Monday, August 19, 2024

CHAPTER 18
Community property tax protest, 2007

 


To conclude the series, I returned to yet another assignment from that instructor of the advanced photography class I took through IUPUI in Indianapolis.

Class members were asked to shoot a news event, so I decided to go to downtown Indianapolis on July 15, 2007, for a planned community protest rally against what many property owners perceived as inordinately steep recent property reassessments on top of a recently approved tax increase on those properties in Marion County.

I landed at the iconic Monument Circle, where Meridian and Market streets meet in the center of downtown.   

The protest was well organized and advertised. Many of the people who showed up carried sundry signs bearing quips and daggers harpooning elected officials responsible for the swell of opposition. But many protestors also showed up wearing black -- either black shirts/tops and/or both shirts and pants/slacks. 

One protestor wore a black robe and had a skull mask covering his/her face (see first  photo below). 


It is believed that people's incensed reaction to the property reassessments and tax increases that year propelled Indianapolis businessman and retired Marine Lt. Col. Greg Ballard to run for mayor of Indianapolis that fall. He won in what was considered a major upset of incumbent Mayor Bart Peterson. The margin of victory was 51% to 47%. Ballard won re-election in 2011.

That's Ballard (in all black) speaking to the tax protestors at Monument Circle in the lead-off photo and in the first photo below.  

Ballard was the only Republican to file for mayor in 2007, which was remarkable considering Republicans had the tax issue to wield in their favor. But most people presumed Democrat Peterson was a lock to win a third consecutive term. 

But it was Republicans who wrote and enacted legislation consolidating county and city governance, called UniGov, in Marion County in 1970. And it was Republicans who had dominated elections to offices operating that government from that point until Peterson first won in 1999 and was re-elected in 2003. Peterson was Indianapolis' first Democrat elected mayor since 1967.

I arrived in Indianapolis in 1978, and all I'd ever known while living there were Republican mayors ... until Peterson came along.

On July 15, 2007, I had a field day doing my photo documentation of the rally. So many signs to zero in on, and I present the bulk of them below. 

At one point, I decided to ask the people at the main desk of the 10-story Columbia Club, which is a private social club on the northeast quadrant of the Circle, if I could use one of their upper-level floors to get aerial perspectives of protestors on the Monument steps. They consented and steered me to the 10th floor, 25,000-square-foot ballroom, and that's where I was when taking the overhead pictures you see below.    













































Sunday, August 18, 2024

CHAPTER 17
Depew Memorial Fountain,
University Park, downtown Indy, 2007


While in downtown Indianapolis on July 15, 2007, I paused for a while to take photos in University Park, a one-block square at the south end of the five-block-long Indiana War Memorial Plaza. At the time, the park was directly across the street from The Indianapolis Star offices at 307 N. Pennsylvania St., where I worked.   

University Park is home to three statues — Benjamin Harrison, the 23rd president, an Ohio native who lived out his last years in a home on the Old Northside of Indianapolis; the Schuyler Colfax Memorial; and the so-called Seated (Abraham) Lincoln. Sadly, I didn't capture any photos of those that day. 

But I did linger at  the center of the park where, since 1919, the Depew Memorial Fountain has stood. The fountain consists of multiple bronze figures arranged on a five-tier circular granite stone base with three basins. The bronze sculptures depict fish, eight children dancing, and a woman on the topmost tier dancing and playing cymbals. That's her you see in the photo leading off the post. 

The fountain was commissioned in memory of Dr. Richard J. Depew by his wife, Emma Ely, following Dr. Depew's death in 1887. When Mrs. Depew died in 1913, she bequeathed $50,000 from her estate to the city of Indianapolis for the erection of a fountain in memory of her husband "in some park or public place where all classes of people may enjoy it." 

The original design was created by Karl Bitter, who was killed in a traffic accident in 1915 before the work could be finished. Following Bitter's overall design, Alexander Stirling Calder created the bronze figures and the fountain. Architect Henry Bacon designed the fountain's setting.

Below are perspective shots of the fountain, some more closeups of the woman with cymbals and a look at the dancing children and a closeup of one of them. 







After finishing my attention on the fountain, I noticed while still in the park the massive tower (above and first five photos below) of the Scottish Rite Cathedral, 650 N. Meridian St. In the first two photos below, you also see the obelisk in the center of Obelisk Square, another block that is part of the Indiana War Memorial Plaza. A closeup of the top of the obelisk is below the closeup shots of the cathedral tower.  
 





Above: The full Scottish Rite Cathedral, in a June 2008 photo that I took from the top floor of the Central Library Branch of Indianapolis-Marion County Public Library on St. Clair Street, which is at the north end of the plaza. 

Above: I didn't get a photo of the Benjamin Harrison statue in University Park on that 2007 shoot, but I did grab this one of it on Jan. 21, 2012, as I walked back to my car after shooting photos for organizers of the Bob to the Top event at the One America Tower downtown. I must have been in a hurry to get out of the cold, as I didn't stop to shoot the Lincoln statue.

Coming tomorrow: Chapter 18, Community property tax protest, 2007