The Historic Town of Homecroft
Homecroft is a quaint southern Indianapolis town that sprang up following World War I. Known as the “perfect place to grow,” Homecroft is located about four miles south of downtown and boasts architectural designs of the 1920s – brick and stone veneered houses with Tudor Revival or Colonial Revival elements. The middle-class neighborhood was the result of suburbanization in 1923 and many of the community’s traditions still stand strong today, including the candy distribution by Homecroft police officers on Halloween.
Homecroft also has a reputation for maintaining a tight-knit community, with a little over 700 dwellers, several people have lived in the area for years. Homecroft is a southern Indianapolis community that has charmed neighbors for nearly 95 years, and it continues to attract more as the area welcomes development and growth.
As our community continues to leverage the success of our downtown into our neighborhoods, it’s both appropriate and resourceful to celebrate those already thriving. Homecroft is an excellent example of what can be achieved when residents invest their time and efforts towards a true sense of community.
Homecroft also has a reputation for maintaining a tight-knit community, with a little over 700 dwellers, several people have lived in the area for years. Homecroft is a southern Indianapolis community that has charmed neighbors for nearly 95 years, and it continues to attract more as the area welcomes development and growth.
As our community continues to leverage the success of our downtown into our neighborhoods, it’s both appropriate and resourceful to celebrate those already thriving. Homecroft is an excellent example of what can be achieved when residents invest their time and efforts towards a true sense of community.
History and Establishment
The increasing accessibility of the automobile and public transportation, as well as idealization of life in the countryside away from the problems of the city, spurred intense suburbanization in the United States in the period after World War I. Homecroft Historic District reflects the importance of interurban and trolley lines in the early suburban development of Indianapolis. The district has survived later suburbanization, retaining its character as a small satellite town.
Homecroft is located about four and one-half miles south of downtown beside Madison Avenue (the south leg of the Michigan Road of settlement times). In January of 1900, the Indianapolis, Columbus & Southern Interurban Company opened an interurban line on Madison Avenue from downtown Indianapolis to several southern Indiana towns.
The Frank E. Gates Real Estate Company bought the site in 1923 and named it Homecroft. Frank Gates and his son Oliver were partners, whose firm had developed subdivisions in Ohio and Michigan as well as Indiana. Homecroft is a typical 1920s suburb for middle-class families following the American dream to own their own homes. The Gates offered design services to prospective lot buyers based on model houses they had built. Others chose their own designs. Most homes are modest period styles popular at the time, one and one-and-a-half story brick or stone veneered houses with Tudor Revival or Colonial Revival elements. Sidewalks were installed in the 1930s by the Works Progress Administration, and Gates began planting maple trees on the lots after the sidewalks were added.
During the 1950s, the intervening space between the south side of Indianapolis and Homecroft filled with housing and commercial strips on Madison Avenue. Homecroft, however, still retains its remote suburban feeling and cohesiveness. This small middle-class suburb of well-kept single family homes shaded by mature maple trees is a significant illustration of suburban community planning and development.
Homecroft is located about four and one-half miles south of downtown beside Madison Avenue (the south leg of the Michigan Road of settlement times). In January of 1900, the Indianapolis, Columbus & Southern Interurban Company opened an interurban line on Madison Avenue from downtown Indianapolis to several southern Indiana towns.
The Frank E. Gates Real Estate Company bought the site in 1923 and named it Homecroft. Frank Gates and his son Oliver were partners, whose firm had developed subdivisions in Ohio and Michigan as well as Indiana. Homecroft is a typical 1920s suburb for middle-class families following the American dream to own their own homes. The Gates offered design services to prospective lot buyers based on model houses they had built. Others chose their own designs. Most homes are modest period styles popular at the time, one and one-and-a-half story brick or stone veneered houses with Tudor Revival or Colonial Revival elements. Sidewalks were installed in the 1930s by the Works Progress Administration, and Gates began planting maple trees on the lots after the sidewalks were added.
During the 1950s, the intervening space between the south side of Indianapolis and Homecroft filled with housing and commercial strips on Madison Avenue. Homecroft, however, still retains its remote suburban feeling and cohesiveness. This small middle-class suburb of well-kept single family homes shaded by mature maple trees is a significant illustration of suburban community planning and development.
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