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Books on Wabash County



If you'd prefer to place your order over the phone, call the museum store at 260.563.9070.


$15.00

Wabash County Historical Museum Cookbook
A celebration of the lives, memories, stories, and food of Wabash County residents, this cookbook will be a treasure for generations to come.  Names of people and places in this book connect us to the past that still reverberates throughout our county.


$24.95



Hanna's Town: A Little World We Have Lost
by Dr. W. William Wimberly II


In late autumn 1902, a macabre scene unfolded at the original burial ground of Wabash, which had been called both the Old Cemetery and Hanna’s Cemetery. The task at hand was the disinterment of four bodies. The newest of the four graves held whatever might be left of the corpse of Col. Hugh Hanna who, more than any other citizen, was the founding father and civic icon of the prosperous and picturesque community. It might be argued that Hanna’s disinterment was a high-water mark in an outpouring of the visible progress, cultural energy and palpable optimism his town had experienced during the preceding 67 years.
Hanna’s Town is the history of 19th-century Wabash, Ind., where the author was raised and where his father was a minister for 30 years.

 
$25.00

Wabash County History: Bicentennial Edition 1976
By Linda Robertson
, Editor in cooperation with Wabash County Historical Society and North Manchester Historical Society by Walsworth Publishing Company, Inc. 
Covers the early history of Wabash County, towns and townships, agriculture, business and industry, schools, churches, organizations, biographies, folklore, and county album.

 

 



$3.00



Mighty Modoc on the Loose
by Phyllis Cramer
Wabash County Historical Society 1971
Revised 2006
The story of this runaway elephant is legendary in Wabash County.

 
$25.00

He Almost Changed the World: The Life and Times of Thomas Riley Marshall
by David J. Bennett

Largely forgotten by history, Thomas Riley Marshall served as Vice President in the administration of President Woodrow Wilson. Born and raised in Indiana, Marshall came from a prominent local family and was well-educated, but struggled against his own personal demons. Rescued from professional oblivion by his devoted wife Lois, Marshall began a meteoric political career that in less than five years took him from the life of a small town lawyer to the Vice Presidency of the United States.