Originally part of the Pottawatomie Nation, the northern Indiana area
of La Porte, which is French for The Door, was named for the access it
provided settlers who passed westward into the Calumet River valley.
Now known as The Maple City for its many beautiful and colorful trees,
La Porte boasts a rich and varied history. From its beginnings in 1833
when the city's founding fathers donated the land for the public square,
through the 1930s and beyond, La Porte has been central to the area's
business, agricultural, religious, and architectural development. The
diverse and rich history of the La Porte area is captured in this
remarkable collection of over 200 vintage photographs. La Porte, Indiana
and Its Environs depicts the history of the area from the Pioneer Period
through the 1930s. It chronicles the changes and challenges faced as the
log cabins of the Pioneer Days became the elaborate homes of the early
20th century, as businesses evolved to meet the changes of
industrialization, and as one-room school houses were replaced to meet
the needs of the growing community.