Tuesday, August 20, 2019

Small-Town Memories; Small-Town Future. Part 2: Welcome to Michiana-Plus.

The White Pigeon train depot, from a time long past.
Image: michiganrailroads.com.
When you grow up in a small town -- as I did, in little White Pigeon, Michigan, current population around 1,500 -- you either find ways to entertain yourself, or you get in your car and drive. Likewise with shopping. Either you deal with what the local mom-and-pop has for sale, or you plan a trip out of town. Every little village might have something different that you're looking for, so you get to know the surrounding areas and what they offer pretty well. Maybe things are different now, when Amazon can deliver anything to your door, but back in the '70s and '80s -- before the internet, before cell phones -- this was reality in small-town America. Whatever was nearby was what you got.

For us, if we needed a loaf of bread, we could pop uptown to the grocery store. If we needed something only a department store was likely to have, then it was north to Three Rivers (about 10 miles) or south to Elkhart, Indiana (20 miles). But for the full mall experience, we had to venture out even further -- north to Portage or Kalamazoo (30 to 35 miles), or south to Mishawaka and South Bend (35 to 40 miles). Better make sure your car is fueled up and in good shape. Hope the winter's salt hasn't rusted out the body too much.

Trips to the big, big city didn't happen too much, and they usually weren't for necessity shopping -- just a fun day out. Our big city was Chicago, about 120 miles west. We never really thought about going to Detroit, about 165 miles east, or even Grand Rapids, just 85 miles or so north. I'm not sure why. We just felt more connected to Chicago and northern Indiana. Maybe it was because my parents' families mostly lived in both places.

But with White Pigeon situated only three miles from the state line, we definitely felt more like residents of "Michiana" than true Michiganians. I traveled US-12, US-131, M-40, M-51, M-60, M-103, and I-94 around southwest Michigan, but I also spent a lot of time on SR-13, SR-15, SR-120, and the 80/90 Toll Road in Indiana. Our family went to Mass at St. Joseph's in White Pigeon and Immaculate Conception in Three Rivers, but also St. Vincent's in Elkhart and St. Mary's in Bristol, on the Indiana side. I went to school in Michigan but worked in Indiana. I called White Pigeon home, while most of our relatives lived around Bristol and Goshen, down in Indiana. We were two-state people, and that never got crazier than when Michigan went on daylight-saving time and Indiana didn't. Half the year we'd all be on the same time; the other half we'd have to do the math to figure out what time we were going to meet friends and relatives ("Is that 5 your time or 5 our time?") and when we had to leave for work, church, and everything else.

Such was life straddling the border of two states.

Life in Michiana-Plus

"Michiana" is a popular term that media folks and the business community use to describe the region that's centered on South Bend, the largest city -- current population a smidge over 101,000. The boundaries of Michiana are somewhat fluid but usually don't extend north to Kalamazoo, which is typically associated with the region simply known as West Michigan, or sometimes Southwest Michigan. So since Kalamazoo was a significant part of my life even as I identified with the Michiana area, I'll just make up my own term and call the area that was the center of my existence "Michiana-Plus." I got my college education in Kalamazoo and my first two steady jobs in South Bend, so there's no way I could leave either one out when talking about the area I called home.

Getting back to South Bend for a moment -- it was so named because it sits at the southernmost bend of the St. Joseph River, which features prominently throughout Michiana, flowing through many of its towns and cities. Its importance to the region is reflected in the fact that two counties bear the name St. Joseph -- one in Indiana, where South Bend is located, and the other in Michigan, where I grew up in White Pigeon. There's also a city of St. Joseph in Berrien County, Michigan, on the shore of Lake Michigan.

With all this talk of saints, you'd think that Catholics had a hand in settling the Michiana area -- and you'd be right. But as I'll discuss, they weren't the only ones -- and of course the Indians were there first, mainly the Potawatomi and Miami peoples. Their legacy lives on primarily through many of the place names in Michiana, from Mishawaka to Shipshewana.

So let's take a little tour of the region I hail from, peppered with some fun facts. The first 32 years of my life revolved around Michiana-Plus -- St. Joseph, Cass, Berrien, Kalamazoo, and Van Buren counties in Michigan; and Elkhart, St. Joseph, LaGrange, and Kosciusko counties in Indiana -- so I know the lay of the land pretty well. Still, I admit I don't know everything, and in the past 16 years I've only been back to visit two or three times. So my memories are just that -- memories -- though I'm fairly confident that there haven't been any drastic changes in the intervening years. 

