Terre Haute, Indiana
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Stephen
St. Paul, MN

Average place but has good potential - 10/12/2021

I lived in Terre Haute from 1980 to 2005, and have lived in 7 states and one other country since then. Terre Haute's my hometown. I had a mostly happy, normal childhood there, but always wanted to leave. If you're younger and looking for bigger adventures in life, "the Haute" is going to seem pretty sleepy. Go out and see the world. Nothing wrong with that. Gives you perspective. But I feel like most of the negative comments about Terre Haute could be made about virtually any town in America. Trust me, I've lived and traveled around the country. There's a lot of "Terre Hautes." I was a stuck-up kid. I thought Terre Haute had a lot of "trashy people." And if I'm being honest, I mean, yeah, it does have its fair share of trashy people. What city doesn't? I live up in the Twin Cities (Minnesota) now, a place that's totally in love with itself, and I guarantee you there are plenty of trashy people here. After being a social icebox, it's my #1 complaint about the Twin Cities. Terre Haute is an average city that shouldn't be average, because it has some pretty great things going for it. When people talk about Bloomington as Indiana's college town, they should really be talking about Terre Haute: Terre Haute has more colleges than Bloomington, including one of the top engineering schools in the country, a good Catholic college (originally for women but now admitting men), and Indiana State University. I went to Indiana State for undergrad, then went to IU-Bloomington and the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill for grad school. Undergrads definitely seemed a lot smarter at UNC, but honestly the faculty were about as good as the professors I had back at ISU. (I also went to undergrad 20 years ago, so I don't know if this has changed.) The question is: why can't Indiana State attract better students? People dumping on Terre Haute is one reason. So is Terre Haute's failure to launch. Endless loop right there. I think what really hurts Indiana State University is the quality of high-school education in America and the lure of Bloomington as the big sexy state school. (Students at Rose-Hulman, though, are pretty bright and come from all over the world.) Terre Haute produces plenty of intelligent, creative, interesting people, it just doesn't keep enough of them. It's a typical Midwestern city in that respect. Most of the brighter kids I went to high school with moved off to Indianapolis, Chicago, Nashville, or elsewhere. What Terre Haute really needs is for Bloomington, Indianapolis and Chicago to get so expensive you can't afford to live there anymore. Terre Haute has all the amenities of any typical small city in the U.S., it's just too close to more "exciting" places within a 3-4 hour drive. Trust me, I lived in Bloomington for a couple of years. Bloomington also gets kind of boring once you're an adult. I lived in Indianapolis for 2 years. I like Indianapolis, and generally feel like I'm around more like-minded people there versus Terre Haute, but Indy also gets stale after a few years. When I really compare the difference between Minneapolis-St. Paul (where I live now) and Terre Haute, the big difference is in how the Twin Cities marketed themselves and attracted more talent and jobs. Minneapolis succeeded not just because of the corporate jobs here (which also drove the cost of living up). It succeeded because it convinced people it was "cool" (so, "lots of brewpubs, concerts and coffee shops.") Minneapolis had fantastic marketers 30 years ago who convinced people "this is where it's at." And it mostly worked. Also, the flipside of Minnesotans living in their own cultural bubble is that they mostly stay and invest in their city -- unlike Terre Haute, which really sells itself short. Some people will mention politics. Terre Haute has always produced plenty of liberals (big Socialist town 100 years ago), the thing is, they just go live in liberal enclaves among each other now because they can't stand people who aren't like them. But plenty of liberals do stay. Almost everybody I know who still lives in Terre Haute is politically liberal, including my parents, who are more liberal than me. The place does need some more cosmetic facelifts. Some neighborhoods feel run down, others are as nice as any neighborhood I've seen in the Midwest. In the winter, Terre Haute can be jarringly ugly -- like every other city north of Atlanta. I've been in Boston, Philly, Pittsburgh and Seattle in the winter. They all have beauty issues. When I grew up in Terre Haute, I thought it was the edge of the world. Now I think that's a better description of my current city. Terre Haute isn't much of a cosmpolitan hub, but at least it's within a short drive to some more heavy-hitting cities. 3 hours to Chicago, an hour to Indy, 3 to Louisville and Cincinnati, a little over 4 to Nashville. (Asheville, NC, is 8 hours, a long drive but not bad. It's not impossibly far to drive to the East Coast or out to Colorado.) From Chicago O'Hare, you have some of the chepeast airfare in America and planes that go all over the world, direct flights to Europe, Asia, Latin America. I've driven from Terre Haute to Champaign, Illinois, parked for free, taken Amtrak to Chicago for about $20, avoided having to drive in the city or park at O'Hare, and flown to Italy. As long as you're making a decent income in Terre Haute, you're probably not paying a ton to live there, so you can use that money for travel. Indiana's state parks are some of the best in the country and were actually the model for most other state park systems. The scenery at Turkey Run, Shades, Pine Hills, McCormick's Creek and Brown County are as good as anything in the region. They don't pack the same punch as the amazing Northern Great Lakes -- I'm a huge of fan of northern Michigan and northern Minnesota -- but Indiana is definitely not all flat cornfields. There's a lot of surprising beauty tucked away. Get off the interstate. Go see it. Would I rather see the Rocky Mountains? Yeah. But Turkey Run is not a disappointment. People in Terre Haute are the usual mix. I don't think they're any nicer or ruder than folks in other cities. I've encountered both, everywhere. If you want to live around artsy intellectuals, you're not going to find a ton of that, but there are smart, creative people if you know where to look and focus on them. Terre Haute has its own social problems (some due to NAFTA, some to issues that have been around for a thousand years), but what it doesn't have is huge crime problems, gang warfare, camps of homeless people, SJW's who think burning down liquor stores is "justice for George," and the unbelieveable wall of crack addicts and psychos you'll see out in San Francisco, L.A., and Vancouver. You also won't see any Pacific sunsets. But you can probably afford to travel to the West Coast on vacation, enjoy the nice stuff, and not deal with the downsides of living out there (including smoke and wildfires). My dad goes to California three times a year, hates coming back to Terre Haute, but there's a reason why he hasn't moved to California. Terre Haute isn't for everybody. **Copacabana Beach it is not.** I wrestle with the idea of going back, but I know it's not my dream destination. If I could snap my fingers, I'd live in the Southwest or live abroad. Still, if we're being real, I could write a mile-long list of other cities in America that I think are a lot worse than Terre Haute or at least not any better. Keep a balanced view of the place, have realistic expectations, try not to be too judgmental, focus on the good stuff, keep your mind busy, and it's tolerable.

