Crawfordsville, Indiana Crawfordsville, Indiana Crawfordsville, Indiana is positioned in Montgomery County, Indiana Crawfordsville, Indiana - Crawfordsville, Indiana Crawfordsville's locale in Montgomery County State Indiana Crawfordsville is a town/city in Union Township, Montgomery County, Indiana, United States.

The town/city is the governmental center of county of Montgomery County. It is home to Wabash College, which was ranked by Forbes as #12 in the United States for undergraduate studies in 2008. As of 2016, Crawfordsville has twelve properties listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Two of the properties are historic districts: Crawfordsville Commercial Historic District, and Elston Grove Historic District.

Two listings are active churches: Bethel AME Church of Crawfordsville, and Saint John's Episcopal Church.

The the rest properties are presently used as a law office (Otto Schlemmer Building), senior apartements and recreation center (Crawfordsville High School), a private residence (Mc - Clelland-Layne House), the command posts of the small-town Daughters of the American Revolution chapter (Col.

In 1813, Williamson Dunn, Henry Ristine, and Major Ambrose Whitlock noted that the site of present-day Crawfordsville was ideal for settlement, surrounded by deciduous forest and potentially arable land, with water provided by a close-by creek, later titled Sugar Creek.

In 1821, William and Jennie Offield had assembled a cabin on a little creek, later to be known as Offield Creek, four miles southwest of the future site of Crawfordsville.

Crawfordsville was titled in honor of Colonel William H.

Cox, one of the first schoolmasters in the area, in 1824: "Crawfordsville is the only town between Terre Haute and Fort Wayne...

In November 1832, Wabash College was established in Crawfordsville as "The Wabash Teachers Seminary and Manual Labor College".

On December 18, 1833, the Crawfordsville Record carried a paid announcement of the opening of this school. Crawfordsville interval in size and amenities, adding such necessities as a bank and fire department.

It attained status as a town/city in 1865, when Indiana granted its charters.

Tuttle, after whom Tuttle Grade School was titled in 1906 and Tuttle Junior High School (now Crawfordsville Middle School) was titled in 1960, became President of Wabash College and served for 30 years.

Joseph Tuttle, together with his administrators, worked to advancement relations in Crawfordsville between "Town and Gown". Several future and past Civil War generals lived in Crawfordsville at different times.

Hawkins spent some of their youth in Crawfordsville.

In 1880, prominent small-town citizen Lew Wallace produced Crawfordsville's most famous literary work, Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ, a historical novel dealing with the beginnings of Christianity in the Mediterranean world.

In addition to Wallace, Crawfordsville lived up to its nickname "The Athens of Indiana" by being the hometown of a number of authors, including Maurice Thompson, Mary Hannah Krout, Caroline Virginia Krout, Susan Wallace, Will H.

Hoosiers have long believed that the first basketball game in Indiana occurred in Crawfordsville YMCA between the squads from Crawfordsville's and Lafayette's YMCAs on March 16, 1894.

Recent research, however, conclusively shows that while Crawfordsville was among the first dozen or so Indiana communities to adopt the sport, it was not the first place basketball was played in Indiana. Nevertheless, Crawfordsville had a vibrant basketball playing culture from early on with squads from the small-town YMCA, Wabash College, Crawfordsville High School, and a company college competing against each other.

Crawfordsville was also the site for one of the earliest intercollegiate basketball games between Wabash and Purdue in 1894 at the city's YMCA.

The beginning of the 20th century marked meaningful steps for Crawfordsville, as Culver Union Hospital and the Carnegie Library were assembled in 1902.

Culver directed as a not-for-profit, municipally-owned facility for 80 years, was then sold to for-profit American Medical International, and in 1984 was relocated from its initial locale near downtown to a new ground north of the city.

Elizabeth Health - Crawfordsville.

In 1911, Crawfordsville High School (motto: Enter to Learn, Go Forth to Serve) was founded, and promptly won the state's first high school basketball title. Crawfordsville's primary employer for much of the century, commercial printer RR Donnelley, began operations in Crawfordsville in 1922.

Nucor Steel, Alcoa CSI, Raybestos Products Company, Pace Dairy Foods, and Random House have all created factories in or near Crawfordsville which provided employment to much of the population.

In 2005, the Crawfordsville District Public Library moved into a new building athwart the street from the city's Carnegie library.

In 2015, Crawfordsville won a Stellar Community grant from Indiana Office of Community & Rural Affairs. An alleged monster was seen here in the late 19th century that became known as the Crawfordsville monster.

Cooksey (R), 1940-1947 (served three terms, two were five year terms and non-consecutive, in office for 14 total years) Crawfordsville is positioned at 40 2 20 N 86 53 48 W (40.038831, -86.896755). According to the 2010 census, Crawfordsville has a total region of 9.15 square miles (23.70 km2), all land. Crawfordsville is positioned in west central Indiana, about an hour west-northwest of Indianapolis, the state's capital and biggest city.