Corn, corn, and more corn
The house I grew up in was literally surrounded by corn fields. It sat on a small plot with fields on all four sides. Corn is a huge business where I come from; in fact, just up the road from my hometown of White Pigeon, in neighboring Constantine (2010 population 2,116), you'll find the world's two largest seed-corn processing plants side by side.

Corn is a billion-dollar business in my old stomping grounds, and even the kids get to share in the wealth, with summer jobs out in the fields. Detasseling is practically a rite of passage for teenagers where I come from. It's a simple enough job -- you just have to yank the pollen-producing tassels off the top of the corn stalks so that they won't fertilize the silk on their own cobs. The idea is to get the corn to cross-pollinate with a second variety that shares the same field, resulting in a hybrid of the two species. Hybrids are desirable because they produce higher yields and tend to be more resistant to drought and disease.

So what happens to all this corn? As a kid, I always thought the corn got shipped over to nearby Battle Creek to make Kellogg's Corn Flakes. Instead, our corn is grown to be seed corn. It's sorted, dried, husked, and packaged as seeds for other farmers to plant.

Over in South Bend, an ethanol plant gobbles up a lot of corn every year. As of 2018, the plant made 65 million gallons of ethanol a year.

The lake and lighthouse at South Haven.
Image: TripAdvisor.
A gigantic lake and a pretty big Whirlpool
Whenever I think of any of the towns in Western Berrien County, I think of Lake Michigan. They all border the Great Lake that defines the western border of Michiana, and their beaches, lighthouses (at New Buffalo and St. Joseph), and sand dunes (notably Warren Dunes, near Bridgman) attract thousands of locals and tourists alike every year.

Growing up not far from the lake, I was asked more than once if you could see Chicago on the other side. In a word, no. The Great Lakes are so massive that it's almost impossible to appreciate their size without seeing them. When you're sitting on their shores, you can easily imagine yourself relaxing by the ocean. So how big is Lake Michigan? Well, at 22,394 square miles, it could hold the smallest five U.S. states by size -- Rhode Island, Delaware, Connecticut, Hawaii, and New Jersey -- combined. Or it could comfortably accommodate the entire nation of Costa Rica, with room to spare.

Then there's the Benton Harbor area, which brings up a fun fact: Michigan makes more than just cars. The world headquarters of Whirlpool, the planet's largest maker of home appliances, is located in Benton Charter Township, adjacent to Benton Harbor.

Homegrown wine. Image: southhaven.org.
Everything you need for a sangria
West Michigan is known for its many orchards and "U-pick" farms. Apples and cherries are especially abundant, and you'll find lots of peaches and blueberries, too. You can get gallons of fresh-pressed apple cider just about everywhere when autumn arrives.

We also have lots of vineyards, and vineyards mean wineries. The award-winning St. Julian Winery, Michigan's oldest and largest winery, was the best known to me and definitely one of the state's most popular.

Paw Paw? Colon?
From Leonidas to Climax, we have some funny place names in the region. The aforementioned St. Julian Winery is headquartered in Paw Paw, named for the pawpaw fruit trees that used to grow there. The Van Buren County seat, population 3,534 as of 2010, also enjoyed a brief moment of fame courtesy of 19th-century resident A.W. Underwood, who was said to possess the ability to breathe fire. Brian Eno immortalized Underwood in his 1974 song "The Paw Paw Negro Blowtorch."

Then there's Colon. Yep. Colon. The St. Joseph County village got its name when one of the town's founders opened a dictionary and his eyes fell on the word "colon." Maybe he should have gone for the best of three, but for better or worse, the name stuck.

Presto! Image: magic-festival.com.
Fortunately, Colon -- 2010 population 1,173 -- is not known for colons, but for magic. In fact, it's known as the Magic Capital of the World, and it may just be able to live up to that boast. Harry Blackstone Sr. made Colon his summer residence, and ever since then the town has been a magnet for all things stage magic. Some 30 magicians are buried in Colon's cemetery, an annual magic convention draws practitioners from around the world, and the town is home to several magic supply shops, most notably the Abbot Magic Company. Even the public school system's sports teams have gotten in on the spirit: Their nickname is the Magi.