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K
West Terre Haute, IN

A horrible place - 1/15/2020

This town’s terrible no roads the government is corrupt and the elections are rigged stay far away even the people here hate this town

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Bp
Terre Haute, IN

Great place for a family, great place for a corpor - 6/14/2012

I read varied reviews when I moved here from the east coast 3 years ago - some good, some not so good. Now I feel I can give a reasonable reflection that I hope will be helpful for folks considering a move here. Terre Haute is a city still reeling from the NAFTA impacts of the 1990's. While there were at one time, many factories and distributors, many of these have moved overseas. Not surprisingly, the infrastructure here is great - Airport, Railway, highway access, and the like. The downside is that much of the infrastructure requires upkeep and the taxes in the city are heavier than average. If I was still in business, I would move my HQ here since it is very well located, three major universities in town (including the #1 ranked engineering school for undergrads - Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology and several highly ranked schools within an hour's drive), many inexpensive corporate spaces in prime locations, an inexpensive and educated labor force, and a close proximity to Indianapolis (~1 hour away) for most anything that is needed. On the family side, the housing is cheap, even for prime real estate. Most neighborhoods are safe, and the hoosiers (folks from Indiana) are wonderful. They are friendly without being nosey, they are informed and interested in making the city a nicer place to live. The schools here are middle of the road for K-12. The activities are inexpensive and available for families. The weather is varied - we seem to miss most major storms, but the summers are warm-hot, and winters are moderate-cold. For those who eat out a lot, most venues are available and inexpensive. For more varied tastes, Indianapolis has many treats. Overall, middle America (the crossroads of America) is very good for the family here. Try Terre Haute, you will like it more than you expect!

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Bryan
Terre Haute, IN

Guy had it right...back then - 2/23/2012

Terre haute used to be ok, now it's one of the worst places I've seen.

