|
See also: Joseph county, See also: Indiana, U.S.A., at the See also: head of navigation and on the See also: southern See also: bend (hence the name) of the St Joseph See also: river of Michigan, and (by See also: rail) 86 m
.
E. by S. of See also: Chicago
.
Pop
.
(1900), 35,999, of whom 86o1 were See also: foreign-See also: horn (including 3053 Poles and 2402 Germans); (r9ro, census), 53,684
.
See also: Land See also: area (1906), 6.2 sq. m
.
It is served by the See also: Grand Trunk, the Lake See also: Shore & Michigan Southern, the Michigan Central, the New See also: Jersey Indiana & See also: Illinois, the Chicago, Indiana & Southern, and the Vandalia See also: railways, and by four inter-See also: urban electric lines
.
Among the See also: principal buildings are the city-See also: hall, the county
See also: court-See also: house, the public library, and the Oliver Hotel
.
In Notre See also: Dame, a suburb, are St Mary's See also: College and See also: Academy (See also: Roman Catholic, chartered 1855) for girls, and the university of Notre Dame du See also: Lac (Roman Catholic, first opened in 1842, and chartered in 1844)
.
In 1910 the university had 87 instructors, 1005 students, and a library of 6o,000 volumes
.
It is the headquarters of the See also: order of the See also: Holy See also: Cross, whose sisters have See also: charge of St Mary's College and Academy
.
See also: South Bend ranked See also: fourth among the manufacturing cities of the See also: state in 1905
.
Its See also: industrial establishments include See also: carriage and See also: wagon See also: works (those of the Studebaker Bros
.
Manufacturing See also: Company being the largest in the See also: world), plough and agricultural machine works—the Oliver Chilled Plow Works, founded by See also: James Oliver (1823-1909), being particularly well known—the
See also: wood-working department of the See also: Singer Sewing Machine Company, iron and See also: steel foundries, See also: flour-mills, and paper and pulp mills
.
The See also: water-supply is obtained from 122 artesian See also: wells, with a daily capacity of about 24,000,000 gallons
.
South Bend was the site of an See also: Indian See also: village and of a French trading See also: post
.
It was settled about 1820, laid out about 1831 (when it became the county-seat of St Joseph county), incorporated as a village in 1835, and chartered as a city in 1865
.
|
|
|
[back] SOUTH AUSTRALIA |
[next] SOUTH BETHLEHEM |
There are no comments yet for this article.
Do not copy, download, transfer, or otherwise replicate the site content in whole or in part.
Links to articles and home page are encouraged.