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Dyer (/ ˈ d aɪ ər / DY-ər) is a town in St. John Township, Lake County, Indiana, United States. The population was 16,517 at the 2020 census. The population was 16,517 at the 2020 census. It is a southeastern suburb of Chicago .
Meyer's Castle or the Joseph Ernest Meyer House is a former private residence in the town of Dyer, Indiana in the United States. The castle was constructed from 1927 to 1931 in the Jacobethan style by architect Cosbey Bernard, Sr. The house was built for Joseph Ernest Meyer as his private residence, a herbologist and one of Hammond's first ...
The seminary was founded on April 21, 1981, when a group of Christian Reformed ministers and laymen met at the Hilton Hotel at O'Hare International Airport in Chicago. At this meeting, it was decided to establish a seminary society and board of trustees, to purchase the Harmony Youth Home in Orange City, Iowa, to serve as the seminary's campus, and to name the seminary Mid-America Reformed ...
Joseph Ernest Meyer (September 5, 1878 – March 9, 1950) was a botanist, writer, illustrator, publisher, and supplier of pharmaceutical-grade herbs and roots to the drug trade who became a prominent citizen and eventually a millionaire in Northwest Indiana.
Dyer station is an Amtrak station in Dyer, Indiana, served by the Cardinal route.. Dyer Station was merely a little shelter with seats before a renovation in 2014, which demolished the "Amshack" shelter built in 1986 and constructed a larger station house which was accessible, and repaved the platform and parking lot. [2]
Dyer Ball (1796–1866), American missionary and doctor in China Dyer Lum (1839–1893), American anarchist labor activist and poet Dyer Pearl (1857–1930), American businessman
Lake Central High School (LCHS) is a high school in St. John, Indiana, for students in grades nine through twelve.Its students come from St. John Township which includes the towns of St. John and Dyer (generally north of 101st Ave), almost the entire town of Schererville, [3] unincorporated areas with Crown Point postal addresses (north of 101st Ave), [citation needed] and the southeastern ...
Aaron Hart was an early resident of the Schererville-Dyer area. [3] He owned about 20,000 acres of land. Most of the land was useless marshland in the low areas between Lake Michigan's old Glenwood and Calumet Shorelines. [3]