Michigan City
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About this ebook
RoseAnna Mueller
RoseAnna Mueller is a professor of Humanities at Columbia College, Chicago, and coauthored La Grange and La Grange Park and Harbor Country with her husband Robert. A resident of nearby Grand Beach, she enjoys exploring Michigan City�s historic downtown.
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Michigan City - RoseAnna Mueller
engagement.
INTRODUCTION
In 1826, the U.S. Government acquired the title to the land where Michigan City stands through a treaty with the Pottawatomie Indians. In 1828, surveyors determined that the mouth of Trail Creek would be a good location for a city and a commercial harbor. Major Isaac C. Elston of Crawfordsville, Indiana, learned of the plans for both road and harbor, and bought a parcel of land that contained Trail Creek in 1830. Michigan City was platted in 1832. Elston later sold his holdings to the Michigan City Land Company, and Michigan City was incorporated in 1836. Elston’s city was bound by Trail Creek, Wabash, Spring, Fifth, and Ninth Streets. Elston, however, never lived in Michigan City.
Trail Creek became part of Indiana Territory and contributed to the young city’s growth before the harbor was developed. As Michigan City grew, its lake traffic increased, and lumber and grist mills lined Trail Creek’s banks. The city’s location near well-traveled Indian trails and the Michigan Road opened northern Indiana to more settlers. The Michigan Road was in use by 1832, and men who worked on it settled near the lakefront. Samuel Miller, the city’s earliest settler, built a log cabin and a warehouse. Hundreds of wagons lined the Michigan Road on the way to the harbor.
Pine and hardwoods encouraged a thriving lumber industry. Milling and shipping lumber became a profitable business, and by 1890, Michigan City was one of the largest lumber markets in Indiana. Natural resources included sand (from the Hoosier Slide), which was shipped to many parts of the U.S. and Mexico for glassmaking. Merchants offered services to travelers: food, shelter, and supplies. Visitors to Michigan City responded with awe to the town’s geography and houses. A visitor who went by boat from St. Joseph, Michigan, to Chicago in 1836 mentioned he saw between twenty and thirty houses and a dozen stores among the sand hills.
The fledgling city was a small village settled by pioneers from Kentucky, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia who came up the Ohio River. It was hoped that the new city would surpass Chicago in commercial importance and size. In 1832, Michigan City competed with La Porte to become the county seat of La Porte County, but lost due to its low and swampy surroundings and La Porte’s more central location.
After the Erie Canal was completed in 1825, settlers from New England, enticed by cheap government land, came to a place of windswept dunes, marshes, and rivers. Wild game, deer, prairie chickens, geese, turkeys, raccoons, fox, and bears were plentiful. Philanthropists such George Ames, John Barker, and others donated their time, money, and energy to making the city a better place to live by supporting the arts and churches, and establishing a library and a YMCA.
Though Indiana boasts only 40 miles of Lake Michigan shoreline, the lake played a vital role in Michigan City’s history. A sand bar blocked the mouth of Trail Creek, and boats anchored offshore. Merchandise was unloaded and brought to shore via barges and lighters.
Congress freed money to dredge Trail Creek’s channel in 1867, and in 1870, the Army Corps of Engineers dredged the channel to a depth of 12 feet. In the late 1880s, commerce in Michigan City centered on its harbor. The lighthouse served as the harbor beacon from 1858 to 1904, when a new one was erected on the East Pier. The pier was extended in 1904, and the breakwater was rebuilt in 1911.
Michigan City’s economy rose and fell. The coming of the railroads resulted in the demise of the port as smaller towns were connected to cities by rail. But the arrival of the Michigan Central Railroad and its car shops in 1850 attracted laborers from Europe. In 1852, railroad lines included the Michigan Central, the Monon, the Nickel Plate, and the Pere Marquette. The Northern Indiana railroad ran an electric train in 1903, and the South Shore Line, also an electric train, began its service in 1908. In 1917, the Michigan Central repair shops were moved to Niles, Michigan. A chamber of commerce formed to offset this loss and attracted twenty-two new factories.
One of the first assembly line manufacturers, Haskell and Barker was started in 1858, and by 1879, the five-acre plant employed five hundred men. Michigan City’s population doubled as the Haskell Barker Plant expanded. The inmates of the Indiana State Prison, built in 1859, worked both inside and outside the prison. Cheap prison labor attracted other industries, and the prison also became a tourist attraction.
During his tenure as mayor, Martin Krueger secured the land between Lake Michigan and Trail Creek and bridged it; before this, there was no access to the lakefront. Krueger served Michigan City as city clerk, mayor, school board member, and state legislator, and developed Washington Park. By 1910, the shipping business had dwindled and