TouchScreenTravels logo

TouchScreenTravels

Our Touch, your Travels…

This is a preview of the full content of our Indiana’s Best app.

Please consider downloading this app to support small independent publishing and because:

  • All content is designed for mobile devices and works best there.
  • Detailed in-app maps will help you find sites using your device’s GPS.
  • The app works offline (one time upgrade required on Android versions).
  • All advertising (only present on Android versions) can be removed.

The app will also allow you to:

  • Add custom locations to the app map (your hotel…).
  • Create your own list of favourites as you browse.
  • Search the entire contents using a fast and simple text-search tool.
  • Make one-click phone calls (on phones).
iOS App Store Google Play

Covered Bridges

Parke County, which calls itself the Covered Bridge Capital of the World, is a quiet, gentle place. An elaborate gabled 1879 courthouse sits in the middle of the town square in historic Rockville, the county seat. Nearby is the old stick style Vandalia railroad depot, built in 1886, now a visitor’s center and starting area for five driving tours. These tours, each designated with a color, take one through small, almost forgotten towns, past old gristmills and across the 32 wooden bridges that still exist here.

Dating between 1856 and 1922, Parke County and neighboring Putnam and Owen counties boast more covered bridges than almost any place in the U.S. and are celebrated each year during the annual Covered Bridge Festival in early October, a 10-day event that brings more than a million people to this rural area.

Though some believe that covered bridges were built to protect travelers from the weather, historians posit that the covers were a way to protect the wood structure from the elements. Approximately 1500 bridges still exist in the United States, 106 of them in Indiana. All the Indiana bridges have signs saying “Cross This Bridge at a Walk,” an admonition to avoid collisions with someone entering the bridge from the other direction and also to help preserve the bridge itself. Many of the bridges are still open to vehicles and walkers, though all have weight restrictions.

Read the full content in the app
iOS App Store Google Play

Haunted Bridges

Bean Blossom

Bluegrass music & a covered bridge

Bridgeton

A mill & bridge from long ago

Greencastle

Historic college town & covered bridges

Huffman Mill Covered Bridge

Where Abe took his grain

Williams Covered Bridge

Across the River

Text © Jane Ammeson

Image by Photo by Jane Ammeson