Indiana Landmarks

Indiana Landmarks
Formation1960 (1960)
FounderEli Lilly
Founded atIndianapolis, Indiana
PurposeHistoric preservation
HeadquartersIndiana Landmarks Center
Location
President
J. Marshall Davis[1]
Vice President and CFO
Madonna Wagner
Vice President of Preservation Services
Mark Dollase
Vice President for Development
Sharon Gamble
34
PublicationIndiana Preservation
Revenue (2019)
$4,186,400
Expenses (2019)$4,137,900
Endowment (2019)$85.6 million
Staff (2020)
40
Websiteindianalandmarks.org
Formerly called
Historic Landmarks Foundation of Indiana

Indiana Landmarks is America's largest private statewide historic preservation organization. Founded in 1960 as Historic Landmarks Foundation of Indiana by a volunteer group of civic and business leaders led by Indianapolis pharmaceutical executive Eli Lilly, the organization is a private non-governmental organization with nearly 6,000 members.[2] At the end of 2023, an independent auditor reported a total endowment of 67.8 million for the organization.[3] The organization simplified its name to Indiana Landmarks in 2010.[citation needed]

Indiana Landmarks owns and restores historic buildings, buys and sells vacant and endangered property, and helps people throughout Indiana save and restore historic places through a variety of programs including grants, loans, and advocacy.

Morris-Butler House in Indianapolis
Veraestau Historic Site, Aurora

Indiana Landmarks employs staff at its state headquarters in Indianapolis and in regional offices throughout the state of Indiana. Regional offices are located in South Bend, Gary, New Albany, Aurora, Evansville, Cambridge City, Wabash, and Terre Haute. The organization's state headquarters are located at the former Central Avenue United Methodist Church in Indianapolis, now known as Indiana Landmarks Center. In addition to Indiana Landmarks Center, Indiana Landmarks owns and operates two historic properties as event and rental venues: the Morris-Butler House in Indianapolis and Veraestau historic site in Aurora, Indiana. Landmarks' honorary board chair is Indiana's former Chief Justice Randall T. Shepard.[2] The organization's first project was restoration of the 1865 Morris-Butler House in Indianapolis. Eli Lilly personally underwrote the acquisition and restoration of the house as a museum of Victorian decorative arts. Though the Morris-Butler House no longer operates as a museum, it is part of the Indiana Landmarks Center campus and functions as an event and rental facility.[citation needed]

One of Indiana Landmarks' largest projects was the $30 million+ restoration of the West Baden Springs Hotel's exterior and public spaces. Indiana Landmarks helped lead the effort to bring riverboat gaming to Orange County, Indiana, as a way to revitalize the French Lick Resort Casino and the West Baden Springs Hotel.[citation needed]

  1. ^ Historic Landmarks Foundation Of Indiana Inc., Nonprofit Explorer, ProPublica, 2024.
  2. ^ a b The Encyclopedia of Indianapolis By David J. Bodenhamer, Robert Graham Barrows, David Gordon Vanderstel, pg 685
  3. ^ Independent Auditor’s Report and Consolidated Financial Statements. Historic Landmarks Foundation of Indiana, Inc. d/b/a Indiana Landmarks, August 31, 2023 and 2022. p. 26.

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