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History of Indiana

The history of human activity in Indiana, a U.S. state in the Midwest, stems back to the migratory tribes of Native Americans who inhabited Indiana as early as 8000 BC. Tribes succeeded one another in dominance for several thousand years and reached their peak of development during the period of Mississippian culture. The region entered recorded history in the 1670s, when the first Europeans came to Indiana and claimed the territory for the Kingdom of France. After France ruled for a century (with little settlement in this area), it was defeated by Great Britain in the French and Indian War (Seven Years' War) and ceded its territory east of the Mississippi River. Britain held the land for more than twenty years, until after its defeat in the American Revolutionary War, then ceded the entire trans-Allegheny region, including what is now Indiana, to the newly formed United States.

History of Indiana
The seal of Indiana reflects the state's pioneer era
Historical Periods
Pre-historyuntil 1670
French Rule1679–1763
British Rule1763–1783
U.S. Territorial Period1783–1816
Indiana Statehood1816–present
Major Events
Tecumseh's War
War of 1812
1811–1814
Constitutional conventionJune 1816
Polly v. Lasselle1820
Capitol moved to
Indianapolis
1825
Passage of the
Mammoth Internal Improvement Act
1831
State Bankruptcy1841
2nd Constitution1851
Civil War1860–1865
Gas Boom1887–1905
Harrison elected president1888
KKK scandal1925

The U.S. government divided the trans-Allegheny region into several new territories. The largest of these was the Northwest Territory, which the U.S. Congress subsequently subdivided into several smaller territories. In 1800, Indiana Territory became the first of these new territories established. As Indiana Territory grew in population and development, it was divided in 1805 and again in 1809 until, reduced to its current size and boundaries, it retained the name Indiana and was admitted to the Union December 11, 1816 as the nineteenth state.

The newly established state government set out on an ambitious plan to transform Indiana from a segment of the frontier into a developed, well-populated, and thriving state. State founders initiated an internal improvement program that led to the construction of roads, canals, railroads, and state-funded public schools. Despite the noble aims of the project, profligate spending ruined the state's credit. By 1841, the state was near bankruptcy and was forced to liquidate most of its public works. Acting under its new Constitution of 1851, the state government enacted major financial reforms, required that most public offices be filled by election rather than appointment, and greatly weakened the power of the governor. The ambitious development program of Indiana's founders was realized when Indiana became the fourth-largest state in terms of population, as measured by the 1860 census.

Indiana became politically influential and played an important role in the Union during the American Civil War. Indiana was the first western state to mobilize for the war, and its soldiers participated in almost every engagement during the war. Following the Civil War, Indiana remained politically important as it became a critical swing state in U.S. presidential elections. It helped decide control of the presidency for three decades.

During the Indiana Gas Boom of the late 19th century, industry began to develop rapidly in the state. The state's Golden Age of Literature began in the same time period, increasing its cultural influence. By the early 20th century, Indiana developed into a strong manufacturing state and attracted numerous immigrants and internal migrants to its industries. It experienced setbacks during the Great Depression of the 1930s. Construction of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, expansion of the auto industry, urban development, and two wars contributed to the state's industrial growth. During the second half of the 20th century, Indiana became a leader in the pharmaceutical industry due to the innovations of companies such as Indiana based Eli Lilly.

Early civilizations edit

Following the end of the last glacial period, about twenty thousand years ago, Indiana's topography was dominated by spruce and pine forests and was home to mastodon, caribou, and saber-toothed cats. While northern Indiana had been covered by glaciers, southern Indiana remained unaltered by the ice's advance, leaving plants and animals that could sustain human communities.[1][2] Indiana's earliest known inhabitants were Paleo-Indians. Evidence exists that humans were in Indiana as early as the Archaic stage (8000–6000 BC).[3] Hunting camps of the nomadic Clovis culture have been found in Indiana.[4] Carbon dating of artifacts found in the Wyandotte Caves of southern Indiana shows humans mined flint there as early 2000 BC.[5] These nomads ate quantities of freshwater mussels from local streams, as shown by their shell mounds found throughout southern Indiana.[5]

The Early Woodland period in Indiana came between 1000 BC and 200 AD and produced the Adena culture. It domesticated wild squash and made pottery, which were large cultural advances over the Clovis culture. The natives built burial mounds; one of this type has been dated as the oldest earthwork in Anderson's Mounds State Park.[6]

Natives in the Middle Woodland period developed the Hopewell culture and may have been in Indiana as early as 200 BC. The Hopewells were the first culture to create permanent settlements in Indiana. About 1 AD, the Hopewells mastered agriculture and grew crops of sunflowers and squash. Around 200 AD, the Hopewells began to construct mounds used for ceremonies and burials. The Hopewells in Indiana were connected by trade to other native tribes as far away as Central America.[7] For unknown reasons, the Hopewell culture went into decline around 400 and completely disappeared by 500.[8]

The Late Woodland era is generally considered to have begun about 600 AD and lasted until the arrival of Europeans in Indiana. It was a period of rapid cultural change. One of the new developments—which has yet to be explained—was the introduction of masonry, shown by the construction of large, stone forts, many of which overlook the Ohio River. Romantic legend attributed the forts to Welsh Indians, who supposedly arrived centuries before Christopher Columbus reached the Caribbean;[9] however, archaeologists and other scholars have found no evidence for that theory and believe that the cultural development was engendered by the Mississippian culture.[10]

Mississippians edit

 
View of Mound A at Angel Mounds

Evidence suggests that after the collapse of the Hopewell, Indiana had a low population until the rise of the Fort Ancient and Mississippian culture around 900 AD.[11] The Ohio River Valley was densely populated by the Mississippians from about 1100 to 1450 AD. Their settlements, like those of the Hopewell, were known for their ceremonial earthwork mounds. Some of these remain visible at locations near the Ohio River. The Mississippian mounds were constructed on a grander scale than the mounds built by the Hopewell. The agrarian Mississippian culture was the first to grow maize in the region. The people also developed the bow and arrow and copper working during this time period.[11]

Mississippian society was complex, dense, and highly developed; the largest Mississippian city of Cahokia (in Illinois) contained as many as 30,000 inhabitants. They had a class society with certain groups specializing as artisans. The elite held related political and religious positions. Their cities were typically sited near rivers. Representing their cosmology, the central developments were dominated by a large central mound, several smaller mounds, and a large open plaza. Wooden palisades were built later around the complex, apparently for defensive purposes.[11] The remains of a major settlement known as Angel Mounds lie east of present-day Evansville.[12] Mississippian houses were generally square-shaped with plastered walls and thatched roofs.[13] For reasons that remain unclear, the Mississippians disappeared in the middle of the 15th century, about 200 years before the Europeans first entered what would become modern Indiana. Mississippian culture marked the high point of native development in Indiana.[11]

It was during this period that American Bison began a periodic east–west trek through Indiana, crossing the Falls of the Ohio and the Wabash River near modern-day Vincennes. These herds became important to civilizations in southern Indiana and created a well-established Buffalo Trace, later used by European-American pioneers moving west.[14]

Before 1600, a major war broke out in eastern North America among Native Americans; it was later called the Beaver Wars. Five American Indian Iroquois tribes confederated to battle against their neighbors. The Iroquois were opposed by a confederation of primarily Algonquian tribes including the Shawnee, Miami, Wea, Pottawatomie, and the Illinois.[15] These tribes were significantly less advanced than the Mississippian culture that had preceded them. The tribes were semi-nomadic, used stone tools rather than copper, and did not create the large-scale construction and farming works of their Mississippian predecessors. The war continued with sporadic fighting for at least a century as the Iroquois sought to dominate the expanding fur trade with the Europeans. They achieved this goal for several decades. During the war, the Iroquois drove the tribes from the Ohio Valley to the south and west. They kept control of the area for hunting grounds.[16][17]

As a result of the war, several tribes, including the Shawnee, migrated into Indiana, where they attempted to resettle in land belonging to the Miami. The Iroquois gained the military advantage after they were supplied with firearms by the Europeans. With their superior weapons, the Iroquois subjugated at least thirty tribes and nearly destroyed several others in northern Indiana.[18]

European contact edit

When the first Europeans entered Indiana during the 1670s, the region was in the final years of the Beaver Wars. The French attempted to trade with the Algonquian tribes in Indiana, selling them firearms in exchange for furs. This incurred the wrath of the Iroquois, who destroyed a French outpost in Indiana in retaliation. Appalled by the Iroquois, the French continued to supply the western tribes with firearms and openly allied with the Algonquian tribes.[19][20] A major battle—and a turning point in the conflict—occurred near present-day South Bend when the Miami and their allies repulsed a large Iroquois force in an ambush.[21] With the firearms they received from the French, the odds were evened. The war finally ended in 1701 with the Great Peace of Montreal. Both Indian confederacies were left exhausted, having suffered heavy casualties. Much of Ohio, Michigan, and Indiana was depopulated after many tribes fled west to escape the fighting.[22]

The Miami and Pottawatomie nations returned to Indiana following the war.[23][24] Other tribes, such as the Algonquian Lenape, were pushed westward into the Midwest from the East Coast by encroachment of European colonists. Around 1770 the Miami invited the Lenape to settle on the White River.[25][note 1] The Shawnee arrived in present-day Indiana after the three other nations.[23] These four nations were later participants in the Sixty Years' War, a struggle between native nations and European settlers for control of the Great Lakes region. Hostilities with the tribes began early. The Piankeshaw killed five French fur traders in 1752 near the Vermilion River. However, the tribes also traded successfully with the French for decades.[26]

Colonial period edit

 
Native Americans guide French explorers through Indiana as depicted by Maurice Thompson in Stories of Indiana.

French fur traders from Canada were the first Europeans to enter Indiana, beginning in the 1670s.[27] The quickest route connecting the New France districts of Canada and Louisiana ran along Indiana's Wabash River. The Terre Haute highlands were once considered the border between the two French districts.[28] Indiana's geographical location made it a vital part of French lines of communication and trade routes. The French established Vincennes as a permanent settlement in Indiana during European rule, but the population of the area remained primarily Native American.[29] As French influence grew in the region, Great Britain, competing with France for control of North America, came to believe that control of Indiana was important to halt French expansion on the continent.[30]

France edit

The first European outpost within the present-day boundaries of Indiana was Tassinong, a French trading post established in 1673 near the Kankakee River.[note 2] French explorer René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, came to the area in 1679, claiming it for King Louis the XIV of France. La Salle came to explore a portage between the St. Joseph and Kankakee rivers,[31] and Father Ribourde, who traveled with La Salle, marked trees along the way. The marks survived to be photographed in the 19th century.[32] In 1681, La Salle negotiated a common defense treaty between the Illinois and Miami nations against the Iroquois.[33]

Further exploration of Indiana led to the French establishing an important trade route between Canada and Louisiana via the Maumee and Wabash rivers. The French built a series of forts and outposts in Indiana as a hedge against the westward expansion of the British colonies from the east coast of North America and to encourage trade with the native tribes. The tribes were able to procure metal tools, cooking utensils, and other manufactured items in exchange for animal pelts. The French built Fort Miamis in the Miami town of Kekionga (modern-day Fort Wayne, Indiana). France assigned Jean Baptiste Bissot, Sieur de Vincennes, as the first agent to the Miami at Kekionga.[34]

In 1717, François-Marie Picoté de Belestre[note 3] established the post of Fort Ouiatenon (southwest of modern-day West Lafayette, Indiana) to discourage the Wea from coming under British influence.[35] In 1732, François-Marie Bissot, Sieur de Vincennes, established a similar post near the Piankeshaw in the town that still bears his name. Although the forts were garrisoned by men from New France, Fort Vincennes was the only outpost to maintain a permanent European presence until the present day.[36] Jesuit priests accompanied many of the French soldiers into Indiana in an attempt to convert the natives to Christianity. The Jesuits conducted missionary activities, lived among the natives and learned their languages, and accompanied them on hunts and migrations. Gabriel Marest, one of the first missionaries in Indiana, taught among the Kaskaskia as early as 1712. The missionaries came to have great influence among the natives and played an important role in keeping the native tribes allied with the French.[37]

During the French and Indian War, the North American front of the Seven Years' War in Europe, the British directly challenged France for control of the region. Although no pitched battles occurred in Indiana, the native tribes of the region supported the French.[38] At the beginning of the war, the tribes sent large groups of warriors to support the French in resisting the British advance and to raid British colonies.[39] Using Fort Pitt as a forward base, British commander Robert Rogers overcame the native resistance and drove deep into the frontier to capture Fort Detroit. The rangers moved south from Detroit and captured many of the key French outposts in Indiana, including Fort Miamis and Fort Vincennes.[40] As the war progressed, the French lost control of Canada after the fall of Montreal. No longer able to effectively fight the British in interior North America, they lost Indiana to British forces. By 1761, the French were entirely forced out of Indiana.[41] Following the French expulsion, native tribes led by Chief Pontiac confederated in an attempt to rebel against the British without French assistance. While Pontiac was besieging British-held Fort Detroit, other tribes in Indiana rose up against the British, who were forced to surrender Fort Miamis and Fort Ouiatenon.[42] In 1763, while Pontiac was fighting the British, the French signed the Treaty of Paris and ceded control of Indiana to the British.[43]

Great Britain edit

When the British gained control of Indiana, the entire region was in the middle of Pontiac's Rebellion. During the next year, British officials negotiated with the various tribes, splitting them from their alliance with Pontiac. Eventually, Pontiac lost most of his allies, forcing him to make peace with the British on July 25, 1766. As a concession to Pontiac, Great Britain issued a proclamation that the territory west of the Appalachian Mountains was to be reserved for Native Americans.[44] Despite the treaty, Pontiac was still considered a threat to British interests, but after he was murdered on April 20, 1769, the region saw several years of peace.[45]

After Britain established peace with the natives, many of the former French trading posts and forts in the region were abandoned. Fort Miamis was maintained for several years because it was considered to be "of great importance", but even it was eventually abandoned.[46] The Jesuit priests were expelled, and no provisional government was established; the British hoped the French in the area would leave. Many did leave, but the British gradually became more accommodating to the French who remained and continued the fur trade with the Native American nations.[47]

Formal use of the word Indiana dates from 1768, when a Philadelphia-based trading company gave their land claim in the present-day state of West Virginia the name of Indiana in honor of its previous owners, the Iroquois. Later, ownership of the claim was transferred to the Indiana Land Company, the first recorded use of the word Indiana. However, the Virginia colony argued that it was the rightful owner of the land because it fell within its geographic boundaries. The U.S. Supreme Court extinguished the land company's right to the claim in 1798.[48]

In 1773, the territory that included present-day Indiana was brought under the administration of Province of Quebec to appease its French population. The Quebec Act was one of the Intolerable Acts that the thirteen British colonies cited as a reason for the outbreak of the American Revolutionary War. The Thirteen Colonies thought themselves entitled to the territory for their support of Great Britain during the French and Indian War, and were incensed that it was given to the enemy the colonies had been fighting.[49]

Although the United States gained official possession of the region following the conclusion of the American Revolutionary War, British influence on its Native American allies in the region remained strong, especially near Fort Detroit. This influence caused the Northwest Indian War, which began when British-influenced native tribes refused to recognize American authority and were backed in their resistance by British merchants and officials in the area. American military victories in the region and the ratification of the Jay Treaty, which called for British withdrawal from the region's forts, caused a formal evacuation, but the British were not fully expelled from the area until the conclusion of the War of 1812.[50]

United States edit

After the outbreak of the American Revolutionary War, George Rogers Clark was sent from Virginia to enforce its claim to much of the land in the Great Lakes region.[51] In July 1778, Clark and about 175 men crossed the Ohio River and took control of Kaskaskia, Cahokia, and Vincennes, along with several other villages in British Indiana. The occupation was accomplished without firing a shot because Clark carried letters from the French ambassador stating that France supported the Americans. These letters made most of the French and Native American inhabitants of the area unwilling to support the British.[52]

 
Clark's march to Vincennes, by F. C. Yohn

The fort at Vincennes, which the British had renamed Fort Sackville, had been abandoned years earlier and no garrison was present when the Americans arrived to occupy it. Captain Leonard Helm became the first American commandant at Vincennes. To counter Clark's advance, British forces under Lieutenant Governor Henry Hamilton recaptured Vincennes with a small force. In February 1779, Clark arrived at Vincennes in a surprise winter expedition and retook the town, capturing Hamilton in the process. This expedition secured most of southern Indiana for the United States.[53]

In 1780, emulating Clark's success at Vincennes, French officer Augustin de La Balme organized a militia force of French residents to capture Fort Detroit. While marching to Detroit, the militia stopped to sack Kekionga.[why?] The delay proved fatal when the expedition met Miami warriors led by Chief Little Turtle along the Eel River. The entire militia was killed or captured. Clark organized another assault on Fort Detroit in 1781, but it was aborted when Chief Joseph Brant captured a significant part of Clark's army at a battle known as Lochry's Defeat, near present-day Aurora, Indiana.[51] Other minor skirmishes occurred in Indiana, including the battle at Petit Fort in 1780.[54] In 1783, when the war came to an end, Britain ceded the entire trans-Allegheny region to the United States—including Indiana—under the terms of the Treaty of Paris.[55]

Clark's militia was under the authority of the Commonwealth of Virginia, although a Continental Flag was flown over Fort Sackville, which he renamed Fort Patrick Henry in honor of an American patriot. Later that year, the areas formerly known as Illinois Country and Ohio Country were organized as Illinois County, Virginia until the colony relinquished its control of the area to the U.S. government in 1784.[56] Clark was awarded large tracts of land in southern Indiana for his service in the war. Present-day Clark County and Clarksville are named in his honor.[57]

Indiana Territory edit

 
Map of the Indiana Territory

Northwest Indian War edit

Passage of the Land Ordinance of 1785 and the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 committed the U.S. government to continued plans for western expansion, causing increasing tensions with native tribes who occupied the western lands. In 1785 the conflict erupted into the Northwest Indian War.[58][59] American troops made several unsuccessful attempts to end the native rebellion. During the fall of 1790, U.S. troops under the command of General Josiah Harmar pursued the Miami tribe near present-day Fort Wayne, Indiana, but had to retreat. Major Jean François Hamtramck's expedition to other native villages in the area also failed when it was forced to return to Vincennes due to lack of sufficient provisions.[60][61] In 1791 Major General Arthur St. Clair, who was also the Northwest Territory's governor, commanded about 2,700 men in a campaign to establish a chain of forts in the area near the Miami capital of Kekionga; however, nearly a 1,000 warriors under the leadership of Chief Little Turtle launched a surprise attack on the American camp, forcing the militia's retreat. St. Clair's Defeat remains the U.S. Army's worst by Native Americans in history. Casualties included 623 federal soldiers killed and another 258 wounded; the Indian confederacy lost an estimated 100 men.[62][63]

St. Clair's loss led to the appointment of General "Mad Anthony" Wayne, who organized the Legion of the United States and defeated a Native American force at the Battle of Fallen Timbers in August 1794.[63][64] The Treaty of Greenville (1795) ended the war and marked the beginning of a series of land cession treaties. Under the terms of the Treaty, native tribes ceded most of southern and eastern Ohio and a strip of southeastern Indiana to the U.S. government. This ethnic cleansing opened the area for white settlement. Fort Wayne was built at Kekionga to represent United States sovereignty over the Ohio-Indiana frontier. After the treaty was signed, the powerful Miami nation considered themselves allies of the United States.[65][66] During the 18th century, Native Americans were victorious in 31 of the 37 recorded incidents with white settlers in the territory.[67]

Territory formation edit

The Congress of the Confederation formed the Northwest Territory under the terms of the Northwest Ordinance on July 13, 1787. This territory, which initially included land bounded by the Appalachian Mountains, the Mississippi River, the Great Lakes, and the Ohio River, was subsequently partitioned into the Indiana Territory (1800), Michigan Territory (1805), and the Illinois Territory (1809), and later became the states of Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, and part of eastern Minnesota. The Northwest Ordinance outlined the basis for government in these western lands and an administrative structure to oversee the territory, as well as a process for achieving statehood, while the Land Ordinance of 1785 called for the U.S. government to survey the territory for future sale and development.[68]

 
William Henry Harrison, the 1st Governor of Indiana Territory from 1801 to 1812, and the 9th President of the United States

On May 7, 1800, the U.S. Congress passed legislation to establish the Indiana Territory, effective July 4, 1800, by dividing the Northwest Territory in preparation for Ohio's statehood, which occurred in 1803.[69] At the time the Indiana Territory was created, there were only two main American settlements in what became the state of Indiana: Vincennes and Clark's Grant. When the Indiana Territory was established in 1800 its total white population was 5,641; however, its Native American population was estimated to be nearly 20,000, but may have been as high as 75,000.[70][71]

Indiana Territory initially comprised most of the present-day state Indiana excluding a narrow strip of land along the eastern border called "The Gore" (ceded by Ohio in 1803), all of the present-day states of Illinois and Wisconsin, and parts of present-day Michigan and Minnesota.[72][73] The Indiana Territory's boundary was further reduced in 1805 with the creation of the Michigan Territory to the north and again in 1809 when the Illinois Territory was established to the west.[74]

Territorial government edit

When the Indiana Territory was established in 1800, President John Adams appointed William Henry Harrison as the first governor of the territory. John Gibson, who was appointed the territorial secretary, served as acting governor from July 4, 1800, until Harrison's arrival at Vincennes on January 10, 1801. When Harrison resigned his position, effective December 28, 1812, Gibson served as territorial governor until Thomas Posey was appointed on March 3, 1813. Posey left office on November 7, 1816, when Jonathan Jennings was sworn into office as the first governor of the state of Indiana.[75][76][note 4]

The first territorial capital was established at Vincennes, where it remained from 1800 to 1813, when territorial officials relocated the seat of government to Corydon.[77][78] After the Illinois Territory was formed in 1809, Indiana's territorial legislature became fearful that the outbreak of war on the frontier could cause an attack on Vincennes, located on the western border of the territory, and made plans to move the capital closer to the territory's population center. Governor Harrison also favored Corydon, a town that he had established in 1808 and where he was also a landowner. Construction on the new capitol building began in 1814 and was nearly finished by 1816, when Indiana became a state.[79][80]

The Northwest Ordinance of 1787 made no provision for a popularly elected territorial government in the first or non-representative phase of territorial government (1800 to 1804).[81] Acting as the combined judicial and legislative government, a territorial governor and a General Court, which consisted of a three-member panel of judges, were appointed by the U.S. Congress, and later, the president with congressional approval. (The president subsequently delegated his authority to appoint these judges to the territorial governor.)[82] When the territory entered the second or semi-legislative phase of government in 1805, its voters were allowed to elect representatives to the House of Representatives (lower house) of its bicameral legislature. President Jefferson delegated the task of choosing a five-member Legislative Council (upper house) to the territorial governor, who chose the members from a list of ten candidates provided by the lower house.[83][84] The newly elected territorial legislature met for the first time on July 29, 1805, and gradually became the dominant branch, while the judges continued to focus on judicial matters.[85] Governor Harrison retained veto powers, as well as his general executive and appointment authority. The legislative assembly had the authority to pass laws, subject to the governor's approval before they could be enacted.[83][84]

As the population of the territory grew, so did the people's interest in exercising of their freedoms. In 1809, after the Indiana Territory was divided to create the Illinois Territory, Congress further altered the makeup of the territorial legislature. Voters in the Indiana Territory would continue to elect members to its House of Representatives; however, they were also granted permission for the first time to elect members to its Legislative Council (upper house).[86][87]

Political issues edit

The major political issue in Indiana's territorial history was slavery; however, there were others, including Indian affairs, the formation of northern and western territories from portions of the Indiana Territory, concerns about the lack of territorial self-government and representation in Congress, and ongoing criticisms of Harrison's actions at territorial governor.[88][89] Most of these issues were resolved before Indiana achieved statehood, including the debate over the issue of allowing slavery in the territory, which was settled in 1810; however, criticism of Governor Harrison continued.[88]

In December 1802 delegates from Indiana Territory's four counties passed a resolution in favor of a ten-year suspension of Article 6 of the Northwest Ordinance of 1787. The ordinance prohibited slavery in the original Northwest Territory, although it had existed in the region since French rule. The resolution was made in order to legalize slavery in the territory and to make the region more appealing to slave-holding settlers from the Upper South who occupied areas along the Ohio River and wanted to bring their slaves into the territory. However, Congress failed to take action on the resolution, leaving Harrison and the territorial judges to pursue other options.[90][91]

In 1809 Harrison found himself at odds with the new legislature when the anti-slavery party won a strong majority in the 1809 elections. In 1810 the territorial legislature repealed the indenturing and pro-slavery laws Harrison and the judicial council had enacted in 1803.[92][93] Slavery remained the defining issue in the state for the decades to follow.[94][95]

War of 1812 edit

The first major event in the territory's history was the resumption of hostilities with Native Americans. Unhappy with their treatment since the peace treaty of 1795, native tribes led by the Shawnee Chief Tecumseh and his brother Tenskwatawa formed a coalition against the Americans. Tecumseh's War started in 1811, when General Harrison led an army to rebuff the aggressive movements of Tecumseh's pan-Indian confederation.[96] The Battle of Tippecanoe (1811), which caused a setback for the Native Americans,[97] earned Harrison national fame and the nickname of "Old Tippecanoe".[98]

The war between Tecumseh and Harrison merged with the War of 1812 after the remnants of the pan-Indian confederation allied with the British in Canada. The siege of Fort Harrison is considered to be the Americans' first land victory in the war.[99] Other battles that occurred within the boundaries of the present-day state of Indiana include the siege of Fort Wayne, the Pigeon Roost Massacre and the Battle of the Mississinewa. The Treaty of Ghent (1814) ended the war and relieved American settlers from their fears of attack by the nearby British and their Indian allies.[100] This treaty marked the end of hostilities with the Native Americans in Indiana. During the 19th century, Native Americans were victorious in 43 of the 58 recorded incidents between Native Americans and white settlers in Indiana. In the 37 battles between Native American warriors and U.S. Army troops, victories were nearly evenly split between the two parties. Despite the Native American victories, most of the native population was eventually removed from Indiana, a process that continued after the territory attained statehood.[101]

Early statehood edit

 
The Constitution Elm in Corydon

In 1812, Jonathan Jennings defeated Harrison's chosen candidate and became the territory's representative to Congress. Jennings immediately introduced legislation to grant Indiana statehood, even though the population of the entire territory was under 25,000, but no action was taken on the legislation because of the outbreak of the War of 1812.[102]

