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Jan Meeuwesen

Jan is the owner and founder of The Crazy Tourist. He's born and raised in The Netherlands and loves exploring the South of France. He loves going on short City Trips and visiting sunny destinations. His favorite country to visit is France.

15 Best Things to Do in Seymour (Indiana)

Muscatatuck National Wildlife Refuge

In South Central Indiana, Seymour is a city that grew up in the mid-19th century at the crossing of two railroads. In the 1840s, the north-south Jeffersonville, Madison and Indianapolis Railroad connected Indianapolis with the Ohio River. A little later, Seymour’s founder, Meedy Shields encouraged railroad surveyor John Seymour to build the Ohio and Mississippi …

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15 Best Things to Do in Shelbyville (Indiana)

Shelbyville Commercial Historic District

Southeast of Indianapolis, the seat of Shelby County is a small town set around the historic Public Square. Shelbyville was platted some 200 years ago, and there’s so much history on these streets that the visitors bureau has published a walking tour of all the fine architecture in the vicinity. A few miles from downtown, …

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15 Best Things to Do in Vincennes (Indiana)

George Rogers Clark National Historical Park

One of the oldest settlements west of the Appalachians, and the oldest continually inhabited European settlement in Indiana, Vincennes is a city that was founded in 1732 by French fur traders. At the beginning of the 19th century this was the capital of the Indiana Territory, where the future 9th President William Henry Harrison (1773-1841) …

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15 Best Things to Do in New Castle (Indiana)

Festival

At this city, east of Indianapolis, you can tap into Indiana’s 130-year love affair with basketball. New Castle is home to both the Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame and the New Castle Fieldhouse, the world’s largest high school gymnasium, with a capacity of 9,325. Founded 200 years ago, New Castle was a major manufacturing center …

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15 Best Things to Do in Logansport (Indiana)

Cass County Dentzel Carousel

On a peninsula at the confluence of the Wabash and Eel Rivers, Logansport developed as a manufacturing center after the Wabash and Erie Canal reached this settlement in 1837. In the early 20th century this was a center for the early automobile industry, home to now forgotten brands like Rutenber and Revere. The Cass County …

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15 Best Things to Do in Huntington (Indiana)

Sunken Gardens

Close to the confluence of the Little River and Wabash River, Huntington is nicknamed “The Lime City” for the many quarries and kilns here in the mid-19th century In fact, one of the city’s loveliest features is the enchanting Sunken Garden, which was planted in a former limestone quarry in the 1920s. Forks of the …

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15 Best Things to Do in Crawfordsville (Indiana)

Shades State Park

Some 45 miles northwest of Indianapolis, the seat of Montgomery County is an attractive city on Sugar Creek, with 200 years of history. Many interesting figures have hailed from Crawfordsville, like Lew Wallace, a Civil War major general, politician, ambassador and the author of Ben Hur. You can visit his home in the upscale Elston …

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15 Best Things to Do in Lebanon (Indiana)

Boone County Courthouse

Around 30 minutes northwest of Mile Square, the small town of Lebanon is the seat of Boone County. The city dates back to 1832, and if you’re wondering about the name, it comes from an early pioneer coming across a grove of hickories here and comparing them to the cedars of Lebanon mentioned in the …

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15 Best Things to Do in Frankfort (Indiana)

Old Stoney

Set between Indianapolis and Lafayette, Frankfort is an endearing small town and the seat of Clinton County. The city was founded in the 1830 by three brothers, and named after Germany’s Frankfurt am Main, in honor of the brothers’ great-grandparents’ home. Two historic buildings command the old townscape in the center of Frankfort. The first …

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15 Best Things to Do in New Haven (Indiana)

Fort Wayne Railroad Historical Society

Just east of Fort Wayne, New Haven is a city that owes its early development to the Wabash and Erie Canal, which linked the Great Lakes with the Gulf of Mexico as early as the 1840s. Before long the waterway was succeeded by the railroads, and you take a peek at the area’s marvelous steam …

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