams. “A modified versions of this story originally appeared in the November/December 1997 issue of Harvard Magazine.” (photographs and history) Indiana limestone is discussed in this article. [PDF]
- “History of Indiana Limestone,” Indiana Limestone Institute (Increasing Demand, Technical Advances, & Limestone Today)
- Impact of The Canal Era on Indiana Geography, presented by the Canal Society of Indiana. The building stone on the Whitewater Canal was procured at Laurel, although good quality stone quarries were difficult to find on the Wabash & Erie. The infamous Indiana limestone was not located in this part of the state, rather in the south and central portions. Lagro and Logansport were the locations of some stone quarries. Not many stone structures were built and only a few remain today.
- Indiana Aggregates, by John R. Hill, presented by the Indiana Geological Survey.
- Indiana Bedrock Digital Collection – Indiana Memory Hosted Digital Collections.
Digital Images via Indiana Memory
About this collection (from the Monroe County Public Library web site):
“This collection is the result of a collaborative grant project with the Monroe County History Center to document the limestone industry of Monroe County, Indiana. The core collection, from the Monroe County History Center, includes various photographs, letters, newspaper clippings, business records and other ephemera relating to the Matthews Brothers Stone Company, a limestone quarry which operated out of Ellettsville, Indiana from 1862 to 1978. A timeline of the limestone industry and oral interviews with individuals related to the industry were created along with the digital images. The Indiana Bedrock project continues to expand with the inclusion of additional collections submitted by the community.
“Collections include: Matthews Brothers Stone Company, The Bybee Stone Company, the Bloomington Limestone Corp., Indiana Limestone Quarrymens Associations Architects File, The Ellettsville Journal, Victor Oolitic Stone Company, Independent Limestone Company, The Albert McIlveen Portfolio.
“This collection was created in part by funding from a grant from the Indiana State Library made possible by the Library Services and Technology Act and administered by the Institute for Museum and Library Services.”
- Indiana Limestone, by John R. Hill, Indiana Geological Survey.
- Indiana Limestone, Answers.com / Wikipedia.
- Indiana Limestone, presented by Wayne Powell, Chair and Associate Professor Department of Geology, Brooklyn College, Brooklyn, New York.
- Indiana Limestone, presented by Wikipedia.
- Indiana Limestone: A Brief History of the Indiana Limestone Industry, presented by the Reid Memorial Presbyterian Church. (This link is no longer available, although you can view the site on the Internet Archive Wayback Machine.)
<http://www.statelib.lib.in.us/WWW/indiana/limestone.html> - “Indiana Limestone: A History,” YouTube video by Journey Indiana. March 23, 2017.
- Indiana Limestone – In Building Stones of Downtown Chattanooga, (Tennessee), Robert Lake Wilson provided the following information on the Indiana limestone. Please see the brochure for more detailed information and photographs of structures constructed with this stone in Chattanooga, Tennessee. You can Read or Download “Building Stones of Downtown Chattanooga” ePaper on Yump.
The Indiana limestone belt encompasses a large part of Monroe and Lawrence counties, and the limestone belt extends 23 miles from Bloomington to Bedford in central Indiana. The Indiana limestone has been quarried since 1880 and “has probably been used more widely than any stone in the world.” In color the stone ranges from “a uniform light-gray, fine to medium-grained oolitic-limestone of Mississippian age. Indiana limestone was used in the construction of many of the buildings in Chattanooga, Tennessee.”
- Indiana Limestone: The Aristocrat of Building Materials, Vol. 1, June 1920, Sixth Edition, Indiana Limestone Quarrymen’s Association, Bedford, Indiana.
- Indiana Limestone − The Salem Limestone, or “the Salem,” is the stone referred to as Indiana’s most famous limestone. The Salem limestone is “exposed in a narrow area that extends from the southern tip of Harrison County on the Ohio River northward to near Greencastle in Putnam County. Most of the stone suitable for use as dimension stone and for building purposes is found in Owen, Monroe, and Lawrence Counties.” (The link from which this information was obtained is no longer available.)
<http://www.geobop.com/Symbols/Geo/1/Limestone/> - Indiana Limestone, presented by “Buffalo as an Architectural Museum.”
- Indiana Limestone: Old Quarry Photos – History – and About Us – Stone City Quarries, presented by the Weber Stone Company, Inc., Stone City Quarries (SCQ) (present-day company) in Anamosa, Iowa.
- Indiana Limestone Economically Used as Veneer in Small House Construction (circa 1925). (The following advertisement is from Stone: An Illustrated Magazine, Vol. XLVI, No. 3, March, 1925, Stone Publishing Co., New York.)
Indiana Limestone Economically Used as Veneer in Small House Construction.
“Indiana Limestone used as a veneer for walls of stud frame construction, brick, or hollow tile is fast becoming popular among builders of small homes and bungalows. Short-length stock of about 4” thickness laid up as a random ashlar is the most economical form of stone construction. It is also thoroughly practical and highly pleasing in its effect. “Cut stone contractors who keep a large supply of this stock on hand will find it highly profitable, as the demand for it among architects and builders is rapidly increasing. “Our handsomely illustrated booklet, ‘Indiana Limestone for School and College Buildings,’ showing various interesting uses of the stone will be sent free upon request.
Indiana Limestone Quarrymen’s Association
Box 772, Bedford, Indiana
Service Bureaus in New York and Chicago
Members:
In Bedford, Indiana: Consolidated Stone Co.; Furst-Kerber Cut Stone Co.; Imperial
Stone Co.; Indiana Quarries Co.; W. McMillan & Son; Shea & Donnelly Co.;
Reed-Powers Cut Stone Co.
In Ellettsville, Indiana: Perry Stone Co.
In Bloomington, Indiana: Chicago & Bloomington Stone Co.; Crescent Stone Co.;
Empire Stone Co.; J. Hoadley & Sons Co.; Mathers Stone Co.; Monroe County
Oolitic Stone Co.; National Stone Co.; Star Stone Co.
- Indiana Limestone Heritage Project
- Indiana Heritage Limestone Park Project Report [PDF]
- Indiana Limestone Institute of America – “The coordinating agency for information, education, and technical data for Indiana Limestone – The Nation’s Building Stone.
- Indiana Limestone Quarried by Elliott Stone Company – “Elliott Stone Acquired by Polycor,” October 9, 2019, News Release on Building Indiana Business.
- Indiana Marble and Granite Dealer’s Association (1895) The following information is from The Monumental News, August, 1895, Vol. 7, No. 8, Chicago, Illinois, pp. 499.
“President: Louis J. Goth, Indianapolis, Ind.; Secretary and Treasurer: Schuyler Powell, Logansport, Ind.”
- Indiana Mineral Aggregates Association, Carmel, Indiana.
- Indiana Mineral Industry News, presented by the Indiana Geological Survey.
- Indiana Oölitic Limestone – “A New ‘Duplex’ Channeler for Oölitic Limestone,” by C. J. Levey, from Mine and Quarry Magazine, Sullivan Machinery Co., Publisher, Chicago, Illinois, Vol. VII. No. 2, January, 1913.
- Indiana Oölitic Limestone: Geology, Quarries, Methods, by George D. Hunter of Bloomington, Indiana, Mine and Quarry Magazine, Sullivan Machinery Co., Publisher, Chicago, Illinois, Vol. V. No. 4 – July, 1910, pages 410-421.
- “Indiana Stone Belt,” Sharing The art of Carving Limestone, Indiana Limestone Symposium. (Learn How to Carve Limestone from the Masters, The Stone Fabrication Process, & a video, The Stone Fabrication Process.)
- Indiana’s Export Base: A Comparison Export Industries Across Indiana’s Metropolitan Statistical Areas, by Wayne Bartholomew, Paul Joray, and Paul Kochanowski. [PDF]
- Limestone History in Indiana, presented on the Indiana Limestone Heritage Parks web site.
- Limestone Industry in Indiana (circa 1967) (From Mining and Mineral Operations in the United States: A Visitor’s Guide, by Staff, Bureau of Mines, Area Mineral Resource Offices, U. S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Mines, 1967, pp. 27.)
“Anyone who has traveled extensively will certainly have seen famous buildings faced in large part with Indiana limestone.
“ Ind. 37. – Bloomington, Oolitic, and Bedford are centers of stone production (circa 1967). Many of the Nation’s most famous buildings are partially constructed of Indiana oolitic limestone from this area. Quarries are visible from Ind. 37 at Oolitic. Numerous quarries and finishing mills are in the area. Inquire locally for permission to visit finishing mills and quarries.”
- Limestone Industry in Indiana – Resources Limestone Industry Resources from the Indiana Division, presented by the Indiana State Library.
- The Mineral Industry of Indiana, reports presented by the Indiana Geological Survey and the U. S. Geological Survey.
- The Mineral Industry of Indiana – 1994 [PDF]
- Tables included in this document are: (1) Table 1. Nonfuel Raw Mineral Production in Indiana; (2) Table 2. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used By Producers in 1993, By Use; (3) Table 3. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used, By Kind; (4) Table 4. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used By Producers in 1993, By Use and District.
