The Allen County Public Library Provides Guests a Unique Experience
By Visit Fort Wayne
Fort Wayne's diverse and growing downtown offers several activities for visitors with different tastes, but rightfully located in the heart of downtown sits one of the city’s most prized facilities: the Allen County Public Library. Since 1895, the library has “informed, educated, entertained, and culturally enriched” hundreds of thousands of local citizens and visitors with first-rate amenities, while blossoming into one of Indiana’s most visited and popular libraries. Guests can enjoy more than 4,500,000 circulated items, including books, DVDs, CDs, and magazines, while children's activities make the library a destination for everyone. Recent expansion to the library’s main hall has provided more space and comfort to all guests, including the addition of a coffee shop and expanded computer access.
With meetings regularly held across the street at the Grand Wayne Convention Center, the library serves as a popular leisure activity for meeting groups, as attendees especially enjoy researching their family heritage at the Fred J. Reynolds Historical Genealogy Department. The department welcomes over 100,000 visitors a year to dig through its large database of genealogical files, the second largest collection in the United States. The professional and friendly on-site staff provides an enriching experience for any researcher, giving groups and visitors a reason to return on multiple occasions due to the proximity to nearby accommodations, like the FGS 2013 conference hotels, the Hilton Fort Wayne and the Courtyard by Marriot.
After stopping at the Allen County Public Library, visitors take away memories and unique experiences that will be shared for a lifetime. From everyday guests to families, the library has a special place in Fort Wayne’s heart, making it a must-see attraction by all visitors to the Summit City.
Want a sneak peek inside the walls of the Allen County Public library? Visit http://www.acpl.lib.in.us/virtualtour/GreatHall.html
The next Federation of Genealogical Societies Conference for the Nation's Genealogists takes place in Fort Wayne, Indiana from August 21-24, 2013. "Journey through Generations" is the conference theme and it is hosted by the Allen County Public Library and the Allen County Genealogical Society of Indiana. Check back frequently for breaking news, details on lectures, speakers, vendors, special offers, events, research places, hotels/convention center, and information about the Fort Wayne area.
18 December, 2012
12 December, 2012
Forts of Fort Wayne
By John Beatty
Fort Wayne has an important military heritage, and it would be natural for a visitor to assume from its name that there must have once been a frontier fort located here. Actually, the city was the site of five different forts – French, British and American – between 1722 and 1819, and today Historic Fort Wayne, a reproduction of the last of these is the location of re-enactments and special events.
While in town for the Federation of Genealogical Societies Conference, genealogists or their travelling companions may want to visit Historic Fort Wayne to get a glimpse of what life was like in a French frontier outpost in the mid-1700s. Fort Miamies, 1754-1763, is a special event scheduled for the weekend of the conference. The fort will be open 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday, August 24, and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday, August 25. Guided tours will be offered on the hour from noon to 5 p.m. on Saturday and noon until 3 p.m. on Sunday. Admission is by donation. For more information, see the Events calendar at http://www.oldfortwayne.org, or call 260-437-2836.
In the late 17th century, French voyageurs were drawn to northeastern Indiana, attracted by the prospect of trading furs with the local Miami tribe. Fort Wayne rests on a Continental Divide at the confluence of three great waterways – the Maumee, St. Joseph and St. Mary’s rivers. To the east of the divide, water flows easterly and the Maumee River serves as a corridor to Lake Erie and the Great Lakes system. West of the divide, water flows west to the Wabash River just west of Fort Wayne, continues to the Ohio River, the Mississippi and on to the Gulf of Mexico. A strip of land about nine miles wide separates the Maumee from the Little Wabash River. Early travelers arriving by canoe and bateaux had to carry their boats from one water system to the other. Controlling that portage, therefore, meant controlling a great water highway that stretched from Quebec to New Orleans. Chief Little Turtle called it “that glorious gate … through which all the good words of our chiefs had to pass from south to north and from east to west.”
