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State Street Commercial Historic District is a national historic district located at Hammond, Lake County, Indiana.The district encompasses 28 contributing buildings in the central business district of Hammond.
The district encompasses 93 contributing buildings in an exclusively residential section of Hammond. It developed between about 1923 and 1940, and includes notable example of Colonial Revival , Tudor Revival , Classical Revival , Bungalow / American Craftsman , and eclectic styles of residential architecture.
Numerous spent .22 caliber bullets have turned up in the back patio from this era. The house was seized under a writ of judicial forfeiture in 1932 by Judge Henry Clay Cleveland, whose wife Florence Hammond was the granddaughter of George Hammond, city founder and proprietor of its meat-packing operation.
WJOB (1230 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station in Hammond, Indiana.It features a mix of talk and brokered programming with news and high school sports. Some hours are sold to hosts who may advertise their goods and services or seek donations.
The neighborhood's boundaries correspond to Hammond's Planning District I. [1] The neighborhood is traversed by the Indiana Toll Road, which has an exit into the neighborhood at the Indianapolis Boulevard immediately east of the state line. Amtrak passenger trains pass through Hammond/Whiting station in the neighborhood. View across Wolf Lake
The West Lake Corridor project, to be called the Monon Corridor upon opening, [2] [3] is an under-construction commuter rail line in Lake County, Indiana.New South Shore Line services are planned to connect the towns of Munster and Dyer in Indiana with Hammond, Indiana and Chicago, Illinois.
The district encompasses 121 contributing buildings and 2 contributing sites in a predominantly residential section of Hammond. It developed between about 1916 and 1918, with some later additions, and includes notable example of Colonial Revival and Bungalow / American Craftsman styles of residential architecture.
The park was first purchased in 1964 for flood control, but the river was straightened in 1975 forming the oxbow. [1] It was dedicated to George W. Carlson, a 32-year member of the Hammond City Council who had played a key role in the park's formation, [2] on October 7, 1998.