Posey had created a rift in the politics of the territory by supporting slavery, much to the chagrin of opponents like Jennings, Dennis Pennington, and others who dominated the Territorial Legislature and who sought to use the bid for statehood to permanently end slavery in the territory.[102][103]

Founding edit

In early 1816, the Territory approved a census and Pennington was named to be the census enumerator. The population of the territory was found to be 63,897,[104] above the cutoff required for statehood. A constitutional convention met on June 10, 1816, in Corydon. Because of the heat of the season, the delegation moved outdoors on many days and wrote the constitution beneath the shade of a giant elm tree. The state's first constitution was completed on June 29, and elections were held in August to fill the offices of the new state government. In November, Congress approved statehood.[105][106]

Jennings and his supporters had control of the convention and Jennings was elected its president. Other notable delegates at the convention included Dennis Pennington, Davis Floyd, and William Hendricks.[107] Pennington and Jennings were at the forefront of the effort to prevent slavery from entering Indiana and sought to create a constitutional ban on it. Pennington was quoted as saying "Let us be on our guard when our convention men are chosen that they be men opposed to slavery".[108] They succeeded in their goal and a ban was placed in the new constitution.[109] But, persons already held in bondage stayed in that status for some time. That same year Indiana statehood was approved by Congress. And, while the Indiana constitution banned slavery in the state, Indiana and its white residents also excluded free Black citizens, and established barriers to their immigration to the state.[110]

Jonathan Jennings, whose motto was "No slavery in Indiana", was elected governor of the state, defeating Thomas Posey 5,211 to 3,934 votes.[111] Jennings served two terms as governor and then went on to represent the state in congress for another 18 years. Upon election, Jennings declared Indiana a free state.[111] The abolitionists won a key victory in the 1820 Indiana Supreme Court case of Polly v. Lasselle, which stated that even those enslaved before Indiana statehood were now free. In the case of Mary Clark, an African American woman born into slavery and then indentured as a servant in Vincennes, Indiana, the Indiana Supreme Court in 1821 decided that indentured servitude was merely a ruse for slavery and was therefore prohibited. All forms of slavery in Indiana were finally banned by 1830.[112][113]

 
Indiana's First State Capitol Building

As the northern tribal lands gradually opened to white settlement, Indiana's population rapidly increased and the center of population shifted continually northward.[114] One of the most significant post-frontier events in Indiana occurred in 1818 with the signing of the Treaty of St. Mary's at St. Mary's, Ohio to acquire Indian lands south of the Wabash from the Delaware and others. The area comprised about 1/3 of the present day area of Indiana, the central portion, and was called the "New Purchase". Eventually, 35 new counties were carved out of the New Purchase. An area like a large bite in the middle of the northern boundary[115] was reserved to the Miami, called the Big Miami Reserve, which was the largest Indian reservation ever to exist in Indiana. Indianapolis was selected to be the site of the new state capital in 1820 because of its central position within the state and assumed good water transportation. However the founders were disappointed to discover the White River was too sandy for navigation.[116] In 1825, Indianapolis replaced Corydon as the seat of government. The government became established in the Marion County Courthouse as the second state capital building.[114]

Early development edit

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
18002,632
181024,520831.6%
1820147,178500.2%
1830343,031133.1%
1840685,86699.9%
1850988,41644.1%
18601,350,42836.6%
[117]

The National Road reached Indianapolis in 1829, connecting Indiana to the Eastern United States.[118] In the early 1830s citizens of Indiana began to be known as Hoosiers, although the origin of the word has been subject considerable debate,[119] and the state took on the motto of "Crossroads of America". In 1832, construction began on the Wabash and Erie Canal, a project connecting the waterways of the Great Lakes to the Ohio River. Railroads soon made the canal system obsolete. These developments in transportation served to economically connect Indiana to the Northern East Coast, rather than relying solely on the natural waterways which connected Indiana to the Mississippi River and Gulf Coast states.[120][note 5]

In 1831, construction on the third state capitol building began. This building, designed by the firm of Ithiel Town and Alexander Jackson Davis, had a design inspired by the Greek Parthenon and opened in 1841. It was the first statehouse that was built and used exclusively by the state government.[121]

 
The fifth Indiana Statehouse in Indianapolis built in 1888 on the site of the third statehouse

The state suffered from financial difficulties during its first three decades. Jonathan Jennings attempted to begin a period of internal improvements. Among his projects, the Indiana Canal Company was reestablished to build a canal around the Falls of the Ohio. The Panic of 1819 caused the state's only two banks to fold. This hurt Indiana's credit, halted the projects, and hampered the start of new projects until the 1830s, after the repair of the state's finances during the terms of William Hendricks and Noah Noble. Beginning in 1831, large scale plans for statewide improvements were set into motion. Overspending on the internal improvements led to a large deficit that had to be funded by state bonds through the newly created Bank of Indiana and sale of over nine million acres (36,000 km2) of public land. By 1841, the debt had become unmanageable.[122] Having borrowed over $13 million, the equivalent to the state's first fifteen years of tax revenue, the government could not even pay interest on the debt.[123] The state narrowly avoided bankruptcy by negotiating the liquidation of the public works, transferring them to the state's creditors in exchange for a 50 percent reduction in the state's debt.[124][note 6] The internal improvements began under Jennings paid off as the state began to experience rapid population growth that slowly remedied the state's funding problems. The improvements led to a fourfold increase in land value, and an even larger increase in farm produce.[125]

During the 1840s, Indiana completed the removal of the Native American tribes. The majority of the Potawatomi voluntarily relocated to Kansas in 1838. Those who did not leave were forced to travel to Kansas in what came to be called the Potawatomi Trail of Death, leaving only the Pokagon Band of Potawatomi Indians in the Indiana area.[126] The majority of the Miami tribe left in 1846, although many members of the tribe were permitted to remain in the state on lands they held privately under the terms of the 1818 Treaty of St. Mary's.[127] The other tribes were also convinced to leave the state voluntarily through the payment of subsidies and land grants further west. The Shawnee migrated westward to settle in Missouri, and the Lenape migrated into Canada. The other minor tribes in the state, including the Wea, moved westward, mostly to Kansas.[128]

By the 1850s, Indiana had undergone major changes: what was once a frontier with sparse population had become a developing state with several cities. In 1816, Indiana's population was around 65,000, and in less than 50 years, it had increased to more than 1,000,000 inhabitants.[129]

Because of the rapidly changing state, the constitution of 1816 began to be criticized.[130][note 7] Opponents claimed the constitution had too many appointed positions, the terms established were inadequate, and some of the clauses were too easily manipulated by the political parties that did not exist when then constitution was written.[131] The first constitution had not been put to a vote by the general public, and following the great population growth in the state, it was seen as inadequate. A constitutional convention was called in January 1851 to create a new one. The new constitution was approved by the convention on February 10, 1851, and submitted for a vote to the electorate that year. It was approved and has since been the official constitution.[132]

Black Hoosiers before the Civil War edit

Year Slaves Free Blacks[133][134]
1800 28 87
1810 237 393
1820 192 1,230
1830 3 3,629
1840 3 7,165
1850 0 11,262

African Americans migrated to Indiana before its official statehood in 1816.[135] The first recorded were five enslaved people in Vincennes, Indiana in 1746.[136] In the 1820 federal census, 1,230 reported themselves as residents of Indiana.[137] Most Black migrants to Indiana arrived from South Carolina, Ohio, Virginia, and Kentucky.[135] African Americans pioneered rural settlements in the state throughout the first half of the nineteenth-century and accounted for 1.1% of the total population by 1850.[138] Although Black Hoosiers settled in urban areas, many rural antebellum communities were found throughout the state, including Lyles Station, Roberts Settlement, and Beech Settlement.[139]

Although Indiana entered the Union in 1816 as a free state, it gave only a tepid welcome to African Americans. Throughout the first half of the nineteenth century, Indiana attempted to keep Black Hoosiers from attending public school, voting, testifying in court, and endeavored to set other limits on African American citizenship and inclusion.[140] Black individuals were denied the right to testify in court in 1818.[141] In 1829, the Indiana Colonization Society was founded to help repatriate African Americans to Liberia which reflected a desire to rid the state of its Black residents.[142] The 1830 census recorded three slaves in the state. The earliest days of the territory and of statehood witnessed intense debates over whether to allow slavery in Indiana. Laws in the 1830s sought to prevent free Black individuals from entering the state without certificates of freedom under threat of fines and expulsion.[143] The Black Law of 1831 required Black citizens to register within their county and pay a $500 bond.[144]

While the 1830 law was only sporadically enforced it reflected hostility towards African Americans and their settlement in the state. Throughout the early nineteenth century, Black Hoosiers struggled to enjoy basic civil rights in the state, including the right to educate their children. In 1837 and 1841, the state formally excluded African Americans from public education. In 1837, the state legislature moved to recognize "The white inhabitants of each congressional district" as the citizens qualified to vote in school board elections. Four years later, they followed with an effort to preclude Black households from school board assessments. This helped to establish Hoosier schools as de facto segregated white populations. Efforts in 1842 to formally exclude African American children from public education were rebuffed, however. The State Committee on Education responded to the matter acknowledging that Black students "Are here, unfortunately, for us and them, and we have duties to perform in reference to their well-being."[145] While the state did not have legal segregation, Black children were also excluded public schools as a matter of custom.[141]

Indiana passed laws against interracial marriage in 1818 and 1821.[146] Under 1840 state laws to ban miscegenation, Indiana became the first state to make interracial marriage a felony.[147] Article II of the new constitution of 1851 expanded suffrage for white males, but excluded Black Hoosiers from suffrage. Article XIII of the Indiana Constitution of 1851 sought to exclude African Americans from settling in the state, declaring "No negro or mulatto shall come into or settle in the State."[148] This was the only provision of the new constitution submitted to a special election. Indiana constitutional convention delegates voted 93 to 40 in favor of the article. The popular vote was even more enthusiastic in its support for exclusion with a vote of 113,828 in favor and only 21,873 against excluding African Americans. This ban stood until 1866 when the Indiana Supreme Court ruled that it was unconstitutional.[149][150]

Racial hostility and discrimination co-existed alongside abolition sentiments and efforts. Levi Coffin, unofficially known as "President of the Underground Railroad", and one of the most prominent abolitionists in the United States operated out of Richmond. The Underground Railroad in Indiana sought to help runaway slaves escape to northern states and Canada. White Quakers, Baptists, and others worked to secure safe passage for runaway slaves. Abolition efforts conflicted with a growing antipathy towards free Black Hoosiers in the state. A large influx occurred in 1814 when Paul and Susannah Mitchem immigrated to Indiana from Virginia with over 100 of their slaves. Later that year they emancipated all of their slaves, most of whom formed a large part of the population of the first state capital in Corydon.[151]

Bounty hunters (slavecatchers), mostly operating in the southern part of the state, offered their services and knowledge of the area to southerners searching for runaways.[152] In addition, free Black individuals could become victims when slavecatchers could not find runaway slaves. Bounty hunters and slavecatchers might seize free Black individuals, claiming them to be runaways, and bring them to the Southern United States to be sold into bondage. In one incident in the early 1850s, for example, slavecatchers seized two free Black citizens working on the Wabash and Erie Canal. Although local abolitionists quickly organized and petitioned the sheriff to release the two men, the slavecatchers had documents that described the men and claimed they were runaways. Evidence suggested the documents were false, but there was no way to refute the claim. The slavecatchers were allowed to take the two men as their prisoners, but before they left Indiana a group of abolitionists overtook the party and freed the two Black laborers.[153]

Civil War, Exodusters, and the Great Migration edit

Article 13 of the 1851 Indiana Constitution was deemed ‘unconstitutional’ in 1866, but was not amended until 1881. Indiana's Black population increased after the Civil War mostly along the Ohio River, such as Spencer County, Indiana, which included 947 Black citizens by 1870.[citation needed]

As Reconstruction ended in the South, former enslaved peoples wanted to move north, which included the migration of Black people from North Carolina to Indiana. Black people who migrated from the South after the Civil War were known as Exodusters, who were in search of access to good schools, Black community-centered churches, and job opportunities. Many migrants during this time who arrived in Indiana were met with anti-Black violence and forced to relocate due to Indiana's numerous sundown towns. Black communities around Indianapolis tried to help those who had migrated, but many of the Exodusters became discouraged and went back to North Carolina. Those who stayed often settled in Indianapolis, contributing to the city's Black population growth.[citation needed]

The Black population in 1880 was 39,228 and by 1900 it was 57,960.[citation needed]

During the Great Migration, Black individuals who came to Indiana between 1910 and 1920, often settled in central or northern parts of the states. New opportunities were available due to industrialization and the war economy, and rumors of new opportunities were appealing.

Religion edit

Frontier Indiana was prime ground missionary for the Second Great Awakening, with a never-ending parade of camp meetings and revivals.[154] Baptist church records show an intense interest in private moral behavior at the weekly meetings, including drinking and proper child-rearing practices. The most contentious issue was the antimission controversy, in which the more traditional elements denounced missionary societies as unbiblical. Daniel Parker, of Vincennes, was a key leader of the antimission movement[155]

Eastern Presbyterian and Congregational denominations funded an aggressive missionary program, 1826–55, through the American Home Missionary Society (AHMS). It sought to bring sinners to Christ and also to modernize society promoted middle class values, mutual trust among the members, and tried to minimize violence and drinking.[156] The frontierspeople were the reformees and they displayed their annoyance at the new morality being imposed on society. The political crisis came in 1854–55 over a pietistic campaign to enact "dry" prohibition of liquor sales. They were strongly opposed by the "wets," especially non-churched, the Catholics, Episcopalians, the antimissionary elements, and the German recent arrivals. Prohibition failed in 1855 and the moralistic pietistic Protestants switched to a new, equally moralistic cause, the anti-slavery crusade led by the new Republican Party.[157][158]

In 1836 Black Hoosiers founded the Bethel AME Church in Indianapolis.[144]

Higher education edit

For a list of institutions, see Category:Universities and colleges in Indiana.

The earliest institutions of education in Indiana were missions, established by French Jesuit priests to convert local Native American nations. The Jefferson Academy was founded in 1801 as a public university for the Indiana Territory, and was reincorporated as Vincennes University in 1806, the first in the state.[159]

The 1816 constitution required that Indiana's state legislature create a "general system of education, ascending in a regular gradation, from township schools to a state university, wherein tuition shall be gratis, and equally open to all".[160] It took several years for the legislature to fulfill its promise, partly because of a debate about whether a new public university should be founded to replace the territorial university.[161] The 1820s saw the start of free public township schools. During the administration of William Hendricks, a plot of ground was set aside in each township for the construction of a schoolhouse.[162]

The state government chartered Indiana University in Bloomington in 1820 as the State Seminary. Construction began in 1822, the first professor was hired in 1823, and classes were offered in 1824.

Other state colleges were established for specialized needs. They included Indiana State University, established in Terre Haute in 1865 as the state normal school for training teachers. Purdue University was founded in 1869 as the state's land-grant university, a school of science and agriculture. Ball State University was founded as a normal school in the early 20th century and given to the state in 1918.[163]

Public colleges lagged behind the private religious colleges in both size and educational standards until the 1890s.[164] In 1855, North Western Christian University [now Butler University] was chartered by Ovid Butler after a split with the Christian Church Disciples of Christ over slavery. Significantly the university was founded on the basis of anti-slavery and co-education. It was one of the first to admit African Americans and one of the first to have a named chair for female professors, the Demia Butler Chair in English.[165] Asbury College (now Depauw University) was Methodist. Wabash College was Presbyterian; they led the Protestant schools.[166] The University of Notre Dame, founded by Rev Edward Sorin in 1842, proclaims itself as a prominent Catholic college.[167] Indiana lagged the rest of the Midwest with the lowest literacy and education rates into the early 20th century.[164]

Transportation edit

In the early 19th century, most transportation of goods in Indiana was done by river. Most of the state's estuaries drained into the Wabash River or the Ohio River, ultimately meeting up with the Mississippi River, where goods were transported to and sold in St. Louis or New Orleans.[168][169]

The first road in the region was the Buffalo Trace, an old bison trail that ran from the Falls of the Ohio to Vincennes.[170] After the capitol was relocated to Corydon, several local roads were created to connect the new capitol to the Ohio River at Mauckport and to New Albany. The first major road in the state was the National Road, a project funded by the federal government. The road entered Indiana in 1829, connecting Richmond, Indianapolis, and Terre Haute with the eastern states and eventually Illinois and Missouri in the west.[171] The state adopted the advanced methods used to build the national road on a statewide basis and began to build a new road network that was usable year-round. The north–south Michigan Road was built in the 1830s, connecting Michigan and Kentucky and passing through Indianapolis in the middle.[171] These two new roads were roughly perpendicular within the state and served as the foundation for a road system to encompass all of Indiana.

Indiana was flat enough with plenty or rivers to spend heavily on a canal mania in the 1830s. Planning in the lightly populated state began in 1827 as New York had scored a major success with its Erie Canal.[172] In 1836 the legislature allocated $10 million for an elaborate network of internal improvements, promoting canals, turnpikes, and railroads. The goal was to encourage settlement by providing easy, cheap access to the remotest corners of the state, linking every area to the Great Lakes and Ohio River, and thence to the Atlantic seaports and New Orleans. Every region joined in enthusiastically, but the scheme was a financial disaster because the legislature required that work must begin on all parts of all the projects simultaneously; very few were finished. The state was unable to pay the bonds it issued and was blackballed in Eastern and European financial circles for decades.[173][174]

The first major railroad line was completed in 1847, connecting Madison with Indianapolis. By the 1850s, the railroad began to become popular in Indiana. Indianapolis as the focal point, Indiana had 212 miles of railroad in operation in 1852, soaring to 1,278 miles in 1854. They were operated by 18 companies; construction plans were underway to double the totals.[175] The successful railroad network brought major changes to Indiana and enhanced the state's economic growth.[118] Although Indiana's natural waterways connected it to the South via cities such as St. Louis and New Orleans, the new rail lines ran east–west, and connected Indiana with the economies of the northern states.[176] As late as mid-1859, no rail line yet bridged the Ohio or Mississippi rivers.[177] Because of an increased demand on the state's resources and the embargo against the Confederacy, the rail system was mostly completed by 1865.

Early nineteenth century social reforms edit

Temperance movement edit

Temperance became a part of the evangelical Protestant initiative during Indiana's pioneer era and early statehood. Many Hoosiers freely indulged in drinking locally distilled whiskey on a daily basis, with binges on election days and holidays, and during community celebrations[158] Reformers announced that the devil was at work and must be repudiated.[178][179] A state temperance society formed in 1829 and local temperance societies soon organized in Indianapolis, Fort Wayne, and Logansport. By the 1830s pietistic (evangelical) Protestants and community leaders had joined forces to curb consumption of alcohol. In 1847, the Indiana General Assembly passed a local option bill that allowed a vote on whether to prohibit alcohol sales in a township.

By the 1850s Indiana's Republican party, whose adherents tended to favor the temperance movement, began challenging the state's Democrats, who supported personal freedom and a limited federal government, for political power.[180] Early temperance legislation in Indiana earned only limited and temporary success. In 1853, Republicans persuaded the state legislature to pass a local option law that allowed a township voter to declare it dry, but it was later deemed unconstitutional. In 1855, a statewide prohibition law was passed, but it met the same fate as the local option.[181] In the decades to come Protestant churches, especially the Methodists, Baptists, Presbyterians, Disciples of Christ, Quakers, and women's groups continued to support temperance efforts and gave strong support to the mostly dry Republican Party. The Catholics, Episcopalians and Lutherans stood opposed and gave strong support to the wet Democratic Party.[182]

Abolition edit

Abolition in Indiana reflected a mix of anti-Black sentiment, religiously oriented social reforms, and pro-Black sentiments.[183] Several groups and notable individuals stood in opposition to slavery and in support of African Americans in the state. The North Western Christian University [later Butler University] was founded by Ovid Butler in 1855 after a schism with the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) over slavery.

Women's suffrage movement edit

Indiana has a long history of women's activism in social movements including the women's suffrage movement.

The Indiana Woman's Suffrage Association was founded in 1851 by important suffrage leaders such as Agnes Cook, Mary B. Birdsall, Amanda M. Way, and Mary F. Thomas.[184] With the exception of Way, all these women were the first to address the Indiana State Legislature on January 19, 1859, with petitions calling for women's suffrage, temperance, and equal rights.[185] In 1854, Birdsall had purchased The Lily, the first U.S. newspaper edited by and for women, from its founder, Amelia Bloomer, and moved it to Richmond, Indiana. The newspaper had begun as a temperance newspaper but was later used to campaign for women's suffrage and rights.[186]

Civil War edit

 
80th Indiana Infantry Regiment and the 19th Indiana Light Artillery defending against the Confederates at the Battle of Perryville by H. Mosler

Indiana, a free state and the boyhood home of Abraham Lincoln, remained a member of the Union during the American Civil War. Indiana regiments were involved in all the major engagements of the war and almost all the engagements in the western theater. Hoosiers were present in the first and last battles of the war. During the war, Indiana provided 126 infantry regiments, 26 batteries of artillery, and 13 regiments of cavalry to the cause of the Union.[187]

In the initial call to arms issued in 1861, Indiana was assigned a quota of 7,500 men—a tenth of the amount called—to join the Union Army in putting down the rebellion.[188] So many volunteered in the first call that thousands had to be turned away. Before the war ended, Indiana contributed 208,367 men to fight and serve in the war.[189] Casualties were over 35% among these men: 24,416 lost their lives in the conflict and over 50,000 more were wounded.[189]

At the outbreak of the war, Indiana was run by a Democratic and southern sympathetic majority in the state legislature. It was by the actions of Governor Oliver Morton, who illegally borrowed millions of dollars to finance the army, that Indiana could contribute so greatly to the war effort.[190] Morton suppressed the state legislature with the help of the Republican minority to prevent it from assembling during 1861 and 1862. This prevented any chance the Democrats might have had to interfere with the war effort or to attempt to secede from the Union.[191]

Sanitary Commission edit

In March 1862, Governor Oliver Morton also assembled a committee known as the Indiana Sanitary Commission to raise funds and gather supplies for troops in the field. It was not until January 1863 that the commission began recruiting women as nurses for wounded soldiers.[192] Notable women members of the included Mary F. Thomas, a Hoosier suffragist, and Eliza Hamilton-George, also known as "Mother George".[193] Although the exact number of women volunteers is unknown, William Hannaman, president of the Indiana Sanitary Commission, reported to Morton in 1866 that "about two hundred and fifty" women had volunteered as nurses between 1863 and 1865.[192]

Raids edit

 
Oliver Hazard Perry Morton, governor 1861 to 1867

Two raids on Indiana soil during the war caused a brief panic in Indianapolis and southern Indiana. The Newburgh Raid on July 18, 1862, occurred when Confederate officer Adam Johnson briefly captured Newburgh by convincing the Union troops garrisoning the town that he had cannon on the surrounding hills, when in fact they were merely camouflaged stovepipes. The raid convinced the federal government that it was necessary to supply Indiana with a permanent force of regular Union Army soldiers to counter future raids.[194]

The most significant Civil War battle fought in Indiana was a small skirmish during Morgan's Raid. On the morning of July 9, 1863, Morgan attempted to cross the Ohio River into Indiana with his force of 2,400 Confederate cavalry. After his crossing was briefly contested, he marched north to Corydon where he fought the Indiana Legion in the short Battle of Corydon. Morgan took command of the heights south of Corydon and shot two shells from his batteries into the town, which promptly surrendered. The battle left 15 dead and 40 wounded. Morgan's main body of troopers briefly raided New Salisbury, Crandall, Palmyra, and Salem. Fear gripped the capitol, and the militia began to form there to contest Morgan's advance. After Salem, however, Morgan turned east, raiding and skirmishing along this path and leaving Indiana through West Harrison on July 13 into Ohio, where he was captured.[195]

Aftermath edit

The Civil War had a major effect on the development of Indiana. Before the war, the population was generally in the south of the state, where many had entered via the Ohio River, which provided a cheap and convenient means to export products and agriculture to New Orleans to be sold. The war closed the Mississippi River to traffic for nearly four years, forcing Indiana to find other means to export its produce. This led to a population shift to the north where the state came to rely more on the Great Lakes and the railroad for exports.[196][197]

Before the war, New Albany was the largest city in the state, mainly because of its river contacts and extensive trade with the South.[198] Over half of Hoosiers with over $100,000 lived in New Albany.[199] During the war, the trade with the South came to a halt, and many residents considered those of New Albany as too friendly to the South. The city never regained its stature. It was stilled as a city of 40,000 with its early Victorian Mansion-Row buildings remaining from the boom period.[200]

Post-Civil War era edit

Economic growth edit

 
The Circle in Indianapolis, circa 1898
Historical population
CensusPop.Note
18701,680,637
18801,978,30117.7%
18902,192,40410.8%
19002,516,46214.8%
19102,700,8767.3%
19202,930,3908.5%
19303,238,50310.5%
[117]

Ohio River ports had been stifled by an embargo on the Confederate South and never fully recovered their economic prominence, leading the south into an economic decline.[196] By contrast, northern Indiana experienced an economic boom when natural gas was discovered in the 1880s, which directly contributed to the rapid growth of cities such as Gas City, Hartford City, and Muncie where a glass industry developed to utilize the cheap fuel. The Indiana gas field was then the largest known in the world.[201] The boom lasted until the early 20th century, when the gas supplies ran low. This began northern Indiana's industrialization.

