Little Tribe River
Little Tribe River | |
---|---|
City of Little Tribe River | |
Country | Zamastan |
Province | Pahl |
Established | 1822 |
Population | |
• Total | 258,404 |
Little Tribe River is a city in the Zamastanian province of Pahl. It has a population of around 258,000 and is located in the northern panhandle Pahl along the namesake Little Tribe River, adjacent to the eastern foothills of the Zian Mountains and 30 miles north of Foreman City. Named for a large collective settlement of Catica First Nations tribes which inhabited the area prior to Adulan exploration, the city was initially established as a key military outpost near the borders of the Gladysynthian, Mayottean, and Parabocan empires. Early planners dammed up the river to create a decorative lake to the south of the central business district with a dam a block and a half west of the later elaborate 260 m (850 ft) long Tayon Street Bridge across the new lake.
Residential neighborhoods include precincts beyond the historic city center are historically or socially noteworthy neighborhoods. Immediately to the north of the central business district is the old warehouse district, increasingly the focus of shopping, nightclubs and residential development; as in other prarie cities of Euronia, the periphery contains shopping malls and big box stores.
In the 1870s, the city was devastated in the Parabocan War, but resurged as a transport hub for goods headed east in the post-war decades. In 1916, the deadliest tornado in Zamastanian history destroyed much of the town and left 78 people dead; in the 1930s, the Pell Riot brought further attention and, in the midst of the 1950s the World War brought much needed steel industries into the city. In recent years, northern Pahl's agricultural and mineral resources have come into new demand, and it has entered a new period of strong economic growth.