- The Mineral Industry of Indiana – 1995 [PDF]
- Tables included in this document are: (1) Table 1. Nonfuel Raw Mineral Production in Indiana; (2) Table 2. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used By Producers in 1994, By Use; (3) Table 3. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used, By Kind; (4) Table 4. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used By Producers in 1994, By Use and District; (5) Table 5. Indiana: Construction Sand and Gravel Sold Or Used in 1994, By Major Use Category; (6) Table 6. Indiana: Construction Sand and Gravel Sold Or Used in 1994, By Use and District.
- Some of the stone quarries and related companies included in this document are: Kentucky Stone Co.; France Stone Co.’s Greencastle ground limestone plan and quarry; Agrock Quarries, Inc.; ESSROC Materials, Inc.; Sellersburg Stone Co., Inc.; Liter’s quarry of Indiana, Inc.’s stone processing plant in Clark County; Erie Stone Co.’s crushed stone quarry in Huntington County (Erie Stone Co. is a division of Irving Materials Inc.); Mulzer Crushed Stone Co., Inc.’s crushed stone operation near Paoli, Orange County; and B. G. Hoadley Quarries Inc.’s dimension limestone quarry in Monroe County.
- The Mineral Industry of Indiana – 1996 [PDF]
- Tables included in this document are: (1) Table 1. Nonfuel Raw Mineral Production in Indiana; (2) Table 2. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used By Producers in 1995, By Use; (3) Table 3. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used, By Kind; (4) Table 4. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used By Producers in 1995, By Use and District; (5) Table 5. Indiana: Construction Sand and Gravel Sold Or Used in 1995, By Major Use Category.
- The stone quarries and related companies included in this document are: Mulzer Crushed Stone Inc.’s quarry at Abydel west of Paoli (Mulzer Crushed stone Inc. announced the opening of a quarry in Harrison County ); Rogers Group Inc. reopened their old quarry near Orleans; D & R Crushed Stone Co. ceased production at the Indiana Limestone Co., Inc., Crown quarry in Monroe County; Hillside Stone Co.’s planned underground crushed limestone mine west of Bloomington; Indiana Limestone Co. Inc., under new management; and ESSROC quarries and Speed Plant.
- The Mineral Industry of Indiana – 1997 [PDF]
- Tables included in this document are: (1) Table 1. Nonfuel Raw Mineral Production in Indiana; (2) Table 2. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used, By Kind; (3) Table 3. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used By Producers in 1996, By Use; (4) Table 4. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used By Producers in 1996, By Use and District; (5) Table 5. Indiana: Construction Sand and Gravel Sold Or Used in 1996, By Major Use Category; (6) Table 6. Indiana: Construction Sand and Gravel Sold Or Used in 1996, By Use and District.
- Some of the stone quarries and related companies included in this document are: S&G Excavating’s crushed stone quarry in Putnam County called Lincoln Park Stone; Walton Quarries Inc.’s new dimension stone quarry in Lawrence County; Martin Marietta Aggregation acquired the Indiana holdings of American Aggregates with an exception (see report); Martin Marietta Aggregates sold their Harding Street crushed stone quarry in Marion County to Cornerstone/Benchmark Materials Midwest (the Kentucky Stone Co.).
- The Mineral Industry of Indiana – 1998 [PDF]
- Tables included in this document are: (1) Table 1. Nonfuel Raw Mineral Production in Indiana; (2) Table 2. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used, By Kind; (3) Table 3. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used By Producers in 1997, By Use; (4) Table 4. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used By Producers in 1997, By Use and District; (5) Table 5. Indiana: Construction Sand and Gravel Sold Or Used in 1997, By Major Use Category; (6) Table 6. Indiana: Construction Sand and Gravel Sold Or Used in 1997, By Use and District.
- Some of the stone quarries and related companies included in this document are: Mulzer Crushed Stone, Inc., opened new on the Ohio River between New Amsterdam and Mauckport in Harrison County; Indiana Inc.’s Liters quarry; Tom Miller Quarries; Junction Limestone Inc. opened their Uland Quarry in Green County; Bybee Stone Co. repairs on Iowa State Capitol building and contract for the Pope John Paul Cultural Center in Washington, D.C.; Evans Quarries, Inc. received contracts for several schools in Chicago, Illinois, and finished the federal courthouses in Sacramento, California; Fargo, North Dakota; and Tallahassee, Florida; Indiana Limestone Co., Inc., “provided limestone from the original Empire Hole at its P.M. and B. Quarry, Lawrence County, for major renovations on the Empire State Building in New York City.” Mansfield Stone, Inc., a new dimension sandstone company, “opened a quarry in old workings near Mansfield, Parke County.”
- The Mineral Industry of Indiana – 1999 [PDF]
- Tables included in this document are: (1) Table 1. Nonfuel Raw Mineral Production in Indiana; (2) Table 2. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used, By Kind; (3) Table 3. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used By Producers in 1998, By Use; (4) Table 4. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used By Producers in 1998, By Use and District; (5) Table 5. Indiana: Construction Sand and Gravel Sold Or Used in 1998, By Major Use Category; (6) Table 6. Indiana: Construction Sand and Gravel Sold Or Used in 1998, By Use and District.
- Some of the stone quarries and related companies included in this document are: New crushed stone operations include: Hansen Aggregates Midwest, Inc., quarry and the Woodlawn II Quarry in Allen County; Limedale Quarry in Putnam County; J. W. Jones Crushed Stone, Inc., quarry in Putnam Quarry; Mulzer’s Crushed Stone, Inc.’s New Amsterdam Quarry; Indiana Limestone Co. Inc. Crown Quarry dimension stone quarry in Monroe County; Blackwell Moore Inc.; Martin Marietta Aggregates, Inc., Kentucky Avenue Mine in Marion County; Material Service Corp. of Chicago, Illinois acquired the Ward Stone, Inc. quarries, the Francesville Quarry in Pulaski County, and the Babcock Quarry in Jasper County; J. W. Jones Crushed Stone, Inc.; Jones & Sons, Inc.; Irving Materials, Inc.; Pipe Creek Stone Co.; Stoneco, Inc. Mill Creek Quarry in Miami County; Hanson Aggregates Midwest, Inc. Greencastle plant closed; Indiana Limestone Co. Inc. (producers of Salem Limestone); Phoenix Limestone Co. closed its quarry in Lawrence County; Dyckerhoff AG, “an international cement and building materials company headquartered in Germany acquired Lone Star Industries, Inc.; General Shale Products Corp. was acquired by Wienerberger Group, based in Vienna Austin; Carmeuse Group; the Lafarge Group (“Carmeuse operates the Marblehead lime plant in Lake County.”
- The Mineral Industry of Indiana – 2000 [PDF]
- Tables included in this document are: (1) Table 1. Nonfuel Raw Mineral Production in Indiana; (2) Table 2. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used, By Kind; (3) Table 3. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used By Producers in 1999, By Use; (4) Table 4. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used By Producers in 1999, By Use And District; (5) Table 5. Indiana: Construction Sand And Gravel Sold Or Used in 1999, By Major Use Category; (6) Table 6. Indiana: Construction Sand And Gravel Sold Or Used in 1999, By Use And District.
- The stone quarries and related companies included in this document are: Crushed stone quarry near Monon, White County, opened by Material Service Corp.; Aggrock Quarries, Inc., was aquired by Hanson Aggregates Midwest, Inc. – crushed stone quarry near Sellersburg, Clark County; Global Stone Co. (subsidiary of Oglebay Norton Co.) acquired J. M. Huber Corp. and renamed the plant Global Stone Portage LLC, which produced ground limestone at the time of the report; 10% interest in Pembrooke Calox Inc. acquired by of Baltic International USA, Inc., both companies to develop high calcium reserves near Stinesville, Monroe County; the following crushed stone quarries were closed during the year: Hanson Aggregates Midwest Region, Russellville Stone in Putnam County; Lowell Quarries Ltd., Lowell Mining, in Lake County; the Patton Hill Quarry in Lawrence County was opened by Star Stone Co., Inc.; Star Stone Co., Inc., also owns Hunter Valley Quarry (inactive) in Monroe County; Walton Quarries Inc., owns an inactive dimension limestone quarry in Lawrence County; Walton Quarries, Inc., quarried dimension limestone near Bloomington in Monroe County on property owned by C&H Stone Co., the quarry was formerly leased by B. G. Hoadley Quarries, Inc.; Hoadley Quarries, Inc., quarries dimension limestone from the Maple Hill Quarry.
- The Mineral Industry of Indiana – 2001 (includes a mineral map of Indiana ) [PDF]
- Tables included in this document are: (1) Table 1. Nonfuel Raw Mineral Production in Indiana; (2) Table 2. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used, By Kind; (3) Table 3. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used By Producers in 2000, By Use; (4) Table 4. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used By Producers in 2000, By Use and District; (5) Table 5. Indiana: Construction Sand and Gravel Sold Or Used in 2000, By Major Use Category; (6) Table 6. Indiana: Construction Sand And Gravel Sold Or Used in 2000, By Use and District.
