Indian Village is a neighborhood located in Detroit, Michigan, bounded to the north and south by Mack Avenue and East Jefferson Avenue, respectively, along the streets of Burns, Iroquois, and Seminole.
Indian Village has very active community organizations, including the Indian Village Association, Men's Garden Club and Women's Garden Club. The neighborhood hosts an annual Home & Garden Tour on the first Saturday in June, neighborhood yard sales in September, a holiday home tour in December, and many other community events. Indian Village is one of Detroit's few white majority neighborhoods.
Schools
Detroit Public Schools operates the area's public schools.
Residents are zoned to Nichols Elementary School, Marcus Garvey African Centered Academy K-8 for middle school, and Southeastern High School. On previous occasions, Butzel Middle School served Indian Village.
Private schools serving Indian Village include the Benjamin E. Mays Male Academy, the Detroit Waldorf School and Detroit Friends School.
Notable buildings
{| class="wikitable sortable"
!style="background:light gray; color:black"|Name
! class="unsortable" style="background:light gray; color:black"|Image
! style="background:light gray; color:black"|Year
! class="unsortable" style="background:light gray; color:black"|Location
! class="unsortable" style="background:light gray; color:black"|Style
! class="unsortable" style="background:light gray; color:black"|Architect
! class="unsortable" style="background:light gray; color:black"|Notes
|- <!-- in alphabetical order by surname -->
|John Beaumont House
|<!-- Please insert image. -->
|1911
|1090 Seminole
|Federal
|Donaldson and Meier
|Founding member of law firm of Smith, Beaumont, and Harris.
|-
|Bliemaster House
|<!-- Please insert image. -->
|1917
|3465 Burns
|English Colonial
|Mildner and Eisen
|Built for Jacob Schaeffer, who built and owned the largest storage facility at the time. Mildner and Eisen also built the building on the south-east side of Mack and Gratiot.
|-
|James Burgess Book Jr. House
|125px
|1911
|8469 East Jefferson Ave.
|Neo-Renaissance
|Louis Kamper
|
|-
|Warren Scripps Booth House
|121px
|1922
|2950 Iroquois
|English Cottage
|Marcus Burrowes
|Son of Cranbrook founders George and Ellen Scripps Booth. President, Publisher and Chairman of The Detroit News.
|-
|Arthur and Clara Buhl House
|<!-- Please insert image. -->
|1908
|1116 Iroquois
|Gothic, Tudor
| John Scott
|Member of the family whose fortune eventually built the Buhl Building.
|-
|Goebel House
|125px
|1912
|1480 Seminole
|German Baroque, Tudor, Arts and Crafts
|Chittenden & Kotting
|Built for Fritz Goebel, vice president (and younger son of the founder) of Goebel Brewing Company.
|-
|James Hamilton House
|125px
|1902
|8325 East Jefferson Ave.
|Tudor Revival
|Stratton & Baldwin
|
|-
|William F. Harris House
|125px
|<!-- Please insert image. -->
|8335 East Jefferson Ave.
|
|
|
|-
|Christian Henry Hecker House
|<!-- Please insert image. -->
|1915
|1763 Iroquois
|
|MacFarlane, Maul, and Lentz
|Son of Colonel Frank J. Hecker. Christian Hecker served as president of the Hecker Insurance Co.
|-
|George M. Holley
|<!-- Please insert image. -->
|1916
|2152 Burns
|
|William Van Tine
|Founded the Holley Carburetor Company.
|-
|Robert Hupp House
|<!-- Please insert image. -->
|1911
|1516 Iroquois
|Prairie Style
|George Valentine Pottle
|Home of the auto baron who built the Huppmobile.
|-
|John Kay House
|125px
|1916
|2924 Iroquois
|Colonial Revival
|Oscar C. Gottesleben
|Built for John Kay, prominent jeweler and founder of Wright, Kay & Company, for an estimated cost of $8,000.
|-
|Bernard G. Koether and Harriet Bowerman House
| <!-- Please insert image. -->
|1923
|2921 Burns
|
|Herman & Simons
|Koether was GM executive, director of sales, advertising, and public relations.
|-
|Henry Leland House
|125px
|1901
|1052 Seminole St.
|Tudor Revival
|Unknown
|Henry Leland was an entrepreneur and machinist who founded Lincoln and Cadillac.
|-
|Julius T. Melchers House
|<!-- Please insert image. -->
|1897
|723 Seyburn
|Colonial Revival
|Donaldson and Meier
|Home of Detroit sculptor Julius T. Melchers. The gable of the house is carved by Melchers.
|-
|Edwin Nelson House
|125px
|
|8311 East Jefferson Ave.
|Federal
|
|
|-
|Pewabic Pottery Co.
|<!-- Please insert image. -->
|1907
|10125 E. Jefferson Ave.
|Tudor
|Stratton & Baldwin
|Mary Chase Perry Stratton, the founder of Pewabic Pottery was married to one of the architects.
|-
|Cornelius Ray House
|<!-- Please insert image. -->
|1910
|1500 Seminole
|French - American colonial
|Louis Kamper
|
