
Thousands of people pass through the Thomas A. Weaver Municipal Complex every year — for a city court date, a library card and many other reasons — without ever asking who Thomas A. Weaver was. I wanted to find out, so I went looking through the public record.
What emerged is the story of a small-circle civic official who helped guide Fishers through a pivotal growth period, just before the town’s modern suburban boom, and whose sudden death turned a routine act of local government into a lasting memorial.
A councilman during a formative era
Contemporary reporting described Weaver as a member of the Fishers Town Council and president of Printed Wiring Inc., an electrical business. A 1992 Indiana Court of Appeals decision, Delph v. Town Council of Town of Fishers, ties him to a 1990 annexation dispute along I-69, listing Weaver alongside fellow council members Walter F. Kelly and Roy G. Holland. The case places him squarely among Fishers’ top leadership during a period when the town was beginning to annex land and lay the groundwork for the growth that would follow later in the decade.
Killed by lightning at Crooked Stick
Weaver died on Aug. 8, 1991, struck by lightning while walking from the course to his car during a rain delay at the PGA Championship at Crooked Stick Golf Club in Carmel. He was 39. Wire service reports at the time — including United Press International’s coverage of that day’s opening round — confirmed he was a member of his town council and president of a wiring company, and that rescue personnel at the scene were unable to revive him. Later accounts identified his wife as Dee and his daughters as Karen and Emily.
Why his name is on the municipal complex
The clearest public explanation comes from local historical and official records. The Hamilton East Public Library’s history of Fishers’ town & city halls says the complex was established in 1991 and named for “a notable town councilman” — one of several sites the town has occupied over the decades as it grew from a fire-station-and-clerk’s-office operation into a full city government. A Town of Fishers annual report preserved by the Indiana State Board of Accounts records a June 28, 1992 memorial “Key to the Town” presented to the Thomas Weaver family, praising Weaver for his “commitment and dedication” to “strong family values, neighborhood spirit, and civic pride.”
That combination — a sitting councilman, killed suddenly and publicly, at the height of a formative decade for the town — appears to be why Fishers chose to attach his name permanently to its seat of government rather than simply mourn and move on.
Some gaps remain
The complete paper trail is still incomplete online. The city’s current Agenda Center notes that older agendas and minutes not yet added to the portal must be requested separately, and no indexed record of the formal naming resolution turned up in available searches. But the surviving record is consistent on one point: Fishers remembered Weaver not just as a public official, but as a civic figure whose values the town wanted physically attached to the center of its government — a distinction that has outlasted the building itself. (The 1991 structure gave way to a new City Hall in 2015 with Fishers’ incorporation as a city, and the Weaver name was carried onto the Arts & Municipal Complex that replaced it in 2024, city officials confirmed at the time.)
Weaver was gone before I began writing about Fishers in January 2012, so I never knew him. I only wanted to look through the public record and find what I could about the man whose name is on our local municipal complex. He was, unmistakably, a man closely tied to the history of Fishers.