The development of heavy industry attracted thousands of European immigrants in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, as well as internal migrants, both Black and white, from the rural and small town South. These developments dramatically altered the demographics of the state. Indiana industrial cities were among the destinations of the Great Migration. After World War II, industrial restructuring and the shifts in heavy industry resulted in Indiana's becoming part of the Rust Belt.[202][203]

In 1876, chemist Eli Lilly, a Union colonel during the Civil War, founded Eli Lilly and Company, a pharmaceutical company. His initial innovation of gelatin-coating for pills led to a rapid growth of the company that eventually developed as Indiana's largest corporation, and one of the largest corporations in the world.[204][205][note 8] Over the years, the corporation developed many widely used drugs, including insulin, and it became the first company to mass-produce penicillin. The company's many advances made Indiana the leading state in the production and development of medicines.[206]

Charles Conn returned to Elkhart after the Civil War and established C.G. Conn Ltd., a manufacturer of musical instruments.[207] The company's innovation in band instruments made Elkhart an important center of the music world, and it became a base of Elkhart's economy for decades. Nearby South Bend experienced continued growth following the Civil War, and became a large manufacturing city centered around the Oliver Farm Equipment Company, the nation's leading plow producer. Gary was founded in 1906 by the United States Steel Corporation as the home for its new plant.[208]

The administration of Governor James D. Williams proposed the construction of the fourth state capitol building in 1878. The third state capitol building was razed and the new one was constructed on the same site. Two million dollars was appropriated for construction and the new building was completed in 1888. The building was still in use in 2008.[209]

The Panic of 1893 had a severely negative effect on the Hoosier economy when many factories closed and several railroads declared bankruptcy. The Pullman Strike of 1894 hurt the Chicago area and coal miners in southern Indiana participated in a national strike. Hard times were not limited to industry; farmers also felt a financial pinch from falling prices. The economy began to recover when World War I broke out in Europe, creating a higher demand for American goods.[210] Despite economic setbacks, advances in industrial technology continued throughout the last years of the 19th and into the 20th century. On July 4, 1894, Elwood Haynes successfully road tested his first automobile, and opened the Haynes-Apperson auto company in 1896.[211] In 1895, William Johnson invented a process for casting aluminum.[212][213]

Political battleground edit

During the postwar era, Indiana became a critical swing state that often helped decide which party controlled the presidency. Elections were very close, and became the center of frenzied attention with many parades, speeches and rallies as election day approached; voter turnout ranging over 90% to near 100% in such elections as 1888 and 1896. In remote areas, both sides paid their supporters to vote, and occasionally paid supporters of the opposition not to vote. Despite allegations, historians have found very little fraud in national elections.[214]

To win the electoral vote, both national parties looked for Indiana candidates for the national tickets; a Hoosier was included in all but one presidential election between 1880 and 1924.[215][216]

In 1888, Indiana Senator Benjamin Harrison, grandson of territorial Governor William Henry Harrison, was elected president after an intense battle that attracted more than 300,000 partisans to Indianapolis to hear him speak from his famous front porch.[217] Fort Benjamin Harrison was named in his honor. Six Hoosiers have been elected as vice-president. The most recent was Mike Pence, elected in 2016.[218]

Black Hoosiers after the Civil War edit

Due to rising white supremacist laws and culture in the southern United States, many Black Americans migrated north. Between November 1878 and February 1879 more than 1100 Black people arrived in Indianapolis, with many more settling across the state. By the end of the century, Indiana's Black resident population numbered 57,505.[144]

Article XIII of the Indiana Constitution of 1851, which sought to exclude African Americans from settling in the state, was invalidated when the Indiana Supreme Court ruled in 1866 that it violated the newly passed Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.[149][150] Nevertheless, numerous communities and counties implemented practices to exclude African Americans. These jurisdictions, known as "sundown towns", were prevalent during the 1890s.[219][220] Sundown towns sought to maintain an all-white population by intentionally expelling Black residents and preventing African American settlement.[219][221] As a result of sundown policies, the number of counties that had African American residents dropped significantly between 1890 and 1930.[219] By the 1990s, sundown town policies became less common in Indiana.[110][219]

Black Hoosiers were selectively allowed to hold leadership roles at the state level. James Sidney Hinton was the first Black person to serve as a legislator in the Indiana General Assembly in 1880. Lillian Thomas Fox was the first Black woman to write for the Indianapolis News, a historically white newspaper.[222]

High culture edit

The last decades of the 19th century began what is known as the "golden age of Indiana literature", a period that lasted until the 1920s.[164] Edward Eggleston wrote The Hoosier Schoolmaster (1871), the first best seller to originate in the state. Many other followed, including Maurice Thompson's Hoosier Mosaics (1875), and Lew Wallace's Ben-Hur (1880). Indiana developed a reputation as the "American heartland" following several widely read novels beginning with Booth Tarkington's The Gentleman from Indiana (1899), Meredith Nicholson's The Hoosiers (1900), and Thompson's second famous novel, Alice of Old Vincennes (1900).[164] James Whitcomb Riley, known as the "Hoosier Poet" and the most popular poet of his age, wrote hundreds of poems celebrating Hoosier themes, including Little Orphant Annie. A unique art culture also began developing in the late 19th century, beginning the Hoosier School of landscape painting and the Richmond Group of impressionist painters. The painters were known for their use of vivid colors and artists including T. C. Steele, whose work was influenced by the colorful hills of southern Indiana.[164] Prominent musicians and composers from Indiana also reached national acclaim during the time, including Paul Dresser whose most popular song, "On the Banks of the Wabash, Far Away", was later adopted as the official state song.[223]

Prohibition and women's suffrage edit

By the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, prohibition and women's suffrage had become the major reform issues in the state. Although supporters and their opponents closely linked the two movements, temperance received a broader hearing than the efforts toward equal suffrage. While many Protestant churches in Indiana supported temperance, few provided a forum for discussions on women's voting rights.[224]

The drive for women's suffrage was reinvigorated in the 1870s, and was sponsored by the leaders of the prohibition movement, especially the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU). The Indiana branch of the American Woman Suffrage Association was re-established in 1869.[225] In 1878, May Wright Sewall founded the Indianapolis Equal Suffrage Society, which fought for world peace before the nation plunged into World War I.[226] Several Indiana women also became temperance leaders and took an active role in the movement.[224][227] The Indiana chapter of the WCTU was formed in 1874 with Zerelda G. Wallace as its first president.[228] Like many other suffrage leaders, Wallace was radicalized for woman's suffrage through her temperance reform work. During her 1875 speech before the Indiana General Assembly in support of prohibition, legislators demonstrated an open contempt for women involved in politics and speaking in public. Afterward, Wallace credited the experience with her embrace of suffrage.[229]

The first major effort to give women the right to vote in all non-federal elections attempted to amend the state constitution. It passed by both houses of the state legislature in 1881;[226] however, the bill failed to pass in the next legislative session in 1883 as state law required. Temperance efforts fared little better. In 1881, the Indiana chapter of the WCTU, along with organizations participating in the Indiana Grand Council of Temperance, successfully lobbied the Indiana General Assembly to pass an amendment to the state constitution to prohibit the manufacture and sale of alcoholic beverages in the state, but the Indiana Liquor League and a Democratic majority in the state legislature killed the bill in the legislative session in 1883.[228] Following these legislative defeats women's suffrage and prohibition became sensitive issues in local politics as the Democrats rallied the opposition.[226] In German strongholds such as Fort Wayne, opposition to prohibition and women's suffrage was strong until World War I. As one historian notes, "within German working-class family traditions, women in particular were sharply defined in terms of family responsibilities. Suffrage and women's rights ran counter to deep social and religious traditions that placed women in a subservient relationship to men."[230] Renewed interest in women's suffrage did not occur until the end of the century,[231] while prohibition crusaders continued to press for legislative action.

To gain political power in favor of prohibition legislation, a state Prohibition Party was formed in 1884; however, it was never able to effectively mobilize a significant force of voters within the state.[232] Many temperance advocates continued to work within the more established political parties. The liquor issue pitted wets and drys in stable uncompromising coalitions that formed a main theme of Hoosier politics into the 1930s.[233] One legislative success occurred in 1895, when the state legislature passed the Nicholson law, a local option law authored by S. E. Nicholson, a Quaker minister who served in the state legislature and was a leader of the national Anti-Saloon League.[234] The League became a political powerhouse, mobilizing pietistic Protestant voters (that is, members of the major denominations except Lutherans and Episcopalians) to support dry legislation. The Nicholson law allowed voters in a city or township to file a remonstrance that would prevent an individual saloon owner from acquiring a liquor license.[228] Additional legislative efforts to extend the Nicholson law and achieve statewide prohibition in Indiana would not occur until the early twentieth century. One of the leading supporters for the temperance movement in Indiana was Emma Barrett Molloy, who was an active member of the WCTU and lectured across the country to promote the ban of alcohol.[235] Through her vocal activism in temperance and prohibition, Molloy also entered into the women's suffrage sphere as a strong supported for women's rights, particularly freedom of speech.[235]

In May, 1906, in Kokomo, a meeting was called to try to revive the defunct Indiana suffragist movement. An Indiana Auxiliary of the National American Woman Suffrage Association was formed and officers were elected. The officers included: Sarah Davis, President; Laura Schofield, first vice-president; Anna Dunn Noland, second vice-president; Mrs. E. M. Wood, secretary; Marion Harvie Barnard, treasurer; and Jane Pond and Judge Samuel Artman, auditors.[236]

In 1911, a suffrage group was formed after the Indianapolis Franchise Society and the Legislation Council of Indiana Women merged to form the Women's Franchise League of Indiana (WFL).[237] The WFL was a member of the national suffrage organization, the National American Woman Suffrage Association. The league was influential in obtaining the vote for women at the state level and formed 1,205 memberships in thirteen districts.[238] After the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution was adopted, the Women's Franchise League of Indiana organized the League of Women Voters of Indiana.[239]

High profile crime edit

Hoosiers were fascinated with crime and criminals. Some historians have argued that the popularity of bandits and their exploits in robbing banks and getting away with murder derived from working class resentment against the excesses of the Gilded Age.[240] A group of brothers from Seymour, who had served in the Civil War, formed the Reno Gang, the first outlaw gang in the United States.[241] The Reno Gang, named for the brothers, terrorized Indiana and the region for several years. They were responsible for the first train robbery in the United States which occurred near Seymour in 1866. Their actions inspired a host of other outlaw gangs who copied their work, beginning several decades of high-profile train robberies. Pursued by detectives from the Pinkerton Detective Agency, most of the gang was captured in 1868 and lynched by vigilantes.[241] Other notorious Hoosiers also flourished in the post-war years, including Belle Gunness, an infamous "black widow" serial killer. She killed more than twenty people, most of them men, between 1881 and her own murder in 1908.[242]

In response to the Reno Gang and other criminals, several white cap groups began operating in the state, primarily in the southern counties. They began carrying out lynchings against suspected criminals, leading the state to attempt to crack down on their practices. By the turn of the 20th century, they had become so notorious that anti-lynching laws were passed and in one incident the governor called out the militia to protect a prisoner. When the white caps showed up to lynch him, the militia opened fire, killing one and wounding eleven.[243] Vigilante activity decreased following the incident, and remained low until the rise of the Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s.

Crime stories grabbed the headlines in the 1920s and 1930s. After Prohibition took effect in 1920 until its demise in 1933, it opened up a financial bonanza for criminal activity, especially underground bootlegging and the smuggling of liquor into Chicago, Gary, South Bend, Fort Wayne, Indianapolis, Evansville and other thirsty cities. Enforcement was haphazard; the Anti-Saloon League was more of a lobbying agency and never rallied community support for enforcement.[244] The KKK called for punishment of bootleggers and set up the "Horse Thief Detective Association" (HTDA) to make extra-legal raids on speakeasies and gambling joints. It seldom cooperated with law enforcement or the state or federal courts. Instead gave enforcement a bad name. Arthur Gillom, a Republican elected state attorney general over Klan opposition in 1924, did not tolerate its extra-legal operations. Instead, "He stressed the dangers of citizens relinquishing their constitutional rights and personal freedoms, and emphasized the importance of representative government (at all levels), states' rights, and the concept of separation of church and state." When Rev. Shumaker proposed that "personal liberty had to be sacrificed in order to save people," Gilliom replied that surrendering power and individual freedoms was a slippery slope to centralized government and tyranny.[245]

John Dillinger, a native of Indianapolis, began his streak of bank robberies in Indiana and the Midwest during the 1920s. He was in prison 1924 to 1933. After a return to crime, Dillinger was returned to prison the same year, but escaped with the help of his gang. His gang was responsible for multiple murders and the theft of over $300,000. Dillinger was killed by the FBI in a shootout in Chicago in 1934.[246]

Twentieth century edit

Economic modernization edit

Although industry was rapidly expanding throughout the northern part of the state, Indiana remained largely rural at the turn of the 20th century with a growing population of 2.5 million. Like much of the rest of the American Midwest, Indiana's exports and job providers remained largely agricultural until after World War I. Indiana's developing industry, backed by inexpensive natural gas from the large Trenton Gas Field, an educated population, low taxes, easy access to transportation, and business-friendly government, led Indiana to grow into one of the leading manufacturing states by the mid-1920s.[247]

 
A restored Monon boxcar at the Linden Railroad Museum in Linden, Indiana

The state's central location gave it a dense network of railroads. The line most identified with the state was the Monon Line. It provided passenger service for students en route to Purdue, Indiana U. and numerous small colleges, painted its cars in school colors, and was especially popular on football weekends. The Monon was merged into larger lines in 1971, closed its passenger service, and lost its identity.[248] Entrepreneurs built an elaborate "interurban" network of light rails to connect rural areas to shopping opportunities in the cities. They began operation in 1892, and by 1908 there were 2,300 miles of track in 62 counties. The automobile made the lines unprofitable unless the destination was Chicago. By 2001, the "South Shore" was the last one; it still operating from South Bend to Chicago.[249][250]

In 1907, Indiana became the first state to adopt eugenics legislation, that allowed the involuntary sterilization of dangerous male criminals and the mentally defectives. It was never put in effect and in 1921 Indiana became the first state to rule such legislation unconstitutional when the Indiana Supreme Court acted.[251] A revised eugenics law was passed in 1927, and it remained in effect until 1974.[252]

 
Driver Mel Marquette's wrecked McFarlan racing car at the 1912 Indianapolis 500

The Indianapolis Motor Speedway complex was built in 1909, inaugurating a new era in history. Most Indiana cities within 200 miles of Detroit became part of the giant automobile industry after 1910. The Indianapolis speedway was a venue for auto companies to show off their products.[253] The Indianapolis 500 quickly became the standard in auto racing as European and American companies competed to build the fastest automobile and win at the track.[254] Industrial and technological industries thrived during this era, George Kingston developed an early carburetor in 1902; in 1912, Elwood Haynes received a patent for stainless steel.[211][212]

Statewide prohibition edit

In the first two decades of the twentieth century the Indiana Anti-Saloon League (IASL), formed in 1898 as a state auxiliary of the national Anti-Saloon League, and the Woman's Christian Temperance Union[232] successfully organized pressure on Indiana politicians, especially members of the Republican party, to support the dry cause.[181] The IASL, although not the first organization to take up the dry crusade in Indiana, became a key force behind efforts at attaining passage of statewide prohibition in early 1917, and rallied state support for ratification of the Eighteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution in 1919.[255] The IASL's success, under the leadership of Edward S. Shumaker, an ordained Methodist minister, made it a model for the League's other state organizations.[256] Shumaker made clear to politicians he did not care whether they drank, but insisted they vote for dry laws or face defeated in the next election by dry voters.[257]

In 1905, passage of the Moore amendment expanded the state's Nicholson local option law to apply to all liquor license applicants within a local township or city ward.[228] The next step was to seek countywide prohibition. The IASL appealed to the general public, holding large rallies in Indianapolis and elsewhere, to support a county option law that would provide a more restrictive ban on alcohol.[258] In September 1908 Indiana governor J. Frank Hanly, a Methodist, Republican, and teetotaler, called for a special legislative session to establish a county option that would allow county voters to prohibit alcohol sales throughout their county.[259][260] The state legislature passed the bill with only a narrow margin.[260] By November 1909 seventy of Indiana's ninety-two counties were dry. In 1911, a Democratic legislative majority replaced the county option with the Proctor law, a less-geographically restrictive local option, and the number of dry counties was reduced to twenty-six.[232][261] Despite the setback prohibition advocates continued to lobby legislators for support. In December 1917 several temperance organizations formed the Indiana Dry Federation to fight the politically powerful liquor interests,[262] with the IASL joining the group a short time later.[263] The Federation and the League vigorously campaigned for statewide prohibition, which the Indiana General Assembly adopted in February 1917.[259][262] Subsequent legal challenges delayed implementation of statewide prohibition until 1918, when a court ruled in June that Indiana's prohibition law was constitutionally valid.[264]

On January 14, 1919, Indiana became the twenty-fifth state to ratify the Eighteenth Amendment, which mandated nationwide prohibition.[259][265][266] Three days later Nebraska became the thirty-sixth state to ratify the amendment, providing the two-thirds majority of states required to amend the U.S. Constitution.[266] With the beginning of nationwide Prohibition on January 17, 1920, after formal ratification of the Eighteenth Amendment the previous day, efforts turned to enforcement of the new law. Protestant support for Prohibition remained intense in Indiana in the 1920s. Shumaker and the IASL lead a statewide grassroots campaign that successfully passed a new prohibition law for the state. Sponsored by Indiana representative Frank Wright and known as the Wright bone-dry law, it was enacted in 1925. The Wright law was part of a national trend toward stricter prohibition legislation and imposed severe penalties for alcohol possession.[267][268]

The Great Depression and the election of Democratic party candidates in 1932 ended widespread national support for Prohibition. Franklin D. Roosevelt, who included repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment as a major issue of his presidential campaign in 1932, made good on his promise to American voters.[269] On December 5, 1933, the Twenty-first Amendment repealed the Eighteenth Amendment and ended nationwide Prohibition. However, Indiana's legislature continued to regulate alcohol within the state through allocation of state liquor licenses and prohibition of sales on Sunday.[267]

Women's organizing and activism edit

White middle-class Indiana women learned organizational skills through the suffrage and temperance movements. By the 1890s they were applying their new skills to the needs of their home communities, by organizing women's clubs, the combined literary activity with social activism focused on such needs as public health, sanitation, and good schools. Hoosier women worked at both the state and local level to materialize Progressive Era reforms. In Lafayette, for example, the suffragists concentrated in the Lafayette Franchise League, while those oriented toward social concerns worked through the Lafayette Charity Organization Society (LCOS), the Free Kindergarten and Industrial School Association (FKISA), and the Martha Home.[270] Albion Fellows Bacon led statewide and national efforts at housing reform. A native of Evansville, Bacon worked to pass tenement and housing legislation in Indiana in 1909, 1913, and 1917. She also held leadership roles in Indiana Child Welfare Association; the Child Welfare Committee, a part of the Women's Section of the Indiana State Council of Defense; the Indiana Conference of Charities and Corrections, and the Juvenile Advisory Commission of Indiana's Probation Department. Women were given the right to vote in 1920 when the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution was ratified.

 
Madame C. J. Walker, Indianapolis entrepreneur and philanthropist

Middle-class Black women activists were organized through African American Baptist and Methodist churches, and under the leadership of Hallie Quinn Brown who formed a statewide umbrella group, the Indiana State Federation of Colored Women's Clubs. Racism prevented the organization from association with its white counterpart, the Indiana State Federation of Women's Clubs.[271] White Hoosier suffragist May Wright Sewall spoke at the founding convention in a show of solidarity with Black Hoosier women.[271] The Indiana Association of Colored Women's Clubs sponsored 56 clubs in 46 cities in the state, with 2000 members by 1933, and a budget of over $20,000. Most members were public school teachers or hairdressers, as well as women active and local business in the Black community, and in government positions. They affiliated with the National Federation of Afro-American Women, headed by Mrs. Booker T. Washington, and became part of her husband's powerful network of Black activists. One of the most prominent members in Indiana was Madame C. J. Walker of Indianapolis, who owned a nationally successful business selling beauty and hair products for Black women. Club meetings focused on home-making classes, research, and statistics regarding the status of African Americans in Indiana and nationwide, suffrage, and anti-lynching activism. The local clubs operated rescue missions, nursery schools, and educational programs.[272]

Floods edit

Between March 23 and March 27, 1913, Indiana and more than a dozen other states experienced major flooding during the Great Flood of 1913; it was Indiana's worst flood disaster up to that time.[273][274][275] The weather system that created the unprecedented flooding arrived in Indiana on Sunday, March 23, with a major tornado at Terre Haute.[276][note 9] In four days, rainfall topped nine inches in southern Indiana, more than half of it falling within a twenty-four-hour period on March 25.[277] Heavy rains, runoff, and rising rivers resulted in extensive flooding in northeast, central, and southern Indiana.[278][note 10] Indiana's flood-related deaths were estimated at 100 to 200,[279][280] with flood damage estimated at $25 million (in 1913 dollars).[278] State and local communities handled their own disaster response and relief.[281] The American Red Cross, still a small organization at that time, established a temporary headquarters in Indianapolis and served the six hardest-hit Indiana counties. Indiana governor Samuel M. Ralston appealed to Indiana cities and other states for relief assistance and appointed a trustee to receive relief funds and arrange for distribution of supplies. Independent organizations, such as the Rotary Club of Indianapolis and others, helped with local relief efforts.[282]

 
Indiana World War Memorial Plaza

World War I edit

Hoosiers were divided about entering World War I. Before Germany resumed unrestricted submarine warfare and tried to enlist Mexico as a military ally in 1917, most Hoosiers wanted the U.S. to be neutral in the war. Support for Britain came from professions and businessmen. Opposition came from churchmen, women, farmers and Irish Catholics and German-American elements. They called for neutrality and strongly opposed going to war to rescue the British Empire.[283] Influential Hoosiers who opposed involvement in the war included Democratic Senator John W. Kern, and Vice President Thomas R. Marshall.[284] Supporters of military preparedness included James Whitcomb Riley and George Ade. Most of the opposition dissipated when the United States officially declared war against Germany in April 1917, but some teachers lost their jobs on suspicion of disloyalty,[285] and public schools could no longer teach in German.[286][note 11] Socialist leader Eugene V. Debs, from Terre Haute, went to federal prison for encouraging young men to evade the draft.

The Indiana National Guard was federalized during WWI; many units were sent to Europe. A separate organization, the Liberty Guard, was formed in 1910, primarily for social purposes: members marched in parades and at patriotic events. Governor Samuel Ralston had to call out the Liberty Guard in November 1913 to put down a growing workers strike in Indianapolis. By 1920, the state decided to formalize this group, renaming it the Indiana Civil Defense Force and supplying it with equipment and training.[287] In 1941, the unit was named the Indiana Guard Reserve; it effectively became a state militia. During World War II, it was again federalized and members were called up by the federal government.

Indiana provided 130,670 troops during the war; a majority of them were drafted.[288] Over 3,000 men died, many from influenza and pneumonia.[288] To honor the Hoosier veterans of the war, the state began construction of the Indiana World War Memorial.[289]

1920s and the Great Depression edit

The war-time economy provided a boom to Indiana's industry and agriculture, which led to more urbanization throughout the 1920s.[290] By 1925, more workers were employed in industry than in agriculture in Indiana. Indiana's greatest industries were steel production, iron, automobiles, and railroad cars.[291]

The Indiana Ku Klux Klan very rapidly in the early 1920s from a cross section of Protestant men. The KKK was operated for the benefit of its well-paid organizers. There was little leadership or coordination among the hundreds of local chapters. During the 1925 General Assembly session, the state Klan leader Grand Dragon D. C. Stephenson boasted, "I am the law in Indiana." The Klan demanded an anti-Catholic legislative agenda, but failed to win any significant legislation. Stephenson was convicted for the murder of Madge Oberholtzer in 1925 and sentenced to life in prison. After Governor Edward L. Jackson, whom Stephenson helped elect, refused to pardon him, Stephenson began to name many of his co-conspirators. This led the state's making a string of arrests and indictments against political leaders, including the governor, mayor of Indianapolis, the attorney general, and many others. The crackdown effectively rendered the Klan powerless and a great majority of members quit.[292][293]

During the 1930s, Indiana, like the rest of the nation, was affected by the Great Depression. The economic downturn had a wide-ranging negative impact on Indiana. Urbanization declined. Governor Paul V. McNutt's administration struggled to build from scratch a state-funded welfare system to help the overwhelmed private charities. During his administration, spending and taxes were cut drastically in response to the Depression. The state government was completely reorganized. McNutt also enacted the state's first income tax. On several occasions, he declared martial law to put an end to worker strikes.[294]

During the Great Depression, unemployment exceeded 25% statewide. Southern Indiana was hard hit, and unemployment in the coal mining districts reached 50% during the worst years, 1931–1933.[291] The federal Works Progress Administration (WPA) began operations in Indiana in July 1935. By October of that year, the agency had put 74,708 Hoosiers to work. In 1940, there were still 64,700 people working for agency.[291] The majority of these workers were employed to improve the state's infrastructure: roads, bridges, flood control projects, and water treatment plants. Some helped index collections of libraries, and artists were employed to create murals for post offices and libraries. Nearly every community had a project to work on.[291][295]

During the 1930s, many local businesses collapsed, several railroads went bankrupt, and numerous small rural banks folded.[296][297] Manufacturing came to an abrupt halt or was severely cut back due to the dwindling demand for products. The Depression continued to negatively affect Indiana until the buildup for World War II. The effects continued to be felt for many years thereafter. After 1935, labor unions grew much stronger, especially in coal, steel and rubber industries.[298]

1938-1945 edit

 
"Greetings from Indiana" large-letter postcard c. 1939

The economy began to recover in 1933, but unemployment remained high among youth and older workers until 1940, when the federal government built up supplies and armaments going into World War II.[299]

Indiana's factories went into overdrive during World War II to support the war effort, and mass employment and prosperity returned. Indiana manufactured 4.5 percent of total United States military armaments produced during World War II, ranking eighth among the 48 states.

The state produced munitions in many plants, such as an army plant near Sellersburg. The P-47 fighter-plane was manufactured in Evansville at Republic Aviation.[300] The steel produced in northern Indiana was used in tanks, battleships, and submarines. Other war-related materials were produced throughout the state. Indiana's military bases were activated, with areas such as Camp Atterbury reaching historical peaks in activity.[301]

The population was highly supportive of the war efforts.[302] The political left supported the war (unlike World War I, which Socialists opposed.) The churches showed much less pacifism than in 1914. The Church of God, based in Anderson, had a strong pacifist element, reaching a high point in the late 1930s. The Church regarded World War II as a just war because America was attacked. Anti-Communist sentiment has since kept strong pacifism from developing in the Church of God.[303] Likewise the Quakers, with a strong base near Richmond, generally regarded World War II as a just war and about 90% served, although there were some conscientious objectors.[304] The Mennonites and Brethren continued their pacifism, but the federal government was much less hostile than before. The churches helped their young men to both become conscientious objectors and to provide valuable service to the nation. Goshen College set up a training program for unpaid Civilian Public Service jobs. Although the young women pacifists were not liable to the draft, they volunteered for unpaid Civilian Public Service jobs to demonstrate their patriotism; many worked in mental hospitals.[305]

The state sent nearly 400,000 Hoosiers who enlisted or were drafted.[306] More than 11,783 Hoosiers died in the conflict and another 17,000 were wounded. Hoosiers served in all the major theaters of the war.[307][308] Their sacrifice was honored by additions to the World War Memorial in Indianapolis, which was not finished until 1965.[309]

Tens of thousands of women volunteered for war service, through agencies such as the Red Cross. Representative was Elizabeth Richardson of Mishawaka. She served coffee and doughnuts to combat soldiers in England and France from a Red Cross clubmobile. She died in a plane crash in 1945 in France.[310]

Since 1945 edit

During the post-World War II boom from 1945 to 1973, Indiana's economy prospered and Indiana was ranked 20th out of 50 states plus Washington, D.C. in the late-1960s for personal income. However, Indiana's economy began to struggle after the recession of 1969-1970 as the manufacturing sector began to decline. Foreign competition, corporate mergers, automation, and new management strategies lead to downsizing, mass layoffs, diversification, and chronic unemployment. Cities such as Muncie, Anderson, Indianapolis, Kokomo, Gary, East Chicago, Hammond, Michigan City, Fort Wayne, South Bend, Elkhart, and Evansville all witnessed population declines and rising unemployment and poverty during the 1970s and 1980s. Northwest Indiana was hit especially by the steel crisis of 1974 - 1983.

