Fulton County Landlord Guide: Round Barns, Lake Manitou, the Potawatomi Trail of Death, and North-Central Indiana’s Lake Country
Fulton County is a north-central Indiana county that has accumulated an unusually layered identity for a rural jurisdiction of 20,500 people. It calls itself the Round Barn Capital of the World — a claim grounded in a remarkable concentration of surviving 19th-century round and multi-sided barns built by farmers who believed the circular design was more efficient than the standard rectangular form and, perhaps, that evil spirits couldn’t hide in corners. It contains more than 30 lakes scattered across its 370 square miles, fed by glacial geology that left behind kettle lakes and moraines. Its county seat, Rochester, sits alongside Lake Manitou, a 700-acre natural lake once known to early settlers as Devil’s Lake because of Indigenous and pioneer superstitions about the waters. And the grounds of its elegant 1895 limestone courthouse carry a marker commemorating one of the darkest chapters in Indiana history: the forced removal of the Potawatomi Nation from this land in 1838. Understanding Fulton County means engaging all of these layers.
The Round Barn Capital
Indiana has a higher concentration of surviving round barns than almost any other state, and Fulton County has a higher concentration of them than almost any other Indiana county. The round barn phenomenon in Indiana peaked in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, when agricultural engineers and innovative farmers promoted circular designs as superior for livestock management, hay storage, and structural efficiency. The barns were expensive and difficult to build — requiring skilled craftsmen who could work curved timber and siding — but those that survived have become local landmarks of considerable charm.
Several of Fulton County’s round barns are listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and the county promotes them as a heritage tourism attraction. For the rental market, the round barns’ significance is primarily about character and identity — they give Fulton County a sense of place that goes beyond the generic flat-field Indiana landscape and contributes to the rural quality of life that makes the county attractive to residents who actively choose rural living.
Lake Manitou and Rochester’s Recreational Identity
Lake Manitou is a 700-acre natural lake immediately adjacent to Rochester, connected to the city by parks, boat launches, and lakefront development. The lake was known to early European settlers as Devil’s Lake, a name reflecting the superstitious reputation the waters had among both Indigenous inhabitants and pioneering settlers who attributed its dark depths and occasional storms to supernatural forces. The lake was renamed Lake Manitou — from the Algonquian word for spirit or deity — in the 19th century. Today it is Rochester’s most prominent recreational asset, supporting boating, fishing, water sports, and summer community events that draw residents and visitors throughout the warm season.
Beyond Lake Manitou, Fulton County has more than 30 additional lakes scattered across the county, most of them smaller glacial lakes accessed by rural roads and dotted with seasonal cottages and cabins. These lakes create a modest but real short-term and seasonal rental market that does not exist in most north-central Indiana counties of comparable size. Lakefront properties on Fulton County’s smaller lakes can attract seasonal renters from South Bend, Fort Wayne, and Indianapolis who want a lake cottage within a reasonable drive.
The Potawatomi Trail of Death
The Fulton County Courthouse at 815 Main Street in Rochester carries one of Indiana’s most historically significant and sobering markers on its grounds: a memorial to the Potawatomi Trail of Death. In 1838, the U.S. government forcibly removed approximately 859 Potawatomi people from the Fulton County area under armed military escort, marching them to a reservation in Kansas under conditions that killed at least 42 people — mostly children and elderly — during the journey. The trail passed through more than 60 Indiana counties before reaching its destination, and the event stands as one of the most direct examples of Indian Removal policy’s human cost in Indiana.
The marker at the courthouse is one of multiple Trail of Death markers across Indiana and reflects Fulton County’s commitment to acknowledging the full history of the land. The Potawatomi and Miami nations were the primary Indigenous inhabitants of Fulton County prior to the forced removal of the 1830s, and their history is documented in the Fulton County Historical Society Museum in Rochester.
The Tippecanoe River and Recreation
The Tippecanoe River flows through Fulton County on its way south toward its confluence with the Wabash River. The Tippecanoe is a beloved paddling river across northern Indiana, with sections ranging from gentle family-friendly floats to more technical runs for experienced canoeists and kayakers. Fulton County’s section of the river provides fishing for bass, pike, and other species and is accessible at multiple public access points throughout the county.
The Rochester Economy
Rochester’s economy is driven by manufacturing, agriculture, and regional services. The Fulton Economic Development Corporation has been active in pursuing new industrial tenants for Rochester’s industrial park and identifying housing development partners to address what local leaders describe as an insufficient housing pipeline. The manufacturing base includes companies serving agricultural equipment, food processing, and general industrial markets. The county is approximately 45 miles south of South Bend, putting it within commuting range of Michiana-area employers for workers who prefer rural Fulton County living at lower housing costs. Median household income in Rochester runs approximately $57,000, reflecting a modest but stable wage environment for a rural north-central Indiana city.
Fulton Circuit and Superior Court
All Fulton County evictions are filed in Fulton Circuit Court or Fulton Superior Court, both located in the Fulton County Courthouse at 815 Main Street, Rochester, IN 46975. The Circuit Court is in Room 315 and can be reached at (574) 223-4339. The Clerk of Courts handles filings and can be reached at (574) 223-2911. Standard court hours are Monday through Friday, 8:00am to 4:00pm. Fulton County has both Circuit and Superior Courts, giving landlords two courts in which evictions may be filed. The eviction process follows Indiana’s standard IC 32-31 framework. A 10-day notice to pay or quit must be properly served with no grace period. After 10 days without cure, the landlord files the Eviction complaint. An uncontested eviction from notice through Writ of Assistance typically resolves in 30 to 60 days.
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