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GARY , a city of Lake county,See also: Indiana, U.S.A., at the See also: southern end of Lake Michigan, about 25 M
.
S.E. of See also: Chicago, See also: Ill
.
Pop
.
(1910 census) 16,802
.
Gary is served by the Baltimore & See also: Ohio, the Lake See also: Shore & Michigan Southern, the Michigan Central, the Pennsylvania, the See also: Wabash, and (for freight only) the Chicago, Lake Shore & Eastern, and the Indiana Harbor See also: Belt See also: railways, and by several steamship lines plying the See also: Great Lakes
.
There are about 21 sq. m. within the municipal limits, but the city lies chiefly within a See also: tract of about 8000 acres composed at the See also: time of its See also: settlement mainly of See also: sand See also: dunes and swamps intersected from See also: east to west by the See also: Grand Calumet and the Little Calumet See also: rivers, small streams respectively about r and 3 M
.
S. of the lake shore
.
In 1906 the See also: United States See also: Steel Corporation bought this tract to establish on it a great See also: industrial community, as See also: direct See also: water connexion with the Lake See also: Superior ore region was possible, and it was comparatively accessible to West Virginia See also: coal and Michigan See also: limestone, with unusual railroad facilities
.
The Steel Corporation began the actual See also: building of the See also: town in See also: June 1906, the first step being the See also: installation of an elaborate See also: system of sewers, and of mains and conduits, for the distribution of water, See also: gas and See also: electricity
.
The water-supply is taken from the lake at a point 2 M. offshore by means of a tunnel
.
These public
utilities the Steel Corporation controls, and it has built about Soo dwellings, two hotels, a See also: bank, and its own plant
.
A small patch of See also: land, now within the limits of the city, has been from the beginning in the hands of private owners, but the See also: remainder of the lots (except those already sold) are owned by the Steel Corporation, and are sold under certain restrictions intended to prevent real estate See also: speculation, to guarantee See also: bona fide improvement of the See also: property, and to restrict the sale of intoxicating drinks
.
Between the Grand Calumet See also: river (which has been dredged out into a canal) and the lake lies the plant of the Steel Corporation, covering about 1200 acres
.
All the machinery in this great plant is driven by electricity from generators whose See also: motive power is supplied by the combustion of gases from the blast furnaces
.
From the same See also: sources is also supplied the electricity for See also: lighting the city
.
The See also: rail See also: mill is operated by three-phase induction
See also: motors of from 2000 to 6000 See also: horse-power capacity
.
The city was chartered in 1906 and was named in honour of Elbert See also: Henry Gary (b
.
1846), chairman of the
See also: board of See also: directors and chairman of the See also: finance committee of the United States Steel Corporation
.
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