Lafayette, city, seat (1826) of Tippecanoe county, west-central Indiana, U.S., on the Wabash River, 63 miles (101 km) northwest of Indianapolis. Laid out by William Digby on May 24, 1825, it was named for the American Revolutionary War hero the marquis de Lafayette, who was then making his last visit to the United States. The settlement soon became an important shipping centre on the Wabash, with the first steamboats arriving in 1826. The Wabash and Erie Canal reached Lafayette in 1843, further contributing to the community’s growth as a river entrepôt. It is about 5 miles (8 km) northeast of the first fortified white settlement in Indiana, Fort Ouiatenon, built by the French in 1717 to exploit fur trade with Native Americans. Lost to the English in 1761 and then to Pontiac’s confederation during the uprising of 1763, the fort was not regarrisoned after it reverted to British control two years later. It remained a small trading post and Native American village, and at times it was a centre of Native American agitation before being destroyed by General Charles Scott in 1791. The fort has been restored as a memorial-museum. The Battle of Tippecanoe (November 7, 1811), for which the county was named, was fought several miles north of the city; the battleground site is now a state memorial and national historical landmark. Lafayette is well industrialized (manufactures include aluminum, industrial, electrical, and rubber products, motor vehicles, and pharmaceuticals) and has a busy grain market. West Lafayette, across the river, is the seat of Purdue University (1869), a state institution and land-grant college named for a local businessman, John Purdue, whose gift secured its establishment there. The Feast of the Hunters’ Moon (October) is a popular annual event at which participants re-create an 18th-century gathering of Native Americans and French voyageurs and soldiers. Inc. 1853. Pop. (2000) 56,397; Lafayette Metro Area, 178,541; (2010) 67,140; Lafayette Metro Area, 201,789.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Kenneth Pletcher.
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Date:
1869 - present
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Purdue University, state system of higher education in Indiana, U.S. Its main campus is in West Lafayette, with branches in Hammond (Calumet campus) and Westville (North Central campus); Indiana University–Purdue University Fort Wayne, Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis, Indiana University–Purdue University Columbus, and several schools of technology throughout the state are also part of the system. All campuses are coeducational, and the six principal campuses offer undergraduate and graduate degree programs. The main campus in West Lafayette is a comprehensive research university and a land-grant institution. The main campus includes the Krannert School of Management and schools of agriculture, consumer and family sciences, education, engineering, health sciences, liberal arts, nursing, pharmacy, science, technology, and veterinary medicine. In addition to a broad range of graduate programs, it offers professional degree programs in pharmacy and veterinary medicine. The campus also hosts a regional centre of the Indiana University School of Medicine, which offers the first two years of a medical school curriculum. Research facilities include the Center for the Environment, the Center for Paralysis Research, and the Purdue Rare Isotope Measurement Laboratory. Total enrollment for the system is approximately 70,000; the West Lafayette campus serves some 38,000 students.

Purdue University was founded in 1869 under the provisions of the Morrill Act of 1862. It was named for John Purdue, its major founding donor. Instruction began in 1874 in West Lafayette. Notable alumni include astronauts Neil Armstrong and Roger Chaffee, basketball coach John Wooden, and playwright George Ade. The Calumet campus was established in 1946 and North Central in 1948.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Amy Tikkanen.
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