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Community Profile

Cannelton BridgePerry County is located in the extreme south central part of Indiana along the Ohio River between Evansville Indiana and Louisville Kentucky. The Ohio River borders the county for 50 miles forming all of our southern border and most of our eastern border. The Ohio River, a primary commercial waterway, flows westward from Pennsylvania and empties into the Mississippi River along the Illinois/Missouri border. Along its shores is the Ohio River National Scenic Byway which traverses the Ohio River through Illinois, Indiana and Ohio.

Perry County has the distinction of having the hilliest terrain of any county in Indiana. The county serves as somewhat of a nature refuge being the only place where Buckthorn is found and one of the few places in Indiana where the fringed Green Briar, Sourwood and Mountain Laurel grow.


About half of the county’s population lives in the incorporated communities of Tell City, Cannelton, and Troy along the river. The remaining population lives in the smaller unincorporated communities and rural areas along the river and amongst its beautiful hills and forests. We are a rural, but progressive community with an abundance of natural amenities and a good share of major national and international corporations.

Please visit our links for more information about Perry County history, statistics, major employers, member community organizations, map, and member media and libraries.

 


Indiana Cotton MillHISTORY
Nearing our Bicentennial
Perry County was established in 1814, two years before the State of Indiana was admitted to the Union. It was named in honor of the gallant Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry, whose fame is known to all Indiana school children for his defeat of the British in 1813 at the Battle of Lake Erie. The great Ohio River, a principal artery carrying immigrants westward, made Perry County a focal point for famous people and events. Settlers were drawn here because of seemingly boundless supplies of natural resources and our remarkably diverse scenic beauty.

In 1811, the New Orleans, Robert Fulton's first steamboat took on coal above Tell City from what was likely the first Indiana coal mine. Fulton later purchased over 1,000 acres of land near the future Tell City. His younger brother, Abraham Fulton, moved here to look after his brother's estate in 1815, and today is buried in Troy Cemetery near Fulton Hill.

A year later, Abraham Lincoln's family crossed into Indiana when he was 7 years old, on their way to their new home near Lincoln City. The Lincoln Ferry Park near Troy commemorates the place where Abe at the age of 17 ran a ferry skiff for James Taylor. The Lincoln family spent much of their time in Troy the center of commerce for the area.

The famous Revolutionary War general Marquis de Lafayette's steamer The Mechanic, shipwrecked in the Ohio River on a rainy night in May, 1825. Lafayette and his entire crew survived and he was rescued from the Indiana shore the next morning by the steamboat The Paragon—but only after visiting with many of the local residents who heard of his plight. Lafayette Springs between Cannelton and Rocky Point bear the name of this famous war hero in memory of this unexpected visit.

Rome Courthouse
1819 Rome Courthouse, County Seat until 1859.

Cannelton's first settlers arrived around 1812 about a decade after white settlers first took up residence near Tobinsport, the burial site of several Revolutionary War heroes. Ironically, Cannelton took the first shot fired in Indiana during the Civil War. Northeastern industrialists were attracted to the cannel coal here which soon led to such landmarks as the Indiana Cotton Mill, one of only 26 National Historic Landmarks in Indiana. The mill's five stories and 280 foot frontage made it the largest building west of the Alleghenies when it was built in 1849. The cotton mill rivaled those in Massachusetts turning out uniforms for the Civil War and both World Wars.

The last major city to be established in Perry County is now the largest and the county seat: Tell City, named after William Tell. The Swiss Colonization society, a group of Swiss-German immigrants, set out from Cincinnati in 1856 to find a new home. The beauty of the hills, river and forest reminded them of their native Switzerland and a mere two years later, 1000 people resided in Tell City.

The Irish also claimed homesteads in Derby, the French-Belgian in Leopold named after King Leopold of Belgium, the French and Irish in St. Croix, the Russian and Polish in Siberia, the English and Germans, along with a host of other European nationalities, settled amidst Perry County's rolling hills and river bluffs throughout the county.