04/01/2026
The Clay County Historical Society will be meeting April 6 at 7:00 PM in the lower level of the museum. A special presentation by Author Charlotte Halsema Ottinger discussing
her 2021 book, "Madge, The life and times of Madge Oberholtzer, the young Irvington woman who brought down D.C. Stephenson and the Ku Klux Klan". According to newsman Harold C. Feightner, “Few deaths of comparatively inconspicuous people have had the far-flung effects that [Oberholtzer’s] did. Her passing marked the beginning of the end of the Ku Klux Klan in Indiana; it resulted in the indictment of Governor Ed Jackson; the indictment and conviction of Mayor Ed L. Duvall, of Indianapolis, and other city officials and a complete change in the capital city’s administration, and it nearly wrecked a political party.” Ottinger will discuss Oberholtzer’s limited relationship with Stephenson, Grand Dragon of the Ku Klux Klan, her abduction and assault, her death bed declaration and the trial that sent D.C. Stephenson to prison for second degree murder. In addition to a display of related artifacts from the 1920s, Ottinger will share interesting aspects of Oberholtzer’s short life including her time studying under notable Indiana artists William Forsyth, Otto Stark and Clifton Wheeler. Special attention will be given to the legal precedents established during the trial and Oberholtzer’s lasting legacy that brought down D.C. Stephenson and the Ku Klux Klan,
There will be a time for questions and answers. You are welcome to bring your own copy to be signed or books will be available for sale at the program. Fifty percent of the proceeds go to the Irvington Historical Society.
The May 4th meeting will feature a local resident, Pat Wilkinson, portraying Evalyn Gertrude James, a well known local artist, with national notoriety. This will also be a very interesting program as we remember our local residents that had a broad reach not only in the State of Indiana.
The programs are always free, and the public is always invited to attend the membership meetings. There will be refreshments and a social time following the programs.
The museum opens April 2 and will be open Thursday, Friday and Saturday 12 to 5 on those days until December 1st.