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Glencoe
Community
Info
Glencoe, IL, Website
Glencoe Illinois. From the Chicago Tribune. The village has an active Historic
Preservation Commission that carefully culls through the hundreds of vintage
homes and public buildings to give official status to those properties deemed
most precious.
The commission has a published guide, available in the village hall, that
lists 96 architecturally significant structures, including the English-style
Glencoe Union Church, dating from 1911, and the spectacularly modern North
Shore Congregation Israel Synagogue, built in 1964 on a former lakeside estate.
The suburb of Glencoe, which borders Lake Michigan and is one of many towns
that make up Chicago's affluent North Shore, is simply not your typical suburb.
There isn't any area in all of Glencoe that looks like a subdivision. In the
late '40s and early '50s subdivisions were built on the western side of Glencoe,
but those areas have mature trees and none of the homes are like other ones
on the street. There's no homogeneity here. The homes are all unique.
Homes are unique and are often architecturally significant, such as the nine
Frank Lloyd Wright homes in Glencoe. But homes usually are pricey. The selling
price for single-family homes in the village during 1994 and 1995 averaged
$510,000 reported Patrick O'Rourke, owner of Landmark Real Estate Inc.
Very expensive properties hug the lake, with many mansions costing $1 million
and more. Homes a few blocks from the beach on the east side of the village
are usually in the upper-six figures, and here is where many cherished three-story
homes built early in the century are found, Ross said.
Although buyers would be hard-pressed to find a starter home under $200,000
in Glencoe, there are a few houses on the south side of the village and near
the business district priced under $300,000, Ross said. Many of the split-levels
and colonials that were developed in subdivisions on the western side are more
affordable than the vintage houses to the east.
The business district delights Glencoe residents about as much as the beauty
of the lake shore and historical architecture. A true Main Street style town
-- no strip mall settings -- offers some 81 stores, mixing a small-town flavor
with convenience and upscale merchants and boutiques. Residents recently mourned
the end of a nearly century-old family business, Wieneke's hardware store,
which closed because there was no next generation to take control. Now, however,
Wieneke's is being renovated to include four new retailers on the first floor
and about a dozen apartments above.
A scattering of apartments can be found near the business district, usually
in charming vintage buildings.
Although Glencoe can be defined by its historical past, the village is intent
on keeping its schools on the cutting edge.
A Short History of Glencoe
By Suzanne Weiss
Author of "Glencoe Queen of Suburbs"
(From which this is excerpted.)
BEGINNINGS
First the Potawatomis walked here, softly through the forest, stalking the
plentiful wild game. There were no sounds other than the cry of birds, wind
rustling through the trees, waves lapping against the shore. What the place
was called in that time is not known to us.
In the year 1835, Chicago, or Fort Dearborn as it was then named, with a population
near 500, was growing a bit crowded for some tastes. Anson H. Taylor, a young
storekeeper, builder and trader who, along with his brother, had come out from
the East, needed more elbow room. Anson and Charles Taylor had built the first
bridge across the Chicago River three years earlier, a wooden span connecting
the south bank of the river with the Green Bay Trail. While another brother,
Augustine, continued to put his mark on the early Chicago landscape, that trail
beckoned Anson.
Taylor, his wife, Eliza, and their infant son, Louis Erastus, followed the
path along the lake, past the Ouillmette settlement, past the old Potawotami
village that would come to be known as Indian Hill. Finally coming to rest
on a high bluff overlooking Lake Michigan, they determined to build their home
here, far from the muddy riverbank and crowds they had left behind.
TAYLORSPORT
Glencoe's first non-native family, Anson and Lisa Taylor built a log cabin,
had their household goods transported along the lakeshore by ox-drawn scow.
Paying $189.94 for 160 acres of former Indian land, Taylor was granted title
in 1839. President Van Buren signed the deed. The following year, Taylor moved
the dwelling a bit closer to the road and added a two-story frame structure
that became known as LaPier House, location of the first post office in the
vicinity, as well as a store. Nothing, if not enterprising, Taylor soon expanded
his use of the building to include a hostel, which catered to travelers on
the post road going west.