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shelly
Terre Haute, IN

Disgusting Little Town - 4/13/2010

Terre Haute is a failed city attracting misfits that can't function in normal society or keep a steady place in life. It seems all the folks living in this dreaded town from hell have Narcissitic Personality Disorders. Each one believes they are the center of the universe, believe that everyone should always agree with them, will verbally abuse people who made simple mistakes and throw tantrums for almost no reason at all. They talk about themselves in glowing terms even when they have been caught doing ugly, or even illegal deeds, continuously bragging about how great and wonderful they are, and will cross the line into deviant and sometimes criminal behavior in order to win the point. They lure you into their town with promises of hope and happiness. The extend their hand to help but if you accept their offer you instantly become a worthless piece of flesh. All the major factories have let Terre Haute, landlords rent houses with condemned signed still stuck to the doors, and you can't trust anyone. The town was built on deception and has never changed. The population contiunes to decline and businesses continue to close their doors and move away. The town smells to high heaven (heck Steve Martin called Terre Haute 'the armpit of America') and the Indianapolis Newspaper referred to Terre Haute as the 'city of stagnation'. Terre Haute is not a happy town and the people in Terre Haute are miserable. The problem with the people is they can't see it. Most of them has never stepped foot outside Terre Haute and doesn't have a clue how the world really works. Terre Haute's news station reported suicide stats in Terre Haute are higher than the number of people killed in car accidents in and around the city in a years time. That goes a long way in telling someone just how sad the town and its people really are. Stay away if you can. There's a reason why the population in Terre Haute is declining, why people are killing themselves, and why businesses are packing up and leaving the evil little town.

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samantha
Redmond, WA

o - 7/25/2009

Terre Haute is dirty and poor. Jobs are low paying, hard to find, and hard to keep. It is like living in a ghetto. Buildings are all ran down, apartments are overpriced, people are rude, any sort of low income help is hard to come by since so many need it. Not a great place to live.

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Richard
Terre Haute, IN

Terre Haute - 4/12/2009

Great place to raise a family. Housing very affordable.

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Eliza
Indianapolis, IN

I'm never coming back - 9/15/2007

I hate this place. Hell on earth. I once had my car frozen into a parking spot in Terre Haute for over a week. Proof that hell does in fact freeze over.

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Jordan
Terre Haute, IN

Conflict of Ideals - 7/19/2007

Terre Haute is a decent place to live, your average midwestern city in my mind. Terre Haute, although, shouldn't be as average as it is. Terre Haute is a city with a a community college, a state college, and two private colleges (one being one of the top ranked engineering colleges in the country). Usualy college towns are quite free-thinking advanced, more open to partying and wiht decently educated citizens. This is not Terre Haute; Terre Haute suffers in many aspects from a conflict of ideals between the younger age group and the older age group. Terre Haute is becomming a "safe heaven" for the retired due to its low cost of living, etc. and therefore halting any political progress or progress in other forms because the older generation are fearful of the onset of a college town ideology.

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yossi
West Terre Haute, IN

Indiana - 5/27/2006

A average city. Older community and not a lot of industry. Not expensive per say to live but have to drive to Indiapolis for better paying job.

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Greg
Peoria, IL

Terre Haute... - 2/1/2006

I grew up in Terre Haute... I graduated from Indiana State University which is a nice college. Along with Rose Hulman and St. Marys... but you have to move away to find a descent job. The town has not grown industrially and has become a sevice intersection at highway 70 and SR 41. Alcola, Stan Steel and NCR used to be located there and the only large manufactures are CBS and Lilly. I wish that the city officails would work on getting some real manufactures to locate there but Terre Haute just doesn't have any draw for large business including: night life, family-oriented festivals, nice restaurants or sport teams to attract new business. It has a Wal-mart, Super K-mart, Honey Creek Shopping Mall, several Krogers grocery stores and a very small airport with no flight service to other towns. There is just no upward movement, if anything things have went backwards for growth in Terrible Haute.

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Reid
Bloomington, IN

Stagnet Community - 2/1/2006

I lived in Terre Haute for 23 years and in that time the town hardly changed. Opportunity is limited, housing is cheap, yet good salaries are hard to find. The city is very spread out with no real designation of city and suburb, causing a lot of blochy areas with nice to mid income homes on one block, then low income and government housing on the next block. Terre Haute has Indianapolis, to the East about 70 miles, but no city with any significance within 2 hours or more on the N, W, and S. With all the major highways going through this city you would think it would be attractive to busines and industry, however it is not. Steve Martin called Terre Haute the "Armpit" of America. He was not far off.

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Roger
Terre Haute, IN

Utopia - 12/17/2005

Terre Haute, Indiana is a Garden of Eden! Low unemployment, good pay, inexpensive housing and the people are the greatest in the world. I can't believe I was blessed with the opportunity to live here! I'm never leaving! I've lived in Mesa, Az. and in Los Angeles (area), Ca. most of my life. This is way better, move here soon! Roger Kellogg

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