
Indiana Facts, State Trivia & Information
- The first long-distance auto race in the U. S. was held May 30,
1911, at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The winner averaged 75 miles
an hour and won a 1st place prize of $14,000. Today the average speed is
over 167 miles an hour and the prize is more than $1.2 million.
Indianapolis Motor Speedway is the site of the greatest spectacle in
sports, the Indianapolis 500. The Indianapolis 500 is held every
Memorial Day weekend in the Hoosier capital city. The race is 200 laps
or 500 miles long.
- Abraham Lincoln moved to Indiana when he was 7 years old. He lived
most of his boyhood life in Spencer County with his parents Thomas and
Nancy.
- Explorers Lewis and Clark set out from Fort Vincennes on their
exploration of the Northwest Territory.
- The movie "Hard Rain" was filmed in Huntingburg.
- During WWII the P-47 fighter-plane was manufactured in Evansville at
Republic Aviation.
- Marcella Gruelle of Indianapolis created the Raggedy Ann doll in
1914.
- The first professional baseball game was played in Fort Wayne on May
4, 1871.
- James Dean, a popular movie star of the 1950s in such movies as
"East of Eden" and "Rebel without a Cause", was born February 8, 1941,
in Marion. He died in an auto crash at age 24.
- David Letterman, host of television's "Late Show with David
Letterman," was born April 12, 1947, in Indianapolis.
- Santa Claus, Indiana receives over one half million letters and
requests at Christmas time.
- Crawfordsville is the home of the only known working rotary jail in
the United States. The jail with its rotating cellblock was built in
1882 and served as the Montgomery County jail until 1972. It is now a
museum.
- Historic Parke County has 32 covered bridges and is the Covered
Bridge Capital of the world.
- True to its motto, "Cross Roads of America" Indiana has more miles
of Interstate Highway per square mile than any other state. The Indiana
state Motto, can be traced back to the early 1800s. In the early years
river traffic, especially along the Ohio, was a major means of
transportation. The National Road, a major westward route, and the
north-south Michigan Road crossed in Indianapolis. Today more major
highways intersect in Indiana than in any other state.
- Most of the state's rivers flow south and west, eventually emptying
into the Mississippi. However, the Maumee flows north and east into Lake
Erie. Lake Wawasee is the states largest natural lake.
- Indiana's shoreline with Lake Michigan is only 40 miles long, but
Indiana is still considered a Great Lakes State.
- More than 100 species of trees are native to Indiana. Before the
pioneer's arrive more than 80% of Indiana was covered with forest. Now
only 17% of the state is considered forested.
- Deep below the earth in Southern Indiana is a sea of limestone that
is one of the richest deposits of top-quality limestone found anywhere
on earth. New York City's Empire State Building and Rockefeller Center
as well as the Pentagon, the U.S. Treasury, a dozen other government
buildings in Washington D.C. as well as 14 state capitols around the
nation are built from this sturdy, beautiful Indiana limestone.
- Although Indiana means, "Land of the Indians" there are fewer than
8,000 Native Americans living in the state today.
- The first European known to have visited Indiana was French Explorer
Rene'-Robert Cavalier sierur de La Salle, in 1679. After LaSalle and
others explored the Great Lakes region, the land was claimed for New
France, a nation based in Canada.
- In the 1700s the first 3 Non-native American settlements in Indiana
were the 3 French forts of Ouiatenon, Ft. Miami, and Ft. Vincennes.
Although they had few settlers in the region, French presence in Indiana
lasted almost 100 years. After the British won the French and Indian
War, and upon the signing of the Treaty of Paris in 1763, the French
surrendered their claims to the lower Great Lakes region.
- Indiana was part of the huge Northwest Territory, which included
present day Ohio, Indiana, Illinois and Wisconsin, which were ceded to
the United States by the British at the end of the Revolutionary war.
- Ft. Wayne, Indiana's 2nd Largest city, had its beginnings in 1794,
after the Battle of Fallen Timbers, when General "Mad Anthony" Wayne
built Ft. Wayne on the site of a Miami Indian village.
- Many Mennonite and Amish live on the farmland of Northwestern
Indiana. One of the United States largest Mennonite congregations is in
Bern. According to Amish ordnung (rules) they are forbidden to drive
cars, use electricity, or go to public places of entertainment.