- Some of the stone quarries and related companies included in this document are: Martin Marietta Aggregates to open “long-abandoned Standard Materials Corp quarry site at Waldron,” Shelby County; J. W. Jones Co.; Blackwell Moore, Inc., was acquired by Rogers Group, Inc., which produced crushed stone from overburden at Indiana Limestone Co., Inc.’s Crown Quarry and the Bloomington Crown Quarry; Indiana Limestone Co., Inc. continued to produce dimension limestone; Mulzer Crushed Stone, Inc.’s New Amsterdam Quarry in Harrison County; Hanson Aggregates Midwest Region’s Woodburn Quarry in Allen County closed during 2001; the StarStone Co., Inc. Patton Hill Quarry near Oolitic, Lawrence County (opened in 2000); the StarStone Co., Inc., Patton Hill Quarry near Oolitic, Lawrence County; Independent Limestone Co. produced “about 425 cubic meters of stone for the Pentagon reconstruction project,” stone for the project “cut, detailed, and shipped the stone” was done by Bybee Stone Co. of Ellettsville.
- The Mineral Industry of Indiana – 2002 (includes a mineral map of Indiana) [PDF]
- Tables included in this document are: (1) Table 1. Nonfuel Raw Mineral Production in Indiana; (2) Table 2. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used, By Kind; (3) Table 3. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used By Producers in 2001, By Use; (4) Table 4: Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used By Producers in 2001, By Use and District; (5) Table 5. Indiana: Construction Sand and Gravel Sold Or Used in 2001, By Major Use Category; (6) Table 6. Indiana: Construction Sand and Gravel Sold Or Used in 2001, By Use and District.
- Some of the stone quarries and related companies included in this document are: Rogers Group Inc. was founded in 1908, received a Half Century Business Award from the Indiana Dept. of Commerce; Rogers Group Inc., opened underground mine near Bloomington, Monroe County; Liter’s Quarry of Indiana opened underground mine at Atkins crushed stone quarry near Jeffersonville, Clark County; Rogers Group Newton County Quarry at Kentland enlarged; the former Blackwell Moore aggregate plant taken over by the Rogers Group – the plant “produces aggregate from overburden limestone at Indiana Limestone Co.’s Crown Quarry,”dimension stone quarry in Monroe County; Limestone Material Supply opened new dimension limestone Luttrell & Galloway Quarry near Oolitic, Lawrence County; production at Hunter Valley Quarry, Monroe County, stopped in 2000 by Star Stone Co.; Star Stone Co. Patton Hill Quarry in the Oolitic area, Lawrence County; Walton Quarries quarry southwest of Bloomington, Monroe County; Walton Quarries abandoned its dimension stone quarry Oolitic Quarry in Lawrence County during 2002; “A panel of Indiana limestone mined by the Independent Limestone Co. and milled by the Bybee Stone Co.”was inscribed with a quote by President Bush: “Terrorist acts can shake the foundations of our biggest buildings but cannot touch the foundation of America.” The panel was signed by employees of the mill and other local dignitaries and placed on display at the Pentagon construction site in Washington, DC, where it was also signed by construction workers. Bybee Stone Co. completed the Pentagon repair project in record time and began a new project to provide carved stone for the Kennedy-Warren Center in Washington, DC.” “The Indiana Limestone Co. supplied dimension stone for the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia, PA, which is scheduled to open in 2003. About 77,100 t of the Indiana stone will be used on the facade of the building, and a portion of the preamble to the Constitution later will be carved onto it. The South Carolina Museum of Natural Science received an Award of Excellence in the third annual Project Awards Program of the Marble Institute of America. The exterior of the building and paving stone were largely composed of Indiana limestone from the Indiana Limestone Co.” Indiana Limestone Co. offered for sale in 2002; “A limestone memorial was constructed at the entrance to the town of Stinesville, Monroe County, to commemorate the importance of the area to the development of the dimension limestone industry in Indiana. Dimension limestone was first quarried near the village in 1827.”
- The Mineral Industry of Indiana – 2003 (includes a mineral map of Indiana) [PDF]
- Tables included in this document are: (1) Table 1. Nonfuel Raw Mineral Production in Indiana, (2) Table 2. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used, By Kind, (3) Table 3. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used By Producers in 2002, By Use, (4) Table 4. Indiana: Crushed Stone Sold Or Used By Producers in 2002, By Use and District, (5) Table 5. Indiana: Construction Sand and Gravel Sold Or Used in 2002, By Major Use Category, (6) Table 6. Indiana: Construction Sand and Gravel Sold Or Used in 2002, By Use and District.
- Some of the stone quarries and related companies included in this document are: Sellersburg Stone Co. acquired the Corydon Crushed Lime Company in Harrison County; “Rogers Group, Inc., listed the Orleans Quarry in Orange County, which had not produced for more than 2 years, as abandoned with MSHA; “Hanson donated 182 hectares including abandoned rock quarries and wooded areas valued at $5 million to DePauw University near Greencastle in Putnam County. It will become the DePauw University Nature Park, and rock climbing may be allowed on the quarry walls.; Shatter cones from Rogers Group, Inc., Newton County Quarry, the site of an ancient meteorite impact, are on display at the Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles, CA.” “About Face Bronze Medallion Community Relations Award was awarded to Rogers Group, Inc.’s Bloomington Crushed Stone plant in Monroe County. Mulzer Crushed Stone, Inc.’s Newburgh sales yard in Warrick County won a Showplace Award in that competition.” St. Meinrad sandstone quarry in Spencer County reopened by Mansfield Stone, Inc. – company also operates a sandstone quarry in Parke County; “A partnership was formed with the monastery that owns the property; the company that will operate the quarry is Mansfield-St. Meinrad Stone, Inc. While the stone will be marketed worldwide, it will also be used to maintain the monastery. The company will not be allowed to blast and must remove the stone by mechanical means. Once quarried, the stone will be trucked to Brazil in Clay County, a 200-kilometer trip, for milling. Initial jobs will focus on the restoration of buildings that had been constructed with the sandstone.” “The Indiana Limestone Company, Inc., which owns quarries in Lawrence and Monroe Counties, was sold to Johnson Ventures. Members of a family who own the Victor Oolitic Stone Company in Monroe County opened Big Creek Stone Quarry under the company name Big Creek LLC at a long-abandoned quarry near Stinesville in Monroe County.; “The Hoosier Calcium Corp., also near Stinesville in Monroe County, was sold to American Limestone, LLC. Hoosier Calcium Corp. had operated as an underground crushed stone quarry that produced crushed limestone for glass manufacture. American Limestone, LLC, however, is producing dimension limestone from a surface mine on the property. The company will be opening another dimension limestone quarry in Monroe County at the site of a quarry that has been abandoned for 75 years. American Limestone, LLC is a spinoff of Mansfield Stone, Inc. Walton Quarries is no longer producing dimension limestone from the C&H Quarry in Monroe County.”
- The Mineral Industry of Indiana – 1994 [PDF]
- “Minerals associated with Lower Pennsylvanian conglomerate, Lawrence County, Indiana,” by Jack Allen Sunderman and Seymour Samuel Greenberg, in Journal of Sedimentary Research; December 1960, v. 30; no. 4, pp. 578-581, on the GeoScienceWorld (GSW) web site.
- Oolitic Limestone in 1887 – “A Specimen Quarry in the Oolitic Limestone Region of Indiana” (This article includes two sketches of the Salem Stone & Lime Company quarries located at Salem, Indiana.) The Manufacturer and Builder, Vol. 19, Issue 11, November 1887.
- The Salem Limestone in the Indiana Building-Stone Industry, Occasional Paper 38, J. R. Patton and D. D. Carr, Indiana Geological Survey, 1982. 31 pp.
- Stone, Dimension, by Lloyd E. Antonides and Robert L. Virta. (includes information on the Indiana stone industry) [PDF]
- Stone, Dimension (Dimension Stone), by Jim F. Lemons, Jr. (includes information on the Indiana stone industry) [PDF]
- Dimension Stone (Stone, Dimension), by Thomas P. Dolley (includes information on the Indiana stone industry) [PDF]
- “Types of Stone Used for Sacred Structures in Northeastern Ohio,” presented by the Center for Sacred Monuments, Cleveland State University. This article includes some information on the use of Indiana limestone in Ohio structures.
Printed, Online Sources, & Video Resources
Google Book Search: You can use Google Book Search to search for specific subjects in thousands of books available through the Google Book Search – both books under copyright and in the public domain. Hundreds of books are added regularly, so check back if you do not find books on the subject for which you are seeking information. Some of the books published prior to 1923 are available in their entirety and can be downloaded to you computer for your personal use.