The French commissioned the construction of Fort St. Philippe in 1721 to protect their claim to the portage and to regularize their increasingly lucrative trade in beaver furs with the Miami. That site, located on what is now Van Buren Street along the St. Mary’s River, housed a small garrison of French soldiers at various times in the ensuing years, but the residents were often sick because of the fort’s swampy location. In 1747, after the fort was burned by a rival tribe of Indians, the site was deemed uninhabitable.
Construction of Fort St. Joseph, a second French fort, began in 1750 along the St. Joseph River where St. Joseph Avenue is now. This was near Kekionga, a great Miami village, and the French continued to trade with their Indian neighbors. Ten years later, near the close of the French and Indian War, the French abandoned Fort St. Joseph. It was occupied sporadically afterward by British soldiers, who used it for trading and as a storehouse of military supplies. During the Revolutionary War, Auguste Motin de la Balme, a French colonel allied with the Americans, invaded Kekionga and burned it and the fort to the ground. The victory was short-lived, however, when he and his men were annihilated the next day by a combined force of
Miami braves and traders. It is this second French fort that will be featured in Fort Miamies, 1754-1763 on FGS Conference weekend.
George Washington recognized the strategic importance of the area and during the 1790s sent several military expeditions in an attempt to secure American control of the portage. In 1794 General Anthony Wayne, fresh from his victory at the Battle of Fallen Timbers, constructed what became Fort Wayne. From that time, the region remained under American control. Two more forts were built later, a large hexagonal structure in 1798 under Colonel Thomas Hart and another, smaller fort in 1816 under Major John Whistler. Both of these were located in what is now the downtown area near the intersections of Main and Clay streets. During these years the fort served as a major trading post, where treaties with the Indians were negotiated and annuities distributed through an official Indian agency. While the fort was besieged briefly during the War of 1812, it saw little other military activity and was de-commissioned by the U.S. Army in 1819. Various local families moved into the vacated log structures, and for a time the blockhouse was an Indian school run by the Baptist missionary Isaac McCoy. By 1852, the last remaining blockhouse had fallen into ruin.
In 1976, a group of entrepreneurs inspired by the United States Bicentennial reconstructed a replica of the 1816 fort along the St. Joseph River at a different location from the original. For many years it served as a living history museum, complete with costumed re- enactors. Today, while it is no longer a museum, the fort still serves as a location for special events, like the one taking place August 24-25.
Fort Wayne has an important military heritage, and it would be natural for a visitor to assume from its name that there must have once been a frontier fort located here. Actually, the city was the site of five different forts – French, British and American – between 1722 and 1819, and today Historic Fort Wayne, a reproduction of the last of these is the location of re-enactments and special events.
While in town for the Federation of Genealogical Societies Conference, genealogists or their travelling companions may want to visit Historic Fort Wayne to get a glimpse of what life was like in a French frontier outpost in the mid-1700s. Fort Miamies, 1754-1763, is a special event scheduled for the weekend of the conference. The fort will be open 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday, August 24, and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday, August 25. Guided tours will be offered on the hour from noon to 5 p.m. on Saturday and noon until 3 p.m. on Sunday. Admission is by donation. For more information, see the Events calendar at http://www.oldfortwayne.org, or call 260-437-2836.
In the late 17th century, French voyageurs were drawn to northeastern Indiana, attracted by the prospect of trading furs with the local Miami tribe. Fort Wayne rests on a Continental Divide at the confluence of three great waterways – the Maumee, St. Joseph and St. Mary’s rivers. To the east of the divide, water flows easterly and the Maumee River serves as a corridor to Lake Erie and the Great Lakes system. West of the divide, water flows west to the Wabash River just west of Fort Wayne, continues to the Ohio River, the Mississippi and on to the Gulf of Mexico. A strip of land about nine miles wide separates the Maumee from the Little Wabash River. Early travelers arriving by canoe and bateaux had to carry their boats from one water system to the other. Controlling that portage, therefore, meant controlling a great water highway that stretched from Quebec to New Orleans. Chief Little Turtle called it “that glorious gate … through which all the good words of our chiefs had to pass from south to north and from east to west.”
