|
|
|
Indiana Getaway & Hotel Guide |
|---|
| HOME | Africa | Asia | Australia | Canada | Caribbean | Europe | Latin America | Mexico |
Travelwithall Indiana destination, getaway, and travel guide is where you can make hotel reservations and find information and tips on travel to Indiana. This hotel guide will help our readers find the perfect lodging accommodations in Indiana, where you can shop and compare rates. Whether you are traveling with your family on a leisure holiday vacation or visiting for corporate business, our Indiana hotels guide will help you find a hotel room that suits your specific needs. Free searchable list of available resorts, hotels, motels, inns, lodges, vacation rentals and other accommodations by city in Indiana. This is where you can find available luxury five star resorts, comfortable four star hotels, clean three star lodges, convenient two star inns, and budget one star motels in IN.
|
Thanks to an early nineteenth-century influx of northward migrants, much of Indiana still displays vestiges of the easygoing South. Among these early settlers was the family of Abraham Lincoln, who set up home near the present village of Santa Claus in 1816 and stayed for fourteen years before moving to Illinois. Unlike the abolitionist Lincolns, many brought slaves to this new territory; Indiana allowed a system of "voluntary servitude" to operate until 1843. At the outbreak of the Civil War, thousands of ex-Southerners rioted against the draft, in part expressing a concern that Indiana was every bit as subservient to the northeast as Deep South slaves were to their masters. However, since the 1870s, industrialization has integrated Indiana into the regional economy. The sports-happy state is at the forefront of the nation in automobile racing and high school basketball. |
|
Despite some beautiful dunes and beaches, the most lasting memories provided by Indiana's fifty-mile lakeshore (by far the shortest of the Great Lake states) are of the grimy steel mills and poverty-stricken neighborhoods of towns like Gary and East Chicago. In northern Indiana, the area in and around Elkhart and Goshen contains one of the nation's largest Amish settlements. The central plains are characterized by small market towns, except for the sprawling capital, Indianapolis, which has brightened up its downtown in recent years to the point that it's not a bad stopover. Hilly southern Indiana, at its most appealing in the fall, is a welcome contrast to the central cornbelt, boasting several quaint towns such as Nashville, Vincennes, Madison and Corydon. Thriving Columbus exhibits a great array of contemporary architecture for such a small city, and former resort town West Baden Springs is restoring the elegant hotel that made it famous. Dozens of explanations have been offered as to why residents of the state are called "Hoosiers"; the most believable is that its use spread from the days of the Ohio Falls Canal construction in the 1820s, when a contractor, Samuel Hoosier, gave employment preference to those living on the Indiana side of the Ohio River.
Indianapolis' chosen designation is the country's unofficial amateur sports capital - "amateur" events like the Pan-American Games and national Olympic trials being worth big money these days. (Major league pro teams include the basketball Pacers and the football Colts.) In recent years, it has constructed several world-class sports stadia (including the retro-styled Conseco Fieldhouse downtown) along with new hotels, a gaggle of top-class museums and a zoo - and its old downtown landmarks have become cultural, shopping and dining complexes. No longer is it (quite) true that nothing happens here except for the glamorous Indianapolis 500 car race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway each May - "the most televised annual event in the world".
Nine interstates - five of them slicing through Indianapolis - provide boring but fast ways of traversing Indiana. Greyhound runs frequent services, particularly on I-65 between Chicago and Louisville and I-70 between the East and St Louis. Indianapolis, Michigan City and South Bend are the major stops on the three different Amtrak routes that cut through the state. Flights from most Midwestern and Eastern cities land at Indianapolis International Airport.
Did you find what you were looking for? | ||||||||||
|
This article was derived fully or in part from the Indiana article from Travelnow.™ Fullfillment services by Hotels.com.™
Other States: [ AK |
AL | AR |
AZ | CA |
CO | CT |
DC | DE |
FL | GA |
HI | ID |
IL | IN |
IA | KS |
KY | LA |
ME | MD |
MA | MI |
MN | MS |
MO ] |