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- Abandoned Railroads of Bedford (Indiana), by Elmer Griffith Sulzer, Indianapolis: Council for Local History, 1959. [Chapters: Dark Hollow to Switz City (CI&L RY), Riverdale to Bedford (B&O SW RR), Bedford to Wallner (CI&L RY), Riverdale to Stonington (BS RY), Sanders to Harrodsburg Junction (CI&L RY), Corrine to North Bedford (I&V RR), Coxton to Gilberson (C TH&SE RY)]
- “Activity in the Indiana Limestone Field,” in Stone, Vol. XLI, No. 6, June 1920, pp. 280.
- Age and Origin of Stone Quarried Near Fort Wayne in the Mid-1800’s, by Michael C. Moore and Carl B. Rexroad, Bloomington: State of Indiana, Department of Natural Resources, Geological Survey, 1974.
- (Areal report/reference on building stone in Indiana – title of article unknown), by (?) Thompson, Indiana Geological and Natural History Survey, Seventeenth Report, 1891, p. 19. (Citation from Economic Geology of the United States, by Heinrich Ries, 1907.)
- “The Bedford Oolitic Limestone of Indiana,” by T. C. Hopkins and C. E. Siebenthal, in Eighteenth Annual Report, Part 5, United States Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1897, pp. 1050-1057.
- “The Bedford Oolitic Limestone of Indiana,” by T. C. Hopkins and C. E. Siebenthal, in Geology and Natural Resources, Twenty-First Annual Report 1896, Indiana Department, W. S. Blatchley, State Geologist, Indianapolis: Wm. B. Burford, Contractor for State Printing and Binding, 1897, pp. 291-427. (The following sections are included in this report: Chapter I. General Geographical and Stratigraphical Features; Chapter II. General Structural and Economic Features f the Bedford Oolitic Limestone; Chapter III. Commercial Features of the Bedford Oolitic Limestone; Chapter IV. Local Features of the Bedford Oolitic Limestone; Chapter V. Oolites and Oolitic Limestones in General.)
- “The Bedford Oolitic Limestone (Indiana),” by C. E. Siebenthal, in Ninteenth Annual Report, Part 6, United States Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1898, pp. 292-296.
- “The Bedford Stone Quarries” (in Indiana), in The Manufacturer and Builder, Vol. 16, No. 12, December 1884, pp. 277-278.
- Bedrock Geology and Mineral Resources of Putnam County, Indiana, by John R. Hill, Michael C. Moore, and John C. Mackey, Bloomington, Indiana: State of Indiana, Department of Natural Resources, Geological Survey, 1982, Series: Geological Survey Special Report; 26.
- “Being Green,” by Brian Smith, Breaker, Drill Runner, Ledge Foreman, Superintendent, in the Indianapolis Monthly Magazine, October 2004, pp. 143. (This magazine is available on Google Books.)
- Bloomington and Indiana University, Indiana, Inc. Bloomington Restorations, Arcadia Publishing, June 1, 2002, 128 pp., ISBN: 0738519405.
- Bloomington Past & Present, by Will Counts, James H. Madison, and Scott Russell Sanders, Indiana University, 2002, ISBN: 025334056X.
- Bloomington Sketchbook, by Douglas A. Wissing, Indigo Custom Publishing, 2004, 92 pp., ISBN: 0972595155 .
- “Build It and They Will Come,” by Amy Brier, Master Carver, Sculptor, in the Indianapolis Monthly Magazine, October 2004, pp. 146. (This magazine is available on Google Books.)
- “Building in War Times” (World War I), in Stone, An Illustrated Magazine, July 1917. (photo caption) “Residence of John Sherman Hoyt, New York – Corner of 79th Street and Park Avenue. Architects: Howell & Stokes, New York. Built of stone from Chestnut Hill, Pa. Trimming of Buff Indiana limestone. Cut by J. J. Spurr & Son, Harrison, N.J.” pp. 358)
- Building Materials in Downtown Indianapolis: Introductory Field Trip, by Arthur Mirsky, Department of Geology, Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis, 1977, 5th ed. April 20, 1986.
- “The Building Stones of Indiana,” in The Manufacturer and Builder, Vol. 17, Issue No. 4, April 1885, pp. 82-83. (The article includes a sketch of the Bedford stone quarries. Stones mentioned in this article include: North Vernon Blue Stone, Greensburg, or Flat Rock, Stone, and many others.)
- “Buried in Stone: Workers for Independent Limestone Company, one of Bloomington’s limestone quarries, share their stories,” by Ashley Lough, in Independent Daily Student at IDSnews.com, Wednesday, October 5, 2005.
- “Canadian Stone Carving Features Indiana Limestone,” July 28, 2017, Stone Update.
- “Carthage Limestone” (Indiana), in Mine and Quarry Magazine, Sullivan Machinery Co., Chicago, 1908, pp. 179-183. (This article is available in Google Book Search – Full view books in a bound book of “Mine and Quarry” magazine, although many pages are unreadable.)
- “Carved Stone in Soldiers’ Memorials” (University of Wisconsin at Madison, Wisconsin), in Stone, Vol. XLVI, No. 8, August 1925, pp. 477-478.
- “A Catalogue of the Fossils of Indiana,” by Edward M. Kindle, in Geology and Natural Resources, Twenty-Second Annual Report 1897, Indiana Department, W. S. Blatchley, State Geologist, Indianapolis: Wm. B. Burford, Contractor for State Printing and Binding, 1898, pp. 407-514.
- Compendium of Paleozoic Rock-Unit Stratigraphy in Indiana – A Revision, by Robert H. Shaver, Curtis H. Ault, Ann M. Burger, Donald D. Carr, John B. Droste, Donald L. Eggert, Henry H. Gray, Denver Harper, Nancy R. Hasenmueller, Walter A. Hasenmueller, Alan S. Horowitz, Harold C. Hutchison, Brian D. Keith, Stanley J. Keller, John B. Patton, Carl B. Rexroad, and Charles E. Weir, hypertext file by Todd A. Thompson and Zinta Smidchens, modified from Indiana Geological Survey Bulletin 59.
- “Covid’s impact on Indiana’s limestone industry. What will the coronavirus do to the way America uses Indiana limestone?” Mitch Daniels Leadership Foundation.
- “Crown Hill Cemetery, Indianapolis, Indiana,” in The Monumental News, Sept. 1893.
- Crushed Stone Aggregate Resources of Indiana, Bulletin 42-H, by Donald D. Carr, Robert R. French, and Curtis H. Ault, State of Indiana, Department of Natural Resources, Geological Survey, 1971.
- DePauw Nature Park Quarry Trail Guide, DePauw University, 2016 (in Greencastle, Indiana)
- Quarry Trail Guide – Geology and Fossils, DePauw University in Greencastle, Indiana.
- Dimension Sandstone Resources of Indiana (B42M, 28 p.) (Indiana Geological Survey)
- Directory of Industrial Mineral Producers in Indiana, 2006, Indiana State Geological Society (D11-2006).
- “Durability & Density: Indiana Limestone known across the globe,” by Krystal Shetler, Times-Mail, June 27, 2019.
- Early History of Indiana Limestone, by Ron Bell, AuthorHouse, 2008.
- An Economic History of theIndianaOolitic Limestone Industry, by Joseph Alexander Batchelor, Bloomington: The School of Business, Indiana University, 1944, Ip 650 I385s no. 27 [Pamphlet]. (Citation from Limestone Industry in Indiana, Select Resources, Indiana Division, Indiana State Library.)
- “Elliott Stone Acquired by Polycor,” October 9, 2019, Building Indiana Business.
- “The Entrance Beautiful Assured by Use of Natural Stone,” in Stone, An Illustrated Magazine, Vol. XLVII, No. 10, October 1926, pp. 603-604.
- The First Annual Report of the Geological Survey of Indiana, Made During the Year 1869, by E. T. Cox, State Geologist, Assisted by Prof. Frank H. Bradley, Dr. Rufus Haymond, and Dr. G. M. Levette, Indianpolist, Alexander H. Conner, State Printer, 1869. (This book is available on Google Book Search for reading or downloading to your computer.)
- Follow the Limestone: A Walking Tour of Indiana University (brochure), by IGS senior scientist Brian Keith and produced by the Bloomington / Monroe County Convention and Visitors Bureau, circa 2009/2010.
(From the Indiana Geological Survey web site) “‘The heart of the Indiana University Bloomington campus is meant for casual walking and exploration. The unique combination of green space and architecturally distinctive limestone buildings that span across three centuries continually provides me with interesting and enjoyable things to see, even after being here for many years,’ said Keith.
“The brochure celebrates and commemorates the area’s limestone heritage as evidenced by the prolific limestone architecture on the campus of Indiana University, and is full of interesting facts about the architectural styles of the buildings and the stone that was used to construct them.
“Brochures are available at the Bloomington Visitors Center on North Walnut Street, the Indiana Geological Survey at the corner of 10th Street and Walnut Grove Avenue and at the Indiana University (IU) Visitor Information Center on Indiana Avenue.”
- Fortieth Annual Report of Department of Geology and Natural Resources, Indiana, 1915, Edward Barrett, State Geologist, Fort Wayne Printing Company, Contractors for State Printing and Binding, 1916.
