Early history The St. Joseph Valley was long occupied by Native Americans. One of the earliest known groups to occupy what would later become northern Indiana was the
Miami tribe. Later, the
Potawatomi moved into the region, utilizing the rich food and natural resources found along the river. The Potawatomi occupied this region of Indiana until most of them were forcibly removed in the 1840s. The South Bend area was popular because its portage was the shortest overland route from the St. Joseph River to the
Kankakee River. This route was used for centuries, first by the Native Americans, then by French explorers, missionaries and traders. The French explorer René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, the first white European to set foot in what is now South Bend, used this portage between the St. Joseph River and the Kankakee River in December 1679.
First settlements The first permanent white settlers of South Bend were fur traders who established trading posts in the area. In 1820,
Pierre Frieschutz Navarre arrived, representing the
American Fur Company (AFC) of
John Jacob Astor. He settled near what is now downtown South Bend.
Alexis Coquillard, another agent of the AFC, established a trading post known as the Big St. Joseph Station. In 1827,
Lathrop Minor Taylor established a post for Samuel Hanna and Company, in whose records the name St. Joseph's, Indiana was used. That same year,
Horatio Chapin moved to the settlement, opened the first general store with imported (out of state) goods and helped established the first church and Sunday school. In 1856, attorney Andrew Anderson, Chapin's son-in-law, founded May Oberfell Lorber, the oldest continuous business in St. Joseph County. He compiled a complete index of South Bend's real estate records. In 1841,
Schuyler Colfax was appointed St. Joseph County deputy auditor. Colfax purchased the
South Bend Free Press and then turned it into a pro-
Whig newspaper, the
St. Joseph Valley Register. He was a member of the state constitutional convention of 1850, at which he opposed the barring of African American migration to Indiana. He joined the
Republican Party, like many Whigs of his day, and was elected to Congress in 1855, becoming Speaker of the House in 1863 during the administration of
Abraham Lincoln. In 1868, he was elected vice president under
Ulysses S. Grant. Colfax returned to South Bend after his stint in Washington and is buried in City Cemetery, west of downtown.
Early business During the late 1830s through the 1850s, much of South Bend's development centered on the industrial complex of factories located on the two
races (man-made canals along the
St. Joseph River in South Bend). Several dams were created and factories were built on each side of the river. On October 4, 1851, the first steam
locomotive entered South Bend. During this time period there was a great immigration of Europeans, such as Polish, Hungarian, Irish, German, Italian, and Swedish people to South Bend because of available employment in area factories. South Bend benefited from its location on the
Michigan Road, the main north–south artery of
northern Indiana in the 19th century. It became a major factor in the area's economy and culture.
Establishment and early history South Bend was incorporated as a city on May 22, 1865, and its first elections were held on June 5, 1865, with William G. George elected as its first mayor Olivet African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church was founded in South Bend in March 1870, making it the first African American church in the city. Olivet AME is still an active African Methodist Episcopal Church, and celebrated its 145th anniversary in 2015. A sergeant from South Bend fired the first American shells against Germany in World War I.
History with Ku Klux Klan In 1923, the African American owner of a soda fountain received a letter signed "KKK", threatening to kill an African American man held in the city's jail and harm the rest of the city's African American population. Within a few days, over a thousand African Americans fled the city. In 1924, the
Ku Klux Klan held a conference and planned a parade from its local headquarters at 230 S. Michigan St. In preparation, Klan members were posted around town to direct traffic. Students from the nearby
University of Notre Dame, aware of the anti-Catholic nature of the Klan, vigorously protested this intrusion, and before noon all of the Klansmen traffic directors had been "unmasked and unrobed." Notre Dame students continued the fight, with several hundred gathering outside of the Klan headquarters, throwing rocks and smashing windows in protest. Local police as well as Notre Dame officials eventually managed to convince them to return to campus. Notre Dame football coach and athletic director
Knute Rockne became involved in the struggle to calm down the students.
Later business Other companies in the manufacturing industry developed in South Bend in the early 20th century, including Birdsell Manufacturing Company, the
Bendix Corporation,
Honeywell,
AlliedSignal,
South Bend Lathe Works, the O'Brien Paint Corp., the South Bend Toy Company, South Bend Range, South Bend Bait Company, and
South Bend Watch Company. Workers at the
Bendix Corporation staged the first sit-in strike in American history in 1936. Fast development led to the creation of
electric rail transportation throughout the area, and in 1925, the
South Shore interurban streetcar service was established from downtown South Bend to downtown Chicago. The South Shore line still runs daily to and from Chicago and also is a major freight carrier in the area. On June 30, 1934, the Merchants National Bank in South Bend was the last bank to be robbed by the
Dillinger gang.
Recent history On September 29, 1929, South Bend completed its "track elevation program". This was a railroad infrastructure project which saw the removal of
Grand Trunk Western Railroad tracks from Division Street, the removal of
level crossings from Chapin to Miami streets, the creation of a modern freight layout, and the construction of
Union Station. In 1949, percussionist
Lionel Hampton was informed that his concert at South Bend's Palais du Royale would be a blacks-only event; he threatened to call for a boycott of the venue, and the affair proceeded as an integrated evening, which newspapers said led to all attendees breaking out in "paroxysms of ecstasy". By 1950, more than half of all employment was in the manufacturing sector. Due to economic difficulties,
Studebaker closed its automotive manufacturing plants in South Bend in December 1963. A general decline in manufacturing soon followed as industry was restructured nationwide. By 2000, only 16% of the local economy consisted of manufacturing. Due to the severe loss of jobs, the city's population decreased by nearly 30,000 during that period. In 1984, South Bend community leaders began seeking a minor-league baseball team for the city. A stadium was constructed in 1986 and a 10-year player-development contract was signed with the
Chicago White Sox. The team would be known as the South Bend White Sox. In 1994, the team's name was changed to the South Bend Silver Hawks, and then to the
South Bend Cubs in 2015. They are a Class A minor league affiliate of the Chicago Cubs in the Midwest League. In 2015, the City of South Bend celebrated its 150th birthday. The yearlong festival culminated with the ceremonial illumination of the first
River Lights along the St. Joseph River, and included appearances by Mayor
Pete Buttigieg along with five previous South Bend mayors:
Steve Luecke,
Joe Kernan,
Roger Parent,
Peter Nemeth, and Jerry Miller. In 2015, the city's population increased by 286, the largest one-year growth in over twenty years. The former
Studebaker plant has been developed as the
Ignition Park center to attract new businesses, especially in the tech industry. South Bend has also seen new development, particularly in the tech field, a decline in unemployment, and a renewal of the downtown area under Buttigieg's tenure, which has been described as a revival and South Bend as a 'turnaround city'. South Bend also was in the national spotlight during the 2019-20 Democratic presidential campaign of former mayor Buttigieg. ==Geography==