Archive for the ‘Area Attractions’ Category

Hathaway Preserve at Ross Run

Hathaway Preserve at Ross Run is a spectacular gorge with waterfalls, reef fossils, exposed bedrock and vertical cliffs as high as 75 feet. On this spectacular terrain are mature oaks, some with trunks over four feet in diameter, a diverse understory beneath the oaks and a spectacular display of spring wildflowers. Ross Run Gorge is an impressive natural feature that has uncommonly high value, geologically, ecologically, and aesthetically.

http://www.acreslandtrust.org/templates/System/details.asp?id=44551&PID=701981

Guide

Directions:
From Wabash, take US 24 east to 300E and turn right (south) toward Lagro. Travel through Lagro as 300E turns into SR 524. Follow SR 524 for 1.5 miles to Baumbauer Rd. and turn right (west). Preserve is on the right in 2.2 miles

Kokiwanee Nature Preserve

Kokiwanee features bluffs along the Salamonie River and streams tumbling down waterfalls to flow into the river. This is a place of many species of trees; wildflowers, including snow trillium; and many birds from wood ducks on the river to great blue herons wading where the water is shallow, and many woodland species.

http://www.acreslandtrust.org/templates/System/details.asp?id=44551&PID=635732

http://www.acreslandtrust.org/templates/System/details.asp?id=44551&PID=632172

http://www.acreslandtrust.org/clientimages/44551/preserve-field-guides/acres_wabash_kokiwanee.pdf

Directions:
From Wabash, take US 24 east to 300E and turn right (south) towards Lagro. Travel through Lagro as 300E turns into SR 524. When SR 524 curves to the east, continue east on Hanging Rock Rd., leaving SR 524. Travel 1.2 miles and turn right (south) on 500E. Continue on 500E for 1.5 miles as it turns into 50S. Preserve is on the right just before 600E.

Salamonie Reservoir (Salamonie Lake)

http://www.visithuntington.org/salamonie.htm

http://www.in.gov/dnr/parklake/2952.htm

Salamonie Video

http://www.lrl.usace.army.mil/sal/

Salamonie River State Park

http://www.stateparks.com/salamonie_river.html

The Underground Railroad

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Hanging Rock

http://www.acreslandtrust.org/templates/System/details.asp?id=44551&PID=701991

Source for info below

The Legend of Hanging Rock

Silurian seas covered the area more than 400 million years ago and marine reefs were formed in the Midwest. Reef remnants, known as Klintar, can be seen as hills and mounds in the valley between Huntington County and Miami County. More spectacular are the exposed Silurian limestone formations of “Hanging Rock” near Lagro, and the “Big Four” cut at Wabash, both in Wabash County.

“Hanging Rock” is a huge out-cropping of limestone, one hundred feet in height, overhanging the Wabash River near the mouth of the Salamonie River near Lagro. The top is somewhat rounded by erosion, and part of one side has been torn away by the river. At the summit is a flat a space some twenty feet square which commands a broad outlook over the river and valley below. Many young people now climb the same pathway to the top which Miami Indian braves and maidens climbed many years before them.
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The “Hospital”

http://www.wabash.lib.in.us/hospital.html

The Hospital-Secret Cave

This story involves a cave located along the Wabash River near the town of Lagro. The “Hospital” is mentioned in a report by Major John Frances Hamtramck in 1790, ascertaining the distances and conditions of navigation of the Wabash from Vincennes to Ft. Wayne. Early voyageurs sometimes called a place of refuge or shelter a hospital. It has been said that the cave is the Hospital of Hamtramck’s report. A wounded Indian crawled near the cave, but due to the seriousness of his injuries, he became unconscious. An Indian maiden found him there and dragged him into the cave. She cared for him until he could care for himself and then she left. The wounded Indian had fallen deeply in love with the girl, and each day he ventured forth in search of food and the maiden. Sadly, though, he finally died, without having discovered the identity of the one who came to his aid in time of need.

Above information taken from: “Miami Indian Stories” by Chief Clarence Godfroy.

Gene Stratton-Porter

http://www.wabash.lib.in.us/porter.html

Geneva Grace Stratton was born on August 17, 1863, on “Hopewell” farm near Wabash, Indiana.

“Hopewell”, near Wabash, Indiana, was the Stratton family farm for almost thirty years. The 240 rolling acres was heavily forested with several flowing springs and little streams crossing it in three directions. In 1872, Mark Stratton donated a corner of his land for the Hopewell Church and Cemetery which he helped to build. He was an ordained minister and the pastor of the beautiful, little red brick church for many years. The Hopewell Cemetery now contains the graves of Mark and Mary Stratton along with those of their children, Leander, Ada, Samira, and Louisa.

Gene was happy and carefree at “Hopewell.” Her parents were avid Nature enthusiasts and always taught Gene to wonder at and to appreciate the beauty of the great outdoors. From her mother Gene learned to love flowers and all growing things. She became so friendly with the birds that she could actually touch them while they brooded. When her mother became a semi-invalid following an attack of typhoid fever, Gene would go out to the fields with her brothers and play happily in the woods while they worked. At that time there were Indians living in the area with whom she became good friends. She was especially fond of the family of Chief Wacacoonah of the Meshingmesas. Gene earned her first money from selling the arrowheads and goose quills given to her by the Indians.

The Kerr Lock and the Wabash and Erie Canal

For pictures and the source of this information, see Terry Pepper’s research here: http://www.terrypepper.com/w&e/lagro.htm

Lagro took its name from the Miami Indian Chief Le Gros. In 1828, a two room brick house was constructed for him at this site. He occupied the home until his death in 1831.
Miami Erie & Wabash Canal Country. Harry G. Black. 1991. page 49.

On the site of this old Indian town, Gen. Tipton had laid out a town which he called La Gro. But at what time this town was laid out I have never been able to ascertain. The original plat, however was recorded in Book A, page 55, of the records of Huntington county, but at what date the record fails to state, though the instrument recorded this bears the date May 18, 1835, and the one on the page following, June 10, 1835, so that we can approach the date of recording the Plat. The first lots sold in the town, numbered 174, 175 and 176, to Jacob Chappel, the deed for which was acknowledged September 18, 1834, so that we can conclude the town was laid out at least as early as September, 1834.

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Kerr Lock

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coffeemessiah2 video of the Kerr Lock.

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