%<> ''•> ^^' .5 '^'P. / -n^ ^'O^ 'A V V 'f .■^'' 'f' HYMAN'S HANDIUX^K OF INDIANAPOLIS AN OUTLINE HISTORY AND DESCRIPTION OF THE CAPITAL OP INDIANA. WITH OVER THREE HUNDRED ILLUS ER ATIONS FROM PHO- TOGRAPHS MADE EXPRESSLY FOR THE WORK MAX R. IIVMAN, Editor tNOIANAPOLIA M K. HVMAN COMPANY •909 im THE lIOlJ.KNnKCK I'Kt.KH INDIANAPOUB PREFACE. It has bwn tlie editor's aim in jjrcparing this work to make it the ni(»st (oiiiplete illustrated liistory of the material development of ■Indianai>olis ever ptihlislied. 'riic text gives a ((unpreliensive i)ut jet ndeiiscd liistorv and deseription of llic city; also of every notabh; puMic institution and feature of ospocial interest. The illustrations cover ii longer period and are far more numerous than have ever before heen published on tiiis suhjeet, and th(\v furnish nuiny inter- esting reminders of the earlier history of the city as wi'll as of the present. In the preparation of this volume, all known availahle sources of (relevant information have been consulted, and particular acknowl- edgment of obligations is due to the local histories, publislied years ago, by Col. W. 1\. Iliilloway and Ignatius lirowii, and to the files of Itlie newspapers of this city for their rich stores of material. ' The book is from the Ilollenbeek Press, and the engravings were all made by the leading Indianapolis engravers menlion<'d in this Iwork. from original photographs taken principally by W. II. I'nss Phot«) Company. This edition is now submitted to the public with the hope that it will be found to be useful as well as interesting, and that its sup- port will neecssitate many editions. Max If. IIvM v\. {8) nATEklAL DEVELOPMENT OF INDIANAPOLIS FROM THE EARLIEST PERIOD TO THE PRESENT. IiHli.-ina was oriiiinizt'd as a tt'iiilfn-y .Inly I. 1S(m), ami adinittctl as I slati" l>c(ciuh('r 11, isiCi. In 1S1(» tli(> tt-rritory of Imiiana Iiatl a popn- atioM of L'l.."(2(», and in ISiM), four y«'ars aftor its adiidssion to stati-huod, tlu' iiopulation had rxjiandt'il to 147. ITS. TIii' sottlrrs bad not strayt'd vovy far aw.iy from the Ohio rivi»r, hut tlu'rc wtTo a few settlonionts lion;; \Vhilf\vat«'r. and a few alon^ the Wahash; but most of them Were alonj; the Houthern herder of the state. The state stretehed from Uh' Ohio to the hike, hut the central and northeru sections were an un- known wilderness ^iven over to the Indians. Dense forests eove:ed the central section, wliile to the nortli stretdicd away the trackless prairies. It was not an inviting held for the liardy pioneer. It was a stru;rKle for »'xislen<-e. Tlie soil was riih eiioti^lK l»ut it was the Work of years to ch'ar a farm and ^'cf it ready to produce, an I whctj Its productions wer** rea«ly for the harvest there was no market, and the malaria arisin;; from the decayinjr veu«'tation nuide tlie outlook anything; Itut favoraltle. It was uiuler su<-h circumst.-mces Intllana l>e- Icnnie a ineiniier of the ^I'eat Keileral I'ldon. In