And what's the deal with Elkhart and Kalamazoo?
No one knows with absolute certainty where the name Elkhart (2010 population 51,860) came from, but the best-known story is that it took its name from an island at the convergence of the St. Joseph and Elkhart rivers. That island is supposedly shaped like the heart of an elk. I don't know exactly how an elk's heart looks distinctly different from the heart of any other animal, but there you go.

Image: mlive.com.
Kalamazoo (2010 population 74,262) might be one of the most fun place names to say of all time. It's been the subject of many a song and has lent its name to trains and ships alike. But, again, no one really knows where the name came from, though most stories agree that it derives from an Indian word. One legend says that an annual Potawatomi tradition involved a footrace in which the men had to run from the settlement to a point on the nearby river and back before a pot of water boiled away. The white settlers presumably latched on to the word for "boiling pot," kikimasung, and a city's name was born. Maybe.

The first concert I ever attended was in Kalamazoo. I went to see Yes, at what was then called Wings Stadium, on their 1991 tour. And I remember vividly that singer Jon Anderson, in his banter in between songs, took a moment to ruminate on the name "Kalamazoo," before blurting out "Oozamalak!" It took me a minute to figure out what he was saying, and a moment later he announced to the crowd, "Sounds better backwards!" Some people in the crowd booed -- playfully, I hope! -- but it made me crack up. My wife and I still refer to the city as Oozamalak sometimes. It does sound pretty cool -- kind of like a faraway planet in a sci-fi novel. Thank you, Jon Anderson.

Image: hippostcard.com.
Opera in the middle of nowhere
You wouldn't expect to find an opera house in a small town in northern Indiana. Yet there it is -- Bristol Opera House, which opened its doors way back in 1897. I know Bristol best as the place where my Grandpa and Grandma Rush lived, but this historic building in a sleepy little Elkhart County town (2010 population 1,602) continues to entertain the public today, though opera has given way to popular stage plays.

Al Capone in Purgatory
Rumors have swirled for years that Al Capone had a secret residence somewhere in southwest Michigan. The most persistent rumor is that his hideout was in a remote area between Three Rivers and Jones called Purgatory. No one seems to know how Purgatory, now a state game and hunting area, got its name, but it's a scrubby patch of ground in the middle of nowhere, and as such it certainly would have made a good place to lie low if you're a notorious mob boss, since no one would ever deliberately go there looking for anything. Today there's not much in Purgatory but the old foundations of long-gone buildings. It's also a popular place for ghost-hunters. The legend of Goat-Man and his Devil Dog companion has been lurking around in the shadows of local lore for a long time.

Be careful what you wish for. Image: Wikipedia.
Constantine is Radiator Springs
In the Pixar movie Cars, Sally Carrera laments how the interstate bypass left her town, Radiator Springs, forgotten and neglected. Now the traffic simply sped by, in a hurry to get somewhere else, rather than taking in the charm of the small towns along the way. Meanwhile, in real life, some residents of Constantine had for years and years complained that US-131, one of the major highways through my old stomping grounds, needed to be rerouted around town. The truck traffic that trudged through the downtown district shook the historic buildings, doing damage to their foundations.

I remember the debate well, as a home my parents owned in Constantine was in danger of being demolished for the bypass, if it were ever to be built.

Well, the people of Constantine finally got their way, and the bypass became a reality. The new path it cut across former farmland managed to spare my parents' house by about a quarter-mile, but the effect in Constantine was predictable. Downtown traffic slowed to a trickle, and those who may have stopped to shop or grab a bite to eat at Harvey House or the Chicken Coop or the Town Fryer zoomed on to their next destination. Last time I went home for a visit, there were boarded-up storefronts galore in Constantine. The residents got their wish -- but at what price?

The humpy-bumpy bridge, as my wife used to call it.
Image: Wikimedia.
Mottville: Blink and you'll miss it
Mottville holds five distinct memories for me: junior high, the speedway, the time my car caught on fire, the camelback bridge, and the Olympic torch.

