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The Muncie Sanitarium: A local business during the Progressive Era

“Medicated, Electric, Turkish and Massage Baths. Treatment on Reasonable Terms. We Cure Diseases of the Head, Throat, Lungs, Heart, Liver, Stomach, Bowels, Kidneys, and other organs. All Diseases of Women, General and Nervous Debility, Headache, Rheumatism, Dyspepsia, Piles, Serofula, Catarrh, Etc. Diseases of the Skin, Blood, Nerves, Spine, Bones, Joints, Eye, Ear, Tumors, and Paralysis. D.E. Cripe, Medical Director. MUNCIE SANITARIUM, 207 North High Street, Muncie, Indiana.” Such was a Sept. 17, 1899 advertisement I recently stumbled across in the Muncie Morning News. I didn’t know of the Muncie Sanitarium before reading this ad. Yet, like all good historical discoveries, the advertisement led me down a rabbit hole of research, yielding new information about Muncie weirdness, Progressive Era (mis)conceptions of illness, and old-fashion American quackery.

Bygone Muncie: Track the history of Delaware County s railroads

Bygone Muncie: Track the history of Delaware County’s railroads Chris Flook, Muncie Star Press © Photo provided by Lost Muncie Facebook page The interior of the Union Station Depot is shown in this 1957 photo by newsman Dick Greene. I grew up in West Acres Addition just outside of Muncie. The heavily wooded lots provided for a magical childhood. In warmer months, my sisters and I spent the majority of our time exploring the natural surroundings, while birds serenaded in the sun-dappled canopy. This serenity was routinely interrupted by the ominous low-rumble clamor of Norfolk Southern trains. Their horn blasts piercing through the trees, scattering children and forest critters alike from the approaching thunder of industrial America.

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