Indiana Has A Lost Town Most People Don’t Know About
A lot of Hoosiers think they know Indiana and her history, but many of them don’t realize that they’ve forgotten about a would-have-been sprawling city that used to exist in what’s now a part of Indiana Dunes State Park.

The would-be city was established in 1836 by Jacob Bigelow, William Morse, Jacob Hobart and Leverett Bradley.

However, by October 1839, City West would already be abandoned, one of many victims of the 1837 financial panic.
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Planners expected that the city, once finished, would stretch up to 25 blocks. Unfortunately, this was a pipe dream that ended with the financial crisis.
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Others were eventually disassembled and carted elsewhere for their valuable lumber. What then remained of City West burned to the ground in 1854, leaving only the pier extending into the lake behind.

The only trace of anything remaining at the site of what used to be City West is an old bath house, which was built in the 1930s. Porter County, Indiana, keeps the area quite protected as it's now a part of the beautiful Indiana Dunes State Park.

Nowadays, visitors come and go without any idea that the beach on which they're playing once was destined for something great.

Although long-gone now, the city offers us a chance to reflect about things in our own lives that come and go, much like the wind, and much like City West. It was here, and then it wasn’t- gone just as quickly as it sprang up.
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