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Sell your home
faster and keep more dollars in your pocket

The "World of Indiana Real Estate" can be a Minefield!
Confused? Anxious? Disillusioned? Frazzled?
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volatile market? Our web site is a library of special reports,
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Info Seekers. Register as an Info Seeker today and have all our
library of information at your fingertips. It is extremely
important to be well informed in home selling before you put the
For Sale sign up.
Read our Special Report on Home Selling
Interesting
Data About Indiana
- Abraham Lincoln moved to Indiana when
he was 7 years old. He lived most of his boyhood life in Spencer County with his
parents Thomas and Nancy.
- Explorers Lewis and Clark set out from
Fort Vincennes on their exploration of the Northwest Territory.
- The movie "Hard Rain" was filmed in
Huntingburg.
- During WWII the P-47 fighter-plane was
manufactured in Evansville at Republic Aviation.
- Marcella Gruelle of Indianapolis
created the Raggedy Ann doll in 1914.
- The first professional baseball game
was played in Fort Wayne on May 4, 1871.
- James Dean, a popular movie star of
the 1950s in such movies as "East of Eden" and "Rebel without a Cause", was born
February 8, 1941, in Marion. He died in an auto crash at age 24.
- David Letterman, host of television's
"Late Show with David Letterman," was born April 12, 1947, in Indianapolis.
- Santa Claus, Indiana receives over one
half million letters and requests at Christmas time.
- Crawfordsville is the home of the only
known working rotary jail in the United States. The jail with its rotating
cellblock was built in 1882 and served as the Montgomery County jail until 1972.
It is now a museum.
- Historic Parke County has 32 covered
bridges and is the Covered Bridge Capital of the world.
- True to its motto, "Cross Roads of
America" Indiana has more miles of Interstate Highway per square mile than any
other state. The Indiana state Motto, can be traced back to the early 1800s. In
the early years river traffic, especially along the Ohio, was a major means of
transportation. The National Road, a major westward route, and the north-south
Michigan Road crossed in Indianapolis. Today more major highways intersect in
Indiana than in any other state.
- Most of the state's rivers flow south
and west, eventually emptying into the Mississippi. However, the Maumee flows
north and east into Lake Erie. Lake Wawasee is the states largest natural lake.
- Indiana's shoreline with Lake Michigan
is only 40 miles long, but Indiana is still considered a Great Lakes State.
- More than 100 species of trees are
native to Indiana. Before the pioneer's arrive more than 80% of Indiana was
covered with forest. Now only 17% of the state is considered forested.
- Deep below the earth in Southern
Indiana is a sea of limestone that is one of the richest deposits of top-quality
limestone found anywhere on earth. New York City's Empire State Building and
Rockefeller Center as well as the Pentagon, the U.S. Treasury, a dozen other
government buildings in Washington D.C. as well as 14 state capitols around the
nation are built from this sturdy, beautiful Indiana limestone.
- Although Indiana means, "Land of the
Indians" there are fewer than 8,000 Native Americans living in the state today.
-The first European known to have
visited Indiana was French Explorer Rene'-Robert Cavalier sierur de La Salle, in
1679. After LaSalle and others explored the Great Lakes region, the land was
claimed for New France, a nation based in Canada.
- In the 1700s the first 3 Non-native
American settlements in Indiana were the 3 French forts of Ouiatenon, Ft. Miami,
and Ft. Vincennes. Although they had few settlers in the region, French presence
in Indiana lasted almost 100 years. After the British won the French and Indian
War, and upon the signing of the Treaty of Paris in 1763, the French surrendered
their claims to the lower Great Lakes region.
- Indiana was part of the huge Northwest
Territory, which included present day Ohio, Indiana, Illinois and Wisconsin,
which were ceded to the United States by the British at the end of the
Revolutionary war.
- Ft. Wayne, Indiana's 2nd Largest city,
had its beginnings in 1794, after the Battle of Fallen Timbers, when General
"Mad Anthony" Wayne built Ft. Wayne on the site of a Miami Indian village.
- Many Mennonite and Amish live on the
farmland of Northeastern Indiana. One of the United States largest Mennonite
congregations is in Bern. According to Amish ordnung (rules) they are forbidden
to drive cars, use electricity, or go to public places of entertainment.
- At one time Studebaker Company of
South Bend was the nation's largest producer of horse-drawn wagons. It later
developed into a multimillion-dollar automobile
manufacturer.
- In Fort Wayne, Syvanus F. Bower
designed the world's first practical gasoline pump.
- Indianapolis grocer Gilbert Van Camp
discovered his customers enjoyed an old family recipe for pork and beans in
tomato sauce. He opened up a canning company and Van Camp's Pork and Beans
became an American staple.
Google News - Indiana
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Indiana State Trivia
Capital City:
Indianapolis
Area: 36,420 sq.mi.
Land: 35,870 sq.mi.
Water: 550 sq.mi.
Area Codes: 219-260-317-574-
765-812
Bird: Cardinal
Flower: Peony
Highest Point: 1257 feet
Lowest Point: 320 feet below Sea level
Soil: Indiana-Miami
Tree: Yellow-poplar
Largest Cities: Indianapolis, Fort Wayne, Evansville,
South Bend, Gary, Hammond, Bloomington, Muncie, Anderson, Terre
Haute
Nickname: Hoosier State
Population: 6,080,485
Economy:
Agriculture: Corn, soybeans, hogs, cattle, dairy products,
eggs
Industry: Steel, electric equipment, transportation
equipment, chemical products, petroleum and coal products,
machinery
Indiana State Flag
The flags dimensions
shall be three feet fly by two feet hoist; or five feet
fly by three feet hoist; or any size proportionate to
either of those dimensions. The field of the flag shall
be blue with nineteen stars and a flaming torch in gold
or buff. Thirteen stars shall be arranged in an outer
circle, representing the original thirteen states; five
stars shall be arranged in a half circle below the torch
and inside the outer circle of stars, representing the
states admitted prior to Indiana; and the nineteenth
star, appreciably larger than the others and
representing Indiana shall be placed above the flame of
the torch. The outer circle of stars shall be so
arranged that one star shall appear directly in the
middle at the top of the circle, and the word "Indiana"
shall be placed in a half circle over and above the star
representing Indiana and midway between it and the star
in the center above it. Rays shall be shown radiating
from the torch to the three stars on each side of the
star in the upper center of the circle. Flag adopted
1917
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