Lost Indianapolis
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About this ebook
John P. McDonald
In Lost Indianapolis, author John P. McDonald weaves together the incredible stories of such diverse lost Indianapolis landmarks as Union Station, Burger Chef, Riverside Park, and the Central Canal. The result is a stirring history of the city, told through the stories of the icons of the past.Mr. McDonald is a writer and local historian. He is the producer of the website Lost Indiana, which seeks to capture the markers of Indiana's history before they are forever lost.
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Lost Indianapolis - John P. McDonald
Internet.
INTRODUCTION
Suwarrow
might have been the name for Indianapolis.
Exactly how a Polynesian atoll might have lent its name to the 12th largest city in the United States is a small part of the rich history of Indianapolis—a history that leaves behind many faded reminders for us to ponder today.
Back in 1816, the U.S. Congress decided to give the newly formed State of Indiana four square miles of land to lay out a capital city. At the time, the capital was in Corydon, having moved there in 1813 from Vincennes, which was the capital since the state’s beginnings in 1801. The first Territorial Governor was William Henry Harrison, who would later become the ninth President of the United States.
Coincidentally, Vincennes had also been the first capital
of an Indian nation lead by the great Shawnee chief, Tecumseh, who later moved his base to a camp along the Tippecanoe River north of present-day Lafayette. Harrison’s troops defeated Tecumseh’s men in the Battle of Tippecanoe in 1811—which in turn became the source of Harrison and John Tyler’s campaign slogan: Tippecanoe and Tyler, Too.
With the land in hand, where would the state’s leaders decide to place the new capital city? In 1820, the legislature sent ten commissioners to meet up with early settler William Conner to survey the land near the center of the state. Starting at Conner’s home near present-day Fishers, Indiana, they searched along the White River until they came upon the mouth of Fall Creek. By a vote of three to two, the spot was set, though for some reason five of the commissioners did not vote.
The legislature quickly drafted a bill to make it official, but they left a blank line for the name of the new city. The committee in charge debated for days. They considered and rejected many Indian names. One legislator even proposed Tecumseh,
which Harrison surely would have opposed had he been there. As the days wore on, they started to get tired. One committee member suggested Suwarrow,
the name given to a small atoll in the Cook Islands discovered two years earlier by the crew of a Russian ship named the Suvorov.
Maybe he was just reading a newspaper to pass the time and saw the story, but thankfully, the legislature rejected the option.
Intending to break the stalemate, Jeremiah Sullivan proposed Indianapolis
one evening to another committee member, Samuel Merrill. The next day Sullivan brought up the name in debate and it did not gather much of a response. To everyone’s surprise, however, Merrill seconded the motion, causing the lawmakers to sit up and take notice. It became the center of debate, and because the weary lawmakers were at the bottom of the creative barrel, they adopted a word that translated literally means Indiana City.
The new city got off to a bad start, despite the highest hopes and a planned grid of streets and avenues converging on a glorious circular plaza at its center. During the first summer mosquitoes breeding in the White River spread malaria that killed one-eighth of the population. The city was badly isolated, and even after the capital officially moved there in 1824, there were few takers for the land. It took almost 20 years for the state to sell all of the initial plots.
Looking to connect the state and its capital with the outside world, the legislature considered two alternatives: build a system of canals that would link the city into the growing canal transportation system launched by the success of the Erie Canal, or invest in the new steam engine technology and the railroads that were starting to spread across the East. Seeking to reach a compromise, Governor Noah Noble signed the Mammoth Improvement Bill
in 1836 to build both railroads and canals—at the same time.
Work began immediately and continued until the bills started to mount. In just three years, Indiana ran up over $14 million in debt—equivalent to $38 billion today. The state declared bankruptcy, and work halted.
Progress could not be stopped however, and by 1855, seven different private railroad lines converged in the city, making Indianapolis one of the key rail hubs for the expanding country. In that decade, the population doubled and retail stores, now connected with supplies of goods from the East, flourished. Indianapolis also became a manufacturing and wholesale center. Giant hotels sprang up, including the opulent Bates House—later sold to Henry Claypool who would build a new grand hotel on the same site. That same decade would also see the city’s first University, Northwestern Christian, eventually renamed for its primary benefactor, Ovid Butler.
By the Civil War, the city stood ready to serve as a gear in the machinery of war. Training camps sprouted across the city as volunteers streamed in from the countryside. Food processors and manufacturers along the rail lines met the needs of the soldiers at home and in the field. As industry boomed, so did the population, and soon interurban trolleys were connecting quiet suburban bedroom communities like Woodruff Place to the burgeoning downtown. After the war, Indianapolis saw large central department stores formed from by entrepreneurs like Lyman S. Ayres and William H. Block. By 1910, a quarter million people called Indianapolis home. The Merchants Bank Building skyscraper
on the southeast corner of Meridian and Washington rose in 1912, and it would remain the city’s tallest building for 50 years.
At about this time, the automobile craze hit Indianapolis, and with its manufacturing capacity and easy rail links to sources of materials and parts, it became an early home of the automobile industry. Indiana would eventually produce over 70 different makes of cars, including Indianapolis-based Stutz Motor Company. Several automotive moguls including Carl Fisher, who operated what was one of the first automobile dealership in the world, later went into partnership to build a proving ground for these automobile manufacturers, giving birth to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and the world-famous 500-Mile Race.
Under the firm control of the powerful mayor, Thomas Taggart, the city undertook several beautification and park projects, including the popular Riverside Park. When World War I broke out, Indianapolis boomed again, as manufacturers competed for war production contracts. At the close of the war, the Legislature elected to build a grand five-block memorial to Indiana’s fallen heroes; it is still one of the largest war memorials in the country.
During the roaring twenties, Indianapolis became a center for jazz music, launching the careers of legends like Hoagy Carmichael from the clubs along Indiana Avenue. Anchoring the block was the giant Madame Walker Theater, named for a prominent black female entrepreneur, Madam C.J. Walker. Companies like RCA relocated to the city, but with the stock market crash, Indianapolis sank into the Great Depression, rescued only by increased war production for World War II. By the end of the 1940s, manufacturing production in the city multiplied by almost ten times.
The 1950s brought the freedom of the car culture and suburban sprawl. Developers built shopping malls like Glendale Center, and drive-ins like the Tee Pee drew their teenage customers. Some, like Burger Chef, would grow to become