While the Crawfordsville Micropolitan Area is not yet formally a part of the Indianapolis Metropolitan Area, it is considered a part of the wider Indianapolis Consolidated Metropolitan Travel Destination and the Indianapolis marketing area.

There were 6,396 homeholds of which 30.3% had kids under the age of 18 living with them, 40.8% were married couples living together, 13.6% had a female homeholder with no husband present, 5.6% had a male homeholder with no wife present, and 40.0% were non-families.

22.3% of inhabitants were under the age of 18; 13.4% were between the ages of 18 and 24; 24% were from 25 to 44; 23.4% were from 45 to 64; and 16.9% were 65 years of age or older.

There were 6,117 homeholds out of which 29.2% had kids under the age of 18 living with them, 45.0% were married couples living together, 11.2% had a female homeholder with no husband present, and 40.1% were non-families.

In the city, the populace was spread out with 23.3% under the age of 18, 13.4% from 18 to 24, 27.3% from 25 to 44, 19.6% from 45 to 64, and 16.5% who were 65 years of age or older.

Crawfordsville is the home of the world's first thin-slab casting minimill (steel manufacturing plant that recycles scrap steel using an electric arc-furnace).

Nucor Steel broke ground on its first sheet steel foundry and first galvanizing line at its billion-dollar Crawfordsville facility in 1987.

Most of the town/city lies inside the Crawfordsville Community Schools school district, while parts of northern Crawfordsville are in North Montgomery Community School Corporation and very small sections of south Crawfordsville are in South Montgomery Community School Corporation. See also: Crawfordsville (Amtrak station) Currently, Amtrak provides service to Crawfordsville.

Amtrak Train 51, the westbound Cardinal, is scheduled to depart Crawfordsville at 7:28 am on Monday, Thursday, and Saturday; Amtrak Train 851, the westbound Hoosier State, is scheduled to depart Crawfordsville at 7:28 am on Sunday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday.

KCFJ - Crawfordsville Municipal Crawfordsville is served by the Crawfordsville Municipal Airport (KCFJ).

Located four miles south of the city, the airport handles approximately 6,383 operations per year, with 100% general aviation and <1% air taxi.

"Curly Bill" Brocius - Old West outlaw, evidence stating his place of birth as Crawfordsville is tenuous - territory speculator, banker, patriarch of Crawfordsville's pre-eminent family Dave Gerard - cartoonist created "Will-Yum" and "Citizen Smith", also served as Crawfordsville mayor Hanna - Indiana Attorney General (1870 72), U.S.

Minister to Argentina (1885 89), publisher of the Crawfordsville Review (1883 85) John Parker Hawkins - lived in Crawfordsville as a boy, longterm position Army officer, became a Union brigadier general amid the Civil War Lane - United States Senator, Governor of Indiana, and pallbearer for Abraham Lincoln Manson - Union Army brigadier general, Indiana Lieutenant Governor (1885 86), U.S.

Pete Metzelaars - played football and basketball for Wabash College; experienced football player and coach that encompassed stints with the Seattle Seahawks, Buffalo Bills, Carolina Panthers, and Detroit Lions in a sixteen-year longterm position in the National Football League.

Caleb Mills - author of the no-charge school bill of Indiana, State Superintendent of Public Instruction, first professor at Wabash College William Wheeler Thornton - author, State Supreme Court librarian, Indiana Deputy Attorney General, Crawfordsville City Attorney Dick Van Dyke - actor, briefly attended Tuttle Middle School in Crawfordsville Lew Wallace - Union general in the Civil War and author of Ben-Hur; Governor of New Mexico Territory from 1878 to 1881; served as U.S.

James Wilson - politician, United States Representative from Indiana and United States Ambassador to Venezuela a b c d Gronert, Theodore G., Sugar Creek Saga: A History and Development of Montgomery County, Wabash College, 1958.

Crawfordsville News.

Baker and Marvin Carmony: Indiana Place Names, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, Ind., 1975, p.

History of Montgomery County, together with historic notes on the Wabash Valley, gleaned from early authors, old maps and manuscripts, private and official correspondence, and other authentic ...

Historical Marker Database image of plaque on Wabash College ground "Indiana Magazine of History looks for the origins of Hoosier basketball" Montgomery County Historical Society Profiles: the First High School Basketball Champion Bowen, History of Montgomery County, Indiana vol.

This origin lists all of Crawfordsville's mayors up to 1913.

Crawfordsville Review Crawfordsville Journal-Review Obit Indiana Football HOF bio United States Enumeration Bureau.

"Annual Estimates of the Resident Population for Incorporated Places: April 1, 2010 to July 1, 2015".

"SCHOOL DISTRICT REFERENCE MAP (2010 CENSUS): Montgomery County, IN." City of Crawfordsville Crawfordsville District Public Library Crawfordsville Star, Google news archive.

Crawfordsville Review, Google news archive.

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Crawfordsville, Indiana.

Municipalities and communities of Montgomery County, Indiana, United States State of Indiana

Categories:
Cities in Indiana - Micropolitan areas of Indiana - Cities in Montgomery County, Indiana - County seats in Indiana