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・ Goshen Township, Clearfield County, Pennsylvania
・ Goshen Township, Clermont County, Ohio
・ Goshen Township, Hardin County, Ohio
・ Goshen Township, Mahoning County, Ohio
・ Goshen Township, Muscatine County, Iowa
・ Goshen Township, Ohio
・ Goshen Township, Stark County, Illinois
・ Goshen Township, Tuscarawas County, Ohio
・ Goshen Township, Washington County, Arkansas
・ Goshen Valley
・ Goshen, Alabama
・ Goshen, Arkansas
・ Goshen, California
・ Goshen, Connecticut
・ Goshen, Henderson County, Texas
Goshen, Indiana
・ Goshen, Kentucky
・ Goshen, Massachusetts
・ Goshen, New Hampshire
・ Goshen, New Jersey
・ Goshen, New York
・ Goshen, New York (disambiguation)
・ Goshen, Nova Scotia
・ Goshen, Ohio
・ Goshen, Oregon
・ Goshen, Parker County, Texas
・ Goshen, Texas
・ Goshen, Utah
・ Goshen, Vermont
・ Goshen, Virginia


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Goshen, Indiana : ウィキペディア英語版
Goshen, Indiana

Goshen is a city in and the county seat of Elkhart County, Indiana, United States.〔(【引用サイトリンク】accessdate=2011-06-07 )〕 It is the smaller of the two principal cities of the Elkhart-Goshen Metropolitan Statistical Area, which in turn is part of the South Bend-Elkhart-Mishawaka Combined Statistical Area. It is located in the northern part of Indiana near the Michigan border, in a region known as Michiana. Goshen is located 10 miles southeast of Elkhart, 25 miles southeast of South Bend, 120 miles east of Chicago, and 150 miles north of Indianapolis. The population was 31,719 at the 2010 census. The city is known as a center of manufacturing for recreational vehicles and accessories, the home of Goshen College, a small Mennonite liberal arts college, and home to the Elkhart County 4-H Fair, one of the largest county fairs in the United States.〔(Purdue Alumni Club of Elkhart County )〕
==History==
Goshen was platted in 1831. It was named after the Land of Goshen. The initial settlers consisted entirely of old stock "Yankee" immigrants, who were descended from the English Puritans who settled New England in the 1600s.〔 The New England Yankee population that founded towns such as Goshen considered themselves the "chosen people" and identified with the Israelites of the Old Testament and they thought of North America as their Canaan. They founded a large number of towns and counties across what is known as the Northern Tier of the upper midwest. It was in this context that Goshen was named.〔The Yankee Exodus: An Account of Migration from New England by Stewart Hall Holbrook University of Washington Press, 1968〕〔American Zion: The Old Testament as a Political Text from the Revolution to ... By Eran Shalev, Yale University Press, Mar 26, 2013 ISBN 9780300186925 page 70-71〕
The Yankee migration to Indiana was a result of several factors, one of which was the overpopulation of New England. The old stock Yankee population had large families, often bearing up to ten children in one household. Most people were expected to have their own piece of land to farm, and due to the massive and nonstop population boom, land in New England became scarce as every son claimed his own farmstead. As a result, there was not enough land for every family to have a self-sustaining farm, and Yankee settlers began leaving New England for the Midwestern United States.〔A Twentieth Century History and Biographical Record of Elkhart County, Indiana edited by Anthony Deahl, Lewis Publishing Company, 1905〕
They were aided in this effort by the construction and completion of the Erie Canal which made traveling to the region much easier, causing an additional surge in migrants coming from New England. Added to this was the end of the Black Hawk War, which made the region much safer to travel through and settle in for white settlers. These settlers were primarily members of the Congregational Church, though due to the Second Great Awakening, many of them had converted to Methodism, and some had become Baptists before coming to what is now Indiana. The Congregational Church has subsequently gone through many divisions, and some factions, including those in Goshen, are now known as the Church of Christ and the United Church of Christ.〔 When the New Englanders arrived in what is now Elkhart County there was nothing but dense virgin forest and wild prairie. They laid out farms, constructed roads, erected government buildings and established post routes.〔〔
On Palm Sunday, April 11, 1965, a large outbreak of tornadoes struck the Midwest. The most famous pair of tornadoes devastated the Midway Trailer Park (now inside the city limits of Goshen), and the Sunnyside Housing Addition in Dunlap, Indiana, but a smaller F4 tornado also struck neighborhoods on the southeast side of Goshen on the same day. Statewide, 137 Hoosiers died in the storms—55 of them in Elkhart County. Days later, President Lyndon B. Johnson visited the Dunlap site.〔(Weather Events: 1965 Palm Sunday Tornado Outbreak Part II: Sunday Evening )〕
The Goshen Historic district, added in 1983 to the National Registor of Historic Places〔(National Register of Historical Places – INDIANA (IN), Elkhart County )〕 is bounded by Pike, RR, Cottage, Plymouth, Main, Purl, the Canal, and Second Sts. with the Elkhart County Courthouse at its center.
In April 2006, Goshen was the site for an immigration march. Officials estimated that from 2000 to 3000 people marched from Linway Plaza to the County Courthouse.〔http://www.goshen.edu/bulletin/Current_Issue/features/fuerza〕
For much of its history, Goshen was a "sundown town", forbidding African Americans from living in, or entering, the town, often under threat of violence. In March 2015, the city acknowledged this part of its past, apologizing and saying that it no longer condones such behavior.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=A RESOLUTION ACKNOWLEDGING THE RACIALLY EXCLUSIONARY PAST OF GOSHEN, INDIANA, AS A 'SUNDOWN TOWN' )
The Elkhart County Courthouse, Fort Wayne Street Bridge, Goshen Carnegie Public Library, Goshen Historic District, William N. Violett House, and Violett-Martin House and Gardens are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

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