- “From the Quarry to the Mill to the Artist’s Studio: Stories From the Indiana Stone Belt,” in the Indianapolis Monthly Magazine, October 2004, pp. 140-147. (This magazine is available on Google Books.)
- Gems, Granites, and Gravels: Knowing and Using Rocks and Minerals, by Brian J Skinner, Richard Vincent Dietrich, Cambridge University Press, Aug. 31, 1990, 182 pp., ISBN 0521344441.
- A Geological Reconnaissance of the State of Indiana, 1838.
- “Geological Scale of Indiana,” by W. S. Blatchley and George H. Ashley, in Geology and Natural Resources, Twenty-Second Annual Report 1897, Indiana Department, W. S. Blatchley, State Geologist, Indianapolis: Wm. B. Burford, Contractor for State Printing and Binding, 1898, pp. 17-23.
- “Geology and Natural History Report of Carroll County,” by Maurice Thompson, Geology and Natural Resources, Seventeenth Annual Report 1891, Indiana Department, S. S. Gorby, State Geologist, Indianapolis: Wm. B. Burford, Contractor for State Printing and Binding, 1892, pp. 171-191.
- Geology and Natural Resources, Seventeenth Annual Report 1891, Indiana Department, S. S. Gorby, State Geologist, Indianapolis: Wm. B. Burford, Contractor for State Printing and Binding, 1892.
- Geology and Natural Resources, Twenty-First Annual Report 1896, Indiana Department, W. S. Blatchley, State Geologist, Indianapolis: Wm. B. Burford, Contractor for State Printing and Binding, 1897.
- Geology and Natural Resources, Twenty-Second Annual Report 1897, Indiana Department, W. S. Blatchley, State Geologist, Indianapolis: Wm. B. Burford, Contractor for State Printing and Binding, 1898.
- “Geology and Natural Resources of Jefferson County (Indiana),” by Prof. Glenn Culbertson, Hanover College, Fortieth Annual Report of Department of Geology and Natural Resources, Indiana, 1915, Edward Barrett, State Geologist, Fort Wayne Printing Company, Contractors for State Printing and Binding, 1916, pp. 223-239.
- “Geology of Dearborn County,” by a. J. Bigney, President Moores Hill College, Fortieth Annual Report of Department of Geology and Natural Resources, Indiana, 1915, Edward Barrett, State Geologist, Fort Wayne Printing Company, Contractors for State Printing and Binding, 1916, pp. 211-222.
- “Geology of Greene County,” by W. B. Van Gorder, Fortieth Annual Report of Department of Geology and Natural Resources, Indiana, 1915, Edward Barrett, State Geologist, Fort Wayne Printing Company, Contractors for State Printing and Binding, 1916, pp. 240-266.
- “The Geology of Lake and Porter Counties,” by W. S. Blatchley, in Geology and Natural Resources, Twenty-Second Annual Report 1897, Indiana Department, W. S. Blatchley, State Geologist, Indianapolis: Wm. B. Burford, Contractor for State Printing and Binding, 1898, pp. 25-104.
- “The Geology of Sculpting Stone: Indiana Limestone,” by Michael E. Yeaman, on the Northwest Stone Sculptors Association web site.
- “Geology of Vigo County, Indiana,” by J. T. Scovell, in Geology and Natural Resources, Twenty-First Annual Report 1896, Indiana Department, W. S. Blatchley, State Geologist, Indianapolis: Wm. B. Burford, Contractor for State Printing and Binding, 1897, pp. 507-578.
- “Geology of Wabash County (Indiana),” by Moses N. Elrod, M.D., Geology and Natural Resources, Seventeenth Annual Report 1891, Indiana Department, S. S. Gorby, State Geologist, Indianapolis: Wm. B. Burford, Contractor for State Printing and Binding, 1892, pp. 192-259.
- Ghost Railroads of Indiana, by Elmer Griffith Sulzer, Indiana University Press, ISBN: 0253334837. (Originally published in 1970 by Vine A. Jones Co., Publishers, Indianapolis, first reprinted by Indiana University Press 1998.)
- A Glimpse of the Celebrated Stone Quarries at Bedford, Indiana – Largest Producers of Oolitic Limestone in the World, Bedford Stone Quarries Co., Inc., R. R. Donnelly & Sons Co., Printers, published late 1800s – early 1890s.
- Guardians of The Soul: Angels And Innocents, Mourners And Saints-Indiana’s Remarkable Cemetery Sculpture, by John Bower, Studio Indiana, October 2004, 144 pp., ISBN-10: 0974518611, ISBN-13: 9780974518619. (This book also includes information on some of the cemetery stones and stone carvers.)
- A Guidebook to Mining In America: Volume 1: West (The Dakotas, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, and farther West), by John Park, Stonerose Publishing Co., Miami, Florida, April, 2000, available at Stonerose Publishing Company.
- A Guidebook to Mining In America: Volume 2: East (Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, Arkansas, Louisiana, and farther East), by John Park, Stonerose Publishing Co., Miami, Florida, April, 2000, available at Stonerose Publishing Company.
- High Calcium Limestone and High Magnesium Dolomite Resources of Indiana (B42B, 20p.) (Indiana Geological Survey)
- History of Crawford County, (Indiana), by Hazen Hayes Pleasant, Greenfield, Indiana: Wm. Mitchell Printing Company, 1926. (This book contains information the stone quarry at Marengo, Indiana.)
- “History of Indiana Limestone,” 3DStone, Inc.
- “Hoosier Quarries Built Industrial America,” June 27, 2018, Orangebean.
- “A Humble Stone,” by Bob Enochs, Sculptor, in the Indianapolis Monthly Magazine, October 2004, pp. 143. (This magazine is available on Google Books.)
- In Stone Country, by Scott Russell Sanders, Beacon Press, paperback ISBN: 0807063355. (Reprint of the text from Stone Country, by Scott R. Sanders and photographs by Jeffrey A. Wolin, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1985) (out of print).
- Indiana, by Ann Heinrichs, Compass Point Books, Aug. 1, 2003, 48 pp., ISBN 0756503256.
- Indiana, by Rich Clark, Browntrout Publishers, June 1, 2005, 168 pp., ISBN: 0763184640.
- “Indiana Bedrock: Limestone Industry Timeline,” Monroe County Public Library.
- Indiana Department of Geology and Natural Resources, Seventeenth Annual Report, 1891, S. S. Gorby, (State Geologist), Wm. B. Burford, Contractor for State Printing and Binding, Indianapolis, Indiana, 1892.
- Indiana Geology and Natural Resources, 1897, Twenty-Second Annual Report, by W. S. Blatchley, State Geologist. William B. Burford, Indianapolis, 1898. 1197 pp. (Includes information on Niagra limestone quarries.)
- “Indiana History Project: Bedford Stone Industry History,” Video on vimeo.
- “Indiana Limestone – A Primer,” October 30, 2021, Outside Stone.
- “Indiana Limestone: A History,” YouTube video by Journey Indiana. March 23, 2017.
- “Indiana Limestone: America’s building stone,” by Nelson R. Shaffer, Geological Society, London, Special Publications, 486, 1 January 2019, on Lyell Collection, Geological Society of London Publications.
- “Indiana limestone built many great structures,” by Andrea Neal, Kokomo Tribune, July 16, 2014.
- “Indiana Limestone Co. bankruptcy shakes entire industry” (Indiana Limestone Co.), by Rick Seltzer, March 9, 2014, The Herald-Times.
- “Indiana Limestone Co. cutting stone with new owner,” Associated Press, May 14, 2014, Goshen News.
- “Indiana Limestone Co. merges with Canada-based quarrier,” by Kurt Christian, Hoosier Times, October 23, 2018. Reporter-Times.
- “Indiana Limestone Co. to close, lay off 166 workers,” by Jeff Swiatek, February 26, 2014, Courier Journal.
- “Indiana limestone industry on upswing, officials say,” Staff reports South Bend Tribune, June 28, 2014.
- “Indiana Limestone is America’s Building Blocks,” by Teree Caruthers, September 25, 2014, on My Indiana Home.
- Indiana Limestone – List of YouTube videos
- “Indiana Limestone: Still the World’s Best,” by Janet Mandelstam, January 23, 2013, Bloom Magazine.
- Indiana Limestone: The Aristocrat of Building Materials, Vol. 1, June 1920, Sixth Edition, Indiana Limestone Quarrymen’s Association, Bedford, Indiana.
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- Indiana Limestone Handbook, 22nd edition, Indiana Limestone Institute of America, Inc., Bedford, IN, 154 pp. (Includes “A Brief History of the Indiana Limestone Industry,” pp. 4)
- “Indiana Limestone is America’s Building Blocks,” by Teree Caruthers, September 25, 2014, on My Indiana Home.
- “Indiana Limestone: Still the World’s Best,” by Janet Mandelstam, January 23, 2013, Bloom Magazine.