Black Hoosiers and redlining edit

Redlining, or the discriminatory and exclusionary housing practice meant to separate affluent white populations from low-income racial groups, was a form of forced migration and relocation that many Black communities experienced during the twentieth-century.[311] For example, the Indiana Avenue community on the west side of downtown Indianapolis was displaced by the building of Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) in the sixties.[312]

Twenty-first century edit

Central Indiana was struck by a major flood in 2008, leading to widespread damage and the evacuations of hundreds of thousands of residents. It was the costliest disaster in the history of the state, with early damage estimates topping $1 billion.[313]

Since the early-1990s, Indiana has diversified its economy away from heavy industry and towards service (such as banking, insurance, healthcare, education, financial services, information technology) and high-tech manufacturing. In 2016, 516,000 workers were employed in manufacturing, down from 696,000 in 2000 and nearly 750,000 in 1969, but up from 424,000 in 2009 at the depths of the Great Recession. Heavy industries such as oil, autos, and steel still comprise a significant portion of the states' GDP, but other industries such as electrical goods, medical equipment, and pharmaceuticals have grown recently as well. However, Indiana's wage growth has lagged behind other states, and Indiana has fallen from 20th in personal income during the 1960s to 39th in 2017.

In 2012, Indiana's exports totaled $34.4 billion, a record high for the state. The rate of export growth in 2012 was faster in Indiana than it was for the nation.[314]

In 2021, Indiana was the third-largest auto-producing state in the U.S. The state also became a hub for advanced manufacturing, especially of electrical vehicles and batteries, as well as aerospace and defense products. Like the rest of the country, Indiana was hit hard by the Great Recession of 2008–2009. The state saw high unemployment rates and a drop in manufacturing output during this time. Since the recession, Indiana has focused on diversifying its economy to reduce reliance on manufacturing.[315]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In negotiations at the settlement of Greenville, Chief Little Turtle of the Miami Tribe asserted a Miami claim to half of what became present-day Ohio, all of present-day Indiana, and eastern portions of present-day Illinois, including Chicago.
  2. ^ Photo available at Historical Marker Database. Retrieved on May 13, 2008.
  3. ^ The father of François-Marie Picoté de Belestre
  4. ^ Harrison gained national fame as a hero of the Battle of Tippecanoe (1811) and become the ninth U.S. president (1841). In addition, Harrison County was named in his honor. See . Northern Indiana Center for History. Archived from the original on May 12, 2008. Retrieved October 9, 2008.
  5. ^ The map shown on Nevins, p. 209, indicates that no railroad crossed the Mississippi or Ohio Rivers in 1859.
  6. ^ Three state-owned railroads, the Michigan Road, the Vincennes Trace, and all of the canals in Indiana, with the exception of the Wabash and Erie Canal, were transferred to creditors.
  7. ^ Indiana's Constitution of 1816 required a referendum be held every twelve years to approve its continued use.
  8. ^ According to Forbes, Eli Lilly and Company was the 229th largest company in the world in 2007.
  9. ^ The Terre Haute tornado killed twenty-one people, injured 250, and caused estimated damages between $1 and $2 million (in 1913 dollars). See . The Tornado Project. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved July 29, 2013.
  10. ^ Waterways were at or near crest along the Wabash River from Logansport to Attica, the White River in the Indianapolis area, and the East Fork of the White River near Columbus and Seymour. The dam at Saint Mary's reservoir, twenty-five miles from Fort Wayne broke, while high water burst levees at Indianapolis, Marion, Muncie, Lafayette, and Lawrenceburg, flooding portions of these cities and others along the Ohio, White, Wabash, and Mississinewa rivers. See . Silver Jackets. 2013. Archived from the original on August 3, 2013. Retrieved July 29, 2013. and "RetroIndy: The Great Flood of 1913". Indianapolis Star. March 22, 2013. Retrieved August 2, 2013. See also, Williams, p. 269, and Bell, "Forgotten Waters", p. 11.
  11. ^ "By law all work in the elementary schools was to be done in English. Courses in the German language had been authorized by the General Assembly as early as 1869 in any public school in which twenty-five parents requested them."

References edit

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  2. ^ Madison, Hoosiers, p. 3.
  3. ^ Barnhart and Riker, pp. 19–25
  4. ^ Justice, p. 12
  5. ^ a b Justice, p. 56
  6. ^ Allison, pp. iv-v
  7. ^ Josephy, p. 108
  8. ^ "Hopewell Culture". National Park Services. Retrieved May 22, 2008.
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  15. ^ Jennings, p. 18
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  17. ^ Dunn, p. 53
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  30. ^ Fowler, pp. 3, 6.
  31. ^ Allison, p. 17
  32. ^ Troyer, p. 153
  33. ^ Allison, p. 16
  34. ^ Barnhart and Riker, pp. 71–73
  35. ^ Barnhart and Riker, p. 72
  36. ^ Fowler, p. 9
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  48. ^ Cyrus Hodgin, "The Naming of Indiana" in "Papers of the Wayne County, Indiana, Historical Society". 1 (1). 1903: 3–11. Retrieved July 23, 2018. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  49. ^ Nancy Brown Foulds. . Encyclopedia of Canada. Archived from the original on June 8, 2011. Retrieved June 14, 2008.
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  62. ^ Dowd, pp. 113–14.
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  64. ^ Buley, v. I, p. 18.
  65. ^ Funk A Sketchbook of Indiana History, (1969), p. 38
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Bibliography edit

Surveys edit

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Native Americans edit

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  • Carter, Harvey Lewis (1987). The Life and Times of Little Turtle: First Sagamore of the Wabash. Urbana: U. of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-01318-8.
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Pre-1900 edit

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  • Etcheson, Nicole. A Generation at War: The Civil War Era in a Northern Community (2011); Putnam County
  • Fuller, A. James. Oliver P. Morton and the Politics of the Civil War and Reconstruction (Kent State University Press, 2017)
  • Funk, Arville L (1967). Hoosiers In The Civil War. Chicago: Adams Press. ISBN 978-0-9623292-5-8.
  • Haymond, William S (1879). An Illustrated History of the State of Indiana: Being a Full and Authentic Civil and Political History of the State from Its First Exploration Down to 1879. Including an Account of the Commercial, Agricultural, and Educational growth of Indiana. With Historical and Descriptive Sketches of the Cities, Towns and Villages, Embracing Interesting Narratives of Pioneer Life, Together with Biographical Sketches and Portraits of the Prominent Men of the Past and Present, and a History of Each County Separately. S.L. Marrow & Co.
  • Levering, Julia Henderson (1909). Historic Indiana: Being Chapters in the Story of the Hoosier State from the Romantic Period of Foreign Exploration and Dominion Through Pioneer Days, Stirring War Times, and Periods of Peaceful Progress, to the Present Time. New York: G. P. Putnam's sons.
  • Morgan, Anita. "“The Responsibilities of a Community at War”: County and State Government Aid to Hoosier Soldiers' Families during the Civil War." Indiana Magazine of History 113.1 (2017): 48-77. online
  • Nevins, Allan (1947). Ordeal of the Union: A House Dividing 1852–1857. Vol. V.II. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. ISBN 978-0-684-10424-9.
  • Onuf, Peter S. "Democracy, Empire, and the 1816 Constitution," Indiana Magazine of History 111 (March 2015), pp: 5-29.
  • Rosenberg, Morton M. (1968). The Politics of Pro-Slavery Sentimental in Indiana 1816-1861. Muncie, Indiana: Ball State University.
  • Thornbrough, Emma (1991). Indiana in the Civil War Era: 1850–1880. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society. ISBN 978-0-87195-050-5.
  • Troyer, Byron L (1975). Yesterday's Indiana. Miami, Florida: E.A. Seemann Publishing. ISBN 978-0-912458-55-7.

Since 1900 edit

  • Barrows, Robert G. Albion Fellows Bacon: Indiana's Municipal Housekeeper. 2000. 229 pp.
  • Gresham, Matilda (1919). Life of Walter Quintin Gresham, 1832-1895. Chicago: Rand McNally and Company.
  • Max Parvin Cavnes. The Hoosier community at war (1961); encyclopedic coverage of the state in World War II
  • Lutholtz, M. William (1991). Grand Dragon: D. C. Stephenson and the Ku Klux Klan in Indiana. West Lafayette, Indiana: Purdue University Press. ISBN 978-1-55753-046-2.
  • Madison, James H. Indiana through Tradition and Change: A History of the Hoosier State and Its People, 1920-1945 (1982) excerpt and text search
  • Phillips, Clifton J (1968). Indiana in Transition: The Emergence of an Industrial Commonwealth, 1880–1920. The History of Indiana. Vol. 4. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Bureau and Indiana Historical Society.

Local and regional edit

  • Findling, John ed. (2003). A History of New Albany, Indiana. New Albany, Indiana: Indiana University Southeast. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  • Goodrich, De Witt C.; Tuttle, Charles Richard (1875). An Illustrated History of the State of Indiana. Unknown: R. S. Peale & co.
  • Law, Judge (1858). The Colonial History of Vincennes. Vincennes: Harvey, Mason and Company. (Reproduced 2006.)
  • Miller, Harold V. (1938). "Industrial Development of New Albany, Indiana". Economic Geography. New York: Wiley.
  • Mohl, Raymond A., and Neil Betten. Steel City: Urban and Ethnic Patterns in Gary, Indiana, 1906-1950 (1986) online
  • Moore, Powell A. The Calumet Region, Indiana's Last Frontier (1959), scholarly study of Gary and Lake County
  • Morris, Ronald V. Yountsville: The Rise and Decline of an Indiana Mill Town (U of Notre Dame Press, 2019) online review
  • Skertic, Mark, and John J. Watkins. A Native's Guide to Northwest Indiana (2003) excerpt and text search
  • Taylor, Robert M. Jr. et al. Indiana: A New Historical Guide (1989)
  • WPA Indiana Writer's Project. Indiana: A Guide To The Hoosier State: American Guide Series (1941), famous WPA Guide to every location; strong on history, architecture and culture; reprinted 1973; online edition

Politics edit

  • Bowen, Otis R. and DuBois, William Jr. Doc: Memories from a Life in Public Service. (2000). 232 pp. Bowen was Governor 1972–80
  • Braeman, John. Albert J.Beveridge: American Nationalist (1971)
  • Fadely, James Philip. Thomas Taggart: Public Servant, Political Boss, 1856-1929. 1997. 267 pp.
  • Finkelman, Paul. "Almost a Free State: The Indiana Constitution of 1816 and the Problem of Slavery," Indiana Magazine of History, 111 (March 2015), 64–95.
  • Gray, Ralph D (1977). Gentlemen from Indiana: National Party Candidates,1836–1940. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Bureau. ISBN 978-1-885323-29-3.
  • Gresham, Matilda (1919). Life of Walter Quintin Gresham 1832–1895. New York City: Rand McNally & company.
  • Hyneman, Charles; et al. (1979). Voting in Indiana: A Century of Persistence and Change. Indiana U.P. ISBN 9780253172839., voting patterns
    • review essay by Paul Kleppner in JSTOR
  • Jensen, Richard J. The Winning of the Midwest: Social and Political Conflict, 1888-1896 (1971) online
  • Mills, Randy K. Jonathan Jennings: Indiana's First Governor (2005), 259 pp.
  • Moore, Leonard J. Citizen Klansmen: The Ku Klux Klan in Indiana, 1921-1928 (1991) online
  • Sievers, Harry J. Benjamin Harrison, Hoosier Warrior: 1833-1865 (1952); Benjamin Harrison, Hoosier Statesmen: from the Civil War to the White House 1865 - 1888 (1959); Benjamin Harrison, Hoosier President: The White House and After (1968)
  • Stampp, Kenneth M. Indiana Politics during the Civil War (1949) online edition

Economic, social and cultural history edit

  • Campney, Brent MS. " ' This Negro Elephant is Getting to be a Pretty Large Sized Animal': White Hostility against Blacks in Indiana and the Historiography of Racist Violence in the Midwest." Middle West Review 1.2 (2015): 63–91. online
  • Divita, James J. (1989). The Italian Immigrant Experience in Indiana.
  • Giffin, William W. The Irish: Peopling Indiana. 2006. 127 pp.
  • Lantzer, Jason S. (2009). Prohibition is Here to Stay: The Reverend Edward S. Shumaker and the Dry Crusade in Indiana. Notre Dame, Indiana: University of Notre Dame Press. ISBN 978-0-268-03383-5.
  • Reese, William J. Hoosier Schools: Past and Present (1998) excerpt and text search
  • Robinson, Kyle Brent. "Seeking a Hoosier Home: Black Migration to Indiana and the Politics of Belonging." CONCEPT 34 (2010) online
  • Rudolph, L. C. Hoosier Faiths: A History of Indiana's Churches and Religious Groups (1995), 710 pp.
  • Rund, Christopher. The Indiana Rail Road Company: America's New Regional Railroad (2006). 254 pp.
  • Simons, Richard S. and Parker, Francis H., eds. Railroads of Indiana (1997) 297 pp.
  • Taylor, Robert M. Jr. and McBirney, Connie A., ed. Peopling Indiana: The Ethnic Experience. 1996. 703 pp. covers every major ethnic group
  • Teaford, Jon C. Cities of the heartland: The rise and fall of the industrial Midwest (Indiana University Press, 1993). online
  • Thornbrough, Emma Lou. "Segregation in Indiana during the Klan Era of the 1920s," Mississippi Valley Historical Review (1961) 47#4 pp. 594–618 in JSTOR
  • Thornbrough, Emma Lou. The Negro in Indiana before 1900: A Study of a Minority (1993)
  • Thornbrough, Emma Lou. Indiana Blacks in the Twentieth Century. (Indiana U. Press, 2000). 287 pp. online
  • Vanausdall, Jeanette. Pride and Protest: The Novel in Indiana. 1999. 169 pp.
  • Whitford, Frederick and Martin, Andrew G. The Grand Old Man of Purdue University and Indiana Agriculture: A Biography of William Carroll Latta (Purdue U. Press, 2005), 385 pp.
  • Witkowski, Gregory R. ed. Hoosier Philanthropy: A State History of Giving (Indiana UP, 2022) online book review

Primary sources edit

  • Cutler, Jervis, and Charles Le Raye (1971). A Topographical Description of the State of Ohio, Indiana Territory, and Louisiana. Arnot Press. ISBN 978-0-405-02839-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) (Reprint of 1812 edition.)
  • WPA Indiana Writer's Project. Indiana: A Guide To The Hoosier State: American Guide Series (1941), famous WPA Guide to every location; strong on history, architecture and culture; reprinted 1973; online edition

Historiography edit

  • Campney, Brent MS. " ' This Negro Elephant is Getting to be a Pretty Large Sized Animal': White Hostility against Blacks in Indiana and the Historiography of Racist Violence in the Midwest." Middle West Review 1.2 (2015): 63–91. online
  • Gabin, Nancy. "Fallow Yet Fertile: The Field of Indiana Women's History," Indiana Magazine of History (2000) 96#3 pp 213–249
  • Jensen, Richard J. et al. Local History Today (Indiana Historical Society, 1980)
  • Price, Barton E. "In Memory of Andrew RL Cayton: A Historiographical Essay." Indiana Magazine of History 112.4 (2016): 385–392. online
  • Taylor, Robert M. ed. The State of Indiana History 2000: Papers Presented at the Indiana Historical Society's Grand Opening (2001) excerpt and text search
  • "Teaching Indiana History: A Roundtable." Indiana Magazine of History (2011) 107#3 pp 250–261 online

