Transcript Slide 1

3. Geographic and Historical Notes
Indiana Prevention Resource Center
GIS in Prevention
County Profiles Series, No. 4
Newton County, Indiana
Barbara Seitz de Martinez, PhD, MLS, CPP, Project Director
The Indiana Prevention Resource Center at Indiana University is funded, in part, by a contract with the Indiana Family and Social Services
Administration, Division of Mental Health and Addiction, financially supported through HHS/Substance Abuse Mental Health Services
Administration, Center for Substance Abuse Prevention, Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment Block Grant. The IPRC is operated
by the Department of Applied Health Science and The School of Health, Physical Education and Recreation.
GIS in Prevention, County Profiles, Series 4 (2007)
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3. Geographic and Historical Notes
GIS in Prevention
County Profile Series, No. 4
Newton County, Indiana
Barbara Seitz de Martinez, PhD, MLS, CPP
Project Director
Project Staff:
Ritika Bhawal, MPH
Ryan Chopra, MPH
Kyoungsun Heo, MPA
Tuba M. Pervin Altay, MPH
Indiana Prevention Resource Center
Opinions expressed herein are those of the authors, and not necessarily those of the Trustees of Indiana University or the Division of
Mental Health and Addiction. Indiana University accepts full Responsibility for the content of this publication. ©2005 The Trustees of
Indiana University. Permission is extended to reproduce this County Profile for non-profit educational purposes. All other rights reserved.
GIS in Prevention, County Profiles, Series 4 (2007)
3. Geographic and Historical Notes
Newton County Map
The maps and tables in this publication were prepared using PCensus
for MapInfo and MapInfo Professional.
GIS in Prevention, County Profiles, Series 4 (2007)
3. Geographic and Historical Notes
3. Geographic and Historical Notes
Newton County is located in Northern Indiana and is bordered by the
State of Illinois to the west and by the following Indiana counties:
Lake to the north, Jasper to the east, and Benton to the south. U.S.
Highways 41 and 24, and State Highway 55 cross the county.
Elevation is 650-750 feet. The county’s landscape is nearly level and
features oak and hickory trees. The northern part of the county
pertains to the Southern Michigan and Northern Indiana Drift Plain
land resource area, and the southern part of the county pertains to
Northern Illinois and Indiana Heavy Till Plain land resource area.
Newton county is in the Ceantral Time Zone and observes DST.
Average daily temperatures are 12٥/32٥ in January and 60٥/86٥ in
July. Annual precipitation is about 37 and snowfall about 20-26
inches.
Typically the first freeze of the season occurs October 5-10 through
most of the county, and a few days later (October 10-15) in the
southeast tip. The last freeze varies from May 1-5 in the southern
half of the county to May 5-10 in northern Newton County. The
growing season lasts about 148-168 days.
Agricultural activity is mainly in soybeans and corn for grain.
About four-fifths of the land is in farms and a little over four-fifths of
that land is in cash crops. Another important crop is hay. Pumpkins
and sweet corn are important vegetable crops. Popcorn is a special
crop. Livestock are include cattle/calves and hogs/pigs. Main natural
resources include crushed stone and forestland. Water resources
include the Goose Pond Swamp and J.C. Murphy Lake, the
Kankakee and Iroquois Rivers, and several streams (Curtis Creek,
Beaver Lake Ditch, Knight Ditch, Hunter Ditch, and Montgomery
Ditch).
Communities include the towns of Kentland, which is the county seat,
Brook, Goodland, Kentland, Morocco, and Mount Ayr.
Sources: Map from PCensus for MapInfo;
GIS in Prevention, County Profiles, Series 4 (2007)
Notes from Indiana Facts: Flying the Colors by
John Clements, 1995.
3. Geographic and Historical Notes
Newton County
The maps and tables in this publication were prepared using PCensus
7.06 for MapInfo and MapInfo Professional 7.0.
GIS in Prevention, County Profiles, Series 4 (2007)
3. Geographic and Historical Notes
3. Location and Historical Notes
Newton County is not a tobacco-producing county, according to the Strategic Development Group’s “Alternative Agricultural
Strategy” (Bloomington, March 15, 2001) report, which is part of Governor Joseph E. Kernan’s “Recipient Final Reports for
Office of the Commissioner of Agriculture Grant Programs” (http://www.in.gov/oca/grants/valueadd/VAFinalReports.html):
GIS in Prevention, County Profiles, Series 4 (2007)
3. Geographic and Historical Notes
3. Newton County Block Group Maps
Don’t Know Your Block Group Number?
You can find it easily at the American
Factfinder Web Site
GIS in Prevention, County Profiles, Series 4 (2007)
Newton County
3. Geographic and Historical Notes
Close-up
GIS in Prevention, County Profiles, Series 4 (2007)
Block Groups