With beaches, boating, and salmon fishing in Michigan City and Gary bordering Lake Michigan, there is more to Indiana than might appear at first glance. The agricultural heartland even has cross country skiing and snowmobiling to go with the Cornball Express. Southwest Indiana near Evansville is renowned for the well-preserved Native American Angel Mounds State Historic Site. The largest city and state capital is famous worldwide for its Indianapolis 500 race. Even locals living in the suburbs often overlook the Indianapolis Museum of Art, Eiteljorg Museum, NCAA Hall of Champions, the old Union Station museum cluster, and downtown Canal Walk, to name but a few landmarks. South Bend is synonymous with the Fighting Irish of Notre Dame.
Forested Nashville’s art colony fame dates to the early 1900s when Impressionist Theodore Clement Steele overwintered in The House of the Singing Winds. It is now the T.C. Steele State Historic Site. View paintings and sculpture at the I.M. Pei-designed Indiana University Museum of Art. Attend an IU sports event or an opera, ballet, concert, or theater performance. Treat the family to The Little Nashville Opry or The Bill Monroe Bluegrass Park. For healing mineral springs, head south to Orange County, Indiana’s spa resort center.
Enjoy golf, fishing, boating, cross country skiing, snowmobiling, and ice skating in the nation’s agricultural heartland. Monticello and Rensselaer are west of Logansport and north of Lafayette. Take the family on the Cornball Express and Hoosier Hurricane at the Indiana Beach Amusement Resort in Monticello. Play boardwalk carnival games, or let the kids loose on the go-carts. Pile the family into their vehicles for an old-fashioned movie experience at Monticello’s Lake Shore Drive-In. Indulge in a weekend dinner boat cruise to hot band sounds as the Madam Carroll plies Lake Freeman.
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This neighborhood was the site of a planned community that was not finished because of World War I.
Chicago has its Pullman Historic District and East Chicago, Indiana, has Marktown. Described as one of the Seven Wonders of Northwest Indiana, this old steel industry company town is best known for being the only town in North America where the cars park on the sidewalks and the people walk in the streets. But there is more to Marktown than a mention in "Ripley's Believe It or Not." It has a rich and interesting history. Built during the Progressive Era in 1917, the neighborhood pounded by Pine, Riley, Dickey and 129th Streets in East Chicago was converted from marshland to provide a complete community for workers of The Mark Manufacturing Company. Designed by noted Chicago architect Howard Van Doren Shaw, all but three of the original 200 residential homes were built in the English Tudor Revival style with stucco exteriors. Only four of the original plan of 28 sections were completed because construction stopped after World War I when Mark's steel pipe manufacturing firm was sold. Marktown was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1975 but its future remains in doubt. The surrounding steel industry and British Petroleum, which operates the nation's largest inland oil refinery nearby, have begun tearing down homes to make green space. Even though Marktown has landmark status and is regarded as an important cultural resource of architectural and historical significance, only 20 percent of the original community remains. See it while you can.
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Travel back in time as you wander down cobblestone streets and gaze at restored 19th-century homes in this historic Indianapolis district. The square gained fame as the home of celebrated Hoosier poet James Whitcomb Riley.
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