External links edit

  • scholarly articles from Indiana Magazine of History 1913-present

history, indiana, history, human, activity, indiana, state, midwest, stems, back, migratory, tribes, native, americans, inhabited, indiana, early, 8000, tribes, succeeded, another, dominance, several, thousand, years, reached, their, peak, development, during,. The history of human activity in Indiana a U S state in the Midwest stems back to the migratory tribes of Native Americans who inhabited Indiana as early as 8000 BC Tribes succeeded one another in dominance for several thousand years and reached their peak of development during the period of Mississippian culture The region entered recorded history in the 1670s when the first Europeans came to Indiana and claimed the territory for the Kingdom of France After France ruled for a century with little settlement in this area it was defeated by Great Britain in the French and Indian War Seven Years War and ceded its territory east of the Mississippi River Britain held the land for more than twenty years until after its defeat in the American Revolutionary War then ceded the entire trans Allegheny region including what is now Indiana to the newly formed United States History of IndianaThe seal of Indiana reflects the state s pioneer eraHistorical PeriodsPre historyuntil 1670French Rule1679 1763British Rule1763 1783U S Territorial Period1783 1816Indiana Statehood1816 presentMajor EventsTecumseh s WarWar of 18121811 1814Constitutional conventionJune 1816Polly v Lasselle1820Capitol moved toIndianapolis1825Passage of theMammoth Internal Improvement Act1831State Bankruptcy18412nd Constitution1851Civil War1860 1865Gas Boom1887 1905Harrison elected president1888KKK scandal1925vteThe U S government divided the trans Allegheny region into several new territories The largest of these was the Northwest Territory which the U S Congress subsequently subdivided into several smaller territories In 1800 Indiana Territory became the first of these new territories established As Indiana Territory grew in population and development it was divided in 1805 and again in 1809 until reduced to its current size and boundaries it retained the name Indiana and was admitted to the Union December 11 1816 as the nineteenth state The newly established state government set out on an ambitious plan to transform Indiana from a segment of the frontier into a developed well populated and thriving state State founders initiated an internal improvement program that led to the construction of roads canals railroads and state funded public schools Despite the noble aims of the project profligate spending ruined the state s credit By 1841 the state was near bankruptcy and was forced to liquidate most of its public works Acting under its new Constitution of 1851 the state government enacted major financial reforms required that most public offices be filled by election rather than appointment and greatly weakened the power of the governor The ambitious development program of Indiana s founders was realized when Indiana became the fourth largest state in terms of population as measured by the 1860 census Indiana became politically influential and played an important role in the Union during the American Civil War Indiana was the first western state to mobilize for the war and its soldiers participated in almost every engagement during the war Following the Civil War Indiana remained politically important as it became a critical swing state in U S presidential elections It helped decide control of the presidency for three decades During the Indiana Gas Boom of the late 19th century industry began to develop rapidly in the state The state s Golden Age of Literature began in the same time period increasing its cultural influence By the early 20th century Indiana developed into a strong manufacturing state and attracted numerous immigrants and internal migrants to its industries It experienced setbacks during the Great Depression of the 1930s Construction of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway expansion of the auto industry urban development and two wars contributed to the state s industrial growth During the second half of the 20th century Indiana became a leader in the pharmaceutical industry due to the innovations of companies such as Indiana based Eli Lilly Contents 1 Early civilizations 1 1 Mississippians 1 2 European contact 2 Colonial period 2 1 France 2 2 Great Britain 2 3 United States 3 Indiana Territory 3 1 Northwest Indian War 3 2 Territory formation 3 3 Territorial government 3 4 Political issues 3 5 War of 1812 4 Early statehood 4 1 Founding 4 2 Early development 4 3 Black Hoosiers before the Civil War 4 3 1 Civil War Exodusters and the Great Migration 4 4 Religion 5 Higher education 6 Transportation 7 Early nineteenth century social reforms 7 1 Temperance movement 7 2 Abolition 7 3 Women s suffrage movement 8 Civil War 8 1 Sanitary Commission 8 2 Raids 8 3 Aftermath 9 Post Civil War era 9 1 Economic growth 9 2 Political battleground 9 3 Black Hoosiers after the Civil War 9 4 High culture 9 5 Prohibition and women s suffrage 9 6 High profile crime 10 Twentieth century 10 1 Economic modernization 10 2 Statewide prohibition 10 3 Women s organizing and activism 10 4 Floods 10 5 World War I 10 6 1920s and the Great Depression 10 7 1938 1945 11 Since 1945 11 1 Black Hoosiers and redlining 12 Twenty first century 13 See also 14 Notes 15 References 16 Bibliography 16 1 Surveys 16 2 Native Americans 16 3 Pre 1900 16 4 Since 1900 16 5 Local and regional 16 6 Politics 16 7 Economic social and cultural history 16 8 Primary sources 16 9 Historiography 17 External linksEarly civilizations editFollowing the end of the last glacial period about twenty thousand years ago Indiana s topography was dominated by spruce and pine forests and was home to mastodon caribou and saber toothed cats While northern Indiana had been covered by glaciers southern Indiana remained unaltered by the ice s advance leaving plants and animals that could sustain human communities 1 2 Indiana s earliest known inhabitants were Paleo Indians Evidence exists that humans were in Indiana as early as the Archaic stage 8000 6000 BC 3 Hunting camps of the nomadic Clovis culture have been found in Indiana 4 Carbon dating of artifacts found in the Wyandotte Caves of southern Indiana shows humans mined flint there as early 2000 BC 5 These nomads ate quantities of freshwater mussels from local streams as shown by their shell mounds found throughout southern Indiana 5 The Early Woodland period in Indiana came between 1000 BC and 200 AD and produced the Adena culture It domesticated wild squash and made pottery which were large cultural advances over the Clovis culture The natives built burial mounds one of this type has been dated as the oldest earthwork in Anderson s Mounds State Park 6 Natives in the Middle Woodland period developed the Hopewell culture and may have been in Indiana as early as 200 BC The Hopewells were the first culture to create permanent settlements in Indiana About 1 AD the Hopewells mastered agriculture and grew crops of sunflowers and squash Around 200 AD the Hopewells began to construct mounds used for ceremonies and burials The Hopewells in Indiana were connected by trade to other native tribes as far away as Central America 7 For unknown reasons the Hopewell culture went into decline around 400 and completely disappeared by 500 8 The Late Woodland era is generally considered to have begun about 600 AD and lasted until the arrival of Europeans in Indiana It was a period of rapid cultural change One of the new developments which has yet to be explained was the introduction of masonry shown by the construction of large stone forts many of which overlook the Ohio River Romantic legend attributed the forts to Welsh Indians who supposedly arrived centuries before Christopher Columbus reached the Caribbean 9 however archaeologists and other scholars have found no evidence for that theory and believe that the cultural development was engendered by the Mississippian culture 10 Mississippians edit nbsp View of Mound A at Angel MoundsEvidence suggests that after the collapse of the Hopewell Indiana had a low population until the rise of the Fort Ancient and Mississippian culture around 900 AD 11 The Ohio River Valley was densely populated by the Mississippians from about 1100 to 1450 AD Their settlements like those of the Hopewell were known for their ceremonial earthwork mounds Some of these remain visible at locations near the Ohio River The Mississippian mounds were constructed on a grander scale than the mounds built by the Hopewell The agrarian Mississippian culture was the first to grow maize in the region The people also developed the bow and arrow and copper working during this time period 11 Mississippian society was complex dense and highly developed the largest Mississippian city of Cahokia in Illinois contained as many as 30 000 inhabitants They had a class society with certain groups specializing as artisans The elite held related political and religious positions Their cities were typically sited near rivers Representing their cosmology the central developments were dominated by a large central mound several smaller mounds and a large open plaza Wooden palisades were built later around the complex apparently for defensive purposes 11 The remains of a major settlement known as Angel Mounds lie east of present day Evansville 12 Mississippian houses were generally square shaped with plastered walls and thatched roofs 13 For reasons that remain unclear the Mississippians disappeared in the middle of the 15th century about 200 years before the Europeans first entered what would become modern Indiana Mississippian culture marked the high point of native development in Indiana 11 It was during this period that American Bison began a periodic east west trek through Indiana crossing the Falls of the Ohio and the Wabash River near modern day Vincennes These herds became important to civilizations in southern Indiana and created a well established Buffalo Trace later used by European American pioneers moving west 14 Before 1600 a major war broke out in eastern North America among Native Americans it was later called the Beaver Wars Five American Indian Iroquois tribes confederated to battle against their neighbors The Iroquois were opposed by a confederation of primarily Algonquian tribes including the Shawnee Miami Wea Pottawatomie and the Illinois 15 These tribes were significantly less advanced than the Mississippian culture that had preceded them The tribes were semi nomadic used stone tools rather than copper and did not create the large scale construction and farming works of their Mississippian predecessors The war continued with sporadic fighting for at least a century as the Iroquois sought to dominate the expanding fur trade with the Europeans They achieved this goal for several decades During the war the Iroquois drove the tribes from the Ohio Valley to the south and west They kept control of the area for hunting grounds 16 17 As a result of the war several tribes including the Shawnee migrated into Indiana where they attempted to resettle in land belonging to the Miami The Iroquois gained the military advantage after they were supplied with firearms by the Europeans With their superior weapons the Iroquois subjugated at least thirty tribes and nearly destroyed several others in northern Indiana 18 European contact edit When the first Europeans entered Indiana during the 1670s the region was in the final years of the Beaver Wars The French attempted to trade with the Algonquian tribes in Indiana selling them firearms in exchange for furs This incurred the wrath of the Iroquois who destroyed a French outpost in Indiana in retaliation Appalled by the Iroquois the French continued to supply the western tribes with firearms and openly allied with the Algonquian tribes 19 20 A major battle and a turning point in the conflict occurred near present day South Bend when the Miami and their allies repulsed a large Iroquois force in an ambush 21 With the firearms they received from the French the odds were evened The war finally ended in 1701 with the Great Peace of Montreal Both Indian confederacies were left exhausted having suffered heavy casualties Much of Ohio Michigan and Indiana was depopulated after many tribes fled west to escape the fighting 22 The Miami and Pottawatomie nations returned to Indiana following the war 23 24 Other tribes such as the Algonquian Lenape were pushed westward into the Midwest from the East Coast by encroachment of European colonists Around 1770 the Miami invited the Lenape to settle on the White River 25 note 1 The Shawnee arrived in present day Indiana after the three other nations 23 These four nations were later participants in the Sixty Years War a struggle between native nations and European settlers for control of the Great Lakes region Hostilities with the tribes began early The Piankeshaw killed five French fur traders in 1752 near the Vermilion River However the tribes also traded successfully with the French for decades 26 Colonial period edit nbsp Native Americans guide French explorers through Indiana as depicted by Maurice Thompson in Stories of Indiana French fur traders from Canada were the first Europeans to enter Indiana beginning in the 1670s 27 The quickest route connecting the New France districts of Canada and Louisiana ran along Indiana s Wabash River The Terre Haute highlands were once considered the border between the two French districts 28 Indiana s geographical location made it a vital part of French lines of communication and trade routes The French established Vincennes as a permanent settlement in Indiana during European rule but the population of the area remained primarily Native American 29 As French influence grew in the region Great Britain competing with France for control of North America came to believe that control of Indiana was important to halt French expansion on the continent 30 France edit The first European outpost within the present day boundaries of Indiana was Tassinong a French trading post established in 1673 near the Kankakee River note 2 French explorer Rene Robert Cavelier Sieur de La Salle came to the area in 1679 claiming it for King Louis the XIV of France La Salle came to explore a portage between the St Joseph and Kankakee rivers 31 and Father Ribourde who traveled with La Salle marked trees along the way The marks survived to be photographed in the 19th century 32 In 1681 La Salle negotiated a common defense treaty between the Illinois and Miami nations against the Iroquois 33 Further exploration of Indiana led to the French establishing an important trade route between Canada and Louisiana via the Maumee and Wabash rivers The French built a series of forts and outposts in Indiana as a hedge against the westward expansion of the British colonies from the east coast of North America and to encourage trade with the native tribes The tribes were able to procure metal tools cooking utensils and other manufactured items in exchange for animal pelts The French built Fort Miamis in the Miami town of Kekionga modern day Fort Wayne Indiana France assigned Jean Baptiste Bissot Sieur de Vincennes as the first agent to the Miami at Kekionga 34 In 1717 Francois Marie Picote de Belestre note 3 established the post of Fort Ouiatenon southwest of modern day West Lafayette Indiana to discourage the Wea from coming under British influence 35 In 1732 Francois Marie Bissot Sieur de Vincennes established a similar post near the Piankeshaw in the town that still bears his name Although the forts were garrisoned by men from New France Fort Vincennes was the only outpost to maintain a permanent European presence until the present day 36 Jesuit priests accompanied many of the French soldiers into Indiana in an attempt to convert the natives to Christianity The Jesuits conducted missionary activities lived among the natives and learned their languages and accompanied them on hunts and migrations Gabriel Marest one of the first missionaries in Indiana taught among the Kaskaskia as early as 1712 The missionaries came to have great influence among the natives and played an important role in keeping the native tribes allied with the French 37 During the French and Indian War the North American front of the Seven Years War in Europe the British directly challenged France for control of the region Although no pitched battles occurred in Indiana the native tribes of the region supported the French 38 At the beginning of the war the tribes sent large groups of warriors to support the French in resisting the British advance and to raid British colonies 39 Using Fort Pitt as a forward base British commander Robert Rogers overcame the native resistance and drove deep into the frontier to capture Fort Detroit The rangers moved south from Detroit and captured many of the key French outposts in Indiana including Fort Miamis and Fort Vincennes 40 As the war progressed the French lost control of Canada after the fall of Montreal No longer able to effectively fight the British in interior North America they lost Indiana to British forces By 1761 the French were entirely forced out of Indiana 41 Following the French expulsion native tribes led by Chief Pontiac confederated in an attempt to rebel against the British without French assistance While Pontiac was besieging British held Fort Detroit other tribes in Indiana rose up against the British who were forced to surrender Fort Miamis and Fort Ouiatenon 42 In 1763 while Pontiac was fighting the British the French signed the Treaty of Paris and ceded control of Indiana to the British 43 Great Britain edit When the British gained control of Indiana the entire region was in the middle of Pontiac s Rebellion During the next year British officials negotiated with the various tribes splitting them from their alliance with Pontiac Eventually Pontiac lost most of his allies forcing him to make peace with the British on July 25 1766 As a concession to Pontiac Great Britain issued a proclamation that the territory west of the Appalachian Mountains was to be reserved for Native Americans 44 Despite the treaty Pontiac was still considered a threat to British interests but after he was murdered on April 20 1769 the region saw several years of peace 45 After Britain established peace with the natives many of the former French trading posts and forts in the region were abandoned Fort Miamis was maintained for several years because it was considered to be of great importance but even it was eventually abandoned 46 The Jesuit priests were expelled and no provisional government was established the British hoped the French in the area would leave Many did leave but the British gradually became more accommodating to the French who remained and continued the fur trade with the Native American nations 47 Formal use of the word Indiana dates from 1768 when a Philadelphia based trading company gave their land claim in the present day state of West Virginia the name of Indiana in honor of its previous owners the Iroquois Later ownership of the claim was transferred to the Indiana Land Company the first recorded use of the word Indiana However the Virginia colony argued that it was the rightful owner of the land because it fell within its geographic boundaries The U S Supreme Court extinguished the land company s right to the claim in 1798 48 In 1773 the territory that included present day Indiana was brought under the administration of Province of Quebec to appease its French population The Quebec Act was one of the Intolerable Acts that the thirteen British colonies cited as a reason for the outbreak of the American Revolutionary War The Thirteen Colonies thought themselves entitled to the territory for their support of Great Britain during the French and Indian War and were incensed that it was given to the enemy the colonies had been fighting 49 Although the United States gained official possession of the region following the conclusion of the American Revolutionary War British influence on its Native American allies in the region remained strong especially near Fort Detroit This influence caused the Northwest Indian War which began when British influenced native tribes refused to recognize American authority and were backed in their resistance by British merchants and officials in the area American military victories in the region and the ratification of the Jay Treaty which called for British withdrawal from the region s forts caused a formal evacuation but the British were not fully expelled from the area until the conclusion of the War of 1812 50 United States edit See also Illinois Campaign After the outbreak of the American Revolutionary War George Rogers Clark was sent from Virginia to enforce its claim to much of the land in the Great Lakes region 51 In July 1778 Clark and about 175 men crossed the Ohio River and took control of Kaskaskia Cahokia and Vincennes along with several other villages in British Indiana The occupation was accomplished without firing a shot because Clark carried letters from the French ambassador stating that France supported the Americans These letters made most of the French and Native American inhabitants of the area unwilling to support the British 52 nbsp Clark s march to Vincennes by F C YohnThe fort at Vincennes which the British had renamed Fort Sackville had been abandoned years earlier and no garrison was present when the Americans arrived to occupy it Captain Leonard Helm became the first American commandant at Vincennes To counter Clark s advance British forces under Lieutenant Governor Henry Hamilton recaptured Vincennes with a small force In February 1779 Clark arrived at Vincennes in a surprise winter expedition and retook the town capturing Hamilton in the process This expedition secured most of southern Indiana for the United States 53 In 1780 emulating Clark s success at Vincennes French officer Augustin de La Balme organized a militia force of French residents to capture Fort Detroit While marching to Detroit the militia stopped to sack Kekionga why The delay proved fatal when the expedition met Miami warriors led by Chief Little Turtle along the Eel River The entire militia was killed or captured Clark organized another assault on Fort Detroit in 1781 but it was aborted when Chief Joseph Brant captured a significant part of Clark s army at a battle known as Lochry s Defeat near present day Aurora Indiana 51 Other minor skirmishes occurred in Indiana including the battle at Petit Fort in 1780 54 In 1783 when the war came to an end Britain ceded the entire trans Allegheny region to the United States including Indiana under the terms of the Treaty of Paris 55 Clark s militia was under the authority of the Commonwealth of Virginia although a Continental Flag was flown over Fort Sackville which he renamed Fort Patrick Henry in honor of an American patriot Later that year the areas formerly known as Illinois Country and Ohio Country were organized as Illinois County Virginia until the colony relinquished its control of the area to the U S government in 1784 56 Clark was awarded large tracts of land in southern Indiana for his service in the war Present day Clark County and Clarksville are named in his honor 57 Indiana Territory editMain article Indiana Territory See also History of slavery in Indiana Northwest Territory and Tecumseh s War nbsp Map of the Indiana TerritoryNorthwest Indian War edit Passage of the Land Ordinance of 1785 and the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 committed the U S government to continued plans for western expansion causing increasing tensions with native tribes who occupied the western lands In 1785 the conflict erupted into the Northwest Indian War 58 59 American troops made several unsuccessful attempts to end the native rebellion During the fall of 1790 U S troops under the command of General Josiah Harmar pursued the Miami tribe near present day Fort Wayne Indiana but had to retreat Major Jean Francois Hamtramck s expedition to other native villages in the area also failed when it was forced to return to Vincennes due to lack of sufficient provisions 60 61 In 1791 Major General Arthur St Clair who was also the Northwest Territory s governor commanded about 2 700 men in a campaign to establish a chain of forts in the area near the Miami capital of Kekionga however nearly a 1 000 warriors under the leadership of Chief Little Turtle launched a surprise attack on the American camp forcing the militia s retreat St Clair s Defeat remains the U S Army s worst by Native Americans in history Casualties included 623 federal soldiers killed and another 258 wounded the Indian confederacy lost an estimated 100 men 62 63 St Clair s loss led to the appointment of General Mad Anthony Wayne who organized the Legion of the United States and defeated a Native American force at the Battle of Fallen Timbers in August 1794 63 64 The Treaty of Greenville 1795 ended the war and marked the beginning of a series of land cession treaties Under the terms of the Treaty native tribes ceded most of southern and eastern Ohio and a strip of southeastern Indiana to the U S government This ethnic cleansing opened the area for white settlement Fort Wayne was built at Kekionga to represent United States sovereignty over the Ohio Indiana frontier After the treaty was signed the powerful Miami nation considered themselves allies of the United States 65 66 During the 18th century Native Americans were victorious in 31 of the 37 recorded incidents with white settlers in the territory 67 Territory formation edit The Congress of the Confederation formed the Northwest Territory under the terms of the Northwest Ordinance on July 13 1787 This territory which initially included land bounded by the Appalachian Mountains the Mississippi River the Great Lakes and the Ohio River was subsequently partitioned into the Indiana Territory 1800 Michigan Territory 1805 and the Illinois Territory 1809 and later became the states of Ohio Michigan Indiana Illinois Wisconsin and part of eastern Minnesota The Northwest Ordinance outlined the basis for government in these western lands and an administrative structure to oversee the territory as well as a process for achieving statehood while the Land Ordinance of 1785 called for the U S government to survey the territory for future sale and development 68 nbsp William Henry Harrison the 1st Governor of Indiana Territory from 1801 to 1812 and the 9th President of the United StatesOn May 7 1800 the U S Congress passed legislation to establish the Indiana Territory effective July 4 1800 by dividing the Northwest Territory in preparation for Ohio s statehood which occurred in 1803 69 At the time the Indiana Territory was created there were only two main American settlements in what became the state of Indiana Vincennes and Clark s Grant When the Indiana Territory was established in 1800 its total white population was 5 641 however its Native American population was estimated to be nearly 20 000 but may have been as high as 75 000 70 71 Indiana Territory initially comprised most of the present day state Indiana excluding a narrow strip of land along the eastern border called The Gore ceded by Ohio in 1803 all of the present day states of Illinois and Wisconsin and parts of present day Michigan and Minnesota 72 73 The Indiana Territory s boundary was further reduced in 1805 with the creation of the Michigan Territory to the north and again in 1809 when the Illinois Territory was established to the west 74 Territorial government edit When the Indiana Territory was established in 1800 President John Adams appointed William Henry Harrison as the first governor of the territory John Gibson who was appointed the territorial secretary served as acting governor from July 4 1800 until Harrison s arrival at Vincennes on January 10 1801 When Harrison resigned his position effective December 28 1812 Gibson served as territorial governor until Thomas Posey was appointed on March 3 1813 Posey left office on November 7 1816 when Jonathan Jennings was sworn into office as the first governor of the state of Indiana 75 76 note 4 The first territorial capital was established at Vincennes where it remained from 1800 to 1813 when territorial officials relocated the seat of government to Corydon 77 78 After the Illinois Territory was formed in 1809 Indiana s territorial legislature became fearful that the outbreak of war on the frontier could cause an attack on Vincennes located on the western border of the territory and made plans to move the capital closer to the territory s population center Governor Harrison also favored Corydon a town that he had established in 1808 and where he was also a landowner Construction on the new capitol building began in 1814 and was nearly finished by 1816 when Indiana became a state 79 80 The Northwest Ordinance of 1787 made no provision for a popularly elected territorial government in the first or non representative phase of territorial government 1800 to 1804 81 Acting as the combined judicial and legislative government a territorial governor and a General Court which consisted of a three member panel of judges were appointed by the U S Congress and later the president with congressional approval The president subsequently delegated his authority to appoint these judges to the territorial governor 82 When the territory entered the second or semi legislative phase of government in 1805 its voters were allowed to elect representatives to the House of Representatives lower house of its bicameral legislature President Jefferson delegated the task of choosing a five member Legislative Council upper house to the territorial governor who chose the members from a list of ten candidates provided by the lower house 83 84 The newly elected territorial legislature met for the first time on July 29 1805 and gradually became the dominant branch while the judges continued to focus on judicial matters 85 Governor Harrison retained veto powers as well as his general executive and appointment authority The legislative assembly had the authority to pass laws subject to the governor s approval before they could be enacted 83 84 As the population of the territory grew so did the people s interest in exercising of their freedoms In 1809 after the Indiana Territory was divided to create the Illinois Territory Congress further altered the makeup of the territorial legislature Voters in the Indiana Territory would continue to elect members to its House of Representatives however they were also granted permission for the first time to elect members to its Legislative Council upper house 86 87 Political issues edit The major political issue in Indiana s territorial history was slavery however there were others including Indian affairs the formation of northern and western territories from portions of the Indiana Territory concerns about the lack of territorial self government and representation in Congress and ongoing criticisms of Harrison s actions at territorial governor 88 89 Most of these issues were resolved before Indiana achieved statehood including the debate over the issue of allowing slavery in the territory which was settled in 1810 however criticism of Governor Harrison continued 88 In December 1802 delegates from Indiana Territory s four counties passed a resolution in favor of a ten year suspension of Article 6 of the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 The ordinance prohibited slavery in the original Northwest Territory although it had existed in the region since French rule The resolution was made in order to legalize slavery in the territory and to make the region more appealing to slave holding settlers from the Upper South who occupied areas along the Ohio River and wanted to bring their slaves into the territory However Congress failed to take action on the resolution leaving Harrison and the territorial judges to pursue other options 90 91 In 1809 Harrison found himself at odds with the new legislature when the anti slavery party won a strong majority in the 1809 elections In 1810 the territorial legislature repealed the indenturing and pro slavery laws Harrison and the judicial council had enacted in 1803 92 93 Slavery remained the defining issue in the state for the decades to follow 94 95 War of 1812 edit Main articles Tecumseh s War and Indiana in the War of 1812 The first major event in the territory s history was the resumption of hostilities with Native Americans Unhappy with their treatment since the peace treaty of 1795 native tribes led by the Shawnee Chief Tecumseh and his brother Tenskwatawa formed a coalition against the Americans Tecumseh s War started in 1811 when General Harrison led an army to rebuff the aggressive movements of Tecumseh s pan Indian confederation 96 The Battle of Tippecanoe 1811 which caused a setback for the Native Americans 97 earned Harrison national fame and the nickname of Old Tippecanoe 98 The war between Tecumseh and Harrison merged with the War of 1812 after the remnants of the pan Indian confederation allied with the British in Canada The siege of Fort Harrison is considered to be the Americans first land victory in the war 99 Other battles that occurred within the boundaries of the present day state of Indiana include the siege of Fort Wayne the Pigeon Roost Massacre and the Battle of the Mississinewa The Treaty of Ghent 1814 ended the war and relieved American settlers from their fears of attack by the nearby British and their Indian allies 100 This treaty marked the end of hostilities with the Native Americans in Indiana During the 19th century Native Americans were victorious in 43 of the 58 recorded incidents between Native Americans and white settlers in Indiana In the 37 battles between Native American warriors and U S Army troops victories were nearly evenly split between the two parties Despite the Native American victories most of the native population was eventually removed from Indiana a process that continued after the territory attained statehood 101 Early statehood edit nbsp The Constitution Elm in CorydonIn 1812 Jonathan Jennings defeated Harrison s chosen candidate and became the territory s representative to Congress Jennings immediately introduced legislation to grant Indiana statehood even though the population of the entire territory was under 25 000 but no action was taken on the legislation because of the outbreak of the War of 1812 102 Posey had created a rift in the politics of the territory by supporting slavery much to the chagrin of opponents like Jennings Dennis Pennington and others who dominated