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Castleton, Indianapolis

1843 establishments in IndianaFormer municipalities in IndianaNeighborhoods in IndianapolisPopulated places established in 1843
Indianapolis Neighborhood Areas Castleton
Indianapolis Neighborhood Areas Castleton

Castleton is a neighborhood area in Lawrence and Washington townships on the northeast side of Indianapolis, Indiana, United States. After shortly over a century of being an independent town, the locality was included in Indianapolis as part of Unigov consolidation in 1970 and was further dissolved in 1992. It is a primarily commercial district today.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Castleton, Indianapolis (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Castleton, Indianapolis
Craig Street, Indianapolis

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Castleton, IndianapolisContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 39.906888888889 ° E -86.052194444444 °
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Address

Craig Street
46250 Indianapolis
Indiana, United States
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Indianapolis Neighborhood Areas Castleton
Indianapolis Neighborhood Areas Castleton
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Nearby Places

West-Harris House
West-Harris House

West-Harris House, also known as Ambassador House, is a historic home located at 106th Street and Eller Road in Fishers, Hamilton County, Indiana, United States. The ell-shaped, two-story, Colonial Revival-style dwelling with a large attic and a central chimney also features a full-width, hip-roofed front porch and large Palladian windows on the gable ends of the home. It also includes portions of the original log cabin dating from ca. 1826, which was later enlarged and remodeled. In 1996 the home was moved to protect it from demolition about 3 miles (4.8 km) from its original site to its present-day location at Heritage Park at White River in Fishers. The former residence was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999 and is operated as a local history museum, community events center, and private rental facility. The restored home is named in honor of two of its previous owners, Thomas and Sarah West, and Addison and India Harris. The Wests had the original two-room log section of the home erected about 1826 on their land at the northwest corner of present-day 96th Street and Allisonville Road in Fishers. Addison Harris purchased the rural property in 1880 and had the home enlarged and remodeled around 1895. Harris was a prominent Indianapolis lawyer, a former member of the Indiana Senate (1876 to 1880), and a U.S. Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Austria-Hungary (1899 to 1901). His wife, India, was active in the Indianapolis arts community, serving from 1905 to 1907 as president of the Art Association of Indianapolis (the predecessor to the Indianapolis Museum of Art and the Indiana University – Purdue University at Indianapolis's Herron School of Art and Design). The home's nickname of Ambassador House comes from Addison Harris's diplomatic service in Vienna, Austria, during President William McKinley's administration.