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Today: Kathy Sipple, the northwest Indiana senior coordinator for the Resilience Cohort, is on "Regionally Speaking" to talk about this summer's greenhouse gas emissions inventory project with 14 participating municipalities. It's part of a statewide effort to better understand such emissions and how communities can reduce them. We bring back our conversation with Indiana Dunes Tourism's Lorelei Weimer, as we get ready for a conversation with South Shore CVA executive director Speros Batistatos for a complete look at area tourism efforts. And we have another conversation from the Welcome Project at Valparaiso University.
Today: We revisit our conversation with Bill Hanna, the new executive director of the Dean and Barbara White Foundation. Reporter Michael Puente has a report on the new Gary casino that opened for business on Friday and the impact that a new Chicago casino, if it opens, could have on the city of Gary's fortunes. We talk to Michael Jackson's second-grade music teacher who recognized the innate talent that he had, even at that early age. And Lorelei Weimer with Indiana Dunes Tourism and Indiana Landmarks regional field office director Brad Miller talk about some upcoming events. Brad talks about the May 22nd "Logs to Lustrons" 2021 virtual talk. Two couples share their experiences revitalizing two homes in Indiana Dunes National Park: one of them, a 19th Century log home and the other, a post-World War II steel Lustron home.
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
Sponsored by Indiana Dunes Tourism - www.indianadunes.com
(June 22, 2019 ) Earlier this year, the Indiana Dunes made national news with the announcement that the distinctive shoreline on Lake Michigan would be a new national park, the first one in the state. But does its designation as Indiana Dunes National Park - rather than the former Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore - make a substantive difference? In this show, Hoosier History Live explores that question, as well as a mountain of other topics related to the towering mounds of white sand that resulted from changes in the level of Lake Michigan that occurred around six thousand years ago, after the last ice age. We also explore the Indiana Dunes State Park, which is included within the 15,000 acres of the national park. Only 61 sites in the country have been designated as national parks, according to an article in April in the Indianapolis Business Journal. During our show, two guests join Nelson by phone from their Porter County offices at the Dunes: Bruce Rowe, public information officer for Indiana Dunes. And Dustin Ritchea, promotions director for Indiana Dunes Tourism. In an interview with the Indianapolis Star when the national park designation was announced in February, Dustin described the Indiana Dunes as one of the most biodiverse areas of North America - with more plant and animal species than Hawaii. In addition to sand dunes, Indiana Dunes includes woodlands, wetlands, prairies and bogs. During the early 1900s, Chicago-based painter Frank Dudley became captivated by the dunes. He crusaded to have them preserved even as steel plants and other industrial development was occurring nearby in northwest Indiana. Carl Sandburg, who lived in Chicago, came to the dunes to write some of his poetry; he once called the dunes "eternity's signature." Proposals to designate the Indiana Dunes as a national park started more than 100 years ago. In 1916, the first director of the National Park Service initially suggested the idea, according to The Indianapolis Star. The Indiana Dunes State Park was opened in 1926. Attractions today include a 3 Dune Challenge, an endurance test in which visitors to the state park are challenged to climb its three tallest dunes. "The 1.5-mile trail takes participants up and down 552 vertical feet," according to the IBJ. Although this is our first show devoted exclusively to the Indiana Dunes, aspects of their heritage have come up during several previous Hoosier History Live programs. They have included: A show in 2018 about the House of Tomorrow and other showplace homes from the 1933 Chicago World's Fair. They were brought by barge to the Indiana Dunes resort town of Beverly Shores after the closing of the fair. And a show about bygone natural landmarks in 2016 that explored the Hoosier Slide, the tallest dune. It had disappeared by 1920 after its sand was hauled away for decades for use in commercial endeavors, particularly the glass-making industry. According to Indiana Dunes Tourism, more than 3.6 million visitors came to the Dunes last year, putting the area on a par with Mount Rushmore's visitation. Because of its biodiversity, Indiana Dunes is promoted as "one of the best spots in the Midwest for bird watching." More than 1,000 species of plant life also can be found there. Consideration of national park designation for the Indiana Dunes dates back more than 100 years, according to an article in the June issue of Indianapolis Monthly. In 1916, Stephen Mather, the first director of the National Park Service, suggested the designation. The country's focus on World War I, however, meant the push was tabled and the proposal was essentially forgotten. In total, the Indiana Dunes have 15 miles of white sand beaches on Lake Michigan. The Hoosier Slide, at about 200 feet tall, was the largest dune before it was destroyed by sand mining.