Yum!
Planting trees is one of the greatest legacies you can leave a parcel of land.
My brother planted ~40 doug firs on his property, 30 years ago. He spaced them ~30' apart, like you find the mature ones in the forest. He's long gone from that property, but there's a beautiful forest there now.
From the earlier suggestion, sequoia may not grow in your area. They are beautiful, take up a lot of space, and can be home to a few 'coon families at one time, but mine has never fared well in ice storms.
I would recommend a varied approach.
You said you're impatient, so do fast growers and intermingle with the true forest giants.
All the suggestions below are from my own experience growing up in the Midwest (MI) and Oregon, from trees on property I owned or trees I planted.
Fast Growers
- Lombardy Poplar / Italian Cypress
Fast growers, don't live long (~ 20 years). The italians grow to 30', the lombardy's to 60'. It might be too cold for Cypress.
- "Cottonwood" poplar : These are beautiful giants, release the snowy cotton seeds in May / June. The leaves make a soft, peaceful sound in the wind. I found a volunteer in '74 in my garden, we had just lost all the elms to Dutch elm, so thought, "let's see what you can do". By '85 it was >60' tall.
- Choke cherry. A great border "shrub", if cultivated can turn into a gorgeous tree.
Medium Growers
- Sweet Gum
Not a terribly large tree (~40'), beautiful fall colors, seems to be resistant to most insects.
- Mulberry
Also not too big. Grandkids will LOVE the berries, birds too. They're messy.
- Hawthorne Apple. These can be invasive has he!!, but are also a beautiful shrub or tree. when a shrub, a great privacy barrier because of the 1" thorns.
- Holly (you may be too cold in Indianna). Beautiful evergreen trees. Some grow as globes, some as a conical form. The females produce the berries, and talk about a tree that brings flocks of robins.
- Birch. Paper birches are the prettiest, but great trees. They need a good water table.
The Majestics - these are ones you will really appreciate after 40 years.
- Northern Red Oak - these are the ones that grow tall and straight for 20'. There are varieties that can develop into sprawling monsters too. If you prune and tend it while it's forming it's lead, you can set its path of growth.
- White Oak - in the Midwest, the white oaks are big leafed, here in Oregon they are small leafed. Both slow, gorgeous trees.
- Pin Oak - I'm on my 2nd one, right outside my window. It was a 6' tall, three lead sapling competing with a Rhodendron when I found it on my property ten years ago. Cut back the rhodie, cut the growth to the vertical lead. Now the trunk is ~10" diameter, and the tree is ~30' tall. It keeps my room cool in the summer.
- Black Walnut (do NOT plant it anywhere near a driveway)
- Black Pine
- White Pine
- Ponderosa Pine (I believe in IN they are "eastern yellow pine")
The rest below are ones that were on my past properties. Beautiful trees
- Sugar Maple
- London Plane Tree (may be too cold)
- Hickory
- American Beech (or European - both gorgeous)
- If you can, find American Chestnut and plant them. Gorgeous trees.
Do NOT Plant
- Silver Maple
- Norway Maple
Both the above trees are "widow makers", known for dropping huge limbs. Norways also have a surface root system that makes digging or growing anything else difficult.