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City of Connersville, Indiana
Central Avenue in Downtown Connersville
Central Avenue in Downtown Connersville
Location of Connersville in Fayette County, Indiana.
Location of Connersville in Fayette County, Indiana.
Country United States
State Indiana
County Fayette
Government
 • Type Mayor–council
 • Body Connersville City Council
Area
 • Total 7.70 sq mi (19.94 km2)
 • Land 7.68 sq mi (19.90 km2)
 • Water 0.01 sq mi (0.04 km2)
Elevation
823 ft (251 m)
Population
 (2020)
 • Total 13,324
 • Density 1,734.44/sq mi (669.67/km2)
Time zone UTC-5 (EST)
 • Summer (DST) UTC-4 (EDT)
ZIP code
47331
Area code(s) 765
FIPS code 18-14932
GNIS feature ID 0432888
Website Fayette County/ Connersville Website

Connersville is a city in Fayette County, east central Indiana, United States, 66 miles (106 km) east by southeast of Indianapolis. The population was 13,481 at the 2010 census. The city is the county seat of and the largest and only incorporated town in Fayette County. The city is in the center of a large rural area of east central Indiana; the nearest significant city is Richmond, 26 miles (42 km) to the northeast by road. Connersville is home to the county's one and only high school. The economy is supported by local manufacturing, retail and healthcare. Employment and population have been declining since the 1960s and it is among the poorest areas of the state in median household income and other economic measures.

The city is among the oldest cities in Indiana and the former Indiana Territory, having been established in 1813 by its namesake John Conner.

Geography and climate

Connersville is located at 39°39′14″N 85°8′16″W / 39.65389°N 85.13778°W / 39.65389; -85.13778 (39.653931, -85.137709). The town is oriented roughly north-south, extending 5 miles north-south and 3 miles east-west from center of town, with most of the town located in the southern 2/3. The center of town is roughly Central Ave and 5th street in the southern portion. Annexations have pushed the city limits of Connersville north along Indiana 1 (Western Avenue) to the county line.

According to the 2010 census, Connersville has a total area of 7.755 square miles (20.09 km2), of which 7.74 square miles (20.05 km2) (or 99.81%) is land and 0.015 square miles (0.04 km2) (or 0.19%) is water.

Most of the town is located on the north bank of the west fork of the Whitewater River. The town is at modest elevation, a little over 800 feet above sea level. The local area has nearly flat to gently rolling topography. The local region (and all of Fayette County and the state of Indiana) are part of the Eastern (U.S.) Broadleaf Forest Environment biome. Much of the surrounding Whitewater Valley vegetation would be classified as riparian woodland or gallery forest. There are 124 native tree species, including 17 varieties of oak, as well as black walnut, sycamore, and tulip tree (yellow poplar), the state tree. Fruit trees—apple, cherry, peach, and pear—are common. Common native mammals are the red fox, common cottontail, muskrat, raccoon, opossum, and several types of squirrel.

Connersville, IN, gets 41 inches of rain per year. Snowfall is 22 inches. About 1/3 of days have measurable precipitation. About half the days are sunny. The July high averages 84 degrees, and the January low averages 16. The hottest month is August, the coolest February, and the wettest December. Floods, major storms, and tornados are relatively infrequent, but do occur.

History

Connersville is named for settler John Conner, older brother of William Conner, an early Indiana settler and politician. There was also, at least through 1795, Connerstown, a small Shawnee village near Lancaster, Ohio, named for John's father, Richard Conner.

Whitewater Valley and pre-European inhabitants

The Whitewater River Valley was created by the Late Wisconsin Glaciation ending 13,600 years ago. Fayette County was at the southern fringe of the glaciation at that time. The Ice Age was punctuated by several prolonged warm periods during which the glaciers disappeared entirely from the temperate latitudes and a climate similar to today or even warmer prevailed. The flood waters produced resulted in lakes; breaching of the lakes resulted in rivers and streams carving the hills and valleys we see today.

In the Northwest Territory during the latter half of the 18th century, the Miami Indians were dominant in the region, but the Potawatomi and Shawnee had a significant presence. Delaware Indians, displaced from their eastern homelands by European settlement, migrated west and settled along the forks of the Whitewater River.

