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September 13, 2025
Miller Beach, IN

Molly & Gavin

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It’s finally happening!

Molly Jane Wilson

&

Gavin Agustus Putchaven

September 13, 2025

Miller Beach, IN

13 Years in the Making

Molly & Gavin est. 2012

After 13 lovely years together—through high school, long-distance during college, and now building a life in Chicago—we’re beyond excited to celebrate with our friends and family on September 13th as we say I do. It feels like the perfect tribute to our journey, a celebration of the love that has only grown stronger with time. We can’t wait to start this new adventure surrounded by the people we love most.

About the Venue

The Gary Aquatorium est. 1921 in Miller Beach, IN

A National Historic Landmark, the Gary Aquatorium was rescued from demolition by the Chanute Aquatorium Society in 1991. The building honors Octave Chanute, the grandfather of flight, and the Tuskegee Airmen, the pioneers who spearheaded the integration of the armed forces. If you are unfamiliar with the word "Aquatorium," you must be questioning its existence. The word defines a place where one can see water and was invented by the Society for the Restoration of the Gary Aquatorium and Octave Chanute's Place in History. The Aquatorium is the former Gary Bathhouse that was opened in 1922 and closed in 1971. Twenty years later it reopened as the Gary Bathing Beach Aquatorium. It is safe to say that from 1921 to 1991 little was spent on maintenance. It wasn't until the Society stepped in that the building was revived. With over ten years of renovation and countless hours of volunteer work, the splendid piece of architecture on the shores of Lake Michigan stands as a symbol of the resilient spirit of the people of Gary, IN. The Aquatorium is also the memorial to Octave Chanute who flew the world's first aeronautically designed glider from a dune just west of the building in 1896, and the Tuskegee airmen whose heroics in World War II led to the racial integration of the armed forces. The Society for the Restoration of the Gary Aquatorium and Octave Chanute's Place in History is made up of citizens of Gary, Northwest Indiana, and indeed through the United States, who are interested in preserving the old Gary Bathhouse, the history of Octave Chanute, and the history of the Tuskegee Airmen. In the last fourteen years, the Society has raised and spent over two million dollars on the building. Excerpted from www.aquatorium.org.

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