Franklin County Indiana has 13 places on the National Register of Historic Places including 2 places of National significance and 4 places of Statewide significance. Significant places include Brookville Historic District, Whitewater Canal Historic District, Franklin County Seminary, Hermitage, The and Little Cedar Grove Baptist Church.
Several famous people are associated with these Franklin County historic places including Winifred Brady Adams and John Ottis Adams.
Some of the country's most noteable architects helped create the Franklin County places including John Ottis Adams, Thomas Carter, Thomas Winscott, John Horn, Lemuel Snow, George Hotel & Company, Joseph Reed and William Butts. Prominent architectural styles found in Franklin Country are Federal, Greek Revival and Italianate.
Historic Significance:
Event, Architecture/Engineering
Architect, builder, or engineer:
Multiple
Architectural Style:
Federal, Greek Revival
Area of Significance:
Architecture, Community Planning And Development
Period of Significance:
1900-1924, 1875-1899, 1850-1874, 1825-1849, 1800-1824
Historic Function:
Commerce/Trade, Domestic
Current Function:
Commerce/Trade, Domestic, Industry/Processing/Extraction
Platted in 1808 at the confluence of the East and West forks of the Whitewater River, the Brookville Historic District holds exceptional significance as one of Indiana's most important early political, economic, and cultural cradles. During the first half of the nineteenth century, Brookville served as a crucial gateway for pioneers migrating into the Indiana Territory and the wider Old Northwest. The establishment of a federal land office here in 1820 solidified its status as a bustling hub of commerce and settlement. This vibrant frontier community nurtured an extraordinary concentration of influential early leaders, including three future Indiana governors-James B. Ray, Noah Noble, and David Wallace-as well as General Lew Wallace, the famed author of Ben-Hur, who was born in the town in 1827. The district's prosperity was further accelerated by the construction of the Whitewater Canal in the 1830s and 1840s, cementing its legacy as a vital regional transportation and trade center.
Architecturally, the historic district comprises a remarkably intact collection of residential, commercial, and civic structures that chronicle Brookville's evolution from a frontier outpost to a prosperous Victorian-era county seat. Spanning from the early nineteenth to the early twentieth centuries, the district showcases outstanding examples of Federal, Greek Revival, Gothic Revival, Italianate, and Queen Anne styles. Key landmarks include the monumental Franklin County Courthouse, the historic Franklin County Seminary, and "The Hermitage"-a scenic estate that later became a famous home and studio for Hoosier Group impressionist painters J. Ottis Adams and T.C. Steele. Today, the Brookville Historic District stands as a cohesive visual testament to Indiana's early statehood, preserved through its diverse streetscapes, historic churches, and robust brick-and-stone merchant buildings.
Historic Significance:
Event
Area of Significance:
Commerce, Transportation, Industry
Period of Significance:
1825-1849
Historic Function:
Industry/Processing/Extraction, Transportation
Historic Sub-function:
Energy Facility, Manufacturing Facility, Water Works, Water-Related
Current Function:
Industry/Processing/Extraction, Landscape, Recreation And Culture
Current Sub-function:
Museum, Outdoor Recreation, Park, Water Works
The Whitewater Canal Historic District, stretching through Franklin County, Indiana, stands as a premier monument to the state's mid-19th-century canal-building era and the ambitious, though financially disastrous, Mammoth Internal Improvement Act of 1836. Constructed between 1836 and 1847, the canal was designed to link the fertile agricultural region of the Whitewater River Valley with the Ohio River at Cincinnati, thereby opening vital trade routes for local farmers and merchants to national markets. Although the canal system was plagued by frequent, devastating floods and was soon superseded by the rapid expansion of railroads, it played an indispensable role in the initial economic development, settlement, and industrialization of southeastern Indiana, fostering the growth of boomtowns like Brookville, Metamora, and Laurel.
Today, the historic district preserves a remarkably intact segment of this early transportation corridor, showcasing exceptional engineering feats of the American canal era. Most notable among its surviving structures is the Duck Creek Aqueduct in Metamora, a National Historic Civil Engineering Landmark and the only operational covered wooden aqueduct remaining in the United States. The district also encompasses numerous limestone locks, feeder dams, and historic brick and frame mills that once harnessed the canal's waterpower, alongside the preserved 19th-century commercial and residential streetscapes of Metamora. Collectively, these resources provide an invaluable, tangible link to the pioneers' efforts to conquer the frontier landscape and integrate early Indiana into the broader national economy.