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- Limberlost Swamp - Wikipedia
The Limberlost Swamp in the eastern part of the present-day U S state of Indiana was a large, nationally known wetlands region with streams that flowed into the Wabash River It originally covered 13,000 acres (53 km 2 ) of present-day Adams and Jay counties
- Limberlost State Historic Site - Geneva, IN - Indiana State Museum
To famed Indiana author Gene Stratton-Porter, the Limberlost Swamp was the perfect playground, laboratory and inspiration for her acclaimed articles, fiction and photographs At a time when most women were homemakers, Stratton-Porter created a lasting legacy of northern Indiana’s vanishing natural history through her writings and photos
- The Legend of Limberlost - Smithsonian Magazine
I am walking on a trail in a part of northeast Indiana that in the 19th century was impenetrable swamp and forest, a wilderness of some 13,000 acres called the Limberlost Nobody knows the true
- Limberlost - U. S. National Park Service
A walk through the forest with mountain laurel in the springtime and an example of a columnar jointing geological feature Limberlost is a fully accessible trail (see more specific information below)
- Limberlost Swamp Nature Preserve - IN. gov
The Limberlost Swamp is an 800+ acre wetland restoration straddling the Adams and Jay County line It encompasses portions of the Loblolly Creek
- Friends of the Limberlost
Friends of the Limberlost is a 501 (c)3 non-profit, all-volunteer organization, incorporated in 1993, dedicated to preserving and promoting Gene Stratton-Porter’s legacy as a writer and conservationist through our support for Limberlost State Historic Site and IDNR Nature Preserves
- Limberlost State Historic Site (2025) - Tripadvisor
Limberlost is a beautiful Arts and Crafts style house with a touch of Victorian, decorated with many of the Porter family possessions, including both Gene and her husband's special collections A self-taught naturalist, Gene incorporated nature into her novels and other works
- Our Land, Our Literature: About Us - Limberlost - Ball State University
The Limberlost Swamp, parts of which are now known as the Loblolly Marsh, spanned Jay and Adams Counties, in east central and northeast Indiana The Limberlost was once a very large and dense swampland of 13,000 acres, with many species of plants and animals thriving within
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