- Indiana Limestone: “The Nation’s Building Stone.” Indianapolis: Public Service Co. of Indiana, 1945, Ip 622.22 no. 4 (Pamphlet) (Citation from Limestone Industry in Indiana, Select Resources, Indiana Division, Indiana State Library.)
- Indiana Limestone Company. Bulletins. (periodical) I 691.2 I385b. (Citation from Limestone Industry in Indiana, Select Resources, Indiana Division, Indiana State Library.)
- Indiana Limestone Quarrymen’s Association. (periodical) Indiana limestone. Bedford: 1917-1927; I 691.2 I385a. (Citation from Limestone Industry in Indiana, Select Resources, Indiana Division, Indiana State Library.)
- Indiana Minerals: A Locality Index, T. E. Huizing & R. E. Russell, Rocks and Minerals, 1986.
- The Indiana Oolitic Limestone Industry, by Perry J. Richard. Indianapolis, 1937, Ip 553.5 no. 2 (Pamphlet). (Citation from Limestone Industry in Indiana, Select Resources, Indiana Division, Indiana State Library.)
- “Indiana Oölitic Limestone: Geology, Quarries, Methods,” by George D. Hunter, Bloomington, Indiana, in Mine and Quarry, Vol. V, No. 1, July 1910, pp. 410-419.
The article begins:
“The Indiana Oölitic limestone district extends from a point near Greencastle on the north, to the Ohio River, and ranges from two to 14 miles in width. The deposits are from 25 to 100 feet thick. The active quarries are confined to a comparatively small area called the Oölitic belt, embracing Romona, in Owen County, Stinesville, Ellettsville, Bloomington, Clear Creek and Saunders, in Monroe County; Oölitic, Dark Hollow and Bedford, in Lawrence County, Salem, Washington County, and Corydon, Harrison County.”
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- “Indiana Oolitic Limestone: Relation Of Its Natural Features To Its Commercial Grading,” by G. F. Loughlin (Abstract), Contributions to Economic Geology, 1929, Part I.
- Indiana’s Stone Cutters and Carvers: Builders for the Nation (90-3041). Indiana Historical Bureau – Indiana Heritage Research Grant Abstracts – 1990. (The link from which this information was obtained is no longer available.)
<http://www.statelib.lib.in.us/www/ihb/resources/ihrg90.html>
“The purpose of this project was to collect oral histories (on audiotape and videotape) of people who worked in the Indiana limestone industry in Monroe and Lawrence counties in the first half of the twentieth century. Among those interviewed are quarry owners, stone cutters, stone carvers, family members of men who worked in the industry, Indiana University geologists who have studied the Indiana limestone industry extensively, and an I.U. folklore professor who has studied the use of limestone carvings in the local community.” Contact: Monroe County Historical Museum, 202 E. Sixth Street, Bloomington, IN 47408.
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- “The Indiana Oölitic Limestone Industry,” by Stephen S. Visher, Geographer, Indiana University, Economic Geography Vol. 7, No. 1 (Jan., 1931), pp. 50-58 (9 pages) Published By: Taylor & Francis, Ltd. on JSTOR.
- Indiana Stonecarver: The Story of Thomas R. Reding, by Ann Nolan and Keith A. Buckley, Indiana Historical Society, 1984, 106 pp., ISBN-10: 999945447X, ISBN-13: 978-9999454476. (This book chronicles the life of Thomas R. Reding from Salem, Indiana. Details his work are included along with many black-and-white photographs of his carvings and tombstones that can be found throughout Indiana. Most of these older markers are carved from a fine-grained, light-colored sandstone. The engraving on these stones appears to be of consistently higher quality than that of the marble ones. Although the sandstone slabs date from 1830 to 1850, they have retained their sharpness and detail.)
- “Indiana’s stone quarries are defending their turf. Artificial stone starting to cut into an Indiana limestone market,” by Associated Press, August 17, 2003.
- “Industrial Limestone in Indiana,” by J. B. Patton, Scientific Monthly, Vol. 72, 1951, pp. 252-265.
- “Just Arrived From The East”: Manufactured And Imported Building Materials in Early Nineteenth-Century Indiana, A Thesis Submitted To The Graduate School in Partial Fulfillment of The Requirements For The Degree Master of Science in Historic Preservation, by M. Chris Manning, Duncan Campbell, Advisor, Ball State University, Muncie, Indiana, December 2010.
- Lawrence County, Indiana, by Maxine Kruse, Arcadia Publishing, Images of America series, by Maxine Kruse, 2001, ISBN: 0738508063.
- “Learn About the Geology, History, and Artistry of Limestone,” June 6, 2016, on Travelin, Indiana’s travel and lifestyle magazine.
- The Lime Industry of Indiana (B42J, 62 p.) (Indiana Geological Survey)
- “Limestone Column Passes Test Far Above Design Calculations,” from Stone, Stone Publishing Company, Vol. XLVII, No. 7, July 1926, pp. 423..
- Limestone Industry in Indiana – Resources Limestone Industry Resources from the Indiana Division, presented by the Indiana State Library. (Books and Printed Materials, Maps, Manuscript Collections , Periodicals, Clippings File Headings, Indianapolis Newspaper Index Headings , & Supplementary Index Headings.)
- “Limestone is to Indiana what Granite is to New Hampshire,” by Kerry Hubartt of the News-Sentinel, June 7, 2014. (This link is no longer available.)
<http://www.news-sentinel.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20140607/EDITORIAL/140609735/-1/LIVING> - Limestone Lives: Voices from the Indiana Stone Belt, by Katherine Ferrucci, Quarry Books, Oct. 2004, 82 pp., ISBN: 025334512X.
- “Limestone Month was created in 2007 to celebrate the rich heritage of limestone in Lawrence and Monroe,” Indiana Limestone Heritage Trail.
- “Linked by Limestone: Seven draftsmen changed the face of the country”, by Claude Parsons, HeraldTimesOnline.com, Special to Living, July 31, 2001. (This link is no longer available, although you can read the document on the Internet Archive Wayback Machine.)
<cardinalscholar.bsu.edu/bitstream/123456789/194648/1/ManningM_2010-1_BODY.pdf> - A Location Guide for Rockhounds, Collected by Robert C. Beste, PG, St. Louis, Missouri: Hobbitt Press, 2nd ed., December 1996, 148 pp. (Includes chapters on “Mineral Locations by State,” “Appendix and Glossary,” and “Bibliography.”)
- “Making Tracks Out of the Stone Age,” by Yaël Ksander, July 13, 2009, Moment of Indiana History.
- Manuscript Collections:Ingall Stone Company, 4th Floor; Mann, John L., S925; Millholland, C., S966; and Owen, Richard, S1036. (Citation from Limestone Industry in Indiana, Select Resources, Indiana Division, Indiana State Library.)
- Map of Bedford-Bloomington Dimension Limestone Celt Showing Mills, Quarries, and Outcrop of Salem Limestone, Donald D. Carr, Bloomington: Indiana Geological Survey, 1967, I 557.I385ma no. 13. (Citation from Limestone Industry in Indiana, Select Resources, Indiana Division, Indiana State Library.)
- Map of Indiana OoliticLimestone District, Monroe County, Lawrence County, and Owen County, Indiana. Bloomington: Building Stone Association, Inc., 1931, I 912.772 I31bu (1931). (Citation from Limestone Industry in Indiana, Select Resources, Indiana Division, Indiana State Library.)
- Map of Indiana Showing Bedrock Units Containing Thick Deposits of Limestone and Dolomite and Locations of Coal-Fired Power Plants and Crushed-Stone Mines, Indiana Geological Survey, compiled by Curtis H. Ault, drafted by Kari A. Lancaster, Rev. March, 1996, Indiana University, Indiana Geological Survey, Bloomington, Indiana, 1996.
- The Millstone Industry: A summary of research on quarries and producers in the United States, Europe and elsewhere, by Charles D. Hockensmith, McFarland, Jun 7, 2009, 269 pp. (Portions of this book are available on Google eBook by clicking on “view sample.”) (Chapters in this book include: Early American Millstone Documents, Millstone Quarrying in the United States, Millstone Makers and Urban Factories, The Rise and Fall of the American Millstone Industry Producers Annual Values and Decline, Foreign Millstones Imported to America, The Millstone Quarrying Industry Outside the United States, Artificial Millstones, Tools Used in Making and Sharpening Millstones, Working Conditions and Hazards in the Millstone Industry, and Conclusion.)
(Description from Google Books) “Since prehistoric times, the process of cutting rock to make millstones has been one of the most important industries in the world. The earliest rotary millstones, known as querns, were turned by human power. Later, larger millstones were manufactured that required animal, water, or wind power to turn them. These larger millstones required less human effort and ground greater quantities of grain, but also required regular maintenance and replacement. As a result, millstone quarries increased greatly in number and size in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, with the largest quarry sites extending as far as nearly a half-mile square to about 12 square miles. The first part of this book compiles information on the millstone industry in the United States, which dates between the mid-1600s and the mid-1900s. Primarily based on archival research and brief accounts published in geological and historical volumes, it focuses on conglomerate, granite, flint, quartzite, gneiss, and sandstone quarries in different regions and states. The second part focuses on the millstone quarrying industry in Europe and other areas. Of the European millstone industry, the quarries of France, Germany, and Great Britain are most extensively documented, although the quarries of Albania, Austria, the Czech Republic, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Luxembourg, Norway, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland are also covered. The extensive bibliography provides scholars with many sources for future research. The book includes 84 photographs, 16 tables, and a helpful glossary of specialized and technical terms.”
