Will County
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About this ebook
David A. Belden
David A. Belden is a doctoral candidate in the School of Education at DePaul University. His primary interests include local history and the early road history of Route 66 and the Lincoln Highway. He is actively involved in the collaborative digitization project between the Minooka Public Library and Minooka Community High School. Belden currently teaches various local history classes at Minooka Community High School and is an adjunct instructor at the University of St. Francis and Joliet Junior College.
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Will County - David A. Belden
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INTRODUCTION
The Local History Digitization Project at Minooka Community High School is designed to increase awareness of the area’s local history and access to its historical collections. It digitizes collections from around the community, making them accessible on the Web site, www.localhistoryproject.org, and in a publication format. The scope of the digitization project includes postcards, photographs, genealogical information, area maps, plat books, newspapers and clippings, church records, telephone books, and school yearbooks, among others.
Over the past few years, the focus of the project’s efforts has been postcard digitization. Postcards are one of the top collectibles worldwide, competing with coins and stamps. They can be very inexpensive, sometimes free, and take little space. Some postcards are very artistic and bring back nostalgic memories. In fact, just looking at vintage postcards evokes an earlier time in American history when life was much simpler. Each postcard is a snapshot of the past: a moment, a slice of social history frozen in time. Postcards provide a panorama of the events of the past century, including wars, sporting events, great exhibitions, and local fetes, to name a few. They can also show the development of rail, road, sea, and air transportation. Perhaps the most fascinating part of the postcard is the back side. Every postcard that has been mailed tells a little bit about its place in the bygone world. The picture, stamp, postmark, message, and address are part of the life of two people—the sender and the recipient—in the past. The intent is to show the historical and cultural aspects of Will County in this book. The postcards will provide the means to discover early towns in the county.
Many different aspects of Will County local history and life can be found in the picture postcards collection found in this book, including schools, businesses, sports teams, social gatherings, churches, public parks, homes, street scenes, and buildings. Because the history of Will County is so intertwined with the growth of the railroad, pictures of railroad depots and businesses located near the tracks are also part of the collection. These picture postcards form the basis for this book. The intent is to showcase an important component of the digitization project and, at the same time, celebrate the local history of Will County through postcards.
Of particular interest are the written messages found on both sides of the card. While the postcard did not serve as a medium for substantial messages, it did open a window to how people thought and communicated in the past. Longer, more intimate messages still had to be sent by ordinary, closed letters, but by the early part of the 20th century, the picture postcard became the perfect medium for short communications. When appropriate, the correspondences found on the postcards are included. It is also important to note that the first chapter (Joliet) is the shortest of all the chapters in the book. In order to showcase as many communities in the county as possible, and because the author has already published a book on Joliet, the decision was made to shorten the chapter.
Nearly 200 years ago, the land that is now Will County was covered by a vast prairie. Potawatomi Indians farmed, trapped, and traveled the area, which was at the crossroads of their land trails and river routes. In the late 17th century, European fur traders arrived and also began to take advantage of the abundance of muskrat, beavers, and other creatures. Trade slowed substantially by the 1820s, as hunting and the enclosure and tilling of the soil depleted the fur supply.
In 1826, Jesse Walker established the area’s first permanent white settlement, Walker’s Grove, near the present town of Plainfield. Most newcomers relied on agriculture, milling, and trade for their subsistence. On January 12, 1836, the state of Illinois responded to the residents’ petition and formed the county of Will, combining parts of Cook and Iroquois Counties. The Illinois legislature named the county for Conrad Will, a member of the first nine general assemblies. Later that year, the three commissioners of the Will County board held their first meeting in the county seat of Juliet (later Joliet).
Six months after the county was formed, workers broke ground for the 96-mile-long Illinois and Michigan Canal, which connected the Chicago River with the Illinois River. The man-made waterway helped to boost the economy and put many new towns on the map. In the mid-19th century, mining augmented the county’s economy. In 1864, while drilling for water, William Henneberry unintentionally hit a rich vein of coal. Soon thereafter, speculators arrived, and by the early 1880s, coal mining had reached its peak in Will County with seven companies operating mines, employing 2,180 men and producing 700,000 tons of coal annually. During this period, limestone quarrying also boomed. By the 1880s, Joliet had adopted the nickname Stone City,
shipping tons of limestone to Chicago for use in the construction of the water tower and residences and businesses throughout the city.
By the early 20th century, the economy of the region began to change as manufacturers and refiners opened and operated sites in the area, and Will County experienced a new industrialization. Although industrialization began to decline by the 1980s, the population of the region began to expand and today is known as one of the fastest-growing counties in Illinois.
A few final thoughts . . . People of every place and time deserve a history. Only local history satisfies the need to remember the most routine matters and the most intimate parts of one’s life. Local history allows the reconstruction of the everyday lives of those who lived before, along with their goods, machines, tools with which they worked, and the groups that they were a part of in the community. Local history helps recapture how they experienced the world they lived in and how it can be better understood today. While every community has stories to tell, there are too few devoted historians to tell them.
Those few local historians are all driven to piece together a cherished, intimate, and routine past. They all cannot get rid of their curiosity with their community’s past. Oftentimes, this curiosity does not allow them to write the critical local history that is required to understand the past. They lack a methodology or a complex hypothesis to help examine the past. Instead, they focus on the anecdotes, the stories, the details, and the