Back when I was in seventh grade, the White Pigeon school district sent its middle-schoolers to a building in Mottville, a tiny town about six miles to the west of White Pigeon. Because Mottville is unincorporated, there's no official population on record for the town, but the surrounding township claimed 1,436 people as of 2010. Suffice it to say it's a tiny place. But even within its small confines, it manages to host a notable piece of Michigan history: a three-span camelback bridge, the longest of its kind in the state. The distinct design was never seen much outside our region, and there aren't many of them left anymore. The Mottville bridge was closed to traffic in 1990 but preserved as a historical attraction, while a new bridge was built parallel to it to traverse the St. Joseph River.

In 1984, the year I attended seventh grade in Mottville, the Olympic torch passed through town along US-12. That was quite a sight to see. I remember the entire school lining up along the road and cheering as the runner passed by.

My dad and I made some good memories out at Mottville Speedway, a quarter-mile track where amateurs came to race for local glory. My dad liked watching NASCAR and Indycar events, and I was happy to tag along whenever he got an itch for an evening at the races. My best memory of the place was meeting Gordon Johncock, two-time Indy 500 winner, who for reasons I no longer remember stopped by for a visit during one race night. He signed a ball cap for me. I had that cap for years; wish I knew what became of it.

And then, yeah, there was the car fire. I stopped to fuel up one day in Mottville, and when I turned over the ignition, smoke started billowing into the car through the vents. I got out and threw open the hood to find flames shooting out at me. Fortunately, the attendant had an extinguisher handy. To this day I have no idea what happened, but my dad, ace mechanic that he was, managed to get my car home and replace the melted wiring harness. Everything else survived. Crazy memories...
A common sight in LaGrange County.
Image: visitshipshewana.org.

Anabaptists everywhere
Head over to LaGrange County, and you'll see lots of farms with houses and barns painted plain white. If you look closer, you might find some antiquated manual farm equipment strewn across those farms. And in the driveway near the house, you might find a little horse-drawn black buggy taking the place of a car.

This is the land of the Amish, simple folk who live close to the earth and shun most modern conveniences. They're hard-working and generally friendly people, but please don't take their pictures without asking -- they take the biblical prohibition on graven images very seriously.

Most people think of Pennsylvania or Ohio when they hear about the Amish, but LaGrange County is home to the third largest Amish community in America, making up about one-third of the county's population.

We spent a lot of time in LaGrange County when I was growing up. One of our annual family traditions was to take in the Corn School Fair in the town of LaGrange (2010 population 2,625) every October, with its rides set up on the old brick city streets, and side stalls and tents showing off farmers' prized pumpkins and animals. For me, Corn School was always a sign that fall was upon us. I can still feel the chill in the air as I think back to all the flashing carnival lights, the mechanical clatter of the rides, the sweet smell and taste of a big, greasy elephant ear, and the chatter of the fairgoers enjoying themselves. I have fond memories of those days.

The famous
Gohn Bros. catalog.
Image: gohnbrothers.com.
If you like Amish crafts, or just want to people-watch as the Amish go about their daily business, you can't go wrong with Shipshewana. For a very small town (2010 population 658), it's usually bustling with activity. It draws half a million visitors every year, and a lot of them come to see the massive Shipshewana Auction and Flea Market, where you can bid on livestock and antiques or browse the largest flea market in the Midwest.

Ten miles west, in Middlebury (2010 population 3,420), the surroundings look more typically "English," though you will find a notable century-old retail store called Gohn Bros., which specializes in plain clothes for the Amish community, along with quilting supplies and other traditional goods. Their text-only catalog is well known in plain communities around the country, from Amish to Old Order Mennonites to Conservative Quakers. A plain dress, collarless jacket, brimmed hat, or bonnet, tailor-made, is only a phone call away. 

Speaking of Mennonites, LaGrange and Elkhart counties are both home to a sizable Mennonite community. Goshen College, in fact, was the first Mennonite-affiliated postsecondary institution in North America to offer a four-year degree.

Mennonite and Amish life converge at Das Dutchman Essenhaus, a huge restaurant in the Middlebury area that welcomes a quarter-million visitors every year. The Essenhaus employs lots of Amish and Mennonites, serving up tasty Amish-style food to its hungry guests.

In the Middle of it all
Middlebury has a lot going on for such a small town. In addition to Gohn Bros. and the Essenhaus, it's home to a quaint rural B&B called The Patchwork Quilt; Culver Duck Farm, one of the nation's largest duck producers and growers; and Coachmen, a leading maker of recreational vehicles.

