Henry County Indiana has 13 places on the National Register of Historic Places including 2 places of National significance and 2 places of Statewide significance. Significant places include Chrysler Enclosure, New Castle Archeological Site, Knightstown Academy and Knightstown Historic District and Grose, Gen. William, House.
Prehistoric cultural affiliation(s) include Adena, Hopewell, Middle Woodland and New Castle Phase dating back to 0.
Several famous people are associated with these Henry County historic places including John Irwin Morrison and John W. Hedrick.
Some of the country's most noteable architects helped create the Henry County places including Charles H. Byfield, Isaac Hodgson, O.L. Miller, L. O. Miller and Henry Brown. Prominent architectural styles found in Henry Country are Italianate, Classical Revival and Greek Revival.
Historic Significance:
Information Potential
Area of Significance:
Native American, Religion, Prehistoric
Cultural Affiliation:
Adena, Hopewell
Period of Significance:
499-0 AD
Historic Function:
Funerary, Religion
Historic Sub-function:
Ceremonial Site, Graves/Burials, Mortuary, Religious Structure
Current Function:
Recreation And Culture
Current Sub-function:
Outdoor Recreation
The Chrysler Enclosure, archaeologically designated as 12-Hn-27, is a significant prehistoric earthwork site located near New Castle in Henry County, Indiana. Attributed to the Middle Woodland period (approximately 200 B.C. to A.D. 500), the site is a well-preserved example of the ceremonial earthworks constructed by Native American societies, often associated with the Hopewell tradition or the localized New Castle Phase. The enclosure features a circular earthen embankment and an accompanying ditch, characteristic of the sacred, non-defensive earthworks built during this era. Rather than serving a military purpose, sites like the Chrysler Enclosure functioned as regional ceremonial centers, gathering places for social and political events, and sites for sacred rituals and mortuary practices, reflecting a highly organized and cooperative prehistoric society.
Listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999, the Chrysler Enclosure is historically and scientifically significant under Criterion D for its exceptional potential to yield important archaeological information. As one of the few remaining intact earthwork complexes in the Upper White River drainage region, the site offers a crucial window into the architectural engineering, spatial planning, and ceremonial behaviors of Woodland-period peoples. Continued archaeological analysis of the site and its surrounding landscape holds the potential to answer critical questions regarding prehistoric settlement patterns, subsistence strategies, and the extensive regional trade networks that connected the ancient inhabitants of East-Central Indiana to the broader Hopewell interaction sphere.