The city of Bloomington and Indiana University were linked from the
start, grew together and still share joys and sorrows 180 years after
their founding.
The many vintage photographs in this pictorial history bring to life
both historical ambiance and transformation in town and gown from the
late 1800s to the present. When Monroe County was organized in southern
Indiana in 1818, hilly, thickly-wooded Bloomington became the county
seat. The first courthouse was a log cabin, and 30 families made up the
town. Six years later, when Bloomington's population had increased to
500, Indiana's first public institution of higher learning opened with
10 students and a single professor. It would grow to become Indiana
University, and start building its present campus in 1884. Bloomington
prospered during these decades through the presence of IU, as many as 40
industries, and its growing production of limestone. The town's Beaux
Arts courthouse building (1907) and IU's wooded central campus form
Bloomington's signature twin landmarks. Around them lie many distinctive
neighborhoods, a now-extensive campus with Big Ten sports arenas, and a
picturesque countryside that draws bicyclists from across the nation.