RVs as far as the eye can see. Image: doityourselfrv.com.
Speaking of homes on wheels... 
Elkhart is the Detroit of RV manufacturing. Some 80% of global RV production is tied to Elkhart and the surrounding area. My dad worked in an RV plant before he retired, and I worked there with him during summer breaks when I was a teenager. And it's not just RVs that keep the economy booming -- the area also builds lots of manufactured and modular homes. If you see half of a double-wide house zooming down the highway on the back of a semi-truck, yellow caution lights flashing and a prominent "Wide Load" sign on display, there's a good chance it came from somewhere in Elkhart County.

Part French, part Irish, all Catholic
You know how Vatican City is its own miniature country surrounded by a larger city? Notre Dame is sort of like that. The university sits adjacent to South Bend, yet it's technically its own separate entity, complete with its own post office and ZIP code, its own fire department, and its own water supply and power plant. It's a fairly self-sufficient place, and of course it's one of the leading universities in the United States, complete with a picturesque campus and a world-famous football team.

Aerial view of one of the most picturesque college campuses
you'll ever see. Image: commonwealmagazine.org.
It's almost impossible to believe its humble origins, given Notre Dame's international fame today. Along with eight French and Irish brothers from the Congregation of the Holy Cross, Father Edward Sorin, himself born in France, established a new school in 1842, centered on an old log chapel that had served as a mission to the Potawatomi peoples. Two years later, the school was christened as the University of Notre Dame du Lac -- or, in English, the University of Our Lady of the Lake. The campus is situated along two lakes, appropriately named St. Mary's and St. Joseph's. A century and a half later, a Holy Cross priest still serves as the university president, and religious life remains strong, with a meditative grotto made to look like the one in Lourdes, France, a gorgeous basilica, and, naturally, the statue of Mary, Our Lady herself, perched atop the famous Golden Dome of the Main Building.

Here come the Irish! Image: fansided.com.
The football team is, of course, iconic, having won 11 consensus NCAA national championships and laying claim to the highest winning percentage in NCAA history. From Knute Rockne to the Gipper to Rudy, the names associated with Fighting Irish football are virtually synonymous with college football itself.

Notre Dame is where I wanted to go to college. When you grow up less than an hour away from Notre Dame, in a Catholic family that loves football, nothing else really compares. But financially speaking, Notre Dame wasn't in the cards for me. Western Michigan University in Kalamazoo was far more affordable, and though I have no captivating memories of my time there, WMU provided me with a decent education and set me on the path toward my current career.

It all began with the Kalamazoo Gazette, which let me get a foot in the door as a freelance reporter, writing feature articles and covering the village council and school board meetings in my hometown of White Pigeon. My work for the Gazette led to similar gigs with the Sturgis Journal and South Bend Tribune, and the Tribune gig eventually turned into a job on the copy desk. I've been earning my keep as a copy editor ever since.

But even though I didn't get to attend Notre Dame, I eventually got to do the next best thing, which was working on campus, as an editor in the publications department. I loved being able to wander the campus grounds on my work breaks, and the discounted season tickets to home football games were a nice perk, too. I'd still be at Notre Dame had my position not been eliminated in a departmental reorganization. It was a dream job.

On the other hand, my job loss there pushed me out of my Michiana-Plus nest and off to new parts of the country. Had it not been for losing my job at Notre Dame, my wife and I never would have had the chance to experience the D.C. area, and I wouldn't have landed a job with the company that I'm still affiliated with as a contractor some 15 years later. So who knows what's good or bad?

Land o' lakes
Because I was adopted and raised by my maternal grandparents, the man I knew as my big brother was, biologically speaking, my uncle. And while we were never terribly close, he never felt more like a big brother to me than when he took me out fishing in his canoe. That was when he owned property on a lake in Syracuse, down in Kosciusko County. That county is home to more than 100 lakes, making it a quaint getaway location that most people don't even know about. I learned how to ice skate on my brother's lake, too. For a brief moment, I thought maybe I could become the next Eric Heiden and win Olympic gold. Now, my gimpy old ankles couldn't even support my weight in a pair of skates. Ah, where does our youth go?

