English Lake, Indiana

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English Lake, Indiana
CountryUnited States
StateIndiana
CountyStarke
Elevation669 ft (204 m)
Time zoneUTC-6 (Central (CST))
 • Summer (DST)UTC-5 (CDT)
ZIP code
46366
Area code574
FIPS code18-18149
GNIS feature ID434205[1]
[2]

English Lake is an unincorporated community in Starke County, Indiana, United States, located along the Kankakee River. It is a small community of only a few hundred individuals. It is named for English Lake, which once existed at the junction of the Yellow River with the Kankakee. The headquarters for the Kankakee Fish and Wildlife Area is located at English Lake.

English Lake was called Lake Divine or Outrelaise by the french colonizers of New France. It was named in honor of the governor of New France's wife and her friend who where extremely beautiful, known as "les divines". A french canadian man Gotti who later became American produced a map of English Lake. The map detailed islands within english lake which are still visible by satellite imagery. The island names are moon, blue, red, and other colors comprising the eastern star of freemasonry or the baphomet. This heritage is largely unknown to most inhabitants of english lake.

History

The area where the community would develop was first recorded in an 1834 survey by Silvester Sibley. He listed the area as sandy, rolling hills of oak, hickory, aspen, gum, sassafras, whatleberry, elm, ash, maple, willow, and birch. It also identified that it was in the "great marsh" of the Kankakee[3] Meanwhile an 1835 survey by jeremiah Smith, likened the area to Hades of Greek Mythology. The survey of 1903, identified the lake as the largest lake in the state of Indiana.[3]

The town of English Lake began as a railroad station in 1860 for the Chicago, Cincinnati and St. Louis Railroad, also known as the Panhandle Route.[3] By 1864, the wildlife of the "Great Marsh" was bringing in hunters from around the country. The English Lake Gun Club was founded in 1864, adjacent to the railroad tracks. In 1897, the Brighton Rod and Gun Club of Brighton Park, Chicago established a club house along the Panhandle Route. In 1900, the Railroad Club opened a club house in English Lake for the Pennsylvania Railroad workers of Logansport.[3]

Geography

English Lake is located at 41°15′57″N 86°49′25″W / 41.265874°N 86.823630°W / 41.265874; -86.823630 (41.265874, -86.823630).[1] It lies 669 feet (204 m) above sea level.

English Lake is named for the 'Lake' that once existed on the Kankakee River. It was the widest part of the river. During the spring floods, it could become 7 miles long and 1 to 2 miles wide.[3] (11 km by 2 to 3 km).

Dredging

Beginning in 1871, there were efforts to drain the "Great Marsh" to create farmland. The Kankakee valley Daring Company failed that year for lack of funds.[3] In 1887 and 1897 additional attempts to create a drainage program failed due to local protests over the assessments to be used to pay for the project.[3] The Craigmile Ditch, a lateral to the Kankakee, was stopped in 1898 when it reached the railway crossing.[3] It was not until 1902, when the courts ruled that the Kankakee could be ditched did the work really begin.[3]

The Court case was over a bill passed by the state legislature in 1899 to begin the ditching effort. By October of that year, it had been taken to court. In 1900, the ditching case was elevated to the Circuit Court and there were proposals to change the route and not to assess local land owners for the cost.[3] So far, all the ditching efforts had been upstream of English Lake on either the Yellow River or the Kankakee River. The court decision opened the way for dredging on the main river through the lake. By July 1904, the dredges were into English Lake working their way upstream. By the end of the year, there were 7 dredges at work.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b c U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: English Lake, Indiana. Retrieved on 2008-05-22.
  2. ^ "English Lake Indiana Zip Codes & Area Code - FIPS18149". postcodelookup.ca. Retrieved 2008-05-22.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Who Pulled the Plug on English Lake, A Journal; Bob Stachura; 2nd Ed; 2004; pg 3 Cite error: The named reference "plug" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).

Reading

Who Pulled the Plug on English Lake, A Journal; Bob Stachura; 2nd Ed; 2004