The inn, located
at what is now185 Old Green Bay Road, operated for some 50 years. It burned
down
in 1893,according to one handwritten account, torched
by the vengeful daughter of the last resident, an elderly woman who was evicted
on the orders of "some real estate shark." Wrote old-time Glencoe
resident Charles Tapper, who remembered watching as a child, "it was a
wonderful blaze."
Anson and Eliza were not alone for very long in Taylorsport, as the new settlement
was called. In 1838two families of English descent moved into the area: William
and Thomas Turnbull as farmers in what is now the northwest end of Glencoe
and former cabinet maker Robert Daggit, his wife and their nine children, nearer
to the lake.
Land was $1.25 an acre and, in time, Daggit acquired a great deal of it, some
1,000 acres, all told. When three of his children died, he buried them on a
portion of this land and the first area cemetery was formed. All the existing
cemeteries were located in Chicago and, in winter, it was not possible to get
there for burials. Accordingly, the entire Daggit family and many other early
residents eventually were buried in that cemetery on Lake Cook Road. It's located
today along Lake-Cook Road east of Highland.
People kept coming. Fite Diettrich, who fled the Napoleonic Wars in Europe,
moved from Chicago to Taylorsportin 1839. A matchmaker by trade, he turned
his hand to farming. Other farmers followed, Wolfgang Louidel settling in what
is now Skokie Heights and Michael Gormley on the present site of Skokie County
Club. The Beinlichs were in the third wave of settlers who followed Taylor
and, years later, North School was built on the site of their original homestead.
In 1850, a school was built in Taylorsport, on Green Bay Road and Montgomery
Street. The log schoolhouse served the farmers at the north end of the settlement
as well as Taylor's immediate neighbors. According to local legend, one farmer
carried his small son to school from the north end every morning on his back,
returning home with him the same way at night.
THE LOGGING TRADE
Lumber was plentiful as more and more land was cleared. In 1855, a lumber
contractor, G.C. Parks, built a steam sawmill, located on the present site
of Shelton Park, to capitalize on the natural resource. A 500-foot pier already
had been built at the foot of Harbor Street and two schooners, the John Lillie
and the Garter, regularly sailed between Taylorsport and Chicago, loaded with
cordwood. When the railroad came through, Parks' sawmill supplied fuel for
the wood burning engines.
The forest, once too dense for wagons to get through, was fast disappearing
under the axe of progress. Logging was big business for some, a meager living
for others. Some of the early settlers hauled their wood into the city with
oxen, trading it for groceries or selling it directly for $1.50 a cord. When
times were particularly tough, other men would follow the wood into Chicago,
wait until it was sold and then contract to chop it up. The daily wage earned
by wood chopping was between 35 and 40 cents, according to the memoirs of George
Hesler, who grew up in the area during those hard times.
Near the mill, charcoal pits were dug and the burned charcoal also was transported
to Chicago by oxcart. The making and selling of charcoal, at 5 to 10 cents
a bushel, became principal means of making money in the 1860s and '70s, Hesler
recalled. Alsatian emigres, the Stupey family, became the first charcoal burners
in the area.
Anson Taylor, already a busy storekeeper, innkeeper and postmaster, was appointed
Justice of the Peace for New Trier Township in 1850. He and Eliza had five
children before she died. In 1855, the widower married again and had two more
children by Marianne Barrett, his second wife. Their youngest son, John, wed
Maria Stupey, of the charcoal burning clan.
As recently as 1969, some of Anson's descendants still lived in Glencoe, as
well as branches of the Beinlich, Diettrich and Gormley family trees. Other
settlers whose families remained in Glencoe for generations include Theodore
Barnett, John Feyd, Andrew MacLeish and Samuel Calhoun.
In 1864, Taylor donated two acres of land for a lighthouse, to be built by
the government. Louis Taylor, Anson's oldest son, was named lighthouse keeper,
a position he held until the lure of gold drew him West. Louis' brother Henry
and sister Maria subsequently moved in and operated the lighthouse until the
government funds dried up. It was then abandoned and fell into decay.
