North Vernon, IN Furnace & Air Conditioning Installation, Repair & Maintenance

Edmundson Mechanical Services Inc is proud to serve the North Vernon community!

We are proud to be part of this community, serving your heating and air conditioning needs. Whether you need repair, replacement or a new installation of a furnace, air conditioner, heat pump or air filtration system, we get the job right the first time. Our certified technicians service all furnace and air conditioning make and models.

Please call us today at 812-524-2600 to consult with our home comfort specialist.

About North Vernon, IN - Happy to be your hometown Heating & Air Conditioning Contractor!

North Vernon is a small Indiana community in Jennings County.  When we think of the Midwest, we tend to think of a slower pace, great family environments and church on Sunday.  Though this may not be the case everywhere that you go (i.e. Indianapolis), towns like North Vernon remind us of what a simpler time in America felt like.  The town is a great place for kids and older retirees as it is safe, quiet and community-oriented.  The seasonal weather adds to the town’s charm. As each month passes, a new landscape emerges and the new time of year brings its own specific brand of fun.

This part of the country is steeped in history and North Vernon has a lot of its very own. The county was named for Jonathon Jennings, the first Governor of Indiana and North Vernon traces its roots to 1882. Initially, a plot of land was bought to be build a fairground but railroads and industry arrived and the community blossomed quickly. North Vernon is extremely unique because it was founded by two Colonel Hagerman Tripp and Hiram Prather, both notable Civil War Veterans.  This makes it a great place to visit at any time of year, as you can always find something historically significant to check out – outdoors or indoors depending on the weather.

Another interesting story in the area took place in Seymour.  In the town, the Reno Gang came to fame as the first ever train robbers. On a chilly, fall evening in 1866, 3 members of the game broke into the express car of a train as it departed from town and restrained the guard. The criminals broke open a safe containing approximately $16,000. They then threw another (larger) safe over the side of the moving train, to waiting accomplices.  Unable to open the second safe, they fled but they kept the money.  The Reno Brothers are buried in nameless graves in the Seymour Old Cemetery.