North America

North America Travel and Photography Ideas

Madison Indiana – Beautiful Small Town America

A historic home in downtown Madison, Indiana

As one who has deep family roots in Indiana, but hasn’t really lived there until a couple of years ago, Madison is everything  an outsider might expect to find in small town America. But Madison is closer to a rarity, than the rule these days. Sadly, in my travels through Indiana, Kentucky, and Ohio, I see a lot of the history of small town America disappearing rapidly, whether its an old barn collapsing in a farm field,  or a once beautiful mansion left to rot on a forgotten side street.  Fortunately, Madison has managed to protect  and embrace its history, as well as the natural beauty that surrounds it. This offers visitors a lot to see and explore in Jefferson County. Being relatively close to where I live,  I have been drawn back numerous times, and there is still plenty left to see.

Madison Historic District

With more than 130 blocks of historic buildings, Madison boasts one of the largest historic districts of any city in the United States. Buildings within its historic downtown cover every era of its history, from its founding in 1809, through 1939. Its architecture includes shotgun houses, Federal style and Greek Revival mansions, and various industrial buildings and commercial storefronts along Main Street.

What impressed me most, was just how large the historic district really is. In many small towns you drive through, you are lucky to see anything beyond the main street through town. But in Madison, you can go 4-5 streets on either side easily and find beautifully kept buildings. And for those who are really into history, you can spend several hours, or even longer walking to all the different sections of it.

Clifty Falls State Park

Clifty Falls State Park is a 570 acre nature park that resides on the Northwest side of Madison Indiana. Created in 1920 from land donated by the people of Madison, the park is a gem, and I say that as someone who has closest to many of America’s great national parks. I have visited the park on several different occasions, from spring through fall. In part, as photographer, this was to get my bearings, particularly with how the waterfalls in the park behave at different times of year. I more use to falls that fairly predictable throughout the year, regardless of the rail fall. Of course it helps that most of the falls I have encountered are in mountains where they are fed continuously from higher elevation run off, which is relative gradual. Where as in Indiana, most of what seems to feed rivers, and indeed falls here is storm run off, and when it storms the falls are bursting at the seams, and when its not raining for extended stretches during the summer, water is nowhere to be seen. So I have spent a fair amount of time trying to figure out the right time to come to the park, among a variety of other considerations, including when other aspects of the park at their best, like leaf out in spring, and the best weekends to come for fall color. Through in the mix, a near historic summer drought in 2019, and Covid in 2020, visiting the park and how it changes with the seasons has been an interesting experience.


I should note that the reasons to come to Clifty, are not just the waterfalls, because frankly they aren’t always predictable. Fortunately there is nature in general to enjoy, wildflowers that change over the course of the spring and summer, wildlife, a historic train tunnel (filled in the winter with bats), and numerous trails that run along the tops and bottoms of several gorges that run from north to south.

Railroads and more

Historically, Madison has served as both a crossroads and a jumping off point from other parts of the Ohio River. Its from the latter where my relatives first entered Indiana prior to the Civil War. And its history as a river town and a railroad town are evident on the landscape. This is particularly true of the railroad. As noted previously in the section on Clifty, numerous pathways were considered to bring the railroad through Madison, including an abandoned attempt using tunnels within the park, and another pathway in a gorge just east of the park. This second pathway, which has been called as the steepest grade of wheeled railroad in the United States, is no longer a functioning line, but remains a track open to the public that still has sections of track along it. What I found remarkable about this hike, was not only the beauty of the area, but just how quickly an unmaintained track, particularly one with a steep grade, will return to nature if its not maintained. Whether its vegetative overgrowth, or deeply eroded sections of track, both are completely understandable in a climate that gets more than 40 inches of rain a year.

For more information google the Madison Rail Trail, and the Heritage Trail (they share the same trail head parking lot.)


So if you find yourself in the southwest part of Indiana, and want to get outdoors to explore nature or some of the history of the state, consider a drive to Madison and Clifty Falls State Park.

Cathedral Gorge – Natural Wonder – Nevada

Cathedral Gorge - Nevada

Cathedral Gorge

Google Maps: Find It

Tucked away in the south east corner of Nevada, this gem of a state park offers geologic wonders that any landscape photographer  would love. The park offers an interesting geologic mix, from ash and pumice deposits, to the sediment of an ancient lake that are slowly eroding away in the dry desert climate that now exists.

If you have ever seen photographs of the place, the size of what you see can be very deceiving in photographs. Everything looks much larger than it really is. But don’t let this deter you from visiting. You’ll have numerous opportunities to explore the different erosion features, from cave like passageways carved out of the ash deposits, to ruggedly sculptured rock faces, and stone pillars.

The best time to provide visit is at sunrise and sunset, both of which will add a bit of magic to the place, especially with a color-filled sky.

The closet town is Panaca, NV, which is about 2 1/2 hours from Las Vegas, and 5 hours from Salt Lake City.

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Videos:

Cathedral Gorge 4k

Suggested Reading:

Roadside Geology of Nevada – Frank DeCourten and Norma Biggar

Chaco Canyon National Monument – Ancient Wonder – New Mexico

Chaco - Pueblo Bonito

Chaco Canyon is a historic national park located in the northwest corner of New Mexico. Along with Mesa Verde to the north, it represents one of the crown jewels of what remains architecturally of the Anasazi culture of the American Southwest. Also known as the Ancestral Puebloans, the Anasazi, and their predecessors inhabited the greater four corners region from about 7500 B.C. until 1300 A.D. The tribes of the region started out as Pleistocene big game hunters, but over time their lifestyle morphed from that of the hunter-gatherer  to mostly sedentary farmers that relied on the planting of maize, squash and beans. Their development over the centuries has been defined in part by what they left behind. At first it was the implements they used to store food, from simple baskets in the beginning to elaborate clay pots in later centuries. In later eras it was their housing that changed significantly, from pit houses, to the elaborate multi-story, multi-roomed mud and stone buildings they are known for today.

Based on numerous studies, scientists speculate that Chaco might have been more of a spiritual or cultural gathering center, rather than a place of permanent habitation. The way many of its buildings seem to align with important solar events,  hints at a possible astronomical significance, that would have required scientific observation of the moon, sun and stars over many generations.

Between, 1100-1300 A.D. the Anasazi began to abandon much of region they inhabited, with Chaco seeing the last inhabitants about 1150. Many theories have been presented regarding their migration away from the region, but one thing is fairly clear, that the climate had become unreliable in later years, making their settled agricultural lifestyle harder and harder to maintain. In Chaco, evidence of a 50 year drought occurring during the period it was finally abandoned, is one of many example. Increasing strife and warfare is another possibility they faced.

While the Anasazi may have moved away, they did not really disappear. Their ancestors include the Hopi of Arizona and the Zuni of New Mexico.

Suggested Reading:

Archeoastronomy of the Chacoan Pueblo (PDF)
House of Rain: Tracking a Vanished Civilization Across the American Southwest – Craig Childs
The Lost World of the Old Ones: Discoveries in the Ancient Southwest – David Roberts
Non-Technical Canyon Hiking Guide to the Colorado Plateau – Mike Kelsey
Grand Gulch, Cedar Mesa Plateau Maps – National Geographic Trails Illustrated Maps

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