The geological aspects of the Whitewater River Valley contributed to early settlement after defeat of the Delaware Indians by Gen. Anthony Wayne at Fallen Timbers in 1794, followed on August 3, 1795, by the Treaty of Greenville (Ohio) ceding most of Ohio and a sliver of southeastern Indiana to the United States. The Valley, running south and southeasterly from east central Indiana to the Ohio River Valley, provided a convenient conduit for migration through Fort Washington (Cincinnati) from points east, settlements on the Ohio River, and settlers from Kentucky to northern and central Indiana Territory. Squatters engaged in agriculture and trading were occupying federal lands well before land sales in Indiana Territory began in 1801. An Indian trail paralleled the river from the Ohio Valley northward to the forks, then went along the East Fork to Eli Creek, thence taking a northwesterly direction passing through what was later Connersville, and then on to the Delaware villages strung along the White River from north of present-day Indianapolis to modern Muncie.

Conner's Post

John Conner, brother William and others arrived in the Whitewater Valley in 1802, establishing a fur trading post in an unpopulated area near what was later to become Cedar Grove on the Whitewater River (Franklin County) at the very fringe of the white man's penetration into the wilderness of Indiana. In 1808, as a result of reduction of Indian hunting grounds by treaty, the trading post, known as "Conner's Post", was relocated 20 miles north on the Whitewater River junction with an Indian trail between the Ohio River 70 miles to the southeast and hunting grounds to the north. According to research by J.L. Heineman, the trading post was located in the middle of what is now Eastern Ave, at the west end of Charles St. At that time, the region was inhabited by Delaware Indians. In 1809 the famous (from the Indian viewpoint, infamous) Treaty of Fort Wayne was signed, by the terms of which the land locally known as the "Twelve Mile Purchase" was ceded by the Indians to the government. This tract included a strip twelve miles in width lying west of the 1795 Greenville treaty line which ran from the midpoint of the Indiana/Ohio border southwest to the Ohio River cutting off a thin wedge of southeastern Indiana. The strip included most of Fayette County except the extreme northern portion (part of later "New Purchase"). Sales of public land by the United States Government in Indiana began in 1801. In that year the Cincinnati, Ohio, Land Office began selling land in a wedge of government land in southeastern Indiana known as the "Gore" (organized as Dearborn County in 1803) which included all of what is today Fayette County. Conner obtained title to his plat in 1811.

First 50 years - through the Civil War

The exodus of the Delaware Indians from Indiana after the War of 1812, completed by June, 1813, deprived John Conner of his field for trading. After 1812, Indian resistance to settlement in the Indiana Territory became nearly non-existent, so Conner busied himself with another task.

John Conner laid out the town on the north side of the west fork of the Whitewater River in March 1813 adjacent to the fur trading post. The original plat was for 62 lots bounded by what are today Central Ave to the west and Water St. to the east, Third St. to the south and Sixth St. to the north. The first constructions in the town were a saw mill and grist mill north of town utilizing water power, and a general store and distillery in town. Influx of settlers was initially sparse - as late as 1815, there were only four cabins in the town. The boundary lines for Fayette County were established in Dec. 1818, and Connersville was chosen as the county seat.

Conner served briefly as sheriff of the newly organized Fayette County. In 1820, John Conner helped plat the new capital of Indianapolis, and in 1822 relocated his fur trading business to Noblesville, north of Indianapolis. He also served as state senator and representative. He died in Indianapolis in April 1826 and was buried there. No trace remains of his grave.

The first post office in Connersville opened in January, 1818. The first courthouse was started in 1819 and finished in 1822. The first newspaper, the Indiana Statesman, was started in 1824. The first church in the village was Presbyterian, constructed in 1824. A seminary building was constructed in 1828, later razed, and the first regular school building in Connersville was constructed on the site in 1858. The Indiana Gazetteer in 1833 stated the population of Connersville as 500. The village was incorporated as a town in 1841. Connersville served as an important link on the Whitewater Canal linking the Whitewater River to the Ohio River, opened in 1847. The canal ceased to be used for through traffic in 1849, though limited local commerce continued. The first railroad, the Cincinnati, Hamilton and Indianapolis Railroad, reached Connersville in 1864. It extended from Rushville through Connersville and Oxford to Hamilton, Ohio.

For many years prior to the Civil War, and even for some time after that struggle, the main industries of the town were milling, pork packing and woolen manufacturing.

