Indiana, USA
Indiana bed and breakfast favorites at the Crossroads of America
Book into an Indiana bed and breakfast and experience what “The Land of the Indians” has to offer. Indiana claims to be the Crossroads of America and with justification. Indianapolis is the junction of interstate highways and serves as the base for many US trucking lines. Adventurers who want to see America inevitably cross Indiana. Bed and breakfasts as wells and lodges and inns are ready to welcome the tourist who is crossing the state. There are hundreds of well-established B&Bs in the state thanks to Indiana’s position as a manufacturing and industrial base. But Indiana’s defining motif is transportation, from the highways and byways to the road trains that cross the country to the site of the Indianapolis 500. Think of Indiana, you think of roads: peaceful two-lane routes lined by cornfields, southern byways unraveling over roller-coaster hills, the asphalt turns of the Indianapolis Speedway.
Indiana B&Bs are ready to welcome travelers. The state has lots to offer. The capital, Indianapolis, is a thriving economic center and a tourist destination. Most Indiana bed and breakfast visitors make sure they see the Indiana State Museum. Of course Indiana bed and breakfast establishments are packed when the famous annual Indianapolis 500 comes round. Fort Wayne bed and breakfast visitors are encouraged to visit Lincoln Museum, which is dedicated to Abraham Lincoln's life. Also in this part of the state is the University of Notre Dame. In Evansville, a historic riverfront town in South Indiana, visitors are sure to enjoy the Willard Library, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Indiana bed and breakfast accommodate is also available for tourists wanting to visit Wyandotte Cave, one of the largest in the U.S. This is located in Crawford County in southern Indiana, andWest Baden and French Lick are well known for their mineral
springs. Other attractions where Indiana bed and breakfasts are situated include the Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore, the Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial, and the George Rogers Clark National Historical Park. Visitors soon discover that Indiana, this classic Midwestern state, It is the 19th US state and has about 6,3 million residents, who are referred to as Hoosiers for reasons long forgotten. Many Indiana bed and breakfast businesses and lodges and inns incorporate the word “Hoosier” in their names. Indiana has a strong basketball tradition, often called Hoosier Hysteria. During big basketball events Indiana bed and breakfasts are booked out so be sure to make your reservations in good time.