Vandalia, a historic stop on the Underground Railroad.
Image: villageofvandaliami.com.
The Quakers and the Underground Railroad
Cass County was a hotbed of abolitionism in the years before the Civil War. Aided by Pennsylvania Quakers who helped settle Penn Township, the area became an important hub on the Underground Railroad -- so much so that angry planters from Kentucky led an invasion into Cass County, in an attempt to capture escaped slaves who were beginning to inhabit the area. Although the raids failed, as local residents angrily repelled the invaders, the incident helped fuel the passage of the Fugitive Slave Act.

Still, the locals resisted, and a route from Niles, on the eastern edge of the county, to Cassopolis, the county seat, remained a prominent route on the Underground Railroad, with the still-existing Bonine House serving as a central lookout point. A network of Quaker abolitionists in Schoolcraft and Battle Creek helped blacks escape through Detroit and into Canada if they chose to venture past Cass County, but many chose to stay behind and create their own communities. The tiny town of Vandalia, 2010 population a mere 301, was at the epicenter of abolitionist activity in Cass County and today remains around 48% black. The Quakers, regrettably, have vanished from the area.

Businesses past and present
Long before Pete Buttigieg made a splash in the presidential race, South Bend was known for making cars. Studebakers, to be precise. The Studebaker company survived for a little over 110 years, starting out in the 19th century as a maker of buggies, wagons, and carriages before moving on to the horseless carriages that propel us around today. But its fortunes faltered in the post-World War II years, as Ford and GM undercut each other to win over suburban America. By the mid-'60s, auto production had ceased and the company, for all practical purposes, was no more.

But the South Bend area still produces vehicles today. In nearby Mishawaka (2010 population 48,256), the AM General plant builds both civilian Hummers and military Humvees.

A few miles further east, Elkhart is still home to Selmer, which means that if you played a musical instrument in school, there's a good chance it has a Michiana connection. Selmer is now Conn-Selmer, which itself is a subsidiary of Steinway, the piano people.

What's not in Elkhart anymore is Miles Laboratories, the onetime maker of Alka-Seltzer, Bactine, and Flintstones and One-a-Day vitamins. Bayer bought the company in 1979 and relocated its headquarters to Pittsburgh in 1992, before retiring the Miles name three years later.

Kalamazoo Mall, the first pedestrian mall in America.
Image: downtownkalamazoo.org.
Medicines have also played a role in Kalamazoo's history. The city was once home to Upjohn, which has since become part of Pfizer. The latter still maintains a presence in Kalamazoo and neighboring Portage (2010 population 46,375), along with Zoetis, an animal health company that Pfizer spun off around 2013. Kalamazoo is also home to med-tech company Stryker.

But Kalamazoo has lost what Elkhart still has -- musical instruments. Gibson, the guitar company, was born in Kalamazoo, but it was bought by an outside company in 1944. Thirty years later, production began to shift from Kalamazoo to Nashville. By 1984, production in Kalamazoo was no more.

Kalamazoo is also notable for its open-air Kalamazoo Mall. It was the first pedestrian mall in the nation when it opened in 1959.

And then, of course, there are the local and regional companies that, if you know about them, mark you as coming from that part of the country. Everyone in Michiana, for example, knows Martin's Super Markets. And for anyone who grew up in West Michigan, your superstore/hypermarket destination of choice wasn't Walmart, but Meijer -- pronounced like "Meyer," but with no connection to the Pacific Northwest's Fred Meyer stores.

Image: swissvalley.com.
Skiing in corn country, rafting in the city, and other hidden (and fading) gems
Swiss Valley, near unincorporated Jones, Michigan, is a delightfully unexpected find. In the midst of mostly flat farmland, you'll find 11 ski runs, chair lifts, and a 225-foot peak, the tallest in all of southwest Michigan.

You also might not expect to find Colorado River-quality rapids in the middle of a city. Yet that's just what you'd encounter on the East Race Waterway in South Bend. Built on the St. Joseph River, it's the first artificial whitewater course in North America.

If you really love county fairs, why not check out the second largest one in the United States? The Elkhart County 4-H Fair is hard to beat.

See how Amish farm life looks when it's turned into, well, a meticulously groomed tourist trap. Amish Acres in Nappanee (2010 population 6,448) has lots to offer in a picturesque farm setting that also features a performance theater, lodging, food, and craft demonstrations.

