Berwyn
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About this ebook
Douglas Deuchler
The character of this singular suburb is preserved and celebrated here. Explore the fascinating history of Maywood, Illinois, with author Douglas Deuchler, a journalist, playwright, and historian who taught in the community for 34 years. Maywood transports readers back in time to meet the people and visit the places that provide the town with its unique heritage. Mr. Deuchler's first Arcadia book, Oak Park in Vintage Postcards, was published in 2003.
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Berwyn - Douglas Deuchler
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INTRODUCTION
At the end of the Ice Age over 13,000 years ago, the area now known as Berwyn was completely reshaped. As the vast glacial ice cap that had covered the region began to melt, it left evidence of its terminal point, such as the rise along Riverside Drive near Harlem Avenue. This slight elevation running northeast throughout the community was once a sandy beach that can still be seen at various points, such as at East Avenue and Scoville Avenue and at Highland Avenue just north of Cermak Road. The melting glacier left behind rolling ridges of solid mud and gravel as it receded northward.
Berwyn thus started out with a dampness problem. Much of the land remained swampy most of the year. Early residents, in fact, kept rowboats handy so they could get around during the rainy season. Flooding was such a constant challenge the wooden sidewalks often literally floated away. As late as 1912, the south end of the community often had so much water standing that it attracted huge flocks of wild ducks and geese. Duck hunting became a very popular pastime in the vicinity.
Deep drainage ditches were dug that crisscrossed the settlement. They were nearly always filled with deep muddy water. The corner of Ogden Road and Ridgeland Avenue was called Four Bridge Corner
because there were deep ditches on both sides of the road with a narrow bridge across each of them. Mothers tied their children together with clothesline so that if one of them fell in on his way to school, the others could pull him out. But eventually all this marshland was drained, filled in, and utilized.
Berwyn began as part of a 36-square mile territory called Cicero Township. But for over a century it has been a 3.8-square mile, rectangular, independent Chicago suburb bordered on the north by Roosevelt Road (12th Street), on the east by Lombard Avenue, on the south by Pershing Road (39th Street), and on the west by Harlem Avenue.
Berwyn’s prime location, with its easy access to public transportation and highways, was a key factor that lured both settlers and commerce into the community. For many generations the city has been home to successive waves of newcomers who often worked long hours to build new lives for themselves and their families.
The City of Homes, as Berwyn has long been known, continues to be recognized for its top-quality housing stock. Although 1920s bungalows are predominant, there is an exciting gamut of residential styles on nearly every street, from ornate painted lady
Victorians to the raised ranch
homes of the 1950s and 1960s.
While no individual work can fully document the phenomenal growth and development of such a community, please join me as we time travel
back via vintage photographs to its early days. My goal is not just to illustrate the life and times of Berwyn, but also to salute and celebrate this most vibrant, fascinating city.
Just before the turn of the twentieth century, Charles E. Piper (1858–1923) became one of the founders of early Berwyn. Along with fellow attorney and real estate speculator Wilbur J. Andrews (1859–1931), Piper purchased 106 acres of land adjacent to the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad and began to lay out the new community like a board game. Knowing that their subdivision would require a train station to service commuters who worked in the city, Piper and Andrews had a depot constructed at their own expense. On May 17, 1890, they officially christened their town Berwyn, selecting the name of a picturesque suburb of Philadelphia from a railroad timetable. They simply liked the sound of it.
One
THE BIRTH OF BERWYN
After the Black Hawk War, the Native American population of northern Illinois was forcibly evicted from the region in the 1830s. After the Indians left and moved further west, beyond the Mississippi River, the land became available for white settlers. At a time when anti-Irish feeling was strong, many Irish workers were recruited to help dig the Illinois and Michigan Canal that would effectively open waterway travel between the Great Lakes and the Gulf of Mexico. Many of these Irish laborers and their families remained after the digging of the canal was completed, establishing small farms in the area that is now southwest Berwyn. The canal is now buried beneath the Stevenson Expressway.
In 1864, railroad tracks were laid through the south section of the community, creating a link from Chicago to Aurora. But the settlement remained rural and essentially undeveloped for several decades.
Berwyn’s early pattern of growth was unique. There was no central area or nucleus from which the community expanded. Berwyn began as two separate communities with vast stretches of marsh and farmland in between. For decades, settlers north of 16th Street were technically living in an Oak Park subdivision called South Oak Park.
Only two dirt roads, Oak Park Avenue and Ridgeland Avenue, crossed the vast prairies, cabbage patches, and onion fields that separated the two settlements.
Berwyn and several adjacent communities continually agitated to break away from Cicero Township, but not all were successful. Austin failed in its efforts to become independent and eventually became part of Chicago. But on November 5, 1901, both Oak Park and Berwyn voted to go it alone as independent municipalities.