- “Minerals of the Rensselaer Stone Co. Quarry, Pleasant Ridge, Indiana,” K. J. Brock, Rocks and Minerals, 1986, pp. 111-115.
- Monon: The Hoosier Line, by Gary Dolzall and Stephen Dolzall, Indiana University Press, 2nd ed., 2002, 216 pp., ISBN: 0253340837.
- Monuments .. For The Ages, Miller Monuments, Incorporated, Plymouth & Elkhart, Indiana, No date of publication.
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Front cover of Monuments..For The Ages |
“Symbols and Their Meaning” section of Monuments..For The Ages |
One of the pages from Monuments.. For The Ages |
- “National Preservation Conference Sneak Peek: Indiana’s Limestone Industry,” by Cynthia Brubaker, August 19, 2013, Preservation Leadership Forum.
- “Notes on the Production of Rustic Monuments in the Limestone Belt of Indiana,” by Warren E. Roberts, in Markers VII, Association for Gravestone Studies, 1990. (Indiana, USA)
- “The Natural Resources of Indiana,” by W. S. Blatchley, in Geology and Natural Resources, Twenty-First Annual Report 1896, Indiana Department, W. S. Blatchley, State Geologist, Indianapolis: Wm. B. Burford, Contractor for State Printing and Binding, 1897, pp. 7-26.
- “A New ‘Duplex’ Channeler for Oölitic Limestone,” by C. J. Levey of Claremont, New Hampshire, Mine and Quarry Magazine, Sullivan Machinery Co., Publisher, Chicago, Illinois, Vol. VII. No. 2, January, 1913, pp. 676- 680. (Article about the Hoosier quarry operated by the Indiana Quarries Company, Oölitic, Indiana.)
- “New Towers of Stone in Chicago,” Stone, July 1925, pp. 413-414. (Article about the S. W. Straus Building & the Chicago Tribune building in Chicago, Illinois.)
- The Oölitic Limestone Industry of Indiana, by Oliver Cary Lockhart, Series: In Indiana University Studies, Bloomington, Indiana, 1910.
- Oolitic Quadrangle, Indiana, Map, U.S. Geological Survey, Surveyed in 1934-1935. Edition of 1942. Scale 1:62,500 (1 inch = 1 mile).
- “Our Building Stone Supply” (Quarrying in the eastern United States circa 1887), from the Scientific American: A weekly journal of practical information, art, science, mechanics, chemistry, and manufactures, New York, Vol. LVI. No. 2 (new series), January 8, 1887.
- Patsy Fell-Barker, BG Hoadley Quarries – Women in Stone Pioneer Award, 2020 (BG Hoadley Quarries – a limestone quarry and fabrication operation in Bloomington, Indiana), Slippery Rock Gazette.
- The Patton Glossary of Building Stone and Masonry Terms, by John B. Patton, Bedford, Indiana, Indiana Limestone Institute of America, 1992 (?).
- “Polycor continues growth with the purchase of another Indiana limestone producer,” by Eric Bignell, 2 October, 2019, Stone Specialist.
- “Power Economy and the Utilization of Waste in the Quarry Industry of Southern Indiana,” by Grover C. Mance, Ph.D., in Indiana University Studies: Contributions to Knowledge made by Instructors and Advanced Students of the University, Vol. IV, No. 35, January 1917, pp. 1-204. (Scroll down to the second book in this publication.)
- Proceedings of the 40th Forum on the Geology of Industrial Minerals, May 2-7, 2004, Nelson R. Shaffer and Deborah A. DeChurch, eds., Bloomington, Indiana, Indiana Geological Survey Occasional Paper 67, 2007. (This book is available on the Indiana Geological Survey web site.)
- Quarries and Mills:IndianaOolitic Limestone Industry. (periodical) Ellettsville: 1929-1931; I 622.22 Q125. (Citation from Limestone Industry in Indiana, Select Resources, Indiana Division, Indiana State Library.)
- “Rebuilding the Pentagon,” by Will Bybee, President, Bybee Stone, Inc., in the Indianapolis Monthly Magazine, October 2004, pp. 144. (This magazine is available on Google Books.)
- “Recutting Stones from an Old Building,” in Stone, Vol. XLI, No. 6, June 1920, pp. 277-278.
(excerpt from article) “…Twenty-one years ago a fine residence was erected by Charles H. Senss on the northwest corner of Madison Avenue and Forty-first Street. The building was designed by Carrere & Hastings and was of Indiana limestone. Recently the property was sold to the Fred F. French Company…who are erecting a large commercial building on the site….”
- Report of a Geological Reconnaissance of Indiana, with David Dale Owen, Indianapolis, 1862.
- “A Report on the Geology of the Middle and Upper Silurian Rocks of Clark, Jefferson, Ripley, Jennings and Southern Decatur Counties, Indiana,” by August F. Foerste, in Geology and Natural Resources, Twenty-First Annual Report 1896, Indiana Department, W. S. Blatchley, State Geologist, Indianapolis: Wm. B. Burford, Contractor for State Printing and Binding, 1897, pp. 213-288.
- “Report on the Niagara Limestone Quarries,” in Geology and Natural Resources, Twenty-Second Annual Report 1897, Indiana Department, W. S. Blatchley, State Geologist, Indianapolis: Wm. B. Burford, Contractor for State Printing and Binding, 1898, pp. 14.
- “A Report on the Niagara Limestone Quarries of Decatur, Franklin and Fayette Counties, with Remarks on the Geology of the Middle and Upper Silurian Rocks of These and Neighboring (Ripley, Jennings, Bartholomew and Shelby) Counties,” by August F. Foerste, in Geology and Natural Resources, Twenty-Second Annual Report 1897, Indiana Department, W. S. Blatchley, State Geologist, Indianapolis: Wm. B. Burford, Contractor for State Printing and Binding, 1898, pp. 195-256.
- “Report Upon the Geology of Steuben County,” by Charles R. Dryer, M.D., Geology and Natural Resources, Seventeenth Annual Report 1891, Indiana Department, S. S. Gorby, State Geologist, Indianapolis: Wm. B. Burford, Contractor for State Printing and Binding, 1892, pp. 114-134.
- “A Report Upon the Various Stones Used for Building, and Found in Indiana,” by Maurice Thompson, Geology and Natural Resources, Seventeenth Annual Report 1891, Indiana Department, S. S. Gorby, State Geologist, Indianapolis: Wm. B. Burford, Contractor for State Printing and Binding, 1892, pp. 18-66.
- The Rise and Fall of The Southern Indiana Railroad and Its Founder John R. Walsh, by Ron Bell, Authorhouse, 250 pp, ISBN 1425946232. (From the description: “John R. Walsh was a Chicago banker that financed a small belt line railroad and quarry in Bedford, Indiana.” To find further information about Ron Bell’s book, use the link above for Authorhouse and click on the “Book Store” section to search for the book on the web site.)
- Roadside Geology of Indiana, by Mark J. Camp and Graham T. Richardson, Mountain Press Publishing Company, Incorporated, June 1999, Paperback, 326 pp., ISBN: 0878423966.
- “Salem Limestone and Associated Formations in South-Central Indiana,” by T. G. Perry, N. M. Smith, and W. J. Wayne, Indiana Geological Survey Field Conf. Guidebook 7, 1954.
- The Salem Limestone in the Indiana Building-Stone Industry, Occasional Paper, 38, J. R. Patton and D. D. Carr, Indiana Geological Survey, 31 pp., 1982,on IUScholar Works.
- “The Sandstones of Western Indiana,” by T. C. Hopkins, in Seventeenth Annual Report, Part 3, United States Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., 1896, pp. 780-787.
- “Selection of Quarry Sites in the Dimension Limestone Belt of Indiana,” (abstract), by N. M Smith, Bulletin Geol. Soc. Amer., Vol. 68, 1957, p. 1797.
- A Short History of Indiana Limestone, by McDonald, Bill. Bedford: Lawrence County Tourism Commission, 1995, I 553.516 M135s. (Citation from Limestone Industry in Indiana, Select Resources, Indiana Division, Indiana State Library.)
- “Some Notes on the Black Slate or Genesee Shale of New Albany, Indiana,” by Hans Duden, in Geology and Natural Resources, Twenty-First Annual Report 1896, Indiana Department, W. S. Blatchley, State Geologist, Indianapolis: Wm. B. Burford, Contractor for State Printing and Binding, 1897, pp. 108-120.
- “Something Different Every Day,” by Wilbern Terrell, Sawyer, Planerman, President of Stone Cutters Union, in the Indianapolis Monthly Magazine, October 2004, pp. 144. (This magazine is available on Google Books.)
