Created By: Historic Urban Neighborhoods of Indianapolis
Year Built: 1889
Architecture Style: Colonial Revival
Key Features:
I’m going to ask you to take a good look at this house and remember it. Despite its stately design, it’s part of a dark chapter in Indiana’s 20th century history.
Prior to these dark deeds, the house was built in 1889 by William Graham, a Civil War veteran and American Consul to Winnipeg, Canada. After William's death, Mrs. Graham rented the house to a Butler University sorority in 1922. By 1923, Mrs. Graham decided to sell the house to D.C. Stephenson, the 1920s leader of the KKK in Indiana.
Stevenson added the full height Ionic portico which transforms the house into a grand and forceful statement. This may have been his intention; however, an equally viable explanation is that he simply meant to impress visitors of his political power. We’ll hear more about this house and its infamous resident later on the tour.
This point of interest is part of the tour: Irvington Neighborhood
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