Roselawn, Indiana

Nudist Resort History & Family Research
Compiled March 6, 2026 — Families: G*****, M****, S*********, M****
G***** M**** S********* M****
Context: This page summarizes research into the history of nudist resorts in Roselawn, Indiana, specifically looking for connections to family members from the 1970s–1990s. This is a family history project — we're trying to piece together what happened in our pasts.

Social Graph

Interactive map of people, places, and events. Drag nodes to explore. Hover for details.

People Places Events Institutions Our Families

Key People

The Two Resorts

Roselawn (Newton County, pop. ~4,000) has hosted two nudist resorts on the same road since the 1960s. Understanding which was which matters — they had very different cultures.

Naked City

Naked City verified

Originally "Club Zoro" / "Zoro Nature Park" • Est. ~1933 • Now "Sun Aura Resort"

Founded by Chicago lawyer Alois Knapp. Acquired post-WWII by Dale & Mary Drost. Their son Dick Drost took over in 1968, renamed it "Naked City," and turned it into the self-proclaimed world's largest nudist camp (Guinness) and home of the Miss Nude America pageant.

By the mid-1970s it evolved from a family nudist camp into what multiple sources describe as a "swingers mecca." Multiple first-hand accounts describe families fleeing to Ponderosa as Drost's behavior escalated. Closed in 1986 after Drost's criminal conviction. Reopened under new ownership as Sun Aura Resort (still operating, adults-only).

Ponderosa Sun Club

Ponderosa Sun Club verified

Est. 1964 • Still operating • 88 wooded acres

Founded by the Schmitt familyTom and Pinky (Linnie) Schmitt from Chicago. Originally a family-oriented nudist resort. Hosted the "Nudes-A-Poppin'" annual pageant from 1975–2019 (erotic dance competition that drew 6,000+ spectators). Many families left Naked City for Ponderosa in the late 1970s when Drost's behavior became known.

Now 21+ only. Described by some as swinger-friendly (contested — depends who you ask). Still run by the Schmitt family (Scarlett Schmitt, granddaughter of founders).

The Scandal Timeline

The major documented events, drawn from court records, UPI wire stories, the Indianapolis Star, Post-Tribune (Gary), and personal accounts:

Year Event
1933 Club Zoro founded by Alois Knapp as a quiet nudist camp
1964 Ponderosa Sun Club founded by the Schmitt family
1968 Dick Drost takes over Zoro, renames it "Naked City." Miss Nude America pageant begins.
1970s Post-Tribune (Gary) runs periodic exposés on Naked City. Swinger culture grows. Families begin leaving for Ponderosa.
1975 Nudes-A-Poppin' pageant starts at Ponderosa Sun Club
1978 Indianapolis Star reports confiscated photos and films of nude children at Naked City
1980 Indiana State Police raid — 100+ films and tapes seized from Naked City
1982 UPI reports: informant and state police officer testified they saw obscene films including child pornography displayed at Naked City
1984 Court case: Naked City, Inc. v. State (460 N.E.2d 151) — 254 allegedly obscene films/videotapes seized as evidence
1985 Drost charged with molesting a 13-year-old girl and showing obscene materials to minors
1986 Plea bargain: Drost pled guilty to 10 sex-related misdemeanors. Ordered to sell the resort, leave Indiana for 10 years, pay $20,000 fine. Naked City closes.
1987 Court orders Naked City "closed instanter" (Naked City v. Aregood, 667 F. Supp. 1246). Newton County commissioners had sought injunction.
Late 80s Drost moves to California, operates "NCLA" (Naked City Los Angeles) in Homeland, CA
1990s Drost files $1 billion lawsuit against Indiana (dismissed). Continues operations in CA. Multiple women come forward with accounts of coercion and abuse.

The Swinger Culture — What Sources Say

Multiple first-hand accounts from people who lived at or visited Naked City describe the evolution:

From a former child resident: "In the early 70's it looked like a seedy trailer park." Families who had been there for years began leaving for Ponderosa "as rumors began to circulate about Dick Drost."
From the Roadside America commenter archives: "Naked City was family-oriented. Parents kept their kids from the front of the resort during nude contest weekends." But by the late 1970s, the culture had shifted dramatically.
From multiple women's accounts (blog comments, 2007-2012): Women described being recruited through "modeling agents," held against their will, and coerced. One described being "sold to the highest bidder." Another, 16 at the time, described being recruited as a worker then coerced with threats. These are unverified personal accounts but multiple, independent, and consistent.

The distinction between "nudist" and "swinger" was a major fault line in the community. The Ponderosa/Schmitt family consistently positioned themselves as legitimate nudists. Naked City under Drost became something else entirely.

Family Name Search Results

G*****, M****, S*********, M**** — None of these surnames appeared in any online source connected to either resort, the court cases, the blog comment threads, or newspaper archive snippets.

This does not mean nothing happened. It means:

Recommended Next Steps

These are the concrete paths most likely to turn up family-specific information:

  1. Newspapers.com — Subscription service with digitized archives. Search your family names + "Roselawn" or "Newton County." The Indianapolis Star and Post-Tribune (Gary) are partially available there. The 1978 Indy Star article about confiscated materials at Naked City is confirmed present. Most likely to have local police blotter items from this era.
  2. Newton County Clerk's Office — County court records from the 70s–90s. Phone: (219) 474-6081. Ask about civil or criminal cases involving your family names. Small county — they may actually be helpful and willing to look.
  3. Newton County Historical Society — Local historical societies often maintain clipping files on significant community topics. Naked City was significant enough that they likely have a folder.
  4. The Book: "Naked City, USA: Growing Up Naked" by Brian D. Blank (ISBN 9781519744401, ~$10 on Amazon). Blank did extensive research including interviews with families who lived there. In blog comments he wrote: "I am very interested in talking with any of you." He has a Twitter/X account and may know your family names or be able to connect you with sources.
  5. The Blog Comment Communities — Two blogs have active comment sections where former residents share first-hand accounts:
    "The Dark Side of Naked City" (2007, comments still active)
    "Naked City Revisited" (2012)
    Posting there asking about your family names may surface people who remember.
  6. Indiana State Archives / ISP — The 1980 state police raid reports would be public record. FOIA request to Indiana State Police for records mentioning your family names in connection with Newton County investigations.

Sources Used in This Research