St. Maurice Catholic Church, Napoleon, INUnited Brethren Church, Fulton, INEagle Church, Whitestown, INSt. Joseph Catholic Church, Shelbyville, INChrist Temple Church of God in Christ, South Bend, INNew Marion Baptist Church, New Marion, INSt. Joseph Catholic Church, Rochester, INTyson United Methodist Church, Versailles, INSt. John’s Lutheran Church, Indianapolis, INBurlington Church of Christ, Burlington, IN
Wow. I used to live very close to Versailles (the French one) which has plenty of very impressive buildings but I don’t remember anything as magnificently Art Deco as the Tyson United Methodist Church in your photo!
Once even the most modest church looked like a church, like the one in New Marion. The modern building in Whitestown could just as easily house a government office or a logistics company, but for the sign.
That Methodist Church in Versailles is pretty special!
It’s a wonderful building! I got a tour several years ago and it’s just as stunning inside.
Good to know!!!
Jim, nice photos! I like all old brick and stone churches, but the Tyson church is special, your Canon does a great job.
Greg, that Canon has exceeded my expectations. Even this many years after its release, which was in 2010, it continues to perform very well.
Wow. I used to live very close to Versailles (the French one) which has plenty of very impressive buildings but I don’t remember anything as magnificently Art Deco as the Tyson United Methodist Church in your photo!
It’s a beautiful building, the last thing you’d expect to find in a small Indiana town.
Also: if you ever visit the town, don’t pronounce the name as the French would. The name is actually pronounced “ver-SALES.”
Totally love the Tyson United Methodist Church, Versailles, IN … never saw a church like it before!!!
Me neither! It’s quite something.
Once even the most modest church looked like a church, like the one in New Marion. The modern building in Whitestown could just as easily house a government office or a logistics company, but for the sign.
It’s an odd one. We call it “the ice cube.” It’s less than a mile from our house.