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DuPage County, Illinois History
Du Page County Guide was the last brush-stroke in the portrait of America
that the Federal Writers' Project set itself to paint. The portrait, of
course, remained unfinished when the Project closed. Even had the work
continued indefinitely, the picture could never have been completed, such is
the infinite variety of the face of our great country. The books brought out
by the Project that have been most widely acclaimed and read are the State
Guides. This is natural, since they, because of their wide geographic
coverage, have the widest appeal. But the multitude of smaller publications,
like the present volume, perhaps in the end will prove the most valuable to
future historians. The State books deal in broad generalities of a great
community's history, culture, politics, and economy, and, of necessity, cannot
give a close-up of the local scene such as the local Guides, which view the
city, county, or village through the magnifying lens of an historic
microscope, are able to do. To me, these local books always had the sharp
flavor of the particular territory they covered, and most vividly illustrated
the flowing pattern of American civilization.
In New Jersey, for example, the Project most frequently interpreted the small
town and city through the history of its fire department, which in that State
seems to have been the center around which revolved the eddy of the
community's social life. In one town, if I remember correctly, the local
pyromaniac kept the volunteer fire force busy, even to the point of burning
down the jail in which he had been lodged. In a number of towns throughout the
country it is strange how the local conduct-pattern repeats itself the high
point and crisis of history was the fight for the privilege of becoming the
county seat. In one case the rival town abducted, vi et armis, the
county records out of the old county court-house, a procedure which ended
unlike the similar happening in Du Page County just short of bloodshed. In
many towns the old cemetery is a central point of interest, for in it are
buried the town's founders, notables, and "characters." I recall the case of
the man who lies buried surrounded by his six wives and whose stone proudly
records the fact that he outlived all of them.
We, today, are apt to think of the frontier as having existed vaguely
somewhere west of the Mississippi. But actually the first frontier was in the
backyards of the Puritan Fathers in Plymouth, and only gradually moved
westward across New England, New York, Pennsylvania, and the Middle Western
States, and from there receded slowly toward the Pacific.
The general pattern of frontier communities was the same: the coming of the
first settlers and the building of log cabins, a log church, and the first
schoolhouse; conflicts with the Indians; the building of the first roads; the
clearing of stumps; the laying out of a town. The successive gold rushes which
claimed some of Du Page County's pioneers actually depopulated some Western
towns, but the deserters often returned to transmute their gold dust into
enterprises that brought prosperity to the community. In Northern towns you
have the development often in opposition to a small but articulate minority of
abolitionist sentiment, the establishment of stations of the underground
railroad, and mass enlistment in the Union forces during the Civil War. The
contest to have the canal and, later, the railroad come to town is another
part of the general pattern. On the Pacific Coast that battle was fought
between Tacoma and Seattle for the better part of a generation, with Seattle
the final victor. The boom-bust is less a part of the pattern of the East than
of the West, although many Eastern and Middle Western towns boomed and
declined with the wanton cutting of the lumber in the great forests and the
exhaustion of coal and oil in certain localities, just as in the West lusty
towns of ten thousand and more shrank to ghost towns when gold or lumber
sources petered out. Labor conflicts, as labor fought for recognition, have
punctuated local history almost everywhere. Du Page County, however,
essentially a non-industrial area, has been spared any spectacular part in
this unhappy portion of the general picture. The struggle for good government,
the fight against local corruption, and the effort to attain to better
techniques of local administration are every-where characteristic of small
communities as of large. All over America these and many other general
developments have taken place, but in each community they have followed along
special lines, always differing in this or that point from the generalization.
This is what makes these little guidebooks so interesting. Reading them, one
is able to follow the large developments of American civilization; but the
survey is never monotonous because of the infinite variety of detail in each
community. These little books they are little merely in the sense that they
cover only a comparatively small area these "little" books, like the Du Page
County Guide, are the living flesh and blood of American history.
Du Page County, A Descriptive And Historical Guide
Table of Contents:
- County Profile
- The County Today
- The Good Land
- "The Great White Father Must Have Seen A Bad Bird ..."
- So They Came To Du Page
- Cities And Villages
- Downers Grove
- Elmhurst
- Glenbard (Glen Ellyn And Lombard)
- Hinsdale
- Naperville
- West Chicago
- Wheaton
- Motor Tours
- Tour 1: Central And South Sections Of The County
- Tour 2: North Section Of The County
- Key To Points Of Interest On County Motor Tours Map
- Appendix I: Changes In Points Of Interest Since 1939
- Appendix II: Population Figures, 1930, 1940, And 1950 Censuses
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The Plow Boys
One day in the year 1860 a large wagon rattled down Main Street in
Downers Grove. It was followed by most of the townspeople, children, and
dogs. In the wagon a flag pole towered 40 feet in the air, sup-porting a
large American flag. Arranged in tiers around the pole were 45 young men
of the village, dressed in white trousers, patent leather belts, red
flannel shirts, and glazed caps. The townspeople gaped and cheered. These
were the Plow Boys, a political organization led by the Republican,
Sheriff Theodore S. Rogers. They held banners which pro-claimed: "Lincoln
for President!" . . . "Vote for Old Abe." Four years before, their banners
had exhorted: "Buchanan for President! Vote for James Buchanan!" Into
every nearby town and community they went, banners flying, bringing the
townsfolk all the excitement of a political campaign. A generation later,
the sons of the original Plow Boys organized a similar group to serve
during the campaign of Benjamin Harrison.
A few months after campaigning for Lincoln, the men of Downers Grove
were called upon to give more serious proof of their loyalty than the
forming of a political society. When Captain Theodore Rogers was
commissioned to organize the first company of 100 men in Du Page County
for service in the Civil War, 138 men promptly enlisted. Captain Rogers
was put in command of Company B, 105th Illinois Infantry, a regiment which
participated in Sherman's march to the sea and in the siege of Savannah.
Captain Walter Blanchard, also of Downers Grove, commanded Company B of
the 19th Illinois Infantry. In the Battle of Ringgold Gap he was mortally
wounded, but rallied his men as he fell. In his report on this battle,
General Hooker said of this company: "It has never been my fortune to
serve with more zealous and devoted soldiers." In an engagement at
Missionary Ridge the Thirteenth, although outnumbered, captured an entire
Confederate regiment.
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