EXHIBITS & COLLECTIONS CALENDAR OF EVENTS IMAX THEATER FOR EDUCATORS PUBLIC PROGRAMS
VISITOR INFO ABOUT US CONTACT US NEWSROOM VOLUNTEERISM FACILITY RENTALS MEMBERSHIP SUPPORT THE MUSEUM STATE HISTORIC SITES
BUILDING FEATURES
L.S. AYRES TEA ROOM
92 COUNTY WALK
STEAM CLOCK
SCHOOL 5 FAÇADE
FOUCAULT PENDULUM
INDIANA'S TREASURES CASES
INDIANA OBELISK
R.B. ANNIS NATURALIST'S LAB
WATANABE FAMILY GARDENS
LIMESTONE FAÇADE
ENTRANCE CANOPY
BRONZE MASTODONTS
CHANGING GALLERIES
COLLECTION
CURATORS
E-NEWSLETTER
EXHIBIT ARCHIVE
FACES
GALLERY GUIDES
GALLERY PROGRAMS
HOOSIER HERITAGE TRAIL
INDIANA STORY GALLERIES
LEGACY THEATER
MUSEUM PASSPORT
SEARCH OUR COLLECTION
Gibson County

Gibson.jpgEst. 1813
(John Gibson)

The Lyles Station community, named for Joshua Lyles, was home during the mid-19th to mid-20th centuries to more than 800 free African-American settlers. During the 19th century, Gibson County discovered its large coal and oil reserves. It was after an oil strike near Princeton in 1903 that pump jacks began appearing in cornfields and pastures.

The first gas refrigerator for home use was marketed in Evansville in 1926.
Site designed and developed by Pathway Productions