About Southern Indiana

A photo blog of the sights and unexpected wonders of Indiana

Medora

Medora is a town in Carr Town­ship, Jack­son County, Indi­ana, United States. The pop­u­la­tion was 565 at the 2000 cen­sus. Medora is noted for its 438-foot (134 m) long triple span cov­ered bridge, the sec­ond longest cov­ered bridge in the United States

Founded in 1904, the Medora Shale Brick Com­pany was one of nearly 55 brick plants in Indi­ana at the turn of the cen­tury. The sur­round­ing hills in Jack­son County pro­vided a ready sup­ply of mate­r­ial for brick pro­duc­tion. The nearby Bal­ti­more and Ohio Rail­road car­ried the fin­ished Medora brick through­out the Mid­west for use in paving streets. At its peak, the Medora Shale Brick Com­pany employed a 50-man work­force to pro­duce 54,000 hand­made bricks a day from its twelve domed kilns.

In 1922, finan­cial trou­bles forced the Medora Shale Brick Com­pany to auc­tion, and it was pur­chased by the Jack­son Brick and Hol­lowware Com­pany. The Medora kilns were then reworked to churn out brick to be used for fac­ing new build­ings, includ­ing some still seen in Detroit, Chicago and Cincin­nati as well as on the cam­puses of Ball State , the Uni­ver­sity of Louisville , and the Uni­ver­sity of Ken­tucky . In fact, Medora brick was the pre­ferred sup­plier to Pur­due Uni­ver­sity from 1960 to 1980, mainly because the plant’s large sup­ply of clay ensured a match­ing brick color through­out the cam­pus. The plant con­tin­ued to pro­duce brick up until its clos­ing in 1992.

http://​www​.medorabrick​plant​.org/

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