Back when – March 20-26

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March 20

In 1943, Greenfield Mayor L.W. Eikenberry said he had found someone with a small tractor to break up ground for Victory Gardens at a nominal charge. Those without the means of having their garden plowed were encouraged to fill out a form in the Daily Reporter and return it to the mayor’s office. It was part of an effort “toward the planting of every available lot.”

In 1995, Mt. Vernon School Board approved the idea of a foundation that would offer mini-grants to teachers for special projects and speakers.

March 21

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In 1968, Cpl. Michael L. Ebert of Greenfield was killed in action at Thua Thien, Vietnam.

In 1978, Greenfield City Cab Co. closed. It had received word from the Federal Communications Commission that its transmitter for radio communications between cabs and headquarters was registered to the company’s former owner, so it had to stop radio communication or pay a $10,000 fine.

March 22

In 1978, Hancock County Council voted to establish a countywide Economic Development Council.

March 23

In 1999, Hancock County Area Planning Commission deadlocked 5-5 over the proposed 470-home Stansbury development in the McCordsville area.

March 24

In 1913, parts of Greenfield were flooded after about two days of steady rain. A bridge over Potts Ditch near Fourth Street and a bridge over Brandywine Creek south of the city were swept away. Several downtown businesses, including a hotel, had flooded basements; so did a church. Martha Duncan, a widow, left her home on Fourth Street near the ditch at about 1 a.m. to stay with friends, having moved furniture and other belongings — except the piano — to prevent them from being damaged.

March 25

In 1943, Wilkinson native Col. Harvey Weir Cook died in the South Pacific during air combat in World War II. He was 50. Cook shot down seven German pilots in World War I. The Indianapolis airport bore his name from 1944 to 1976; when Indianapolis International Airport’s new terminal opened Nov. 11, 2008, it was named the Col. H. Weir Cook Terminal.

In 2008, Chelsea Clinton visited Arbor Café and Tea Room in Cumberland to campaign for her mother, Sen. Hillary Clinton, who was seeking the Democratic nomination for president.

March 26

In 1942, Hancock County superintendent of schools S.R. Boring announced county schools would be in session Saturday as part of a “war time schedule” to allow students in agricultural areas more evening hours to help with farm work. Greenfield schools already had been on the schedule.