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  2. Geography of Indiana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geography_of_Indiana

    The southern cities of Clarksville, Jeffersonville, and New Albany are part of the Louisville metropolitan area and are in the area called Kentuckiana. Bloomington , the home of Indiana University's main campus, and Columbus , a small industrial city, are located in the northern part of this region called south-central Indiana.

  3. List of municipalities in Indiana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_municipalities_in...

    "Second-class" cities had a population of at least 34,000 and up to 600,000 at time of designation, and have a nine-member city council and an elected clerk. Indianapolis is the only "first-class" city in Indiana under state law, making it subject to a consolidated city-county government known as Unigov. A town is differentiated from a city in ...

  4. Southwestern Indiana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southwestern_Indiana

    Additionally, over half of the area is located within the Wabash Valley seismic zone along with neighboring Southeastern Illinois. Southwestern Indiana has clusters of separate towns of varying sizes and layouts. Vincennes is laid out in the French quadrangular, while Jasper and Princeton are laid out in a standard grid. Evansville is laid out ...

  5. List of metropolitan areas in Indiana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_metropolitan_areas...

    During the same time period, the population of the city of Fort Wayne was almost one-third the size of Indianapolis at close to 264,000 people, with roughly 430,000 in its metropolitan area. [3] The other two cities with populations over 100,000, Evansville and South Bend, both had approximately 269,000 people living in their metropolitan areas.

  6. List of Indianapolis neighborhoods - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Indianapolis...

    [7] [8] Between 1890 and 1900, the city's land area had more than doubled from 12.4 square miles (32 km 2) to 27.21 square miles (70.5 km 2). [ 3 ] The expansion of the city's streetcar and interurban systems at the turn of the 20th century allowed workers to live further from the economic center of Indianapolis, establishing streetcar suburbs ...

  7. Fort Wayne Rivergreenway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Wayne_Rivergreenway

    The Rivergreenway is the backbone of burgeoning Fort Wayne Trails network in Fort Wayne, Indiana and the surrounding area. The Rivergreenway consists of 26-miles [ 1 ] of connected trails through a linear park following alongside or near the City's three rivers: St. Joseph River , St. Marys River , and Maumee River .

  8. Three Indiana cities made it into the list of top 20 emerging ...

    www.aol.com/three-indiana-cities-made-list...

    The first Indiana city on the list is Elkhart-Goshen at number 12. The population of Elkhart-Goshen is 206,890 and the unemployment rate is 4.1%. The median home listing price as of December 2023 ...

  9. Outline of Indiana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outline_of_Indiana

    [1] [2] [3] Indiana is ranked 38th in land area [1] and is the smallest state in the contiguous U.S. west of the Appalachian Mountains. [4] Indiana's capital and largest city is Indianapolis, [5] the second largest of any state capital and largest state capital east of the Mississippi River. [citation needed]