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Indianapolis Travel
INDIANAPOLIS began life in 1821, when a tract of barely
inhabited marshes was designated the state capital. Its location in the
middle of Indiana's rich farmland bore terrific commercial advantages,
but the absence of a navigable river prohibited the transportation of
bulky materials such as coal and iron to sustain heavy industry. Though
home to more than sixty car manufacturers by 1910, the city never
seriously threatened Detroit's supremacy. Nevertheless, it has become
one of the biggest cities in the world not accessible by water,
attracting food, paper and pharmaceutical industries, including the
giant Eli Lilly Corporation.
Today the city has shaken off such nicknames as Naptown, India-no-place
and Brickhouse in the Cornfield in favor of its chosen designation as
the country's unofficial amateur sports capital - "amateur" events like
the Pan-American Games and national Olympic trials being worth big money
these days. (Major league pro teams include the basketball Pacers and
the football Colts.) In recent years, it has constructed several
world-class sports stadia (including the retro-styled Conseco Fieldhouse
downtown) along with new hotels, a gaggle of top-class museums and a zoo
- and its old downtown landmarks have become cultural, shopping and
dining complexes. No longer is it (quite) true that nothing happens here
except for the glamorous Indianapolis 500 car race each May - "the most
televised annual event in the world". |