New Albany, Indiana New Albany, Indiana City of New Albany Flag of New Albany, Indiana Flag Official seal of New Albany, Indiana New Albany / lb ni/ is a town/city in Floyd County, Indiana, United States, situated along the Ohio River opposite Louisville, Kentucky.

The mayor of New Albany is Jeff Gahan, a Democrat; he was re-elected in 2015.

The territory of New Albany was officially granted to the United States after the American Revolutionary War.

The region of New Albany ended up in the possession of Col.

New Albany was established in July 1813 when three brothers from Connecticut Joel, Abner, and Nathaniel Scribner appeared at the Falls of the Ohio and titled the site after the town/city of Albany, New York. They purchased the territory from Col.

New Albany was platted by John Graham on the territory owned by the Scribner brothers.

In 1814 Joel and Mary Scribner assembled their home in New Albany; the Scribner House still stands today.

New Albany was incorporated as a town in 1817 as part of Clark County.

In 1819, three years after Indiana was admitted as a state, New Albany became the seat of government for newly established Floyd County. A courthouse was finally assembled in 1824.

New Albany interval quickly and was the biggest city in Indiana from 1816 until 1860 when overtaken by Indianapolis.

In 1853 the New Albany High School opened, the first enhance high school in the state.

New Albany would also be the first in the state to problematic a merged school precinct a several years later.

Willard, governor of the state of Indiana and a native of New Albany, dedicated the Floyd County Fairgrounds in 1859.

That year, the Indiana State Fair was held in New Albany.

During the Civil War New Albany served as both a supply center for Union troops and as a medical care center for wounded soldiers.

Up to 1,500 wounded soldiers were treated in New Albany amid the war, many non medical buildings were converted into makeshift hospitals.

In 1862, Abraham Lincoln established one of the first seven nationwide cemeteries in New Albany for burying the many war dead.

The Town Clock Church, now the Second Baptist Church, was used as the New Albany stop in the Underground Railroad. The initial steeple was finished by a lighting strike in 1915 and a new replica steeple wasn't instead of until 101 years later in 2016.

New Albany National Cemetery opened in 1862 and inters hundreds of Civil War soldiers During the American Civil War the trade with the South dwindled, as New Albany was boycotted by both sides, by Confederates because it was in a Union state and by the North because it was considered as too friendly to the South.

Indianapolis overtook New Albany as Indiana's biggest city in 1860 and athwart the river Louisville's populace interval much faster, New Albany never regained its initial stature.

The once robust steamboat trade ended by 1870, with the last steamboat assembled in New Albany named, appropriately, the Robert E.

During the second half of the 19th century New Albany experienced an industrialized boom despite the collapse of the steamboat industry.

When the factory relocated in 1893 New Albany lost a large part of its populace and went into economic decline.

New Albany Amphitheatre with the Sherman Minton Bridge in the background In the early 20th century, New Albany became a center of plywood and veneer, and its biggest employer was the New Albany Veneering Company.

By 1920, New Albany was the biggest producer of plywood and veneer in the world with other producers including Indiana Veneer Panel Company and Hoosier Panel Company.

On March 23, 1917, a tornado hit the north side of New Albany, killing 45 persons. Interstate 64 was assembled through New Albany in 1961 and led to the assembly of the Sherman Minton Bridge.

The bridge was titled for US Senator and later Supreme Court Justice Sherman Minton, who was a native of close-by Georgetown and practiced law in New Albany.

Prosser lived in New Albany for much of his life.

In the mid and late 20th century, New Albany became an innovator in using electronic media in education.

New Albany High School, a enhance school, started WNAS-FM in 1949, which is the nation's earliest continuously operating high school airways broadcast.

New Albany, like the other river towns, had no flood walls and no methods of regulating the river.

The Ohio River rose to 60.8 feet at New Albany, leaving most of the town under 10 or more feet of water for nearly three weeks.

After the flood, New Albany was the first town/city in the region to begin assembly on massive flood walls around the city.

New Albany's flood walls would serve as examples for those that would later be constructed around Louisville and Clark County.

New Albany is positioned at 38 18 07 N 85 49 17 W (38.301935, -85.821442). According to the 2010 census, New Albany has a total region of 15.111 square miles (39.14 km2), of which 14.94 square miles (38.69 km2) (or 98.87%) is territory and 0.171 square miles (0.44 km2) (or 1.13%) is water. New Albany's Main Street features a large compilation of late 19th century mansions from the city's heyday as a ship assembly center.

Every October, the downtown region of New Albany hosts the Harvest Homecoming festival, one of the biggest annual affairs in the state.

New Albany-Floyd County Consolidated School Corporation operates enhance schools.

The Children's Academy of New Albany is the enhance preschool program. The middle schools in New Albany are Hazelwood Middle School and Nathaniel Scribner Middle School. New Albany High School is the city's senior high school with the town/city being in its attendance boundary. The Greater Louisville Regional Japanese Saturday School ( Gureta Ruibiru Nihongo Hoshuko), a Japanese weekend supplementary school, is affiliated with IUS's Japan Center. It was established in January 1988 and holds its classes at Hillside Hall; its office is elsewhere in New Albany. Edwin Hubble - astronomer and namesake of Hubble Space Telescope; was a physics and Spanish teacher and basketball coach at New Albany High School amid the 1913-1914 academic year Warren Kerrigan - actor, was born in New Albany La Follette - member of Congress, was born in New Albany After retirement, he practiced law in New Albany and was buried in the city's Holy Trinity Catholic Cemetery.

The I-64 double-decker bridge that crosses the Ohio River between New Albany and Louisville, Kentucky is titled for him.

Prosser School of Technology in New Albany is titled in his honor Four Reno Gang members were lynched in the New Albany Jail by masked vigilantes from Jackson County in 1868 Camille Wright Thompson (born in 1955) - silver medalist in swimming at 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal, graduate of New Albany High School, University of Hawaii List of mayors of New Albany, Indiana New Albany High School Miller, Harold, "Industrial Development of New Albany, Indiana", Economic Geography, January 1938, p.48 Historic New Albany.

"NEW ALBANY TORNADO, 1917".

The Children's Academy of New Albany.

"1111 Pearl Street New Albany, IN 47150" "4811 Grant Line Road New Albany, IN 47150" New Albany High School District (Archive).

" 4201 Grant Line Road, KV-225 New Albany, Indiana 47150 U.S.A." Lipin, Producers, Proletarians, and Politicians: Workers and Party Politics in Evansville and New Albany, Indiana, 1850-87.

Wikimedia Commons has media related to New Albany, Indiana.

Wikivoyage has a travel guide for New Albany.

City of New Albany, Indiana website New Albany

Categories:
Cities in Indiana - New Albany, Indiana - Populated places on the Underground Railroad - County seats in Indiana - Louisville urbane region - Cities in Floyd County, Indiana - Indiana populated places on the Ohio River - 1813 establishments in Indiana Territory - Populated places established in 1813