the Territorial Legislature and who sought to use the bid for statehood to permanently end slavery in the territory 102 103 Founding edit In early 1816 the Territory approved a census and Pennington was named to be the census enumerator The population of the territory was found to be 63 897 104 above the cutoff required for statehood A constitutional convention met on June 10 1816 in Corydon Because of the heat of the season the delegation moved outdoors on many days and wrote the constitution beneath the shade of a giant elm tree The state s first constitution was completed on June 29 and elections were held in August to fill the offices of the new state government In November Congress approved statehood 105 106 Jennings and his supporters had control of the convention and Jennings was elected its president Other notable delegates at the convention included Dennis Pennington Davis Floyd and William Hendricks 107 Pennington and Jennings were at the forefront of the effort to prevent slavery from entering Indiana and sought to create a constitutional ban on it Pennington was quoted as saying Let us be on our guard when our convention men are chosen that they be men opposed to slavery 108 They succeeded in their goal and a ban was placed in the new constitution 109 But persons already held in bondage stayed in that status for some time That same year Indiana statehood was approved by Congress And while the Indiana constitution banned slavery in the state Indiana and its white residents also excluded free Black citizens and established barriers to their immigration to the state 110 Jonathan Jennings whose motto was No slavery in Indiana was elected governor of the state defeating Thomas Posey 5 211 to 3 934 votes 111 Jennings served two terms as governor and then went on to represent the state in congress for another 18 years Upon election Jennings declared Indiana a free state 111 The abolitionists won a key victory in the 1820 Indiana Supreme Court case of Polly v Lasselle which stated that even those enslaved before Indiana statehood were now free In the case of Mary Clark an African American woman born into slavery and then indentured as a servant in Vincennes Indiana the Indiana Supreme Court in 1821 decided that indentured servitude was merely a ruse for slavery and was therefore prohibited All forms of slavery in Indiana were finally banned by 1830 112 113 nbsp Indiana s First State Capitol BuildingAs the northern tribal lands gradually opened to white settlement Indiana s population rapidly increased and the center of population shifted continually northward 114 One of the most significant post frontier events in Indiana occurred in 1818 with the signing of the Treaty of St Mary s at St Mary s Ohio to acquire Indian lands south of the Wabash from the Delaware and others The area comprised about 1 3 of the present day area of Indiana the central portion and was called the New Purchase Eventually 35 new counties were carved out of the New Purchase An area like a large bite in the middle of the northern boundary 115 was reserved to the Miami called the Big Miami Reserve which was the largest Indian reservation ever to exist in Indiana Indianapolis was selected to be the site of the new state capital in 1820 because of its central position within the state and assumed good water transportation However the founders were disappointed to discover the White River was too sandy for navigation 116 In 1825 Indianapolis replaced Corydon as the seat of government The government became established in the Marion County Courthouse as the second state capital building 114 Early development edit See also Indian removals in Indiana and Indiana Mammoth Internal Improvement ActHistorical population CensusPop Note 18002 632 181024 520831 6 1820147 178500 2 1830343 031133 1 1840685 86699 9 1850988 41644 1 18601 350 42836 6 117 The National Road reached Indianapolis in 1829 connecting Indiana to the Eastern United States 118 In the early 1830s citizens of Indiana began to be known as Hoosiers although the origin of the word has been subject considerable debate 119 and the state took on the motto of Crossroads of America In 1832 construction began on the Wabash and Erie Canal a project connecting the waterways of the Great Lakes to the Ohio River Railroads soon made the canal system obsolete These developments in transportation served to economically connect Indiana to the Northern East Coast rather than relying solely on the natural waterways which connected Indiana to the Mississippi River and Gulf Coast states 120 note 5 In 1831 construction on the third state capitol building began This building designed by the firm of Ithiel Town and Alexander Jackson Davis had a design inspired by the Greek Parthenon and opened in 1841 It was the first statehouse that was built and used exclusively by the state government 121 nbsp The fifth Indiana Statehouse in Indianapolis built in 1888 on the site of the third statehouseThe state suffered from financial difficulties during its first three decades Jonathan Jennings attempted to begin a period of internal improvements Among his projects the Indiana Canal Company was reestablished to build a canal around the Falls of the Ohio The Panic of 1819 caused the state s only two banks to fold This hurt Indiana s credit halted the projects and hampered the start of new projects until the 1830s after the repair of the state s finances during the terms of William Hendricks and Noah Noble Beginning in 1831 large scale plans for statewide improvements were set into motion Overspending on the internal improvements led to a large deficit that had to be funded by state bonds through the newly created Bank of Indiana and sale of over nine million acres 36 000 km2 of public land By 1841 the debt had become unmanageable 122 Having borrowed over 13 million the equivalent to the state s first fifteen years of tax revenue the government could not even pay interest on the debt 123 The state narrowly avoided bankruptcy by negotiating the liquidation of the public works transferring them to the state s creditors in exchange for a 50 percent reduction in the state s debt 124 note 6 The internal improvements began under Jennings paid off as the state began to experience rapid population growth that slowly remedied the state s funding problems The improvements led to a fourfold increase in land value and an even larger increase in farm produce 125 During the 1840s Indiana completed the removal of the Native American tribes The majority of the Potawatomi voluntarily relocated to Kansas in 1838 Those who did not leave were forced to travel to Kansas in what came to be called the Potawatomi Trail of Death leaving only the Pokagon Band of Potawatomi Indians in the Indiana area 126 The majority of the Miami tribe left in 1846 although many members of the tribe were permitted to remain in the state on lands they held privately under the terms of the 1818 Treaty of St Mary s 127 The other tribes were also convinced to leave the state voluntarily through the payment of subsidies and land grants further west The Shawnee migrated westward to settle in Missouri and the Lenape migrated into Canada The other minor tribes in the state including the Wea moved westward mostly to Kansas 128 By the 1850s Indiana had undergone major changes what was once a frontier with sparse population had become a developing state with several cities In 1816 Indiana s population was around 65 000 and in less than 50 years it had increased to more than 1 000 000 inhabitants 129 Because of the rapidly changing state the constitution of 1816 began to be criticized 130 note 7 Opponents claimed the constitution had too many appointed positions the terms established were inadequate and some of the clauses were too easily manipulated by the political parties that did not exist when then constitution was written 131 The first constitution had not been put to a vote by the general public and following the great population growth in the state it was seen as inadequate A constitutional convention was called in January 1851 to create a new one The new constitution was approved by the convention on February 10 1851 and submitted for a vote to the electorate that year It was approved and has since been the official constitution 132 Black Hoosiers before the Civil War edit Year Slaves Free Blacks 133 134 1800 28 871810 237 3931820 192 1 2301830 3 3 6291840 3 7 1651850 0 11 262African Americans migrated to Indiana before its official statehood in 1816 135 The first recorded were five enslaved people in Vincennes Indiana in 1746 136 In the 1820 federal census 1 230 reported themselves as residents of Indiana 137 Most Black migrants to Indiana arrived from South Carolina Ohio Virginia and Kentucky 135 African Americans pioneered rural settlements in the state throughout the first half of the nineteenth century and accounted for 1 1 of the total population by 1850 138 Although Black Hoosiers settled in urban areas many rural antebellum communities were found throughout the state including Lyles Station Roberts Settlement and Beech Settlement 139 Although Indiana entered the Union in 1816 as a free state it gave only a tepid welcome to African Americans Throughout the first half of the nineteenth century Indiana attempted to keep Black Hoosiers from attending public school voting testifying in court and endeavored to set other limits on African American citizenship and inclusion 140 Black individuals were denied the right to testify in court in 1818 141 In 1829 the Indiana Colonization Society was founded to help repatriate African Americans to Liberia which reflected a desire to rid the state of its Black residents 142 The 1830 census recorded three slaves in the state The earliest days of the territory and of statehood witnessed intense debates over whether to allow slavery in Indiana Laws in the 1830s sought to prevent free Black individuals from entering the state without certificates of freedom under threat of fines and expulsion 143 The Black Law of 1831 required Black citizens to register within their county and pay a 500 bond 144 While the 1830 law was only sporadically enforced it reflected hostility towards African Americans and their settlement in the state Throughout the early nineteenth century Black Hoosiers struggled to enjoy basic civil rights in the state including the right to educate their children In 1837 and 1841 the state formally excluded African Americans from public education In 1837 the state legislature moved to recognize The white inhabitants of each congressional district as the citizens qualified to vote in school board elections Four years later they followed with an effort to preclude Black households from school board assessments This helped to establish Hoosier schools as de facto segregated white populations Efforts in 1842 to formally exclude African American children from public education were rebuffed however The State Committee on Education responded to the matter acknowledging that Black students Are here unfortunately for us and them and we have duties to perform in reference to their well being 145 While the state did not have legal segregation Black children were also excluded public schools as a matter of custom 141 Indiana passed laws against interracial marriage in 1818 and 1821 146 Under 1840 state laws to ban miscegenation Indiana became the first state to make interracial marriage a felony 147 Article II of the new constitution of 1851 expanded suffrage for white males but excluded Black Hoosiers from suffrage Article XIII of the Indiana Constitution of 1851 sought to exclude African Americans from settling in the state declaring No negro or mulatto shall come into or settle in the State 148 This was the only provision of the new constitution submitted to a special election Indiana constitutional convention delegates voted 93 to 40 in favor of the article The popular vote was even more enthusiastic in its support for exclusion with a vote of 113 828 in favor and only 21 873 against excluding African Americans This ban stood until 1866 when the Indiana Supreme Court ruled that it was unconstitutional 149 150 Racial hostility and discrimination co existed alongside abolition sentiments and efforts Levi Coffin unofficially known as President of the Underground Railroad and one of the most prominent abolitionists in the United States operated out of Richmond The Underground Railroad in Indiana sought to help runaway slaves escape to northern states and Canada White Quakers Baptists and others worked to secure safe passage for runaway slaves Abolition efforts conflicted with a growing antipathy towards free Black Hoosiers in the state A large influx occurred in 1814 when Paul and Susannah Mitchem immigrated to Indiana from Virginia with over 100 of their slaves Later that year they emancipated all of their slaves most of whom formed a large part of the population of the first state capital in Corydon 151 Bounty hunters slavecatchers mostly operating in the southern part of the state offered their services and knowledge of the area to southerners searching for runaways 152 In addition free Black individuals could become victims when slavecatchers could not find runaway slaves Bounty hunters and slavecatchers might seize free Black individuals claiming them to be runaways and bring them to the Southern United States to be sold into bondage In one incident in the early 1850s for example slavecatchers seized two free Black citizens working on the Wabash and Erie Canal Although local abolitionists quickly organized and petitioned the sheriff to release the two men the slavecatchers had documents that described the men and claimed they were runaways Evidence suggested the documents were false but there was no way to refute the claim The slavecatchers were allowed to take the two men as their prisoners but before they left Indiana a group of abolitionists overtook the party and freed the two Black laborers 153 Civil War Exodusters and the Great Migration edit Article 13 of the 1851 Indiana Constitution was deemed unconstitutional in 1866 but was not amended until 1881 Indiana s Black population increased after the Civil War mostly along the Ohio River such as Spencer County Indiana which included 947 Black citizens by 1870 citation needed As Reconstruction ended in the South former enslaved peoples wanted to move north which included the migration of Black people from North Carolina to Indiana Black people who migrated from the South after the Civil War were known as Exodusters who were in search of access to good schools Black community centered churches and job opportunities Many migrants during this time who arrived in Indiana were met with anti Black violence and forced to relocate due to Indiana s numerous sundown towns Black communities around Indianapolis tried to help those who had migrated but many of the Exodusters became discouraged and went back to North Carolina Those who stayed often settled in Indianapolis contributing to the city s Black population growth citation needed The Black population in 1880 was 39 228 and by 1900 it was 57 960 citation needed During the Great Migration Black individuals who came to Indiana between 1910 and 1920 often settled in central or northern parts of the states New opportunities were available due to industrialization and the war economy and rumors of new opportunities were appealing Religion edit Frontier Indiana was prime ground missionary for the Second Great Awakening with a never ending parade of camp meetings and revivals 154 Baptist church records show an intense interest in private moral behavior at the weekly meetings including drinking and proper child rearing practices The most contentious issue was the antimission controversy in which the more traditional elements denounced missionary societies as unbiblical Daniel Parker of Vincennes was a key leader of the antimission movement 155 Eastern Presbyterian and Congregational denominations funded an aggressive missionary program 1826 55 through the American Home Missionary Society AHMS It sought to bring sinners to Christ and also to modernize society promoted middle class values mutual trust among the members and tried to minimize violence and drinking 156 The frontierspeople were the reformees and they displayed their annoyance at the new morality being imposed on society The political crisis came in 1854 55 over a pietistic campaign to enact dry prohibition of liquor sales They were strongly opposed by the wets especially non churched the Catholics Episcopalians the antimissionary elements and the German recent arrivals Prohibition failed in 1855 and the moralistic pietistic Protestants switched to a new equally moralistic cause the anti slavery crusade led by the new Republican Party 157 158 In 1836 Black Hoosiers founded the Bethel AME Church in Indianapolis 144 Higher education editFor a list of institutions see Category Universities and colleges in Indiana The earliest institutions of education in Indiana were missions established by French Jesuit priests to convert local Native American nations The Jefferson Academy was founded in 1801 as a public university for the Indiana Territory and was reincorporated as Vincennes University in 1806 the first in the state 159 The 1816 constitution required that Indiana s state legislature create a general system of education ascending in a regular gradation from township schools to a state university wherein tuition shall be gratis and equally open to all 160 It took several years for the legislature to fulfill its promise partly because of a debate about whether a new public university should be founded to replace the territorial university 161 The 1820s saw the start of free public township schools During the administration of William Hendricks a plot of ground was set aside in each township for the construction of a schoolhouse 162 The state government chartered Indiana University in Bloomington in 1820 as the State Seminary Construction began in 1822 the first professor was hired in 1823 and classes were offered in 1824 Other state colleges were established for specialized needs They included Indiana State University established in Terre Haute in 1865 as the state normal school for training teachers Purdue University was founded in 1869 as the state s land grant university a school of science and agriculture Ball State University was founded as a normal school in the early 20th century and given to the state in 1918 163 Public colleges lagged behind the private religious colleges in both size and educational standards until the 1890s 164 In 1855 North Western Christian University now Butler University was chartered by Ovid Butler after a split with the Christian Church Disciples of Christ over slavery Significantly the university was founded on the basis of anti slavery and co education It was one of the first to admit African Americans and one of the first to have a named chair for female professors the Demia Butler Chair in English 165 Asbury College now Depauw University was Methodist Wabash College was Presbyterian they led the Protestant schools 166 The University of Notre Dame founded by Rev Edward Sorin in 1842 proclaims itself as a prominent Catholic college 167 Indiana lagged the rest of the Midwest with the lowest literacy and education rates into the early 20th century 164 Transportation editIn the early 19th century most transportation of goods in Indiana was done by river Most of the state s estuaries drained into the Wabash River or the Ohio River ultimately meeting up with the Mississippi River where goods were transported to and sold in St Louis or New Orleans 168 169 The first road in the region was the Buffalo Trace an old bison trail that ran from the Falls of the Ohio to Vincennes 170 After the capitol was relocated to Corydon several local roads were created to connect the new capitol to the Ohio River at Mauckport and to New Albany The first major road in the state was the National Road a project funded by the federal government The road entered Indiana in 1829 connecting Richmond Indianapolis and Terre Haute with the eastern states and eventually Illinois and Missouri in the west 171 The state adopted the advanced methods used to build the national road on a statewide basis and began to build a new road network that was usable year round The north south Michigan Road was built in the 1830s connecting Michigan and Kentucky and passing through Indianapolis in the middle 171 These two new roads were roughly perpendicular within the state and served as the foundation for a road system to encompass all of Indiana Indiana was flat enough with plenty or rivers to spend heavily on a canal mania in the 1830s Planning in the lightly populated state began in 1827 as New York had scored a major success with its Erie Canal 172 In 1836 the legislature allocated 10 million for an elaborate network of internal improvements promoting canals turnpikes and railroads The goal was to encourage settlement by providing easy cheap access to the remotest corners of the state linking every area to the Great Lakes and Ohio River and thence to the Atlantic seaports and New Orleans Every region joined in enthusiastically but the scheme was a financial disaster because the legislature required that work must begin on all parts of all the projects simultaneously very few were finished The state was unable to pay the bonds it issued and was blackballed in Eastern and European financial circles for decades 173 174 The first major railroad line was completed in 1847 connecting Madison with Indianapolis By the 1850s the railroad began to become popular in Indiana Indianapolis as the focal point Indiana had 212 miles of railroad in operation in 1852 soaring to 1 278 miles in 1854 They were operated by 18 companies construction plans were underway to double the totals 175 The successful railroad network brought major changes to Indiana and enhanced the state s economic growth 118 Although Indiana s natural waterways connected it to the South via cities such as St Louis and New Orleans the new rail lines ran east west and connected Indiana with the economies of the northern states 176 As late as mid 1859 no rail line yet bridged the Ohio or Mississippi rivers 177 Because of an increased demand on the state s resources and the embargo against the Confederacy the rail system was mostly completed by 1865 Early nineteenth century social reforms editTemperance movement edit Temperance became a part of the evangelical Protestant initiative during Indiana s pioneer era and early statehood Many Hoosiers freely indulged in drinking locally distilled whiskey on a daily basis with binges on election days and holidays and during community celebrations 158 Reformers announced that the devil was at work and must be repudiated 178 179 A state temperance society formed in 1829 and local temperance societies soon organized in Indianapolis Fort Wayne and Logansport By the 1830s pietistic evangelical Protestants and community leaders had joined forces to curb consumption of alcohol In 1847 the Indiana General Assembly passed a local option bill that allowed a vote on whether to prohibit alcohol sales in a township By the 1850s Indiana s Republican party whose adherents tended to favor the temperance movement began challenging the state s Democrats who supported personal freedom and a limited federal government for political power 180 Early temperance legislation in Indiana earned only limited and temporary success In 1853 Republicans persuaded the state legislature to pass a local option law that allowed a township voter to declare it dry but it was later deemed unconstitutional In 1855 a statewide prohibition law was passed but it met the same fate as the local option 181 In the decades to come Protestant churches especially the Methodists Baptists Presbyterians Disciples of Christ Quakers and women s groups continued to support temperance efforts and gave strong support to the mostly dry Republican Party The Catholics Episcopalians and Lutherans stood opposed and gave strong support to the wet Democratic Party 182 Abolition edit Abolition in Indiana reflected a mix of anti Black sentiment religiously oriented social reforms and pro Black sentiments 183 Several groups and notable individuals stood in opposition to slavery and in support of African Americans in the state The North Western Christian University later Butler University was founded by Ovid Butler in 1855 after a schism with the Christian Church Disciples of Christ over slavery Women s suffrage movement edit Indiana has a long history of women s activism in social movements including the women s suffrage movement The Indiana Woman s Suffrage Association was founded in 1851 by important suffrage leaders such as Agnes Cook Mary B Birdsall Amanda M Way and Mary F Thomas 184 With the exception of Way all these women were the first to address the Indiana State Legislature on January 19 1859 with petitions calling for women s suffrage temperance and equal rights 185 In 1854 Birdsall had purchased The Lily the first U S newspaper edited by and for women from its founder Amelia Bloomer and moved it to Richmond Indiana The newspaper had begun as a temperance newspaper but was later used to campaign for women s suffrage and rights 186 Civil War editMain article Indiana in the American Civil War nbsp 80th Indiana Infantry Regiment and the 19th Indiana Light Artillery defending against the Confederates at the Battle of Perryville by H MoslerIndiana a free state and the boyhood home of Abraham Lincoln remained a member of the Union during the American Civil War Indiana regiments were involved in all the major engagements of the war and almost all the engagements in the western theater Hoosiers were present in the first and last battles of the war During the war Indiana provided 126 infantry regiments 26 batteries of artillery and 13 regiments of cavalry to the cause of the Union 187 In the initial call to arms issued in 1861 Indiana was assigned a quota of 7 500 men a tenth of the amount called to join the Union Army in putting down the rebellion 188 So many volunteered in the first call that thousands had to be turned away Before the war ended Indiana contributed 208 367 men to fight and serve in the war 189 Casualties were over 35 among these men 24 416 lost their lives in the conflict and over 50 000 more were wounded 189 At the outbreak of the war Indiana was run by a Democratic and southern sympathetic majority in the state legislature It was by the actions of Governor Oliver Morton who illegally borrowed millions of dollars to finance the army that Indiana could contribute so greatly to the war effort 190 Morton suppressed the state legislature with the help of the Republican minority to prevent it from assembling during 1861 and 1862 This prevented any chance the Democrats might have had to interfere with the war effort or to attempt to secede from the Union 191 Sanitary Commission edit In March 1862 Governor Oliver Morton also assembled a committee known as the Indiana Sanitary Commission to raise funds and gather supplies for troops in the field It was not until January 1863 that the commission began recruiting women as nurses for wounded soldiers 192 Notable women members of the included Mary F Thomas a Hoosier suffragist and Eliza Hamilton George also known as Mother George 193 Although the exact number of women volunteers is unknown William Hannaman president of the Indiana Sanitary Commission reported to Morton in 1866 that about two hundred and fifty women had volunteered as nurses between 1863 and 1865 192 Raids edit Main articles Newburgh Raid Morgan s Raid and Battle of Corydon nbsp Oliver Hazard Perry Morton governor 1861 to 1867Two raids on Indiana soil during the war caused a brief panic in Indianapolis and southern Indiana The Newburgh Raid on July 18 1862 occurred when Confederate officer Adam Johnson briefly captured Newburgh by convincing the Union troops garrisoning the town that he had cannon on the surrounding hills when in fact they were merely camouflaged stovepipes The raid convinced the federal government that it was necessary to supply Indiana with a permanent force of regular Union Army soldiers to counter future raids 194 The most significant Civil War battle fought in Indiana was a small skirmish during Morgan s Raid On the morning of July 9 1863 Morgan attempted to cross the Ohio River into Indiana with his force of 2 400 Confederate cavalry After his crossing was briefly contested he marched north to Corydon where he fought the Indiana Legion in the short Battle of Corydon Morgan took command of the heights south of Corydon and shot two shells from his batteries into the town which promptly surrendered The battle left 15 dead and 40 wounded Morgan s main body of troopers briefly raided New Salisbury Crandall Palmyra and Salem Fear gripped the capitol and the militia began to form there to contest Morgan s advance After Salem however Morgan turned east raiding and skirmishing along this path and leaving Indiana through West Harrison on July 13 into Ohio where he was captured 195 Aftermath edit The Civil War had a major effect on the development of Indiana Before the war the population was generally in the south of the state where many had entered via the Ohio River which provided a cheap and convenient means to export products and agriculture to New Orleans to be sold The war closed the Mississippi River to traffic for nearly four years forcing Indiana to find other means to export its produce This led to a population shift to the north where the state came to rely more on the Great Lakes and the railroad for exports 196 197 Before the war New Albany was the largest city in the state mainly because of its river contacts and extensive trade with the South 198 Over half of Hoosiers with over 100 000 lived in New Albany 199 During the war the trade with the South came to a halt and many residents considered those of New Albany as too friendly to the South The city never regained its stature It was stilled as a city of 40 000 with its early Victorian Mansion Row buildings remaining from the boom period 200 Post Civil War era editEconomic growth edit See also Indiana Gas Boom nbsp The Circle in Indianapolis circa 1898Historical population CensusPop Note 18701 680 637 18801 978 30117 7 18902 192 40410 8 19002 516 46214 8 19102 700 8767 3 19202 930 3908 5 19303 238 50310 5 117 Ohio River ports had been stifled by an embargo on the Confederate South and never fully recovered their economic prominence leading the south into an economic decline 196 By contrast northern Indiana experienced an economic boom when natural gas was discovered in the 1880s which directly contributed to the rapid growth of cities such as Gas City Hartford City and Muncie where a glass industry developed to utilize the cheap fuel The Indiana gas field was then the largest known in the world 201 The boom lasted until the early 20th century when the gas supplies ran low This began northern Indiana s industrialization The development of heavy industry attracted thousands of European immigrants in the late 19th and early 20th centuries as well as internal migrants both Black and white from the rural and small town South These developments dramatically altered the demographics of the state Indiana industrial cities were among the destinations of the Great Migration After World War II industrial restructuring and the shifts in heavy industry resulted in Indiana s becoming part of the Rust Belt 202 203 In 1876 chemist Eli Lilly a Union colonel during the Civil War founded Eli Lilly and Company a pharmaceutical company His initial innovation of gelatin coating for pills led to a rapid growth of the company that eventually developed as Indiana s largest corporation and one of the largest corporations in the world 204 205 note 8 Over the years the corporation developed many widely used drugs including insulin and it became the first company to mass produce penicillin The company s many advances made Indiana the leading state in the production and development of medicines 206 Charles Conn returned to Elkhart after the Civil War and established C G Conn Ltd a manufacturer of musical instruments 207 The company s innovation in band instruments made Elkhart an important center of the music world and it became a base of Elkhart s economy for decades Nearby South Bend experienced continued growth following the Civil War and became a large manufacturing city centered around the Oliver Farm Equipment Company the nation s leading plow producer Gary was founded in 1906 by the United States Steel Corporation as the home for its new plant 208 The administration of Governor James D Williams proposed the construction of the fourth state capitol building in 1878 The third state capitol building was razed and the new one was constructed on the same site Two million dollars was appropriated for construction and the new building was completed in 1888 The building was still in use in 2008 209 The Panic of 1893 had a severely negative effect on the Hoosier economy when many factories closed and several railroads declared bankruptcy The Pullman Strike of 1894 hurt the Chicago area and coal miners in southern Indiana participated in a national strike Hard times were not limited to industry farmers also felt a financial pinch from falling prices The economy began to recover when World War I broke out in Europe creating a higher demand for American goods 210 Despite economic setbacks advances in industrial technology continued throughout the last years of the 19th and into the 20th century On July 4 1894 Elwood Haynes successfully road tested his first automobile and opened the Haynes Apperson auto company in 1896 211 In 1895 William Johnson invented a process for casting aluminum 212 213 Political battleground edit During the postwar era Indiana became a critical swing state that often helped decide which party controlled the presidency Elections were very close and became the center of frenzied attention with many parades speeches and rallies as election day approached voter turnout ranging over 90 to near 100 in such elections as 1888 and 1896 In remote areas both sides paid their supporters to vote and occasionally paid supporters of the opposition not to vote Despite allegations historians have found very little fraud in national elections 214 To win the electoral vote both national parties looked for Indiana candidates for the national tickets a Hoosier was included in all but one presidential election between 1880 and 1924 215 216 In 1888 Indiana Senator Benjamin Harrison grandson of territorial Governor William Henry