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CUMBERLAND
Although platted
in the 1830s, Cumberland did not experience significant growth for over a
century. When Washington Square Shopping Mall opened near the edge of Marion
County and with the construction of I-70 in the 1970s the town began to grow
and that growth caused problems. As the town board worked to contain development,
citizens' confidence in their elected officials was tested more than once,
especially in the 1970s and 1980s when in-fighting, unreasonable self-appointed
pay increases, and even grand jury indictments were common occurences. Today
Cumberland's biggest concerns are continued growth and its identity as a community
rather than just another Indianapolis suburb.
Platted in 1831 by Henry Brady,
Cumberland was settled initially by workers who were constructing the National
Road. [1] In 1830 the population
of all of Warren Township, in which Cumberland resides, was only 617 persons.
[2] But in 1838 the National Road connected to Washington Street in
Indianapolis, setting the stage for growth in Cumberland as travelers made
their way to the state capital.
[3] By 1855 Cumberland had its own Post Office and two churches, Cumberland
Baptist established in 1832 and St. John's Evangelical and Reformed Church
established by local German immigrants in 1855.
[4]
In 1901 Carl Sonnerschmidt
and Herman Junge established Smith and Young Greenhouses, which would eventually
become one of the largest rose-growing nurseries in Indiana. [5] Local students attended Cumberland
High School before the construction of Warren Central which consolidated the
Cumberland and Shadeland High Schools in 1925. [6] By 1926 the Indianapolis News
was predicting that Cumberland would eventually become a community center
of Indianapolis since it was in line with the eastward growth of the larger
city. [7] Four years later St. John Evangelical
Church celebrated it 75th anniversary with 400 members and 100 associate members. [8]
Cumberland's population reached
600 in 1950, but residents claimed that bad roads were a deterrent to growth.
[9] In 1959 the town bond-financed a $241,000 waterworks and 230 residents
agreed to switch from well water to city water.
A growth spurt began early
in the 1960s when the Cumberland Homes Addition added 28 new lots to the town. [10] One illustration of that growth
was the groundbreaking for a new $60,000 building for the Cumberland Methodist
Church in 1961. [11] Now
with a population of 900, representing 50 percent growth in a decade, the
town faced sewage problems and a $176,000 bill to solve them. [12] These problems were compounded in 1967 when
the Cumberland Heights subdivision was platted adding more new homes to the
town. [13]
In the midst of concerns over
development the citizens of Cumberland began to have even greater concerns
about their town board. In 1969 the board voted itself a pay increase. The
raises meant that the Clerk-Treasurer of tiny Cumberland would now make more
than the mayor of the City of Lawrence.
[14] And, the increase also gave pay raises to two members of the board
whose actions were under investigation by a grand jury.
[15]
On January 10, 1970, citizens
circulated a petition to call a referendum to strike $11,000 from the town's
budget, set new salaries for town employees, redistrict the town's population
for better representation on the town board, and drop the town Marshal's office
and use the Metro Indy police force instead.
[16] In March the Cumberland Clerk-Treasurer and 2 former town board
members were indicted by the grand jury on 58 counts of unlawful activities. [17] Eventually the remaining members of the
town board agreed to a reduction in pay, and in 1972 a new board again lowered
the pay of board members to what it considered to be a reasonable level.
[18]
In 1972 construction began
at another new subdivision, Glen Oaks. By 1977 the assessed valuation of
the Glen Oaks and Cumberland Heights subdivisions was $1,430, 410.
[19] The construction of the multi-million dollar Mount Comfort Airport
on 1,200 acres about a mile from the Glen Oaks subdivision encouraged further
development in the Cumberland area and the opening of I-70 turned the far
eastside into a viable bedroom community for Indianapolis commuters. And
Washington Square Mall, which opened in the mid-1970s, drew crowds of shoppers
that made the far eastside attractive to an ever-increasing number of retail
establishments. In 1978 the Town Board annexed 157 acres to the town's boundaries.
To keep up with the growth and increased population, Cumberland's police force
was almost doubled in two years; by 1978 it consisted of a Town Marshall and
3 full-time and one part-time deputies.
[20]
Cumberland's population had
grown to 3,400 by 1980. In 1983 the largest employer in town, the Electra
Corporation, closed its production facilities, after giving its employees
only 3 days notice, and moved the manufacturing plant to Mexico. In the
mid 1980s discontent with the town board surfaced again over instability in
the Clerk-Treasurer's officethere were three Clerk-Treasurer's in one
year's timeand a dispute, resulting in a lawsuit later dismissed by
the Indiana Supreme Court, filed by the Town Marshall. [21]
In 1990 the population of
Cumberland had reached 4,500. Fourteen churches served this relatively small
population. [22] The town's area grew beyond its official
town limits in 1991 and encompassed parts of Buck Creek and Sugar Creek townships
in Hancock County as well as part of Warren Township in Marion County.
[23] Also in 1991, the Cumberland Area Chamber of Commerce had 121
members and in January the town opened a new $524,000 Town Hall at 11501 E.
Washington Street. [24] In 1987 the Chamber instituted
an annual "Chamberfest" that lasts 4 days and consists of a talent
show, a queen contest, and a three-ring circus. Chamber members and residents
view the festival as a way of pulling the community together. [25]
Toward the end of the decade
of 1990 the tension between growth and the desire to retain "community"
affects Cumberland as it does many small towns in Marion County.
[1] Kris E. Daman, "Cumberland," in
David J. Bodenhamer & Robert G. Barrows, eds., Encyclopedia of Indianapolis
(Indiana University Press 1994), 486.
[3] Albert E. Dickens, "The Growth and Structure
of Real Property Uses in Indianapolis, 1939.
[4] "Warren Township Development Study,"
1990"; Daman, "Cumberland," Encyclopedia of Indianapolis.
[6] Indiana State Library Indiana Division Clipping
Files, "Indiana Schools"
[7] Indianapolis News, December
28, 1926.
[8] Indianapolis Star, October
25, 1930.
[9] Indianapolis Times, April
16, 1950.
[10] Indianapolis Star, August
6, 1961.
[11] Indianapolis Star, June
6, 1961.
[12] Indianapolis News, April 11, 1963.
[13] Indianapolis Star, June 28, 1978. Daman,
"Cumberland," Encyclopedia of Indianapolis.
[15] Indianapolis News, December 18, 1969.
[16] Indianapolis News, January 10,
1970.
[17] Indianapolis News, March 27, 1970.
[18] Indianapolis News, February 1,
1972.
[19] Indianapolis Star, June 25, 1978.
[21] Indianapolis News, April
11, 1984, June 29, 1984, November 9, 1984; Indianapolis Star,
September 1, 1985, October 24, 1985, December 4, 1985.
[22]Daman, "Cumberland," Encyclopedia
of Indianapolis.
[23] Indianapolis News, December
26, 1991.
[25] Indianapolis News, July 20, 1994.
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