For those needing a little culture, South Bend and Kalamazoo lead the way with an abundance of museums, celebrating everything from art and history to automobiles and aviation. If it's entertainment you need, Notre Dame's Joyce Center and Kalamazoo's Wings Events Center are home to concerts and sporting events. And there are festivals everywhere you turn, from the homey little White Pigeon Days fair I used to enjoy, to the Apple Festival in Niles, to classier experiences like the Elkhart Jazz Festival and Kalamazoo's Gilmore Keyboard Festival.

But while lots of the area's traditions survive, others have faded away -- like the annual Tomahawk Game that defined the sports rivalry between White Pigeon and Constantine for over 80 years. And on another sad note, a little-known but highly prestigious Michiana school has reached the end of its life. Howe Military Academy, a private LaGrange County boarding school for grades 7 through 12, has closed its doors after 135 years. A combination of rising costs and dwindling enrollment sealed its fate, and the campus is currently up for sale.

The Wings on green ice. Image: kwings.com.
Second fiddle to the big leagues
Somebody has to play in the minor leagues, and the region I hail from offers fans a few opportunities to catch some fun minor-league action at decent prices. For baseball fans, there's the South Bend Cubs, formerly the Silver Hawks. Not surprisingly, the single-A Midwest League club is a farm team for the Chicago Cubs.

Up in Kalamazoo, hockey fans can catch the Kalamazoo Wings, an ECHL club affiliated with the NHL's Vancouver Canucks and the Utica Comets of the American Hockey League. And here's one of the things that make the minor leagues so much fun: The Wings have a long-standing tradition of playing on green ice for St. Patrick's Day. I once took my wife to a pink-ice Wings game on Valentine's Day. You'll never see that in the NHL.

Perhaps you've heard of us
From South Bend to Kalamazoo, the region has produced a few famous people over the years. Here's a partial list.

Brendan Bayliss, singer and guitarist for Umphrey's McGee -- born and raised in South Bend
Lindsay Benko, Olympic gold medalist and former swimming world record holder -- born in Elkhart
Harry Blackstone Jr., magician -- born in Three Rivers
Tom Bodett, the voice of Motel 6's "We'll leave the light on for you" ads -- raised in Sturgis
Marian and Vivian Brown, twin actresses -- born in Kalamazoo, raised in Mattawan
Jake Cinninger, guitarist in Umphrey's McGee -- born and raised in Niles
Schuyler Colfax, U.S. vice president under Ulysses Grant -- lived in South Bend
Candy Crowley, CNN news reporter -- born in Kalamazoo
D'Arcy, former Smashing Pumpkins bassist -- born and raised in South Haven
Vivica Fox, actress -- born in South Bend
Peter Gent, former NFL player and author of North Dallas Forty -- born and raised in Bangor
Lisa Germano, musician, born in Mishawaka
Jon Gruden, NFL coach -- raised in South Bend
Ernie Hudson, actor -- born and raised in Benton Harbor
Tommy James, musician -- raised in Niles
Derek Jeter, baseball great -- grew up in Kalamazoo
Shawn Kemp, former NBA player -- born and raised in Elkhart
Ring Lardner, writer -- born and raised in Niles
Loretta Long, best known for playing Susan on Sesame Street -- born in Paw Paw
Ed Lowe, inventor of Kitty Litter -- raised in Cassopolis
Pete Metzelaars, former NFL player -- born in Three Rivers
Sinbad, actor and comedian -- born and raised in Benton Harbor
Matt Thornton, major-league pitcher -- born in Three Rivers, raised in Centreville
Verne Troyer, best known as Mini-Me from the Austin Powers films -- born in Sturgis, raised in Centreville
Kate Upton, model and actress -- born in St. Joseph
Narada Michael Walden, musician -- born in Kalamazoo

Thank you all for coming. Please watch your step on the way out.

For me, this has been an enjoyable trip down memory lane. For you, I hope it's been entertaining and informative. A third installment, detailing our family's impending encounter with small-town life, will be coming soon.

(Part 3: Moving on to Wallace, Idaho.)

2 comments:

  1. Many of us from White Pigeon are wanting to know who wrote this. 😊

    ReplyDelete
  2. This person right here! Class of 1989.

    https://www.facebook.com/adrian.rush.10

    ReplyDelete