Harrison was elected president after an intense battle that attracted more than 300 000 partisans to Indianapolis to hear him speak from his famous front porch 217 Fort Benjamin Harrison was named in his honor Six Hoosiers have been elected as vice president The most recent was Mike Pence elected in 2016 218 Black Hoosiers after the Civil War edit Due to rising white supremacist laws and culture in the southern United States many Black Americans migrated north Between November 1878 and February 1879 more than 1100 Black people arrived in Indianapolis with many more settling across the state By the end of the century Indiana s Black resident population numbered 57 505 144 Article XIII of the Indiana Constitution of 1851 which sought to exclude African Americans from settling in the state was invalidated when the Indiana Supreme Court ruled in 1866 that it violated the newly passed Thirteenth Amendment to the U S Constitution 149 150 Nevertheless numerous communities and counties implemented practices to exclude African Americans These jurisdictions known as sundown towns were prevalent during the 1890s 219 220 Sundown towns sought to maintain an all white population by intentionally expelling Black residents and preventing African American settlement 219 221 As a result of sundown policies the number of counties that had African American residents dropped significantly between 1890 and 1930 219 By the 1990s sundown town policies became less common in Indiana 110 219 Black Hoosiers were selectively allowed to hold leadership roles at the state level James Sidney Hinton was the first Black person to serve as a legislator in the Indiana General Assembly in 1880 Lillian Thomas Fox was the first Black woman to write for the Indianapolis News a historically white newspaper 222 High culture edit See also Golden Age of Indiana Literature The last decades of the 19th century began what is known as the golden age of Indiana literature a period that lasted until the 1920s 164 Edward Eggleston wrote The Hoosier Schoolmaster 1871 the first best seller to originate in the state Many other followed including Maurice Thompson s Hoosier Mosaics 1875 and Lew Wallace s Ben Hur 1880 Indiana developed a reputation as the American heartland following several widely read novels beginning with Booth Tarkington s The Gentleman from Indiana 1899 Meredith Nicholson s The Hoosiers 1900 and Thompson s second famous novel Alice of Old Vincennes 1900 164 James Whitcomb Riley known as the Hoosier Poet and the most popular poet of his age wrote hundreds of poems celebrating Hoosier themes including Little Orphant Annie A unique art culture also began developing in the late 19th century beginning the Hoosier School of landscape painting and the Richmond Group of impressionist painters The painters were known for their use of vivid colors and artists including T C Steele whose work was influenced by the colorful hills of southern Indiana 164 Prominent musicians and composers from Indiana also reached national acclaim during the time including Paul Dresser whose most popular song On the Banks of the Wabash Far Away was later adopted as the official state song 223 Prohibition and women s suffrage edit By the late nineteenth and early twentieth century prohibition and women s suffrage had become the major reform issues in the state Although supporters and their opponents closely linked the two movements temperance received a broader hearing than the efforts toward equal suffrage While many Protestant churches in Indiana supported temperance few provided a forum for discussions on women s voting rights 224 The drive for women s suffrage was reinvigorated in the 1870s and was sponsored by the leaders of the prohibition movement especially the Woman s Christian Temperance Union WCTU The Indiana branch of the American Woman Suffrage Association was re established in 1869 225 In 1878 May Wright Sewall founded the Indianapolis Equal Suffrage Society which fought for world peace before the nation plunged into World War I 226 Several Indiana women also became temperance leaders and took an active role in the movement 224 227 The Indiana chapter of the WCTU was formed in 1874 with Zerelda G Wallace as its first president 228 Like many other suffrage leaders Wallace was radicalized for woman s suffrage through her temperance reform work During her 1875 speech before the Indiana General Assembly in support of prohibition legislators demonstrated an open contempt for women involved in politics and speaking in public Afterward Wallace credited the experience with her embrace of suffrage 229 The first major effort to give women the right to vote in all non federal elections attempted to amend the state constitution It passed by both houses of the state legislature in 1881 226 however the bill failed to pass in the next legislative session in 1883 as state law required Temperance efforts fared little better In 1881 the Indiana chapter of the WCTU along with organizations participating in the Indiana Grand Council of Temperance successfully lobbied the Indiana General Assembly to pass an amendment to the state constitution to prohibit the manufacture and sale of alcoholic beverages in the state but the Indiana Liquor League and a Democratic majority in the state legislature killed the bill in the legislative session in 1883 228 Following these legislative defeats women s suffrage and prohibition became sensitive issues in local politics as the Democrats rallied the opposition 226 In German strongholds such as Fort Wayne opposition to prohibition and women s suffrage was strong until World War I As one historian notes within German working class family traditions women in particular were sharply defined in terms of family responsibilities Suffrage and women s rights ran counter to deep social and religious traditions that placed women in a subservient relationship to men 230 Renewed interest in women s suffrage did not occur until the end of the century 231 while prohibition crusaders continued to press for legislative action To gain political power in favor of prohibition legislation a state Prohibition Party was formed in 1884 however it was never able to effectively mobilize a significant force of voters within the state 232 Many temperance advocates continued to work within the more established political parties The liquor issue pitted wets and drys in stable uncompromising coalitions that formed a main theme of Hoosier politics into the 1930s 233 One legislative success occurred in 1895 when the state legislature passed the Nicholson law a local option law authored by S E Nicholson a Quaker minister who served in the state legislature and was a leader of the national Anti Saloon League 234 The League became a political powerhouse mobilizing pietistic Protestant voters that is members of the major denominations except Lutherans and Episcopalians to support dry legislation The Nicholson law allowed voters in a city or township to file a remonstrance that would prevent an individual saloon owner from acquiring a liquor license 228 Additional legislative efforts to extend the Nicholson law and achieve statewide prohibition in Indiana would not occur until the early twentieth century One of the leading supporters for the temperance movement in Indiana was Emma Barrett Molloy who was an active member of the WCTU and lectured across the country to promote the ban of alcohol 235 Through her vocal activism in temperance and prohibition Molloy also entered into the women s suffrage sphere as a strong supported for women s rights particularly freedom of speech 235 In May 1906 in Kokomo a meeting was called to try to revive the defunct Indiana suffragist movement An Indiana Auxiliary of the National American Woman Suffrage Association was formed and officers were elected The officers included Sarah Davis President Laura Schofield first vice president Anna Dunn Noland second vice president Mrs E M Wood secretary Marion Harvie Barnard treasurer and Jane Pond and Judge Samuel Artman auditors 236 In 1911 a suffrage group was formed after the Indianapolis Franchise Society and the Legislation Council of Indiana Women merged to form the Women s Franchise League of Indiana WFL 237 The WFL was a member of the national suffrage organization the National American Woman Suffrage Association The league was influential in obtaining the vote for women at the state level and formed 1 205 memberships in thirteen districts 238 After the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution was adopted the Women s Franchise League of Indiana organized the League of Women Voters of Indiana 239 High profile crime edit Hoosiers were fascinated with crime and criminals Some historians have argued that the popularity of bandits and their exploits in robbing banks and getting away with murder derived from working class resentment against the excesses of the Gilded Age 240 A group of brothers from Seymour who had served in the Civil War formed the Reno Gang the first outlaw gang in the United States 241 The Reno Gang named for the brothers terrorized Indiana and the region for several years They were responsible for the first train robbery in the United States which occurred near Seymour in 1866 Their actions inspired a host of other outlaw gangs who copied their work beginning several decades of high profile train robberies Pursued by detectives from the Pinkerton Detective Agency most of the gang was captured in 1868 and lynched by vigilantes 241 Other notorious Hoosiers also flourished in the post war years including Belle Gunness an infamous black widow serial killer She killed more than twenty people most of them men between 1881 and her own murder in 1908 242 In response to the Reno Gang and other criminals several white cap groups began operating in the state primarily in the southern counties They began carrying out lynchings against suspected criminals leading the state to attempt to crack down on their practices By the turn of the 20th century they had become so notorious that anti lynching laws were passed and in one incident the governor called out the militia to protect a prisoner When the white caps showed up to lynch him the militia opened fire killing one and wounding eleven 243 Vigilante activity decreased following the incident and remained low until the rise of the Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s Crime stories grabbed the headlines in the 1920s and 1930s After Prohibition took effect in 1920 until its demise in 1933 it opened up a financial bonanza for criminal activity especially underground bootlegging and the smuggling of liquor into Chicago Gary South Bend Fort Wayne Indianapolis Evansville and other thirsty cities Enforcement was haphazard the Anti Saloon League was more of a lobbying agency and never rallied community support for enforcement 244 The KKK called for punishment of bootleggers and set up the Horse Thief Detective Association HTDA to make extra legal raids on speakeasies and gambling joints It seldom cooperated with law enforcement or the state or federal courts Instead gave enforcement a bad name Arthur Gillom a Republican elected state attorney general over Klan opposition in 1924 did not tolerate its extra legal operations Instead He stressed the dangers of citizens relinquishing their constitutional rights and personal freedoms and emphasized the importance of representative government at all levels states rights and the concept of separation of church and state When Rev Shumaker proposed that personal liberty had to be sacrificed in order to save people Gilliom replied that surrendering power and individual freedoms was a slippery slope to centralized government and tyranny 245 John Dillinger a native of Indianapolis began his streak of bank robberies in Indiana and the Midwest during the 1920s He was in prison 1924 to 1933 After a return to crime Dillinger was returned to prison the same year but escaped with the help of his gang His gang was responsible for multiple murders and the theft of over 300 000 Dillinger was killed by the FBI in a shootout in Chicago in 1934 246 Twentieth century editEconomic modernization edit Although industry was rapidly expanding throughout the northern part of the state Indiana remained largely rural at the turn of the 20th century with a growing population of 2 5 million Like much of the rest of the American Midwest Indiana s exports and job providers remained largely agricultural until after World War I Indiana s developing industry backed by inexpensive natural gas from the large Trenton Gas Field an educated population low taxes easy access to transportation and business friendly government led Indiana to grow into one of the leading manufacturing states by the mid 1920s 247 nbsp A restored Monon boxcar at the Linden Railroad Museum in Linden IndianaThe state s central location gave it a dense network of railroads The line most identified with the state was the Monon Line It provided passenger service for students en route to Purdue Indiana U and numerous small colleges painted its cars in school colors and was especially popular on football weekends The Monon was merged into larger lines in 1971 closed its passenger service and lost its identity 248 Entrepreneurs built an elaborate interurban network of light rails to connect rural areas to shopping opportunities in the cities They began operation in 1892 and by 1908 there were 2 300 miles of track in 62 counties The automobile made the lines unprofitable unless the destination was Chicago By 2001 the South Shore was the last one it still operating from South Bend to Chicago 249 250 In 1907 Indiana became the first state to adopt eugenics legislation that allowed the involuntary sterilization of dangerous male criminals and the mentally defectives It was never put in effect and in 1921 Indiana became the first state to rule such legislation unconstitutional when the Indiana Supreme Court acted 251 A revised eugenics law was passed in 1927 and it remained in effect until 1974 252 nbsp Driver Mel Marquette s wrecked McFarlan racing car at the 1912 Indianapolis 500The Indianapolis Motor Speedway complex was built in 1909 inaugurating a new era in history Most Indiana cities within 200 miles of Detroit became part of the giant automobile industry after 1910 The Indianapolis speedway was a venue for auto companies to show off their products 253 The Indianapolis 500 quickly became the standard in auto racing as European and American companies competed to build the fastest automobile and win at the track 254 Industrial and technological industries thrived during this era George Kingston developed an early carburetor in 1902 in 1912 Elwood Haynes received a patent for stainless steel 211 212 Statewide prohibition edit In the first two decades of the twentieth century the Indiana Anti Saloon League IASL formed in 1898 as a state auxiliary of the national Anti Saloon League and the Woman s Christian Temperance Union 232 successfully organized pressure on Indiana politicians especially members of the Republican party to support the dry cause 181 The IASL although not the first organization to take up the dry crusade in Indiana became a key force behind efforts at attaining passage of statewide prohibition in early 1917 and rallied state support for ratification of the Eighteenth Amendment to the U S Constitution in 1919 255 The IASL s success under the leadership of Edward S Shumaker an ordained Methodist minister made it a model for the League s other state organizations 256 Shumaker made clear to politicians he did not care whether they drank but insisted they vote for dry laws or face defeated in the next election by dry voters 257 In 1905 passage of the Moore amendment expanded the state s Nicholson local option law to apply to all liquor license applicants within a local township or city ward 228 The next step was to seek countywide prohibition The IASL appealed to the general public holding large rallies in Indianapolis and elsewhere to support a county option law that would provide a more restrictive ban on alcohol 258 In September 1908 Indiana governor J Frank Hanly a Methodist Republican and teetotaler called for a special legislative session to establish a county option that would allow county voters to prohibit alcohol sales throughout their county 259 260 The state legislature passed the bill with only a narrow margin 260 By November 1909 seventy of Indiana s ninety two counties were dry In 1911 a Democratic legislative majority replaced the county option with the Proctor law a less geographically restrictive local option and the number of dry counties was reduced to twenty six 232 261 Despite the setback prohibition advocates continued to lobby legislators for support In December 1917 several temperance organizations formed the Indiana Dry Federation to fight the politically powerful liquor interests 262 with the IASL joining the group a short time later 263 The Federation and the League vigorously campaigned for statewide prohibition which the Indiana General Assembly adopted in February 1917 259 262 Subsequent legal challenges delayed implementation of statewide prohibition until 1918 when a court ruled in June that Indiana s prohibition law was constitutionally valid 264 On January 14 1919 Indiana became the twenty fifth state to ratify the Eighteenth Amendment which mandated nationwide prohibition 259 265 266 Three days later Nebraska became the thirty sixth state to ratify the amendment providing the two thirds majority of states required to amend the U S Constitution 266 With the beginning of nationwide Prohibition on January 17 1920 after formal ratification of the Eighteenth Amendment the previous day efforts turned to enforcement of the new law Protestant support for Prohibition remained intense in Indiana in the 1920s Shumaker and the IASL lead a statewide grassroots campaign that successfully passed a new prohibition law for the state Sponsored by Indiana representative Frank Wright and known as the Wright bone dry law it was enacted in 1925 The Wright law was part of a national trend toward stricter prohibition legislation and imposed severe penalties for alcohol possession 267 268 The Great Depression and the election of Democratic party candidates in 1932 ended widespread national support for Prohibition Franklin D Roosevelt who included repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment as a major issue of his presidential campaign in 1932 made good on his promise to American voters 269 On December 5 1933 the Twenty first Amendment repealed the Eighteenth Amendment and ended nationwide Prohibition However Indiana s legislature continued to regulate alcohol within the state through allocation of state liquor licenses and prohibition of sales on Sunday 267 Women s organizing and activism edit White middle class Indiana women learned organizational skills through the suffrage and temperance movements By the 1890s they were applying their new skills to the needs of their home communities by organizing women s clubs the combined literary activity with social activism focused on such needs as public health sanitation and good schools Hoosier women worked at both the state and local level to materialize Progressive Era reforms In Lafayette for example the suffragists concentrated in the Lafayette Franchise League while those oriented toward social concerns worked through the Lafayette Charity Organization Society LCOS the Free Kindergarten and Industrial School Association FKISA and the Martha Home 270 Albion Fellows Bacon led statewide and national efforts at housing reform A native of Evansville Bacon worked to pass tenement and housing legislation in Indiana in 1909 1913 and 1917 She also held leadership roles in Indiana Child Welfare Association the Child Welfare Committee a part of the Women s Section of the Indiana State Council of Defense the Indiana Conference of Charities and Corrections and the Juvenile Advisory Commission of Indiana s Probation Department Women were given the right to vote in 1920 when the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution was ratified nbsp Madame C J Walker Indianapolis entrepreneur and philanthropistMiddle class Black women activists were organized through African American Baptist and Methodist churches and under the leadership of Hallie Quinn Brown who formed a statewide umbrella group the Indiana State Federation of Colored Women s Clubs Racism prevented the organization from association with its white counterpart the Indiana State Federation of Women s Clubs 271 White Hoosier suffragist May Wright Sewall spoke at the founding convention in a show of solidarity with Black Hoosier women 271 The Indiana Association of Colored Women s Clubs sponsored 56 clubs in 46 cities in the state with 2000 members by 1933 and a budget of over 20 000 Most members were public school teachers or hairdressers as well as women active and local business in the Black community and in government positions They affiliated with the National Federation of Afro American Women headed by Mrs Booker T Washington and became part of her husband s powerful network of Black activists One of the most prominent members in Indiana was Madame C J Walker of Indianapolis who owned a nationally successful business selling beauty and hair products for Black women Club meetings focused on home making classes research and statistics regarding the status of African Americans in Indiana and nationwide suffrage and anti lynching activism The local clubs operated rescue missions nursery schools and educational programs 272 Floods edit Between March 23 and March 27 1913 Indiana and more than a dozen other states experienced major flooding during the Great Flood of 1913 it was Indiana s worst flood disaster up to that time 273 274 275 The weather system that created the unprecedented flooding arrived in Indiana on Sunday March 23 with a major tornado at Terre Haute 276 note 9 In four days rainfall topped nine inches in southern Indiana more than half of it falling within a twenty four hour period on March 25 277 Heavy rains runoff and rising rivers resulted in extensive flooding in northeast central and southern Indiana 278 note 10 Indiana s flood related deaths were estimated at 100 to 200 279 280 with flood damage estimated at 25 million in 1913 dollars 278 State and local communities handled their own disaster response and relief 281 The American Red Cross still a small organization at that time established a temporary headquarters in Indianapolis and served the six hardest hit Indiana counties Indiana governor Samuel M Ralston appealed to Indiana cities and other states for relief assistance and appointed a trustee to receive relief funds and arrange for distribution of supplies Independent organizations such as the Rotary Club of Indianapolis and others helped with local relief efforts 282 nbsp Indiana World War Memorial PlazaWorld War I edit Hoosiers were divided about entering World War I Before Germany resumed unrestricted submarine warfare and tried to enlist Mexico as a military ally in 1917 most Hoosiers wanted the U S to be neutral in the war Support for Britain came from professions and businessmen Opposition came from churchmen women farmers and Irish Catholics and German American elements They called for neutrality and strongly opposed going to war to rescue the British Empire 283 Influential Hoosiers who opposed involvement in the war included Democratic Senator John W Kern and Vice President Thomas R Marshall 284 Supporters of military preparedness included James Whitcomb Riley and George Ade Most of the opposition dissipated when the United States officially declared war against Germany in April 1917 but some teachers lost their jobs on suspicion of disloyalty 285 and public schools could no longer teach in German 286 note 11 Socialist leader Eugene V Debs from Terre Haute went to federal prison for encouraging young men to evade the draft The Indiana National Guard was federalized during WWI many units were sent to Europe A separate organization the Liberty Guard was formed in 1910 primarily for social purposes members marched in parades and at patriotic events Governor Samuel Ralston had to call out the Liberty Guard in November 1913 to put down a growing workers strike in Indianapolis By 1920 the state decided to formalize this group renaming it the Indiana Civil Defense Force and supplying it with equipment and training 287 In 1941 the unit was named the Indiana Guard Reserve it effectively became a state militia During World War II it was again federalized and members were called up by the federal government Indiana provided 130 670 troops during the war a majority of them were drafted 288 Over 3 000 men died many from influenza and pneumonia 288 To honor the Hoosier veterans of the war the state began construction of the Indiana World War Memorial 289 1920s and the Great Depression edit The war time economy provided a boom to Indiana s industry and agriculture which led to more urbanization throughout the 1920s 290 By 1925 more workers were employed in industry than in agriculture in Indiana Indiana s greatest industries were steel production iron automobiles and railroad cars 291 The Indiana Ku Klux Klan very rapidly in the early 1920s from a cross section of Protestant men The KKK was operated for the benefit of its well paid organizers There was little leadership or coordination among the hundreds of local chapters During the 1925 General Assembly session the state Klan leader Grand Dragon D C Stephenson boasted I am the law in Indiana The Klan demanded an anti Catholic legislative agenda but failed to win any significant legislation Stephenson was convicted for the murder of Madge Oberholtzer in 1925 and sentenced to life in prison After Governor Edward L Jackson whom Stephenson helped elect refused to pardon him Stephenson began to name many of his co conspirators This led the state s making a string of arrests and indictments against political leaders including the governor mayor of Indianapolis the attorney general and many others The crackdown effectively rendered the Klan powerless and a great majority of members quit 292 293 During the 1930s Indiana like the rest of the nation was affected by the Great Depression The economic downturn had a wide ranging negative impact on Indiana Urbanization declined Governor Paul V McNutt s administration struggled to build from scratch a state funded welfare system to help the overwhelmed private charities During his administration spending and taxes were cut drastically in response to the Depression The state government was completely reorganized McNutt also enacted the state s first income tax On several occasions he declared martial law to put an end to worker strikes 294 During the Great Depression unemployment exceeded 25 statewide Southern Indiana was hard hit and unemployment in the coal mining districts reached 50 during the worst years 1931 1933 291 The federal Works Progress Administration WPA began operations in Indiana in July 1935 By October of that year the agency had put 74 708 Hoosiers to work In 1940 there were still 64 700 people working for agency 291 The majority of these workers were employed to improve the state s infrastructure roads bridges flood control projects and water treatment plants Some helped index collections of libraries and artists were employed to create murals for post offices and libraries Nearly every community had a project to work on 291 295 During the 1930s many local businesses collapsed several railroads went bankrupt and numerous small rural banks folded 296 297 Manufacturing came to an abrupt halt or was severely cut back due to the dwindling demand for products The Depression continued to negatively affect Indiana until the buildup for World War II The effects continued to be felt for many years thereafter After 1935 labor unions grew much stronger especially in coal steel and rubber industries 298 1938 1945 edit nbsp Greetings from Indiana large letter postcard c 1939Further information United States home front during World War II The economy began to recover in 1933 but unemployment remained high among youth and older workers until 1940 when the federal government built up supplies and armaments going into World War II 299 Indiana s factories went into overdrive during World War II to support the war effort and mass employment and prosperity returned Indiana manufactured 4 5 percent of total United States military armaments produced during World War II ranking eighth among the 48 states The state produced munitions in many plants such as an army plant near Sellersburg The P 47 fighter plane was manufactured in Evansville at Republic Aviation 300 The steel produced in northern Indiana was used in tanks battleships and submarines Other war related materials were produced throughout the state Indiana s military bases were activated with areas such as Camp Atterbury reaching historical peaks in activity 301 The population was highly supportive of the war efforts 302 The political left supported the war unlike World War I which Socialists opposed The churches showed much less pacifism than in 1914 The Church of God based in Anderson had a strong pacifist element reaching a high point in the late 1930s The Church regarded World War II as a just war because America was attacked Anti Communist sentiment has since kept strong pacifism from developing in the Church of God 303 Likewise the Quakers with a strong base near Richmond generally regarded World War II as a just war and about 90 served although there were some conscientious objectors 304 The Mennonites and Brethren continued their pacifism but the federal government was much less hostile than before The churches helped their young men to both become conscientious objectors and to provide valuable service to the nation Goshen College set up a training program for unpaid Civilian Public Service jobs Although the young women pacifists were not liable to the draft they volunteered for unpaid Civilian Public Service jobs to demonstrate their patriotism many worked in mental hospitals 305 The state sent nearly 400 000 Hoosiers who enlisted or were drafted 306 More than 11 783 Hoosiers died in the conflict and another 17 000 were wounded Hoosiers served in all the major theaters of the war 307 308 Their sacrifice was honored by additions to the World War Memorial in Indianapolis which was not finished until 1965 309 Tens of thousands of women volunteered for war service through agencies such as the Red Cross Representative was Elizabeth Richardson of Mishawaka She served coffee and doughnuts to combat soldiers in England and France from a Red Cross clubmobile She died in a plane crash in 1945 in France 310 Since 1945 editDuring the post World War II boom from 1945 to 1973 Indiana s economy prospered and Indiana was ranked 20th out of 50 states plus Washington D C in the late 1960s for personal income However Indiana s economy began to struggle after the recession of 1969 1970 as the manufacturing sector began to decline Foreign competition corporate mergers automation and new management strategies lead to downsizing mass layoffs diversification and chronic unemployment Cities such as Muncie Anderson Indianapolis Kokomo Gary East Chicago Hammond Michigan City Fort Wayne South Bend Elkhart and Evansville all witnessed population declines and rising unemployment and poverty during the 1970s and 1980s Northwest Indiana was hit especially by the steel crisis of 1974 1983 Black Hoosiers and redlining edit Redlining or the discriminatory and exclusionary housing practice meant to separate affluent white populations from low income racial groups was a form of forced migration and relocation that many Black communities experienced during the twentieth century 311 For example the Indiana Avenue community on the west side of downtown Indianapolis was displaced by the building of Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis IUPUI in the sixties 312 Twenty first century editCentral Indiana was struck by a major flood in 2008 leading to widespread damage and the evacuations of hundreds of thousands of residents It was the costliest disaster in the history of the state with early damage estimates topping 1 billion 313 Since the early 1990s Indiana has diversified its economy away from heavy industry and towards service such as banking insurance healthcare education financial services information technology and high tech manufacturing In 2016 516 000 workers were employed in manufacturing down from 696 000 in 2000 and nearly 750 000 in 1969 but up from 424 000 in 2009 at the depths of the Great Recession Heavy industries such as oil autos and steel still comprise a significant portion of the states GDP but other industries such as electrical goods medical equipment and pharmaceuticals have grown recently as well However Indiana s wage growth has lagged behind other states and Indiana has fallen from 20th in personal income during the 1960s to 39th in 2017 In 2012 Indiana s exports totaled 34 4 billion a record high for the state The rate of export growth in 2012 was faster in Indiana than it was for the nation 314 In 2021 Indiana was the third largest auto producing state in the U S The state also became a hub for advanced manufacturing especially of electrical vehicles and batteries as well as aerospace and defense products Like the rest of the country Indiana was hit hard by the Great Recession of 2008 2009 The state saw high unemployment rates and a drop in manufacturing output during this time Since the recession Indiana has focused on diversifying its economy to reduce reliance on manufacturing 315 See also edit nbsp Indiana portalMain article Historical outline of Indiana Economy of Indiana History for economic history History of the Midwestern United States Indiana Historical Society Indiana State Library and Historical Bureau List of battles fought in Indiana List of governors of Indiana List of National Historic Landmarks in Indiana National Register of Historic Places listings in Indiana List of State Historic Sites in Indiana Indiana Register of Historic Sites and StructuresNotes edit In negotiations at the settlement of Greenville Chief Little Turtle of the Miami Tribe asserted a Miami claim to half of what became present day Ohio all of present day Indiana and eastern portions of present day Illinois including Chicago Photo available at Historical Marker Database Retrieved on May 13 2008 The father of Francois Marie Picote de Belestre Harrison gained national fame as a hero of the Battle of Tippecanoe 1811 and become the ninth U S president 1841 In addition Harrison County was named