Early growth - pre-industrial age

The Roots blower, a type of air turbine, was invented by the Roots brothers in Connersville in the 1850s, patented in 1859 and manufactured in Connersville for over 150 years.

The town of Connersville became a chartered city in June, 1869, and William H. Beck was chosen as its first mayor. The first high school opened in 1875. In 1882, James H. Fearis, of Connersville, started the Bell telephone exchange. The Connersville Electric Light Company commenced operations in August 1890 as the first supplier of electric power in the city. Central Avenue was paved with brick in 1902, and became the first paved street in the city.

Prior to the advent of automotive manufacturing, Connersville for decades was colloquially known as the "furniture and buggy town" because of the dominance of those two industries in the town.

In 1898, Stant is founded in Connersville, and becomes the world's largest producer of piano tuning pins.

During the school year 1906–07, Dr. W. Otto Miessner established the first public high school band in the U.S. at Connersville High School.

Automotive and industrial age to the 1990s

In the early 20th century, the town became known as "Little Detroit" because of its importance to the automobile industry. Automobiles manufactured in Connersville include Auburn, Cord, Duesenberg, Ansted, Empire, Lexington and McFarlan. The Willys MB Jeep body was manufactured in Connersville during the 1940s. Much of the western portion of town was occupied by light industry for the 150 years prior to 1990. Companies included Roots Blower (later Dresser Industries), Stant, McQuay Norris, Design & Manufacturing Co. (D&M), H.H. Robertson, Visteon, Philco Ford.

McQuay-Norris, manufacturer of auto parts based in St. Louis, got its start in Connersville in 1921 by acquisition of Wainwright Engineering, a privately held local company manufacturing automotive engines. In 1969, it was acquired by Eaton, Yale & Towne, and closed its Connersville and Indianapolis plants in 1983.

Design & Manufacturing (D&M) company got its start when Rex Regenstrief purchased American Kitchens in 1958 and renamed the company. By 1972, D&M controlled 25% of the nation’s dishwasher market. Design & Manufacturing's assets were sold to White Consolidated Industries in 1987 and the firm was dissolved in 1990.

Architectural Products Division of H. H. Robertson purchased land owned by the defunct Lexington Motor Car Co. in Feb. 1960. Robertson was a victim of hard times for the industry in the late 1980s and the Connersville plant was merged with operations in Pittsburgh, PA starting in 1986.

Culture and recreation

Fayette County Public Library housing over 139,000 volumes of books and other media, is located in the city.

There is a golf course west of town known as Willowbrook Country Club.

Connersville has an indoor movie theater, Showtime Cinemas.

For outdoor types, there is overnight and long-term camping at the Whitewater River Campground south of town. The Heritage MusicFest takes place every year in June at the campground. Local bands ranging in style from bluegrass to rock perform.

Parks and preserves

Robert's Park, located in the northeast corner of town, which contains a public pool, community center, grandstand and racetrack. It hosts the annual Fayette County Free Fair, a week-long event held late in the summer.

Whitewater Memorial State Park is located on a 200-acre lake about 10 miles southeast by east of Connersville near Liberty, Indiana.

Manlove Park, about 8 miles northwest of downtown near Milton, is a recreation area around Manlove Lake.

Shrader-Weaver Woods Nature Preserve, about 4 miles northwest of Connersville, is 108 acres of pristine woodland offering hiking.

The Mary Gray Bird Sanctuary, over 700 acres of forest, meadow, prairie and ponds, provides hiking, picnicing, camping and birdwatching. It is located about 5 miles southwest of Connersville.

Doc-O-Lake, a 50-acre lake and recreation area 7 miles north of town, features camping, boating and limited fishing (not a stocked lake).

Historic places

Elmhurst at Connersville
Elmhurst mansion in Connersville, built in 1831

Elmhurst, an estate south of town on St. Rd. 121 built in 1831, was the home of Caleb Blood Smith, who served in Abraham Lincoln's cabinet. It also serves as the site of an annual re-enactment of the American Civil War. The estate was formerly known as Conners Elm Park.

The Whitewater Valley Railroad is a 19-mile-long operating scenic railroad and museum between Connersville and Metamora.

Fayette County Historical Museum is located in the city.

