Center of Population USA 1910 Census - Bloomington, IN
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member adgorn
N 39° 10.022 W 086° 32.051
16S E 540240 N 4335415
A large, round, flat inscribed disk in the Monroe County seat square.
Waymark Code: WM14R6V
Location: Indiana, United States
Date Posted: 08/13/2021
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member tiki-4
Views: 2

Verified by the US Census Bureau: (visit link)

It's a roadside attraction too: (visit link)
"Every ten years the Census Bureau issues a report from which can be computed the population center of the United States, "the place where an imaginary, flat, weightless, and rigid map of the United States would balance perfectly if all residents were of identical weight." As early as the turn of the 20th century, towns along the ever-shifting population path began celebrating their centeredness with permanent monuments. The oldest known survivor of these, for the 1910 census, is in Bloomington, Indiana.

It is not, however, without some controversy.

In July 1911 Professor William A. Cogshall, an Indiana University astronomer, took the Census Bureau data and determined that the Population Center was on the W. L. Moser farm, nine miles east of Bloomington. The Bloomington World-Courier jumped on this news and erected a cheap wooden marker, topped with a couple of small American flags, at the rural spot, described by Prof. Cogshall as "a hilly field, in which there are gullies and some underbrush, where screech owls, snakes, squirrels, and rabbits abound."

The original 1910 Population Center and marker only lasted a month.
This close-but-not-close-enough Center made Bloomington's business community unhappy. Apparently word got back to the Census Bureau, because barely a month later it released a completely new set of data. Prof. Cogshall again crunched the numbers, and this time found that the Center was right in Bloomington, on a conveniently grassy and snake-free plot outside the Showers Furniture factory, the city's largest employer. An engraved limestone disk was quickly commissioned and placed on the spot in September 1911 with much ceremony.

Fifty years and five census's later, the Monroe County Historical Society learned that the limestone marker was in danger of being destroyed at the old factory site. It was moved to a place of honor on Bloomington's county courthouse lawn, and it's been there ever since. It doesn't actually mark the 1910 U.S. Population Center, but maybe it never did."

Address: 101 W. Kirkwood Ave., Bloomington, IN
Directions: Midtown. A large, limestone disk, set flat on the ground, on the south side of the Monroe County Courthouse, on the east side of the sidewalk leading north from W. Kirkwood Ave./5th St."
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