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of Indiana History: Scripts Winona
Lake Winona Lake’s Shimmering Season…on this Moment of Indiana History. The turn-of-the-century phenomenon known as Chautauqua was uniquely American in its blend of religion and entertainment, politics and culture, and the bucolic enjoyment provided by the booming railroad industry. The Winona Lake Chautauqua was no exception. The resort just south of Warsaw, Indiana was eclectic from the start. On land near an Indian burial ground at what was then called Eagle Lake, the Beyer Brothers purchased and platted a 100-acre tract to set up a dairy in 1881. The area’s springs offered natural refrigeration for their products, and business flourished. As traffic to the area increased, Eagle Lake became a tourist destination. Spring Fountain Park, as it was christened, boasted a roller coaster, cycloramas illustrating both the life of Christ and Civil War battles, a race track, and the Eagle Lake Hotel, counted among Indiana’s finest. The amusement park, however, was only a preamble to the resort’s
golden age. In 1894, Presbyterian elder Dr. Solomon Dickey purchased the
property to serve as the grounds for the Winona Bible Conference and Summer
School, which began the following summer. A fence with a turnstile was
constructed around the town, and admission charged for the six-week season
of education, entertainment and recreation. The Pennsylvania Railroad
shuttled visitors to the resort until discontinuing service in 1902; the
following year the assembly’s directors developed the Winona Interurban
Electric Line to fill in the breech. The light rail service eventually
extended to Goshen in the north and Peru in the South. At its height,
the Chautauqua sustained five separate schools, three luxury hotels, steamboat
cruises for 150 around the lake, and an annual Venetian Night, with decorated
boats on the canals. Attendance peaked at 250,000 visitors a season. Famed
orator William Jennings Bryan not only included Winona on his circuit,
but served as the assembly’s president for two years. Humorist Will
Rogers graced the stage of the Winona Chautauqua, as did Arctic explorer
Admiral Richard E. Byrd, opera star Amelita Galli-Curci and violin virtuoso
Efrem Zimbalist. Ketchup magnate H.J. Heinz directed the assembly at one
point; John M. Studebaker, the carriage and automobile manufacturer, at
another. A name synonymous with Winona Lake is Billy Sunday--the nation’s
first celebrity evangelist--who made his home there from the turn of the
century until his death in 1935. Soon thereafter, the assembly’s
summer programs were discontinued for lack of funding, although Winona
Lake continued to serve as a hub for religious groups for decades. Writer: Yaël Ksander Sources for this program include: “Billy Sunday Dies in Chicago,” Warsaw Daily Times (November
7,1935)
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