INDIANAPOLIS — Summer is almost here, and the Indiana Historical Society is bringing back its Concerts on the Canal series.
All Concerts on the Canal performances are from 6 to 8 p.m. at the Eugene and Marilyn Glick Indiana History Center, located at 450 W. Ohio St. in downtown Indianapolis. The 2022 lineup is as follows:
- June 2: Touch of Grass – Bluegrass
- June 9: Doug Henthorn and the LLC – Classic Rock/Blues
- June 16: 45 RPM – British Invasion Rock n’ Roll
- June 23: First Time Caller – Covers
- June 30: Cohen Rutkowski Mix – Jazz
- July 7: Everett Greene and Trio – Jazz
- July 14: Sizzlin’ Gregg Bacon – Smooth Jazz
Food and cash bar service will be available from the Stardust Terrace Café by Jonathan Byrd’s beginning at 5 p.m. Guests may also bring their own food and nonalcoholic beverages to the concerts.
The Indiana Historical Society (IHS) is also hosting Free Admission Thursdays from June 2 through July 14. Free admission will also be offered on July 2, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., in observance of Independence Day.
Volunteers are needed for Concerts on the Canal from 4:30 to 8:30 p.m. to assist with concert setup and tear down and to answer basic visitor questions. Anyone interested should call (317) 233-3902 or contact Toni Shipp at volunteers@indianahistory.org.
-
Investigators: Soldier used AI to plan Las Vegas Cybertruck explosion
On Tuesday, officials in Las Vegas shared new details of the investigation of Matthew Livelsberger and the Cybertruck explosion in front of the Trump International Hotel.Unshoveled sidewalks remain dangerous days after snowstorm
Residents could receive a fine if their sidewalks are not shoveled. Despite the law, the sidewalks surrounding the Red and Purple Line station were mostly untouched on Tuesday.Proposed bill would disband 5 Indiana school districts including IPS
House Bill 1136 would force public schools to become charter schools if more than 50% of students living in the district attend other schools.As the temperatures get colder, fire officials urge fire space heater safety
Fire officials are speaking about space heater safety after a large fire started by an oil heater led to the destruction of two businesses and the death of one dog and five puppies.