- “A Specimen Quarry of Oolitic Limestone, Region of Indiana,” The Manufacturer and Builder, November 1887, pp. 252.
- “Stinesville Offers Block of Four Buildings for $1. Town officials are turning to a new strategy to revive four vacant building in downtown Stinesville: offering the group of structures for $1 to a party who will stabilize and restore them” (a group of five historic limestone buildings is the only intact remnant of downtown Stinesville.) Indiana Landmarks News.
- “Stone Center of Indiana joins Heritage family of companies. The company’s two locations will continue to operate under the Stone Center name” (Heritage Landscape Supply Group, Inc / Stone Centery of Indiana, Inc.) By Kim Lux, July 31, 2020, Lawn & Landscape.
- Stone Country, by Scott R. Sanders, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1985, Ip 553.51 S215s. (Citation from Limestone Industry in Indiana, Select Resources, Indiana Division, Indiana State Library.)
- “Stone Country: Then and Now,” article by Jeffrey A. Wolin.
- “Stone Country: Then and Now opens June 24” (2017), Megan Simpson, June 29, 2017, Indiana State Museum and Historic Sites.
- “Stone Diary: From the Quarry to the Mill to Artistic Studio From the Indiana Stone Belt,” in the Indianapolis Monthly Magazine, October 2004, 140-141. (Includes a photograph from Limestone Lives: Voices from the Indiana Stone Belt. This magazine is available on Google Books.)
- “Stone in California Church” (St. Vincent in Los Angeles), Stone, An Illustrated Magazine, October 1925, pp. 605, 618.
- “Stonecarvers of Monroe County, Indiana, 1828-1890,” by Jennifer Lucas, in Markers VII, Association for Gravestone Studies, 1990.
- “Stone Quarrier Polycor Inc. Expands Its Geographic Presence by Merging with Indiana Limestone Company,” Polycor Inc., October 11, 2011, on Cision PR Newswire.
- “Stone Quarrier Polycor Inc. Merges with Indiana Limestone Company. Polycor now establishes itself as the global leader in the natural stone industry.” October 12, 2018, Walls & Ceilings News.
- “The surprising Indiana origins of the Pentagon, Empire State Building and more landmarks,” by Sarah Bowman, Indianapolis Star, February 1, 2022, IndyStar.
- “Tree-Stump Tombstones: Traditional Cultural Values and Rustic Funerary Art,” by Susanne S. Ridlen, in Markers XIII, Association for Gravestone Studies, 1996. (Indiana, USA)
- Unexpected Indiana: A Portfolio of Natural Landscapes, by Ron Leonetti and Christopher Jordan, Indiana University Press, 2004, 143 pp, ISBN: 0253344859.
- Urban Geology of Madison County, Indiana, Special Report 10, by William J. Wayne, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska – Lincoln, 1975.
- “Washington Crossing the Delaware,” by Vollie Staggs, Laborer, Drill Runner, Hooker, Stone Polisher, Epoxy Worker, in the Indianapolis Monthly Magazine, October 2004, pp. 145. (This magazine is available on Google Books.)
- “Welcome to the 21st Century of Stone in North America,” Article published on LITOS nº 60, May 2002.
- “What a Penny Used to Mean,” Bob Thrasher: Railway Car Blocker, Hooker, Diamond Sawyer, Euclid Driver, in the Indianapolis Monthly Magazine, October 2004, pp. 142. (This magazine is available on Google Books.)
Stone Carvers, Stone Cutters, etc., in Indiana
- Walter S. Arnold, Sculptor, Stone Carver, in Chicago, Illinois – carvers Indiana limestone extensively. Also on Facebook.
- Franklin D. Bault, Master Carver – “Ionic Cut Stone – Master Carver Franklin D. Bault: A passion for the lost art of hand carved Indiana Limestone.”
- Tom Blatt, Sculptor, Brooklyn, New York – Visit Tom Blatt Sculpture & Paintings web site to view photographs of sculptures in Indiana limestone and Vermont marble.
- Amy Brier, Artist – Sculptor, Educator, & on Facebook.
- Ferdinand O. Cross, Master Stone Carver & John A. Rowe – Cross & Rowe Monumental Works,Bedford,Indiana. The following material came from an article entitled, “Master carver brought stone to life – Limestone legacy still graces porch,” by Mary G. Johnson, Times-Mail Staff Writer from tmnews.com, a supplement to the Times-Mail, July 30, 1999. Ferdinand O. Cross lived and worked as a stone carver and a monument business owner in Bedford, Indiana. John A. Rowe joined him and they established the Cross & Rowe Monumental Works. The business specialized in monuments created from dark blue Bedford stone. The writer of the article believes their monuments can be found throughout Lawrence and Orange county cemeteries. (This link is no longer available.)
<ttp://www.tmnews.com/stories/1999/07/30/ferdinand_cross_master_carver> - Ned Cunningham
- Timothy Doyle – In Memoriam (1946-2016)
- Joyce Harmon – “Artists on a limestone canvas. From tablets of Indiana bedrock, cutters and carvers sculpt the pillars, cornices, and fa,cades of some of the nation’s most famous buildings,” by Hattie Clark, Staff writer of The Christian Science monitor, Ellettsville, Indiana, August 4, 1987.
- Indiana’s Stone Cutters and Carvers: Builders for the Nation (90-3041) Indiana Historical Bureau – Indiana Heritage Research Grant Abstracts – 1990. (Scroll down to the entry.)
“The purpose of this project was to collect oral histories (on audiotape and videotape) of people who worked in the Indiana limestone industry in Monroe and Lawrence counties in the first half of the twentieth century. Among those interviewed are quarry owners, stone cutters, stone carvers, family members of men who worked in the industry, Indiana University geologists who have studied the Indiana limestone industry extensively, and an I.U. folklore professor who has studied the use of limestone carvings in the local community.” Contact: Monroe County Historical Museum, 202 E. Sixth Street, Bloomington, IN 47408.
- Indiana Limestone Symposium
- Jack Kendall – Indiana Carver – interview in Stone Country, in the “Three Carvers” section, text by Scott R. Sanders and photographs by Jeffrey A. Wolin, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1985)
- Monroe County – “Stonecarvers of Monroe County, Indiana, 1828-1890,” by Jennifer Lucas, in Markers VII, Association for Gravestone Studies, 1990.
- Henry Morris – Indiana Carver – interview in Stone Country, in the “Three Carvers” section, text by Scott R. Sanders and photographs by Jeffrey A. Wolin, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1985)
- Robin Putnam – Carthage, Missouri, Stone Carver – Visit Robin Putnam’s web site to view photographs of many sculptures done in Indiana limestone.
- Thomas Reding, Salem, Indiana
Indiana Stonecarver: The Story of Thomas R. Reding, by Ann Nolan and Keith A. Buckley, Indiana Historical Society, 1984, 106 pp., ISBN-10: 999945447X, ISBN-13: 978-9999454476. (This book chronicles the life of Thomas R. Reding from Salem, Indiana. Details his work are included along with many black-and-white photographs of his carvings and tombstones that can be found throughout Indiana. Most of these older markers are carved from a fine-grained, light-colored sandstone. The engraving on these stones appears to be of consistently higher quality than that of the marble ones. Although the sandstone slabs date from 1830 to 1850, they have retained their sharpness and detail.)
- David Rodgers – Indiana Carver – interview in Stone Country, in the “Three Carvers” section, text by Scott R. Sanders and photographs by Jeffrey A. Wolin, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1985)
- C. R. Schiefer, Sculptor – 10-acre Sculpture Garden in Martinsville, Indiana, which includes over 150 garden and monumental works. (The following quotation is used with the permission.)
“Schiefer is a self-taught stone sculptor. After 25 years as a speech pathologist specializing in brain injury, he discovered sculpting and found he could not only carve things from limestone, marble, alabaster, and soapstone – people would actually buy them. So – since 1974, Schiefer has worked in, and loved his new field, making for years, small saleable items and taking them to major art fairs all over the East Coast from Central Park in New York City – to Chicago – to Miami and all over Florida.
“Schiefer’s private art collection is Ethnographic Art beginning with American Indian artifacts and growing into pre-Columbian art from all over Mexico, Costa Rica, Guatamala and Peru….”
- Stone Carvers Guild on Facebook.
- “Stonecarvers of Monroe County, Indiana, 1828-1890,” by Jennifer Lucas, in Markers VII, Association for Gravestone Studies, 1990.
- Casey Winningham, Bloomington, Indiana – “Craftsman turns carved headstones into business,” by Associated Press, May 3, 2014.
(excerpt from the article) “He works from his home to the west of Bloomington…He started lettering three years ago and has now created headstones for graves in Indiana, Ohio, Iowa, Kansas and Tennessee.
“Winningham, a 59-year-old who spent much of his life as an artist-blacksmith, is fascinated by old graveyards. He’s done work documenting aged headstones that are in danger of being lost. When he started seeing orphaned graves without headstones, he started to create markers for them.”