(Fort Wayne Monthly “Along the Heritage Trail with Tom Castaldi” – Jun
2016 No 137)
2016 Indiana Bicentennial Commission Legacy Endorsed
Project
Laying out the Town after Statehood in 1816
You can say that Fort
Wayne is here because of its rivers. The Miami
War Chief Little Turtle recalled that it was from here the words of their
fathers went forth in all the directions.
Anthony Wayne placing his fortress near water was a strategic
decision. Positioned to protect and
defend three rivers was perhaps of primary importance. Just as vital was another popular waterway
of sorts that connected Lake Erie , between the
Maumee River and across the “natural” track or
“Carrying Place ”
with the Wabash River Valley
to the west and the Mississippi River system.
John Barr and John McCorkle, combined their resources in
1823 to buy the original tract of one hundred and ten acres. Barr was a land
speculator from Baltimore , Maryland , who was heavily involved in
supplying trade goods to the Ohio
and Pennsylvania
frontier. McCorkle was a Westerner
interested in the business of the Indian trade. Once the land was purchased,
the two partners had their new property surveyed and laid out to begin offering
lots for sale to the public.
Originally, the partners paid twenty-six dollars an
acre which was a very high price for the time. Most frontier lands were sold
for the minimum of a dollar and twenty-five cents per acre. As always it had to
do with location, location, location. Much had to do with the presence of
Indians, the Indian Agency, and the very lucrative fur trade. In those years,
the Fort Wayne
fur trade was greater than the combined trade of both Detroit and Chicago and the Indian Agency made annual
payments of tens of thousands of dollars to over three thousand tribe members
who held the lands of northern Indiana .
The original layout of the town of Fort Wayne was based on the “natural” track
of the first street, Columbia ,
which was along a line that ran toward the west from the old fort but not along
a true east-west line. When they first
laid out their streets they were based on the off-center line of the original
Columbia Street which, not long after became known as the “Landing.” Along here
is where scores of warehouses, boat docks, turnaround basins, custom houses,
inns and taverns clustered to serve Wabash Erie Canal travelers and freight
which created unprecedented economic development.
The area that is now in the heart of Fort Wayne ’s downtown was bounded on the
north by Superior Street ,
on the east by Barr Street ,
on the south by Washington
Boulevard , and on the west by the alley between
Harrison and Calhoun streets. Extending to Wayne on the South it is bisected by Clinton crossed by Wayne , Berry ,
Main and Columbia .
A map of the early Fort Wayne plat in the History Center ’s
collection contains interesting information. First among the map’s “Notes” which
correspond to a block on the map bound by Main, Clinton, Berry and Calhoun
streets is designated, “Public Ground for County Purposes.” It had been donated
by McCorkle and Barr and subsequently became the site of each of four county
court houses. The partners donated
several additional lots to the, “County
of Allen .” Separately, a
lot was set aside designated as “Burial Grounds” in the northwest corner of the
plat and immediately to the east still another marked “School lot.”
South of town, Samuel Lewis became the first settler
to lay out his addition according to the actual points of the compass. In the process he gave his name to the true
east-west street
which sets it all straight. Lewis was a
relative of Meriwether Lewis, of “Lewis and Clark” fame; and his wife,
Katherine Wallace was the aunt of the author of the novel Ben Hur,
General Lew Wallace who stayed at the couple’s rose-covered log home on several
occasions. Samuel Lewis came to Fort Wayne in 1827 as the
appointee of President John Quincy Adams to be the sub-agent for Indian affairs
in the district. Lewis stayed in Fort Wayne the remainder
of his life.
When those first developers laid out the streets of Fort Wayne , based on the
off-center line of the original Columbia
Street it made sense that it ran west from the old
fort. Today, main thoroughfares move
traffic in all directions echoing the observations made in 1795 by the Miami
War Chief Little Turtle when he said this place was, “that glorious
gate…through which all the good words of our chiefs had to pass from north to
south and from east to west.”
Allen County Historian Tom
Castaldi is author of the Wabash & Erie Canal Notebook series; hosts “On the Heritage
Trail,” which is broadcast. Mondays on WBOI, 89.1 FM; and “Historia Nostra”
heard on Redeemer Radio 106.3 FM. Enjoy his previously published columns on the
History Center ’s blog, “Our Stories,” at history
centerfw.blogspot.com.
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