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Miller Beach (also commonly known as Miller) is a neighborhood of Gary, Indiana on the southernmost shore of Lake Michigan. First settled in 1851, Miller Beach was originally an independent town. First settled in 1851, Miller Beach was originally an independent town.
Miller Woods is a western unit of Indiana Dunes National Park in the lakefront community of Miller Beach, Indiana. Miller Woods is home to the federally endangered Karner Blue butterfly and the federally threatened Pitcher's thistle. [1] Miller Woods is also the only part of the National Park that also adjoins the Grand Calumet River.
Thomas Miller Beach [1] (who used the alias Major Henri Le Caron) (September 26, 1841 – April 1, 1894) was an English spy. For 25 years he lived in Detroit, Michigan and other places in the United States , paying occasional visits to Europe.
The area offers a fishing pier, a riverwalk, and a hike bike trail through the restored dunescape. There is beach access and a 3,500-square-foot (330 m 2) pavilion. [77] [78] West Beach Bathhouse is located in Portage north of U.S. Route 12 on County Line Road. West Beach has ample parking, picnic shelters, and a bathhouse with showers.
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The road passes just south of the historical Miller Town Hall, in the community of Miller Beach. After the community of Miller Beach, the highway enters Indiana Dunes National Park. The road passes through woodland and parallel to the South Shore tracks, before leaving the national park west of Ogden Dunes. In Ogden Dunes, the highway becomes a ...
It was located in present-day Marquette Park in Miller Beach, near the southern tip of Lake Michigan. Indiana City was one of a handful of early contenders to be a port city on southern Lake Michigan, alongside Chicago, City West, and Michigan City. Plats for the town were drawn up in 1836 or 1837, but it was never built. [1]
The original town of Miller was the area immediately surrounding the old Miller Station itself, primarily along present-day Miller Avenue between Lake Street and Grand Blvd. The old town limits did not extend to the south of the present day South Shore tracks, nor to the north of the old New York Central elevated tracks to the north of that area.