in his honor See Indiana History Chapter Two Northern Indiana Center for History Archived from the original on May 12 2008 Retrieved October 9 2008 The map shown on Nevins p 209 indicates that no railroad crossed the Mississippi or Ohio Rivers in 1859 Three state owned railroads the Michigan Road the Vincennes Trace and all of the canals in Indiana with the exception of the Wabash and Erie Canal were transferred to creditors Indiana s Constitution of 1816 required a referendum be held every twelve years to approve its continued use According to Forbes Eli Lilly and Company was the 229th largest company in the world in 2007 The Terre Haute tornado killed twenty one people injured 250 and caused estimated damages between 1 and 2 million in 1913 dollars See Indiana Tornadoes causing 10 or more deaths The Tornado Project Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved July 29 2013 Waterways were at or near crest along the Wabash River from Logansport to Attica the White River in the Indianapolis area and the East Fork of the White River near Columbus and Seymour The dam at Saint Mary s reservoir twenty five miles from Fort Wayne broke while high water burst levees at Indianapolis Marion Muncie Lafayette and Lawrenceburg flooding portions of these cities and others along the Ohio White Wabash and Mississinewa rivers See The Great Flood of 1913 100 Years Later The Rivers Silver Jackets 2013 Archived from the original on August 3 2013 Retrieved July 29 2013 and RetroIndy The Great Flood of 1913 Indianapolis Star March 22 2013 Retrieved August 2 2013 See also Williams p 269 and Bell Forgotten Waters p 11 By law all work in the elementary schools was to be done in English Courses in the German language had been authorized by the General Assembly as early as 1869 in any public school in which twenty five parents requested them References edit Justice pp 13 and 16 Madison Hoosiers p 3 Barnhart and Riker pp 19 25 Justice p 12 a b Justice p 56 Allison pp iv v Josephy p 108 Hopewell Culture National Park Services Retrieved May 22 2008 Allison p 9 Allison p vii a b c d Josephy pp 105 109 Indiana Department of Natural Resources Angel Mounds State Park Indiana State Museum Archived from the original on May 11 2008 Retrieved May 17 2008 Justice p 69 Justice p 75 Jennings p 18 Jennings p 126 Dunn p 53 Dunn p 55 Dunn pp 55 58 Jennings p 43 Thompson pp 38 40 Jennings p 238 a b Barnhart and Riker p 52 Josephy pp 131 139 Carter pp 38 55 Allison p 271 Fowler p 5 The Road from Detroit to the Illinois Michigan Pioneer and Historical Collections 10 247 8 Also published as Roads from Detroit to the Illinois Glenn A Black Laboratory of Archeology Archived from the original on March 21 2008 Retrieved March 21 2008 Fowler p 2 Fowler pp 3 6 Allison p 17 Troyer p 153 Allison p 16 Barnhart and Riker pp 71 73 Barnhart and Riker p 72 Fowler p 9 Law pp 21 25 Fowler p 192 Fowler p 236 Fowler p 241 Fowler p 263 Fowler p 276 Fowler p 309 Pocock p 256 Fowler pp 284 285 Barnhart and Riker p 133 Barnhart and Riker p 148 Cyrus Hodgin The Naming of Indiana in Papers of the Wayne County Indiana Historical Society 1 1 1903 3 11 Retrieved July 23 2018 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Nancy Brown Foulds Quebec Act Encyclopedia of Canada Archived from the original on June 8 2011 Retrieved June 14 2008 John Jay s Treaty 1794 95 U S Department of State Retrieved June 14 2008 a b English pp 71 72 English p 208 English p 234 Allison p 49 The Paris Peace Treaty of 1783 Article 2 University of Oklahoma Archived from the original on September 29 2008 Retrieved October 11 2008 Barnhart and Riker p 202 English pp 826 827 Madison and Sandweiss p 40 Barnhart and Riker p 287 Barnhart and Riker pp 283 87 Madison Hoosiers p 27 Dowd pp 113 14 a b Madison Hoosiers p 29 Buley v I p 18 Funk A Sketchbook of Indiana History 1969 p 38 Barnhart and Riker pp 303 07 Allison p 272 Congressional Record 1st U S Congress August 7 1789 pp 50 51 Retrieved September 30 2008 Barnhart and Riker pp 311 13 Law p 57 Benett Pamela J ed March 1999 Indiana Territory PDF The Indiana Historian Indianapolis Indiana Historical Bureau Retrieved July 24 2018 Bigham pp 7 8 Indiana Counties Indiana Wesleyan University Archived from the original on June 21 2008 Retrieved October 10 2008 Cutler and Le Raye pp 110 112 Barnhart and Riker pp 314 323 405 417 Gugin and St Clair eds The Governors of Indiana pp 18 25 28 32 37 and 40 Madison Hoosiers p 35 Bennett ed p 8 Gresham p 25 Dunn p 311 Barnhart and Riker pp 267 70 Barnhart and Riker pp 314 317 and 324 a b Esarey Logan 1915 A History of Indiana W K Stewart Company pp 170 72 a b Barnhart and Riker pp 345 46 and p 345 note 2 Barnhart and Riker pp 347 351 Barnhart and Riker p 356 Dunn p 246 a b Barnhart and Riker pp 369 70 Bigham pp 12 14 Barnhart and Riker pp 334 36 Gresham p 21 Dunn p 258 Barnhart and Riker pp 327 and 361 Rosenburg p 49 Dunn pp 313 14 Funk 1969 pp 9 12 Sugden John 1999 Tecumseh A Life New York Macmillan Publishers pp 260 61 ISBN 0 8050 6121 5 Cleaves p 3 Dunn p 267 Engleman Fred L The Peace of Christmas Eve American Heritage Foundation Archived from the original on July 10 2009 Retrieved May 21 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Allison pp 272 73 a b Dunn p 293 Donovan Weight Begging for an Irremediable Evil Slavery Petitioning and Territorial Advancement in the Indiana Territory 1787 1807 Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 2010 103 3 pp 316 342 Haymond p 181 Funk 1969 p 35 Indiana History Chapter three Indiana Center For History Archived from the original on May 11 2008 Retrieved May 17 2008 Indiana Historical Bureau List of Delegates at first Constitutional Convention Indiana Historical Bureau Archived from the original on May 11 2008 Retrieved May 18 2008 Levering p 583 Henderson p 193 a b Reid Merritt Patricia 2018 A State by State History of Race and Racism in the United States Greenwood pp 284 285 a b Woollen p 163 Paul Finkelman Evading the Ordinance The Persistence of Bondage in Indiana and Illinois Journal of the Early Republic 1989 9 1 pp 21 51 in JSTOR Thornbrough Emma Lou 1993 The Negro in Indiana before 1900 A Study of a Minority Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press pp 23 30 a b Dunn p 295 comprising present day Howard County and portions of surrounding counties Madison James H 2014 Hoosiers A New History of Indiana Indiana UP pp 78 79 ISBN 9780253013101 a b Population Tables United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on January 2 2008 Retrieved August 7 2008 a b Indiana History Chapter Four Indiana Center For History Archived from the original on May 11 2008 Retrieved May 17 2008 Haller Steve Autumn 2008 The Meanings of Hoosier 175 Years and Counting Traces of Indiana and Midwestern History 20 4 5 ISSN 1040 788X Also What is a Hoosier Indiana Historical Bureau Retrieved March 17 2012 Nevins pp 206 227 Indiana Historical Bureau The State House Story Indiana Historical Bureau Archived from the original on May 18 2008 Retrieved May 17 2008 Goodrich pp 189 192 Dunn p 448 Dunn p 415 Dunn pp 324 325 418 Funk 1969 pp 45 47 Woollen pp 35 37 Funk 1969 pp 84 85 Population and Population Centers by State U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on December 12 2001 Retrieved May 21 2008 Dunn p 418 Dunn pp 311 313 Dunn p 423 Rosenberg p 7 Dunn 1892 p 442 a b Black settlement and migration in Indiana s history Indiana Minority Business Magazine January 28 2016 Retrieved May 5 2022 IHB December 15 2020 Being Black in Indiana IHB Retrieved May 5 2022 Moore Wilma L 2015 A Treasure Hunt Black Rural Settlements in Indiana by 1870 PDF Traces Indiana Historical Society Press James Madison Hoosiers a New History of Indiana Blooming Indiana University Press 2014 p 58 60 Early Black Settlements by County Indiana Historical Society Retrieved February 16 2022 Thornbrough The Negro in Indiana p 162 163 Pascoe What Comes Naturally 52 and Madison Hoosiers 143 151 a b Indiana Slavery in the North website Madison Hoosiers 108 109 and Indiana Historical Bureau online exhibit The Colonization Movement http www in gov history 3123 htm Retrieved 2016 12 05 Emma Lou Thornbrough The Negro in Indiana before 1900 A Study of A Minority Bloomington Indiana University Press 1957 p 58 62 a b c Hine Darlene 1981 When the truth is told A history of black women s culture and community in Indiana 1875 1950 National Council of Negro Women Indianapolis Section p 22 Thornbrough The Negro in Indiana before 1900 162 163 Peggy Pascoe What Comes Naturally Miscegenation Law and the Making of Race in America Oxford University Press 2009 p 51 Pascoe What Comes Naturally p 53 and Thornbrough The Negro in Indiana before 1900 119 128 160 167 Article 13 Negroes and Mulattoes December 15 2020 a b Madison Hoosiers 144 145 a b Bibbs Rebecca R April 3 2016 Indiana criminalized blacks settlement The Herald Bulletin Retrieved February 11 2022 Early Black Settlements by County Harrison County Indiana Historical Society Retrieved February 14 2022 Passage of the fugitive slave law in 1850 meant that bounty hunters and slavecatchers could more aggressively pursue runaway slaves which included the authority to enter Indiana and deputize any American citizen even those who opposed slavery to assist them in capturing the runaways See Gresham v 1 p 32 33 Also Hanlon p 43 Esarey pp 624 27 Richard F Nation At Home in the Hoosier Hills Agriculture Politics and Religion in Southern Indiana 1810 1870 2005 excerpt and text search Randy Mills And Their Fruits Shall Remain The World of Indiana Frontier Baptists American Baptist Quarterly 2006 25 2 pp 119 135 Jon Gjerde The Minds of the West Ethnocultural Evolution in the Rural Middle West 1830 1917 1997 Suzanne Thurman Cultural Politics on the Indiana Frontier The American Home Missionary Society and Temperance Reform Indiana Magazine of History 1998 94 4 pp 285 302 a b Emma Lou Thornbrough Indiana in the Civil War Era 1850 1880 1965 pp 29 34 A Brief History Vincennes University Archived from the original on March 12 2008 Retrieved May 21 2008 1 permanent dead link Constitution of Indiana 1816 Article 9 Section 2 permanent dead link Dunn pp 315 317 Goodrich pp 241 242 Gray 1995 p 182 a b c d e Furlong Patrick J 2000 INDIANA In Farmington Gale ed Encyclopedia of the United States in the Nineteenth Century Michigan a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Butler Libraries Blog University Founder Demia Butler amp The University s Abolitionist Feminist Beginnings blogs butler edu Retrieved July 18 2018 Gray 1995 p 87 Marvin R O Connell Edward Sorin 2001 Gray 1995 pp 3 4 Thompson pp 98 100 Gray 1995 p 99 a b Gray 1995 p 94 Shaw Ronald E 2014 Canals For A Nation The Canal Era in the United States 1790 1860 University Press of Kentucky p 137 ISBN 9780813145815 B H Meyer and C E MacGill History of Transportation in the United States before 1860 1917 p 506 9 online James H Madison Hoosiers A New History of Indiana 2014 pp 76 86 Meyer and MacGill History of Transportation in the United States before 1860 1917 p 508 9 Nevins pp 195 196 Nevins pp 209 Lantzer p 15 Madison The Indiana Way p 105 6 Madison p 194 95 a b Madison The Indiana Way p 224 Richard J Jensen The Religious and Occupational Roots of Party Identification Illinois and Indiana in the 1870s Civil War History 1970 16 4 pp 325 343 in Project MUSE Madison Hoosiers 144 Indiana Woman s Suffrage Association 1851 Record book A Public Jollification The 1859 Women s Rights Petition Moment of Indiana History Indiana Public Media Moment of Indiana History Indiana Public Media Retrieved December 5 2016 Mary Birdsall House Register of Historic Places application form PDF Retrieved December 8 2016 Funk 1967 pp 23 24 163 Gray 1995 p 156 a b Funk 1967 p 3 4 Goodrich p 230 236 Thornbrough p 149 a b Seigel Peggy Brase March 1 1990 She Went to War Indiana Women Nurses in the Civil War Indiana Magazine of History ISSN 1942 9711 Center The History November 14 2013 History Center Notes amp Queries Eliza Mother George History Center Notes amp Queries Retrieved December 6 2016 David Eicher The Longest Night A Military History of the Civil War 2002 pp 310 311 Stephen Rockenbach This Just Hope of Ultimate Payment Indiana Magazine of History 2013 109 1 pp 45 60 a b Gray 1995 p 202 Peckham p 76 Peckham p 65 Miller p 48 Findling p 53 Gray 1995 pp 187 188 202 207 Indiana History Chapter Eight Indiana Center For History Archived from the original on February 10 2008 Retrieved May 24 2008 Phillips p 252 Gray 1995 p 378 Eli Lilly amp Company NYSE LLY At A Glance Forbes Archived from the original on April 14 2009 Retrieved May 30 2008 Eli Lilly and Company Milestones in Medical Research lilly com Archived from the original on October 26 2008 Retrieved May 24 2008 Federal Writers Project p 290 History of Gary gary lib in us Archived from the original on January 3 2009 Retrieved May 23 2008 Gray 1995 p 184 Phillips p 38 a b Gray 1995 pp 186 200 a b Kokomo Visitor s Bureau Kokomo Indiana Visitors Bureau Archived from the original on September 25 2008 Retrieved October 15 2008 Gray 1995 p 200 Richard J Jensen The Winning of the Midwest 1880 1896 1971 ch 1 Gray 1995 pp 171 172 Overview of Elections from 1888 Harper s Weekly p 4 Archived from the original on April 12 2013 Retrieved October 11 2008 Charles W Calhoun Minority Victory Gilded Age Politics and the Front Porch Campaign of 1888 2008 Gray 1977 p 118 162 a b c d Loewen James W 2005 Sundown Towns A Hidden Dimension of American Racism New York The New Press ISBN 9781620974346 Campney Brent M S 2019 Hostile Heartland Racism Repression and Resistance in the Midwest Urbana University of Illinois Press ISBN 9780252084300 Reid Merritt Patricia 2019 A State by State History of Race and Racism in the United States Santa Barbara Greenwood ISBN 9781440856006 Mitchell Dawn Lillian Thomas Fox was a journalist and champion for her race The Indianapolis Star Retrieved February 16 2022 Henderson Clayton W Paul Dresser Indiana Historical Society Archived from the original on August 28 2010 Retrieved March 30 2010 a b Phillips p 494 and Madison Phillips p 498 a b c Boomhower Ray E Summer 2012 Fighting For Equality Traces of Indiana and Midwestern History 24 3 2 3 Lantzer p 16 a b c d Phillips p 495 Dunn Indiana and Indianians p 1059 60 Seigel Peggy September 2006 Winning the Vote in Fort Wayne Indiana The Long Cautious Journey in a German American City Indiana Magazine of History 102 3 232 Retrieved October 28 2013 Phillips p 500 a b c Phillips p 496 Madison The Indiana Waypp 106 224 Lantzer p 37 a b Pickrell Martha M 1999 Emma Speaks Out Life and Writings of Emma Molloy 1839 1907 Harper Ida Husted ed 1922 CHAPTER XIII Indiana The History of Woman Suffrage Volume VI Project Gutenberg National American Woman Suffrage Association pp 166 167 Webster Nancy November 3 2016 Suffrage movement took root in Indiana in 1859 chicagotribune com Chicago Post Tribune Retrieved May 12 2016 Bowman Sarah May 7 2016 Are You With Us A Study of the Hoosier Suffrage Movement 1844 1920 Undergraduate Thesis Collection League of Women Voters of Indiana Retrieved December 5 2016 Mark Dugan with Anna Vasconelles The Brilliant Bandit of the Wabash The Life of the Notorious Outlaw Frank Rande 2010 a b Funk pp 104 107 Belle Gunness The Biography Channel Archived from the original on June 10 2011 Retrieved October 13 2008 Campney Brent 2013 Hostile Heartland Racism Repression and Resistance in the Midwest Champaign University of Illinois Press p 191 Thomas R Pegram Hoodwinked The Anti Saloon League and the Ku Klux Klan in 1920s Prohibition Enforcement Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 2008 7 1 pp 89 119 Ann Gilliom Verbeek The League and the Law Arthur L Gillom and the Problem of Due Process in Prohibition Era Indiana Indiana Magazine of History 2011 107 4 pp 289 326 quotes at p 297 online Elliott J Gorn Dillinger s Wild Ride The Year That Made America s Public Enemy Number One 2009 Gray 1995 p 186 Gary W Dolzall and Stephen F Dolzall Monon The Hoosier Line Glendale Calif Interurban Press 1987 Jerry Marlette Trials and Tribulations The Interurban in Indiana Traces of Indiana and Midwestern History 2001 13 3 pp 12 23 Middleton William D 1970 South Shore the last interurban Golden West Books ISBN 9780870950032 Philip R Reilly The Surgical Solution A History of Involuntary Sterilization in the United States 1991 Alexandra Minna Stern We Cannot Make a Silk Purse Out of a Sow s Ear Indiana Magazine of History 2007 103 1 pp 3 38 Wilson Alan October 1 2011 Driven by Desire The Desire Wilson Story Veloce Publishing Ltd p 92 ISBN 9781845843892 History of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Where America Learned To Race Indiana Motor Speedway LLC Archived from the original on May 9 2008 Retrieved May 19 2008 Lantzer p 32 Lantzer p 136 Lantzer p 32 and 136 Lantzer p 55 a b c Madison The Indiana Way p 225 a b Phillips p 101 Lantzer p 67 a b Phillips p 497 Lantzer p 79 Lantzer p 80 84 Phillips p 497 98 a b Lantzer p 86 a b Madison The Indiana Way p 239 Lantzer p 135 Lantzer p 167 Joan E Marshall The Changing Allegiances of Women Volunteers in the Progressive Era Lafayette Indiana 1905 1920 Indiana Magazine of History 2000 96 3 pp 250 285 online a b Thornbrough Indiana Blacks in the Twentieth Century p 23 24 Erlene Stetson Black Feminism in Indiana 1893 1933 Phylon 1983 46 4 pp 292 298 in JSTOR RetroIndy The Great Flood of 1913 Indianapolis Star March 22 2013 Williams Geoff 2013 Washed Away How the Great Flood of 1913 America s Most Widespread Natural Disaster Terrorized a Nation and Changed It Forever New York Pegasus Books p viii ISBN 978 1 60598 404 9 Klein Christopher March 25 2013 The Superstorm That Flooded America 100 Years Ago History Retrieved July 3 2013 Batic Eloise Giacomelli Angela Spring 2013 Wulf s Hall Great Hope in the Midst of the Great Flood Traces of Indiana and Midwestern History 25 2 6 Bell Trudy E Spring 2006 Forgotten Waters Indiana s Great Easter Flood of 1913 Traces of Indiana and Midwestern History 18 2 9 a b Gustin Andrew Flooding in Indiana Not If but When Indiana Geological Survey Retrieved July 3 2013 Bell Trudy E February 18 2013 Our National Calamity The Great Easter 1913 Flood Death Rode Ruthless blog Retrieved July 29 2013 Williams p viii Batic and Giacomelli p 11 Bell Forgotten Waters p 13 Cedric Cummins Indiana public opinion and the World War 1914 1917 1945 Phillips pp 592 605 Phillips pp 595 600 Phillips p 388 Indiana Guard Reserve History Indiana Guard Reserve Archived from the original on October 17 2008 Retrieved October 13 2008 a b Phillips p 610 611 Indiana Historical Bureau Indiana World War II Memorial Indiana Historical Bureau Archived from the original on May 13 2008 Retrieved May 17 2008 Gray 1995 p 201 a b c d Indiana History Chapter Nine Indiana Center for History Archived from the original on April 11 2008 Retrieved May 17 2008 Lutholtz pp 43 83 Leonard J Moore Citizen Klansmen The Ku Klux Klan in Indiana 1921 1928 Univ of North Carolina Press 1997 Branson Ronald Paul V McNutt County History Preservation Society Archived from the original on December 4 2008 Retrieved May 24 2008 Gray 1995 pp 330 335 Keenan Jack The Fight for Survival The Cincinnati amp Lake Erie and the Great Depression Indiana Historical Society Archived from the original PDF on May 12 2008 Retrieved October 19 2012 Star Bank National Association Eastern Indiana PDF Indiana Historical Society Archived from the original PDF on June 24 2008 Retrieved May 21 2008 Gray 1995 p 269 James H Madison Indiana through Tradition and Change A History of the Hoosier State and Its People 1920 1945 1982 pp 370 407 Fact Sheet National Museum of the Air Force Archived from the original on May 22 2008 Retrieved May 17 2008 Gray 1995 p 353 354 Max Parvin Cavnes The Hoosier community at war 1961 Mitchell K Hall A Withdrawal from Peace The Historical Response to War of the Church of God Anderson Indiana Journal of Church and State 1985 27 2 pp 301 314 Thomas D Hamm et al The Decline of Quaker Pacifism in the Twentieth Century Indiana Yearly Meeting of Friends as a Case Study Indiana Magazine of History 2000 96 1 pp 45 71 online Rachel Waltner Goossen Women Against the Good War Conscientious Objection and Gender on the American Home Front 1941 1947 1997 pp 98 111 Indiana History Chapter Ten Indiana Center for History Archived from the original on May 11 2008 Retrieved May 17 2008 United States Navy Indiana Naval Marine amp Coast Guard Casualties National Archives Retrieved May 17 2008 Indiana Army amp Air Force Casualties United States Army National Archives Retrieved May 21 2008 Indiana World War Memorial Indiana Historical Bureau Archived from the original on May 13 2008 Retrieved May 17 2008 James H Madison Burdens of War and Memories of Home An Indiana Woman in World War II Traces of Indiana and Midwestern History 2007 19 4 pp 34 41 Moxley Donovan Fischer Burnell April 28 2020 Historic HOLC Redlining in Indianapolis and the Legacy of Environmental Impacts Journal of Public and Environmental Affairs Indiana University Press 1 1 2 doi 10 14434 jpea v1i1 30321 S2CID 219006659 Mullins Paul R 2010 The Price of Progress IUPUI the Color Line amp Urban Displacement Indianapolis IUPUI Office of External Affairs p 13 Lavoie Phil June 7 2008 Great Flood of 2008 Advance Indiana Magazine Global Positioning State of Indiana s Export Activity 2013 Indiana Business Research Center August 2013 accessed Aug 19 2013 Don Foley Indiana manufacturers embrace 21st century opportunities ReliablePlant December 2022 Bibliography editSurveys edit Boomhower Ray E Jones Darryl photographer 2000 Destination Indiana Travels through Hoosier History Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society ISBN 978 0871951472 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Dunn Jacob Piatt 1919 Indiana and Indianans Vol V I Chicago amp New York The American Historical Society biographies Federal Writers Project 1941 Indiana A Guide to the Hoosier State New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 1 60354 013 1 covers many themes and most localities Funk Arville L 1983 1969 A Sketchbook of Indiana History Rochester Indiana Christian Book Press Gray Ralph D 1980 The Hoosier State Readings in Indiana History Eerdmans 800pp ISBN 9780608205458 2 vols Gray Ralph D 1995 Indiana History A Book of Readings Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 32629 4 abridged version Gugin Linda C and James E St Clair eds 2006 The Governors of Indiana Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society Press and the Indiana Historical Bureau ISBN 0 87195 196 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author has generic name help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Gugin Linda C and James E St Clair eds 2015 Indiana s 200 The People Who Shaped the Hoosier State Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society ISBN 978 0 87195 387 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author has generic name help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Madison James 2014 Hoosiers A New History of Indiana Bloomington and Indianapolis Indiana University Press and the Indiana Historical Society Press ISBN 978 0 253 01308 8 Madison James H 1990 The Indiana Way A State History Midland Book ed Bloomington and Indianapolis Indiana University Press and Indiana Historical Society ISBN 978 0 253 20609 1 Madison James H and Lee Ann Sandweiss 2014 Hoosiers and the American Story Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society Press ISBN 978 0 87195 363 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Peckham Howard Henry 2003 Indiana A History University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 07146 1 excerpt and text search Rudolph L C 1995 Hoosier Faiths A History of Indiana Churches and Religious Groups Bloomington and Indianapolis Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0253328823 Streightoff Frances Doan Indiana A Social and Economic Survey 1916 full text online Taylor Jr Robert M Erroll Wayne Stevens Mary Ann Ponder Paul Brockman 1989 Indiana A New Historical Guide Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society ISBN 0871950499 Native Americans edit Allison Harold 1986 The Tragic Saga of the Indiana Indians Paducah Turner Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 938021 07 0 Carter Harvey Lewis 1987 The Life and Times of Little Turtle First Sagamore of the Wabash Urbana U of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 01318 8 Dowd Gregory Evans 1992 A Spirited Resistance The North American Indian Struggle for Unity 1745 1815 Baltimore Johns Hopkins U P ISBN 978 0 8018 4236 8 Fowler William M 2005 Empires at War New York Walker amp Company ISBN 978 0 8027 1411 4 Jennings Francis 1990 The Ambiguous Iroquois Empire W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 30302 5 Pocock Tom 1998 Battle for Empire The very first world war 1756 63 London Michael O Mara Books Limited ISBN 978 1 84067 324 1 United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service 2006 Looking at Prehistory Indiana s Hoosier National Forest Region 12 000 B C to 1650 Washington Government Printing Office Pre 1900 edit Barnhart John D Riker Dorothy L 1971 Indiana to 1816 The Colonial Period Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society ISBN 978 0871951083 Bigham Darrel E ed 2001 Indiana Territory 1800 2000 A Bicentennial Perspective Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author has generic name help Buley R Carlyle 1951 The Old Northwest Pioneer Period 1815 1840 Vol I and II Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society a Pulitzer Prize winner Carmony Donald Francis Indiana 1816 to 1850 The Pioneer Era 1998 924 pp excerpt and text search Cayton Andrew R L Frontier Indiana 1996 340 pp Cleaves Freeman 1939 Old Tippecanoe William Henry Harrison and His Time New York Scribner s English William Hayden 1896 Conquest of the Country Northwest of the River Ohio 1778 1783 and Life of Gen George Rogers Clark Vol 1 amp 2 Indianapolis Bowen Merrill Etcheson Nicole A Generation at War The Civil War Era in a Northern Community 2011 Putnam County Fuller A James Oliver P Morton and the Politics of the Civil War and Reconstruction Kent State University Press 2017 Funk Arville L 1967 Hoosiers In The Civil War Chicago Adams Press ISBN 978 0 9623292 5 8 Haymond William S 1879 An Illustrated History of the State of Indiana Being a Full and Authentic Civil and Political History of the State from Its First Exploration Down to 1879 Including an Account of the Commercial Agricultural and Educational growth of Indiana With Historical and Descriptive Sketches of the Cities Towns and Villages Embracing Interesting Narratives of Pioneer Life Together with Biographical Sketches and Portraits of the Prominent Men of the Past and Present and a History of Each County Separately S L Marrow amp Co Levering Julia Henderson 1909 Historic Indiana Being Chapters in the Story of the Hoosier State from the Romantic Period of Foreign Exploration and Dominion Through Pioneer Days Stirring War Times and Periods of Peaceful Progress to the Present Time New York G P Putnam s sons Morgan Anita The Responsibilities of a Community at War County and State Government Aid to Hoosier Soldiers Families during the Civil War Indiana Magazine of History 113 1 2017 48 77 online Nevins Allan 1947 Ordeal of the Union A House Dividing 1852 1857 Vol V II New York Charles Scribner s Sons ISBN 978 0 684 10424 9 Onuf Peter S Democracy Empire and the 1816 Constitution Indiana Magazine of History 111 March 2015 pp 5 29 Rosenberg Morton M 1968 The Politics of Pro Slavery Sentimental in Indiana 1816 1861 Muncie Indiana Ball State University Thornbrough Emma 1991 Indiana in the Civil War Era 1850 1880 Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society ISBN 978 0 87195 050 5 Troyer Byron L 1975 Yesterday s Indiana Miami Florida E A Seemann Publishing ISBN 978 0 912458 55 7 Since 1900 edit Barrows Robert G Albion Fellows Bacon Indiana s Municipal Housekeeper 2000 229 pp Gresham Matilda 1919 Life of Walter Quintin Gresham 1832 1895 Chicago Rand McNally and Company Max Parvin Cavnes The Hoosier community at war 1961 encyclopedic coverage of the state in World War II Lutholtz M William 1991 Grand Dragon D C Stephenson and the Ku Klux Klan in Indiana West Lafayette Indiana Purdue University Press ISBN 978 1 55753 046 2 Madison James H Indiana through Tradition and Change A History of the Hoosier State and Its People 1920 1945 1982 excerpt and text search Phillips Clifton J 1968 Indiana in Transition The Emergence of an Industrial Commonwealth 1880 1920 The History of Indiana Vol 4 Indianapolis Indiana Historical Bureau and Indiana Historical Society Local and regional edit Findling John ed 2003 A History of New Albany Indiana New Albany Indiana Indiana University Southeast a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author has generic name help Goodrich De Witt C Tuttle Charles Richard 1875 An Illustrated History of the State of Indiana Unknown R S Peale amp co Law Judge 1858 The Colonial History of Vincennes Vincennes Harvey Mason and Company Reproduced 2006 Miller Harold V 1938 Industrial Development of New Albany Indiana Economic Geography New York Wiley Mohl Raymond A and Neil Betten Steel City Urban and Ethnic Patterns in Gary Indiana 1906 1950 1986 online Moore Powell A The Calumet Region Indiana s Last Frontier 1959 scholarly study of Gary and Lake County Morris Ronald V Yountsville The Rise and Decline of an Indiana Mill Town U of Notre Dame Press 2019 online review Skertic Mark and John J Watkins A Native s Guide to Northwest Indiana 2003 excerpt and text search Taylor Robert M Jr et al Indiana A New Historical Guide 1989 WPA Indiana Writer s Project Indiana A Guide To The Hoosier State American Guide Series 1941 famous WPA Guide to every location strong on history architecture and culture reprinted 1973 online editionPolitics edit Bowen Otis R and DuBois William Jr Doc Memories from a Life in Public Service 2000 232 pp Bowen was Governor 1972 80 Braeman John Albert J Beveridge American Nationalist 1971 Fadely James Philip Thomas Taggart Public Servant Political Boss 1856 1929 1997 267 pp Finkelman Paul Almost a Free State The Indiana Constitution of 1816 and the Problem of Slavery Indiana Magazine of History 111 March 2015 64 95 Gray Ralph D 1977 Gentlemen from Indiana National Party Candidates 1836 1940 Indianapolis Indiana Historical Bureau ISBN 978 1 885323 29 3 Gresham Matilda 1919 Life of Walter Quintin Gresham 1832 1895 New York City Rand McNally amp company Hyneman Charles et al 1979 Voting in Indiana A Century of Persistence and Change Indiana U P ISBN 9780253172839 voting patterns review essay by Paul Kleppner in JSTOR Jensen Richard J The Winning of the Midwest Social and Political Conflict 1888 1896 1971 online Mills Randy K Jonathan Jennings Indiana s First Governor 2005 259 pp Moore Leonard J Citizen Klansmen The Ku Klux Klan in Indiana 1921 1928 1991 online Sievers Harry J Benjamin Harrison Hoosier Warrior 1833 1865 1952 Benjamin Harrison Hoosier Statesmen from the Civil War to the White House 1865 1888 1959 Benjamin Harrison Hoosier President The White House and After 1968 Stampp Kenneth M Indiana Politics during the Civil War 1949 online editionEconomic social and cultural history edit Campney Brent MS This Negro Elephant is Getting to be a Pretty Large Sized Animal White Hostility against Blacks in Indiana and the Historiography of Racist Violence in the Midwest Middle West Review 1 2 2015 63 91 online Divita James J 1989 The Italian Immigrant Experience in Indiana Giffin William W The Irish Peopling Indiana 2006 127 pp Lantzer Jason S 2009 Prohibition is Here to Stay The Reverend Edward S Shumaker and the Dry Crusade in Indiana Notre Dame Indiana University of Notre Dame Press ISBN 978 0 268 03383 5 Reese William J Hoosier Schools Past and Present 1998 excerpt and text search Robinson Kyle Brent Seeking a Hoosier Home Black Migration to Indiana and the Politics of Belonging CONCEPT 34 2010 online Rudolph L C Hoosier Faiths A History of Indiana s Churches and Religious Groups 1995 710 pp Rund Christopher The Indiana Rail Road Company America s New Regional Railroad 2006 254 pp Simons Richard S and Parker Francis H eds Railroads of Indiana 1997 297 pp Taylor Robert M Jr and McBirney Connie A ed Peopling Indiana The Ethnic Experience 1996 703 pp covers every major ethnic group Teaford Jon C Cities of the heartland The rise and fall of the industrial Midwest Indiana University Press 1993 online Thornbrough Emma Lou Segregation in Indiana during the Klan Era of the 1920s Mississippi Valley Historical Review 1961 47 4 pp 594 618 in JSTOR Thornbrough Emma Lou The Negro in Indiana before 1900 A Study of a Minority 1993 Thornbrough Emma Lou Indiana Blacks in the Twentieth Century Indiana U Press 2000 287 pp online Vanausdall Jeanette Pride and Protest The Novel in Indiana 1999 169 pp Whitford Frederick and Martin Andrew G The Grand Old Man of Purdue University and Indiana Agriculture A Biography of William Carroll Latta Purdue U Press 2005 385 pp Witkowski Gregory R ed Hoosier Philanthropy A State History of Giving Indiana UP 2022 online book reviewPrimary sources edit Cutler Jervis and Charles Le Raye 1971 A Topographical Description of the State of Ohio Indiana Territory and Louisiana Arnot Press ISBN 978 0 405 02839 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Reprint of 1812 edition WPA Indiana Writer s Project Indiana A Guide To The Hoosier State American Guide Series 1941 famous WPA Guide to every location strong on history architecture and culture reprinted 1973 online editionHistoriography edit Campney Brent MS This Negro Elephant is Getting to be a Pretty Large Sized Animal White Hostility against Blacks in Indiana and the Historiography of Racist Violence in the Midwest Middle West Review 1 2 2015 63 91 online Gabin Nancy Fallow Yet Fertile The Field of Indiana Women s History Indiana Magazine of History 2000 96 3 pp 213 249 Jensen Richard J et al Local History Today Indiana Historical Society 1980 Price Barton E In Memory of Andrew RL Cayton A Historiographical Essay Indiana Magazine of History 112 4 2016 385 392 online Taylor Robert M ed The State of Indiana History 2000 Papers Presented at the Indiana Historical Society s Grand Opening 2001 excerpt and text search Teaching Indiana History A Roundtable Indiana Magazine of History 2011 107 3 pp 250 261 onlineExternal links editscholarly articles from Indiana Magazine of History 1913 present Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of Indiana amp oldid 1180137874, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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