The Canal House, built in 1842 as headquarters for the Whitewater Canal Company, is in the city.

In addition to the Canal House and Elmhurst, the Fayette County Courthouse and Roberts Park are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Demographics

Connersville-indiana-from-above
Connersville from the air, looking west. The Whitewater River is in the foreground, and Roberts Park Grandstand and Race Track are at the bottom right. The Park is home to the Fayette County Free Fair, one of the last free fairs remaining in the state.
Historical population
Census Pop.
1840 596
1850 1,396 134.2%
1860 2,119 51.8%
1870 2,496 17.8%
1880 3,228 29.3%
1890 4,548 40.9%
1900 6,836 50.3%
1910 7,738 13.2%
1920 9,901 28.0%
1930 12,795 29.2%
1940 12,898 0.8%
1950 15,550 20.6%
1960 17,698 13.8%
1970 17,604 −0.5%
1980 17,023 −3.3%
1990 15,550 −8.7%
2000 15,411 −0.9%
2010 13,481 −12.5%
2020 13,324 −1.2%
Source: US Census Bureau

As of 2019, the population is estimated to be 12,796 people. About 55% of Fayette county's population lives in the town.

2010 census

As of the census of 2010, there were 13,481 people, 5,582 households, and 3,506 families residing in the city. The population density was 1,739.5 inhabitants per square mile (671.6/km2). There were 6,450 housing units at an average density of 832.3 per square mile (321.4/km2). The racial makeup of the city was 95.7% White, 2.1% African American, 0.2% Native American, 0.3% Asian, 0.3% from other races, and 1.3% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 1.0% of the population.

There were 5,582 households, of which 31.1% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 41.9% were married couples living together, 15.2% had a female householder with no husband present, 5.8% had a male householder with no wife present, and 37.2% were non-families. 31.6% of all households were made up of individuals, and 13.8% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.37 and the average family size was 2.95.

The median age in the city was 39.4 years. 24.2% of residents were under the age of 18; 8.2% were between the ages of 18 and 24; 24.3% were from 25 to 44; 25.6% were from 45 to 64; and 17.7% were 65 years of age or older. The gender makeup of the city was 47.7% male and 52.3% female.

Transportation

There is no commercial air or bus service to Connersville. There is Amtrak (passenger) and CSX (freight) rail service. The Whitewater River, while mostly navigable, is not commercially viable as a means of transportation.

Freight moves into and out of Connersville by truck, principally via State Road 1 north and Interstate 70 to Indianapolis, and State Road 1 south, U.S. Route 52, and Interstate 74 to Cincinnati. State Road 44 is mostly local and in-county traffic. SR 1 and SR 44 are both narrow two-lane state roads. The nearest large cities are Cincinnati 58 miles (93 km) to the southeast; Indianapolis 66 miles (106 km) to the west; Dayton, Ohio, 60 miles (97 km). to the east; Louisville, Kentucky, 127 miles (204 km) to the south; and Columbus, Ohio, 135 miles (217 km) to the east.

Airport

Mettel Field is a private aviation airport located three nautical miles (6 km) north of the central business district of Connersville. There is no commercial service. It is owned by the Connersville Board of Aviation Commissioners. The nearest commercial airport is Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport, 62 miles (100 km) to the southeast.

Railroad

Amtrak, the national passenger rail system, provides service to Connersville. Each of two trains provides service three days a week. The westbound train provides service to Indianapolis, Lafayette, and Chicago. The eastbound train provides service to Cincinnati, cities in Kentucky, and points east ending at New York City.

Bus and taxi service

There is no transit bus service to Connersville, but local public transit is available to all residents by calling the public transit office. There is 1 local taxi service in town.

Highways

  • Indiana 1.svg Indiana State Road 1 runs north-south through downtown Connersville north to beyond Fort Wayne and south to Lawrenceburg
  • Indiana 44.svg Indiana State Road 44 runs east-west through downtown Connersville west to Martinsville and east to the Ohio state line
  • Indiana 121.svg Indiana State Road 121 runs north-south from intersection with SR44 in downtown Connersville south to Metamora
  • I-70.svg Interstate 70, 14 miles (23 km) to the north via SR1 runs east-west from Indianapolis to Columbus, Ohio
  • US 40.svg U.S. Route 40, 12 miles (19 km) to the north via SR1 runs east-west from just south of Indianapolis to Richmond, IN.