The French commissioned the construction of Fort St. Philippe in 1721 to protect their claim to the portage and to regularize their increasingly lucrative trade in beaver furs with the Miami. That site, located on what is now Van Buren Street along the St. Mary’s River, housed a small garrison of French soldiers at various times in the ensuing years, but the residents were often sick because of the fort’s swampy location. In 1747, after the fort was burned by a rival tribe of Indians, the site was deemed uninhabitable.
Construction of Fort St. Joseph, a second French fort, began in 1750 along the St. Joseph River where St. Joseph Avenue is now. This was near Kekionga, a great Miami village, and the French continued to trade with their Indian neighbors. Ten years later, near the close of the French and Indian War, the French abandoned Fort St. Joseph. It was occupied sporadically afterward by British soldiers, who used it for trading and as a storehouse of military supplies. During the Revolutionary War, Auguste Motin de la Balme, a French colonel allied with the Americans, invaded Kekionga and burned it and the fort to the ground. The victory was short-lived, however, when he and his men were annihilated the next day by a combined force of
Miami braves and traders. It is this second French fort that will be featured in Fort Miamies, 1754-1763 on FGS Conference weekend.
George Washington recognized the strategic importance of the area and during the 1790s sent several military expeditions in an attempt to secure American control of the portage. In 1794 General Anthony Wayne, fresh from his victory at the Battle of Fallen Timbers, constructed what became Fort Wayne. From that time, the region remained under American control. Two more forts were built later, a large hexagonal structure in 1798 under Colonel Thomas Hart and another, smaller fort in 1816 under Major John Whistler. Both of these were located in what is now the downtown area near the intersections of Main and Clay streets. During these years the fort served as a major trading post, where treaties with the Indians were negotiated and annuities distributed through an official Indian agency. While the fort was besieged briefly during the War of 1812, it saw little other military activity and was de-commissioned by the U.S. Army in 1819. Various local families moved into the vacated log structures, and for a time the blockhouse was an Indian school run by the Baptist missionary Isaac McCoy. By 1852, the last remaining blockhouse had fallen into ruin.
In 1976, a group of entrepreneurs inspired by the United States Bicentennial reconstructed a replica of the 1816 fort along the St. Joseph River at a different location from the original. For many years it served as a living history museum, complete with costumed re- enactors. Today, while it is no longer a museum, the fort still serves as a location for special events, like the one taking place August 24-25.
09 December, 2012
Interested in genealogy? You are invited to FGS 2013!
I am happy to serve as one of the National Co-Chairs of this conference along with my friend and colleague, Dawne Slater-Putt. I live in Minnesota and she is in Indiana. I have researched at the Allen County Public Library many times over the years. It's a city and a library where I always feel welcome and hate to leave. I have researched Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, Arkansas, Kentucky, California, and other localities at the ACPL. I keep a running list of what I need to work on during the next trip there. It's a place with row after row of county histories, city directories, family histories, record abstracts, and much more on open shelves. The microfilm and database offerings are extensive. The Genealogy Center is full of tables for researchers and has many rows of computers.
Anyone with an interest in family history is invited and FGS conferences draw people from all over the U.S. and from other countries. I hope to see you in Fort Wayne next August. Registration will open as it usually does in February, 2013.
In an upcoming post I will give you an overview of the week's activities and provide updates on the conference planning. As you can read earlier on this blog, the hotels are accepting reservations. At the minimum you'll want to be there on Tuesday, August 20th for registration and special activities.and depart after the Farewell Brunch on Sunday, August 25th. Oh, wait, we might want to stay longer to research. What a week it will be!
Labels:
2013 FGS Conference,
Hotels,
Registration
06 December, 2012
Give the Gift of FGS 2013 this Holiday Season
- Do you have a family member you would like to get more involved in family history? The Federation of Genealogical Societies 2013 Conference is for your loved one.
- Do you have a helpful librarian in your local library who is interested in family history and serves the public in that area? Most libraries don't have funds to send their staff to FGS. You (and maybe along with other members of your genealogical society) can give the person a gift of an FGS 2013 Conference registration.
