Lena Park, Indiana

Coordinates: 41°11′40″N 86°43′03″W / 41.19444°N 86.71750°W / 41.19444; -86.71750
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Lena Park, Indiana
Lena Park is located in Indiana
Lena Park
Lena Park
Lena Park is located in the United States
Lena Park
Lena Park
Coordinates: 41°11′40″N 86°43′03″W / 41.19444°N 86.71750°W / 41.19444; -86.71750
CountryUnited States
StateIndiana
CountyStarke
TownshipWayne
Elevation712 ft (217 m)
Time zoneUTC-6 (Central (CST))
 • Summer (DST)UTC-5 (CDT)
ZIP code
46366
Area code574
GNIS feature ID446765

Lena Park is a place name in Wayne Township, Starke County, in the U.S. state of Indiana, which refers to a failed real estate development in the area in the early 20th century.

History[edit]

From 1909 to 1911, Lena Park was the site of a fraudulent real estate development which lured people to Indiana farmland about 60 miles from Chicago to sell them lots in what was promised to be a new manufacturing center similar to the success of Gary, Indiana. Though the scheme collapsed, some people did move to the area, to which the name "Lena Park" was still applied.[2] [3][4]

October 1, 1909 advertisement for Lena Park in Chicago Polish-language newspaper Dziennik Chicagoski

The scheme included providing free train rides every weekend from Chicago to prospective buyers, many of whom were recent immigrants from eastern Europe. A train station was built just for the alleged prospective development.[5][6] The promoters claimed that a number of manufacturing companies would be opening in the development soon. Though the farmland was only worth perhaps $80 an acre, buyers were paying at a much higher price for small subdivided lots.[7][8]

Lena Park portions still extant on bottom right portion of 1925 Wayne Township map.

A glass factory did locate in the development, but it moved away to Michigan in July 1911.[9][10] The scheme completely collapsed by September 1911 when a receiver was appointed.[11] In February 1912, the auditor of the county issued an advertisement to sell 1,500 lots in Lena Park for delinquent taxes.[12]

Legacy[edit]

Some people did locate to the area, however, and the name "Lena Park" is occasionally still used to refer to the area. A 1929 newspaper report described it as a "settlement on the C. & O. railroad near North Judson, ten miles southwest of Knox. It was a promotion scheme backed by Chicago interests. The plan fell through and houses in the locality are occupied mostly by Chicago foreigners."[13][14] It appeared on maps for some time; a 1925 Wayne Township map still has "Lena Park" identified on it, but by 1949 a township map merely shows the remaining vestiges of Lena Park as "platted" sections of the township.[15][16]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "US Board on Geographic Names". United States Geological Survey. October 25, 2007. Retrieved 2016-11-06.
  2. ^ "The Great Lena Park Scam of 1909". Orangebean. Retrieved 2022-08-16.
  3. ^ "Lena Park, Indiana". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. Retrieved July 31, 2017.
  4. ^ (31 July 1911). Fake Real Estate Schemes, Lake County Times
  5. ^ Wilkinson, William Clayton Jr. Memories of the Ku Klux Klan in One Indiana Town, Indiana Magazine of History (December 2006)
  6. ^ History of Lena Park, lenapark.net, archived at archive.org
  7. ^ (15 September 1909). New Town Located? Starke County Democrat, p.1 (somewhat skeptical of the promoters' claims)
  8. ^ (21 October 1909). Lena Park Still Booming, Starke County Democrat ("The practical mind says that Lena Park will vanish into thin air and tax sales, in a few years at most...")
  9. ^ (31 July 1911). "Fake Real Estate Schemes", Hammond Lake County Times
  10. ^ (26 September 1912). Note, North Judson News ("L.F. Miller and son of Danville, Ill. have leased the old Lena Park cut glass building and is converting it into a storage warehouse for onions, cabbage, potatoes, and other produce.")
  11. ^ (14 September 1911). H.C. Rogers has been appointed receiver for the Lena Park proposition ..., Starke County Democrat ("How many persons where duped into buying lots it is hard to say, but there are hundreds of them, mostly from Chicago.")
  12. ^ (3 February 1912). Boom Town Thing of Past: Proposed Rival to Gary Falls, Tax Sales Being Ordered, Huntington Herald
  13. ^ (28 March 1929) "Admits Murder But Says He Killed for Another", Logansport Press
  14. ^ (27 September 2003). Second suspect in slaying to be sentenced Oct. 22, South Bend Tribune ("a hunter discovered Lovely's body in Bogus Ditch near Lena Park, southeast of North Judson")
  15. ^ Wayne Township, North Judson, Teallowville, Major McFall (1949)
  16. ^ Bowen's Indiana state atlas (1917) (Lena Park appears on Starke County map)