- At one time Studebaker Company of South Bend was the nation's
largest producer of horse-drawn wagons. It later developed into a
multimillion-dollar automobile
manufacturer.
- In Fort Wayne, Syvanus F. Bower designed the world's first practical
gasoline pump.
- Indianapolis grocer Gilbert Van Camp discovered his customers
enjoyed an old family recipe for pork and beans in tomato sauce. He
opened up a canning company and Van Camp's Pork and Beans became an
American staple.
- Muncie's Ball State University was built mostly from funds
contributed by the founders of the Ball Corporation, a company than made
glass canning jars.
- Thomas Hendricks, a Democrat from Shelbyville, served Indiana as a
United States Senator, a United States representative, governor, and as
Vice President under Grover Cleveland. Indiana has been the home of 5
vice presidents and one president.
- Peru Indiana was once known as the "Circus Capital of America".
- Indiana University's greatest swimmer was Mark Spitz, who won 7 gold
medals in the 1972 Olympic games. No other athlete has won so many gold
medals in a single year.
- In 1934 Chicago Gangster John Dillinger escaped the Lake Country
Jail in Crown Point by using a "pistol" he had carved from a wooden
block.
- Before Indianapolis, Corydon served as the state's capitol from
1816-1825. Vincennes was the capital when Indiana was a territory.
- East Race Waterway, in south Bend, is the only man-made white-water
raceway in North America.
- In 1862, Richard Gatling, of Indianapolis, invented the rapid-fire
machine gun.
- The American Federation of Labor (AFL) was organized in Terre Haute
in 1881.
- Sarah Walker, who called herself Madame J.C. Walker, became one of
the nation's first woman millionaires. In 1905 Sarah Breedlove
McWilliams Walker developed a conditioning treatment for straightening
hair. Starting with door-to-door sales of her cosmetics, Madame C.J.
Walker amassed a fortune.
- From 1900 to 1920 more than 200 different makes of cars were
produced in the Hoosier State. Duesenbergs, Auburns, Stutzes, and
Maxwells - are prize antiques today.
- The Indiana Gazette Indiana's first newspaper was published in
Vincennes in 1804.
- The state constitution of 1816 directed the legislature to establish
public schools, but it was not until the 1850s that state government was
able to establish a public school system.
- Before public schools families pitched in to build log schoolhouse
and each student's family paid a few dollars toward the teachers
salaries.
- At one time 12 different stagecoach lines ran through Indiana on the
National Road. (Now U.S. Interstate 40)
- In the 1830s canals were dug linking the Great Lakes to Indiana's
river systems. The canals proved to be a financial disaster. Railroads
made the canal system obsolete even before its completions.
- Indiana's first major railroad line linked Madison and Indianapolis
and was completed in 1847.
- The farming community of Fountain City in Wayne County was known as
the "Grand Central Station of the Underground Railroad." In the years
before the civil war, Levi and Katie Coffin were famous agents on the
Underground Railroad. They estimated that they provided overnight
lodging for more than 2,000 runaway slaves who were making their way
north to Canada and freedom.
- During the great Depression of the 1930's 1 in every 4 Hoosier
factory hands was out of work, farmers sank deeper in debt, and in
southern Indiana unemployment was as high as 50%.
- In the summer of 1987 4,453 athletes from 38 nations gathered in
Indianapolis for the Pan American Games.
- The Saturday Evening Post is published in Indianapolis.
- Comedian Red Skelton, who created such characters as Clem
Kadiddlehopper, and Freddie the Freeloader, was born in Vincennes.
- The Poet Laureate of Indiana, James Whitcomb Riley was born in a
two-room log cabin in Greenfield. He glorified his rural Indiana
childhood in such poems as "The Old Swimmin' Hole" "Little Orphant
Annie", and " When the frost is on the Pumpkin".
- Albert Beveridge won the Pulitzer Prize in biography in 1920, for
The Life of John Marshall. In 1934 Harold Urey won the Nobel Prize in
chemistry for his discovery of deuterium. Ernie Pyle won the Pulitzer
Prize in foreign Correspondence in 1944. Paul Samuelson won the Nobel
Prize in economics, 1970.
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