- Does your genealogical society have a deserving volunteer? An FGS 2013 Conference registration makes a great thank you gift!
- Have family members been asking what you would like for a Christmas or Hanukkah gift? A trip to Fort Wayne for the FGS 2013 Conference would make a great addition to your holiday wish list.
- Choose a deserving recipient to give the gift of the FGS 2013 Conference.
- Download the FGS 2013 Holiday Card at http://www.fgs.org/cpage.php?pt=43 (PDF).
- Print the card and fold it.
- Sign and add a personal note to the card.
- Add some money to cover the cost of conference registration, a luncheon, a special event or hotel reservations.
- Put the card and money into an envelope.
- Give to a deserving genealogist, librarian, volunteer, or anyone curious about learning more about family history.
Organize a Society Bus Trip to FGS 2013
By Dawne Slater-Putt
If you are excited about the Federation of Genealogical Societies conference next August, but are not excited about the prospect of driving to Fort Wayne by yourself, encourage your local genealogical society to organize a bus trip!
Many groups organize bus trips to the Allen County Public Library annually, and there are many benefits to doing so for next year’s conference, including:
We hope to see a whole caravan of buses heading into Fort Wayne on August 20th next year!
If you are excited about the Federation of Genealogical Societies conference next August, but are not excited about the prospect of driving to Fort Wayne by yourself, encourage your local genealogical society to organize a bus trip!
Many groups organize bus trips to the Allen County Public Library annually, and there are many benefits to doing so for next year’s conference, including:
- If Fort Wayne is unfamiliar to you, coming by bus means you do not need to pay attention to directions, navigate one-way streets or risk getting lost.
- It may be more economical to come by bus than to pay for gas for your personal automobile. Figure in the savings in wear and tear on your car, too!
- Parking is never a problem when the bus lets you out at the door to the library or hotel.
- It’s fun to attend a conference with friends.
- If this is your first conference, it’s likely someone from your society has attended one before and can give you some pointers.
- You can spend some time during the bus ride finalizing which conference sessions to attend, or perhaps even creating a research plan for the Allen County Public Library’s extended hours.
- When you are exhausted at the end of the conference, you do not have a long drive home ahead of you. Instead, rest or nap on the bus, or look over the materials you have collected at the conference or the copies you made at the library.
We hope to see a whole caravan of buses heading into Fort Wayne on August 20th next year!
04 December, 2012
Automobile Heritage Attractions for FGS 2013
By Dawne Slater-Putt
Are you an automobile enthusiast, or will you be bringing one with you as a travel companion when you come to the 2013 Federation of Genealogical Societies Conference in Fort Wayne? Several must-see automobile museums and attractions are with a half-day’s drive of Fort Wayne.
Very close is the Auburn Cord Deusenberg Museum, about 20 miles north in the town of Auburn, Indiana. Housed in a National Historic Landmark building at 1600 Wayne Street is the most extensive collection of Auburn Cord and Deusenberg automobiles in the world. The museum is open daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. (all times are Eastern Daylight). Tickets are $10 for adults and $6 for students. For more information, visit the website at www.automobilemuseum.org, or call 260-925-1444.
Auto racing fans won’t want to miss the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Hall of Fame Museum five miles northwest of downtown Indianapolis – and about a two-hour drive from Fort Wayne. The museum is on the grounds of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, home to the Indianapolis 500 and the Brickyard 400, at 4790 W. 16th Street, Indianapolis. Museum admission is $5 for adults, $3 for children 6 to 15, and free for children younger than 6. The museum is open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. For information, visit the website at www.indianapolismotorspeedway.com and click on “Museum” from the “Facility” drop-down menu. Or call 317-492-6784.