Economics

The economic base is mostly manufacturing, followed by retail and health care. Little remains of the old industrial base. There are fewer than 600 union employees in the town. The closure of the Visteon plant in 2007, resulting in loss of over 900 jobs was a chief contributing factor in the town reaching the brink of bankruptcy in Mar. 2014. The largest employers are Stant, Walmart, and Howden Roots (formerly Roots/Dresser), followed by various retail establishments and schools. Wayzata Home Products Connersville, a unit of 6 Square Cabinet Co. based in Minnetonka, Minnesota,. began production in March 2014, but has since closed.

The mean house price in 2012 was $67,000, and the median household income $29,000 (versus $47,649 for all of Indiana).

Primarily due to loss of unionized manufacturing jobs and labor, the population of Connersville has been declining since the 1960s. The unemployment rate in Connersville and surrounding Fayette County is among the highest in the state, and has been for most of the last decade and even longer. In 2018, it ranged around 5%. A significant portion of workers in Connersville are employed in Shelbyville, Greensburg, and other outlying towns with better local economies.

The city is the economic center of a micropolitan statistical area of the same name. It is also part of Richmond-Connersville, IN Combined Statistical Area.

Notable people

  • Phil Cox, 1972 Indiana Mr. Basketball, 1972 Graduate of Connersville High School, and member of 1972 Indiana High School basketball champions.
  • Howard Garns, creator of the logic game Sudoku, was born in Connersville on March 2, 1905.
  • Finly H. Gray was a US Congressman elected to represent Indiana's 6th and 10th Districts in the United States House of Representatives, serving from 1911 to 1917 and 1933 to 1939. He also served as Mayor of Connersville from 1904 to 1910. Gray is buried in Dale Cemetery, located on Memorial Drive in Connersville. Gray Road, on the west side of Connersville, is named for him.
  • Scott Halberstadt, television actor, was born in Connersville in 1976 and graduated from Connersville High School in 1994.
  • Tom T. Hall, country singer and Grand Ole Opry member, spent time in Connersville early in his career and wrote "Thank You, Connersville" about the experience.
  • Matt Howard, a three-time Academic All-American starting forward for Butler University's men's basketball team who has since played professionally for several European teams, is a 2007 graduate of Connersville High School. He played in the 2010 and 2011 NCAA Championship games. In February 2011, Howard was selected as the top Academic All-American in the University category (chosen from all twelve Academic All-America teams, including football).
  • Virginia Claypool Meredith, "Queen of American Agriculture," born in Connersville
  • James N. Huston, Treasurer of the United States 1889–91, lived in Connersville most of his life, founding a local bank, Citizen's Bank.
  • Carol J. Pereyra, founder of Going Bonkers Magazine, raised in Connersville, Indiana and attended middle school and high school.
  • Betsy Ross, former ESPN anchor, graduate of Connersville High School, now freelance broadcaster/emcee in Cincinnati, Ohio.
  • Caleb Blood Smith was a Congressman and the Secretary of the Interior in the Lincoln administration. He was the second occupant of the Elmhurst mansion.
  • Oliver H. Smith was a Congressman and Senator. He built the Elmhurst mansion at the south edge of Connersville in 1831.
  • Dan Toler, rock musician with the Allman Brothers Band and Gregg Allman Band (died 2013)
  • Robert Wise, one of Hollywood's most acclaimed directors and producers, graduated from Connersville High School in 1932. The CHS auditorium, the Robert E. Wise Center for Performing Arts, was named in his honor. Wise is known for his direction of The Sound of Music and West Side Story.
  • Mark Rose, vice president of design and engineering at Busch Gardens in Tampa, Florida.
  • E. L. Cord, Industrialist/Automaker purchased assets from Lexington/Ansted to begin manufacturing Cord, Auburn, and Duesenberg (parts only) in Connersville. He later founded American Airlines in Dallas, Texas.
  • Newton Claypool, Former member of the Indiana House of Representatives and Indiana Senate (1825-1845). Patriarch of the Claypool Family in Indiana. Grandfather of Virginia Claypool Meredith. Newton's son Austin, served as one of the first Trustees for Purdue University 1874-1875
  • Joey Sturgis music producer, sound engineer, musician, drummer.

See also

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