Miller Beach, known for its eclectic charm, became a popular tourist
destination in the early 1900s thanks to its windswept sand dunes and
Lake Michigan shoreline.
An early aviator, Chicagoan Octave Chanute, glided his aircraft over the
dunes almost 10 years before the Wright brothers' flight at Kitty Hawk,
and botanist Henry Chandler Cowles studied plant succession in Miller
Woods, now part of the Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore. Like its
citizens, Miller Beach's architecture is diverse, with historic park
buildings designed by George W. Maher: the Marquette Park Pavilion and
the Gary Bathing Beach Bathhouse, recently renovated as a museum that
honors Chanute and the Tuskegee Airmen. Miller Beach contains other
historic structures: Miller Town Hall dates to 1911, the old railroad
depot houses a restaurant, the 1910 Miller School is home to a community
arts group, and Ayers Realtors remains in its 1926 building. Miller
Beach is now a part of Gary, Indiana, and the draw of the beach remains
a timeless part of its past, present, and future.