Kokomo, Indiana, about 90 miles southwest of Fort Wayne, is known as the “City of Firsts.” In 1893, Elwood Haynes hired brothers Elmer and Edgar Apperson to build one of the first gasoline-powered automobiles in the United States. The Haynes-Apperson Company produced automobiles from 1896 to 1905, and the Haynes Automobile Company continued in the auto business from 1905 to 1924. Visitors to the Elwood Hayes Museum in the Haynes Mansion at 1915 S. Webster St. in Kokomo can view artifacts relating to the automobile industry, other products invented by Haynes, and additional Kokomo “firsts.” See a description of the Elwood Haynes Museum on the City of Kokomo website at www.cityofkokomo.org/main.asp?SectionID=50&SubSectionID=113&ArticleID=205&TM=45357.58. For more information, call 765-456-7500.
Also in Kokomo is the Kokomo Automotive Museum at the Ivy Tech Community College Kokomo Event & Conference Center, 1500 N. Reed Road. This museum has more than 100 antique cars on display and is open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday. Admission is $5. For more information, call 765-454-9999 or visit www.kokomoautomotivemuseum.org.
Those who may be flying into Detroit on their way to the conference, or who don’t mind a drive, may want to visit the Henry Ford Museum and Greenfield Village. These attractions are about three hours northeast of Fort Wayne at 20900 Oakwood Boulevard in Dearborn, Michigan. The Henry Ford Museum is open 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily and admission is $17 for adults, $15 for seniors 62+, $12 for children 5 to 12 and free to children younger than 5. For more information, visit the website at www.hfmgv.org.
Are you an automobile enthusiast, or will you be bringing one with you as a travel companion when you come to the 2013 Federation of Genealogical Societies Conference in Fort Wayne? Several must-see automobile museums and attractions are with a half-day’s drive of Fort Wayne.
Very close is the Auburn Cord Deusenberg Museum, about 20 miles north in the town of Auburn, Indiana. Housed in a National Historic Landmark building at 1600 Wayne Street is the most extensive collection of Auburn Cord and Deusenberg automobiles in the world. The museum is open daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. (all times are Eastern Daylight). Tickets are $10 for adults and $6 for students. For more information, visit the website at www.automobilemuseum.org, or call 260-925-1444.
Auto racing fans won’t want to miss the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Hall of Fame Museum five miles northwest of downtown Indianapolis – and about a two-hour drive from Fort Wayne. The museum is on the grounds of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, home to the Indianapolis 500 and the Brickyard 400, at 4790 W. 16th Street, Indianapolis. Museum admission is $5 for adults, $3 for children 6 to 15, and free for children younger than 6. The museum is open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. For information, visit the website at www.indianapolismotorspeedway.com and click on “Museum” from the “Facility” drop-down menu. Or call 317-492-6784.
Kokomo, Indiana, about 90 miles southwest of Fort Wayne, is known as the “City of Firsts.” In 1893, Elwood Haynes hired brothers Elmer and Edgar Apperson to build one of the first gasoline-powered automobiles in the United States. The Haynes-Apperson Company produced automobiles from 1896 to 1905, and the Haynes Automobile Company continued in the auto business from 1905 to 1924. Visitors to the Elwood Hayes Museum in the Haynes Mansion at 1915 S. Webster St. in Kokomo can view artifacts relating to the automobile industry, other products invented by Haynes, and additional Kokomo “firsts.” See a description of the Elwood Haynes Museum on the City of Kokomo website at www.cityofkokomo.org/main.asp?SectionID=50&SubSectionID=113&ArticleID=205&TM=45357.58. For more information, call 765-456-7500.
Also in Kokomo is the Kokomo Automotive Museum at the Ivy Tech Community College Kokomo Event & Conference Center, 1500 N. Reed Road. This museum has more than 100 antique cars on display and is open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday. Admission is $5. For more information, call 765-454-9999 or visit www.kokomoautomotivemuseum.org.
Those who may be flying into Detroit on their way to the conference, or who don’t mind a drive, may want to visit the Henry Ford Museum and Greenfield Village. These attractions are about three hours northeast of Fort Wayne at 20900 Oakwood Boulevard in Dearborn, Michigan. The Henry Ford Museum is open 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily and admission is $17 for adults, $15 for seniors 62+, $12 for children 5 to 12 and free to children younger than 5. For more information, visit the website at www.hfmgv.org.
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