Back when: Aug. 30-Sept. 5

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New Palestine native Todd Yoder began his NFL career with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2000.

Daily Reporter file photo

Aug. 30

In 1977, Greenfield Board of Works awarded a contract for $4,674,000 to Charles H. Shook Inc. of Dayton, Ohio, to build the city’s new wastewater treatment plant.

Aug. 31

In 1912, the Hancock County Progressive Party met for its convention at the opera house in Greenfield and nominated candidates for several county offices. The Rev. Marcellus Walker of Vernon Township was named county chairman of the party and thanked the audience. “He said it was only once in a lifetime that a man was called to preside at the formation and birth of a new party in a county,” according to the Aug. 31, 1912, edition of the Daily Reporter.

Sept. 1

In 1921, Greenfield residents were surprised to find crews cutting and removing the sidewalk at State and Main streets. The action followed an ordinance, passed by the city council four days earlier, that prohibited building a driveway across a sidewalk within 150 feet of the Hancock County Courthouse. The measure appears to have been intended to prevent Standard Oil Co. from using the corner for a gas station; instead, the company simply removed the sidewalks.

In 1956, the Memorial Hospital Guild announced it would sponsor a chapel for what is now Hancock Regional Hospital. Donations given to the guild in memory of friends or loved ones would be the nucleus of the fund to establish the chapel.

Sept. 2

In 1918, a patriotic demonstration took place in Fortville, organized by the Fortville Liberty Guard. Major Gordon Sandford of the British army was the guest speaker.

Sept. 3

In 1977, a fire wrought extensive damage to the Spring Lake Community Center, forcing the town board to meet in nearby Philadelphia.

In 2000, Todd Yoder played in his first National Football League game as part of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The New Palestine High School and Vanderbilt University graduate had signed as an undrafted free agent and would play for three teams over his 10 seasons in the NFL, winning a Super Bowl with Tampa Bay in 2003.

Sept. 4

In 1870, New Palestine Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) was founded.

In 1917, the first brick of the Fortville Carnegie Library was placed at 115 N. Main St. in Fortville.

In 1973, former Greenfield resident Rosemary Huffman became the first woman in Indiana and the second woman in the United States to achieve certification as a court executive to the United States Circuit Court of Appeals.

Sept. 5

In 1950, Hancock County’s first five draftees left for Indianapolis to be inducted into the armed forces: Lawrence Perrin Osmer, Charles Wayne Cecil, Robert Eugene Gatewood, Carl Duane Coleman and Paul Marshal.

In 1967, a man walked into the Eden Variety Store and shot storekeeper J.W. “Doc” Worley, 75, killing him. Police the next day arrested a former Hancock County resident near Washington, Indiana, in the slaying.