You don’t need to step inside a museum to see this history.
A lot of the buildings that tell it are still standing — and
still in use. A few to look out for as you wander:
Evansville’s Riverside Historic District
runs along Riverside Drive south and east of downtown. Italianate
and Queen Anne mansions built by furniture and brewing barons
face directly onto the Ohio. The Reitz Home
(1871, French Second Empire) is the headliner, but the whole
stretch is a Victorian time capsule.
The Old Vanderburgh County Courthouse (1891,
Romanesque Revival), a few blocks inland, is one of the most
intricate public buildings in the state — heavy stone, ornate
carvings, a copper dome. Used today for events and offices.
Nearby, the Old Post Office (now repurposed as
a restaurant and office complex) and the Soldiers and
Sailors Memorial Coliseum (1917) round out the
downtown civic-architecture story.
For early-20th-century Americana, see
Bosse Field (1915), one of the few pre-WWI
professional ballparks still in use — and a stand-in for Wrigley
and Comiskey in A League of Their Own.
Newburgh’s historic Main Street is
arguably the best-preserved 19th-century downtown in southern
Indiana. A 30-minute stroll covers Federal, Greek Revival, and
Italianate storefronts that have been in continuous use for over
150 years. The Old Newburgh Lock & Dam
structures down the river add a layer of working-class
engineering history.
Combined, these districts make Evansville/Newburgh one of the
most walkable architectural-history destinations in the region —
with the added bonus that you’re never more than a few
blocks from a great coffee or beer.