THE RAILROAD & GLENCOE
The first train ran from Chicago to Waukegan on Jan. 20, 1855, taking three
hours to complete the 36-mile trip. Settlers lined
the route, marveling at the iron wonder, little suspecting their sylvan isolation
soon would be at an end.
The coming of the train meant that wealthy Chicagoans no longer had to live
close to their businesses. Whether escaping the political corruption and labor
unrest of the growing metropolis or the aftermath of the great fire of 1871,
a new class of commuters looked to the North Shore as an answer to urban woes
and to the railroad as a link between two worlds.
The train did not stop in Taylorsport, the name for Glencoe then. According
to some accounts, Anson Taylor knew a competitor when he saw one and refused
to give up land for a train station when his inn depended on customers of the
stagecoach line.
Maybe so but then, as now, it was not always a question of what you knew but
who you knew and the president of the railroad just happened to live a mile
farther down the road.
Scottish-born Walter Gurnee was an important figure in early Chicago history,
twice mayor (1851-52) and then president of the Chicago and Milwaukee Railroad.
He also was involved with the buying and selling of real estate along the North
Shore.
In the center of what was to become the Village of Glencoe was a large stock
farm belonging to Matthew D. Coe, who owned enormous tracts of land extending
as far west as Libertyville. Coe's daughter married none other than Walter
Gurnee and, in 1853, Coe sold the farm to his son-in-law. Gurnee built a mansion
on the property, surrounded it with rare imported trees and arranged for the
train to stop right across the way.
The Chicago and
Milwaukee Railroad eventually became the Chicago and North Western but some
things
stayed the same. Although the original three sided
shed that served as a station is long gone and Gurnee's home "The Castle," a
venerable Glencoe landmark, was changed to a multi-family residence after a
major fire in 1962, the train still stops where the railroad president decreed.
Recently, the home was restored to a single-family residence.
The Glencoe trains
appear to run on the "wrong" side. That is because,
at first, only one track existed. Railroad officials had decided that stations
should be on the side going to downtown Chicago so that waiting commuters could
stay dry and warm. When the second track was laid, it was used for northbound
traffic.
An electric railroad also ran through Glencoe, between Milwaukee and Chicago,
from 1899 to the mid-'50s.This was the North Shore and Milwaukee Road, a commuter
line, owned atone time, by Samuel Insull, the steel magnate who built the Chicago
Opera House.
ABOUT GLENCOE'S NAME
Depending on which
account you read, the Village of Glencoe got its name from a Coe's Glen," an acknowledgement of Matthew Coe's original ownership
of the property in the heart of the town, or Glencoe, Scotland, said to be
the town of Gurnee's birth but better known as the site of a bloody clan massacre
that took place some three centuries ago. The Scottish word "glen" means
a narrow secluded valley and may refer to the ravines near Sheridan Road. Glencoe's
first seal was modeled after the seal of Glencoe, Scotland.
Gurnee did not
live in his "castle" very long. He declared bankruptcy
and moved to New York City in 1862, selling his home to Dr. Alexander Hammond
four years later. And, with that transaction, a new chapter in Glencoe history
was born.
GLENCOE'S INCORPORATION
Dr. Alexander
Hammond, retired in Rockford, Illinois from medical practice, had a dream
of an ideal
community and the resources to make it come true. Hearing
that the former Matthew Coe stock farm was for sale, he journeyed to the site
and approved of what he saw: "the natural features and objects of the
place--the pieces of forest of grand oaks, the numerous handsome trees scattered
over all parts of the cleared land, and the groves of young trees of second
growth, the undulation of the land, with a depot and post office already established--all
pleased me so much that I speedily resolved to purchase the property," he
wrote near the end of his life.
The price of the
520-acre tract was $75 an acre, with an additional 160 acres in the less
desirable
Skokie marsh to the west thrown in at $15 each. Dr. Hammond "fearing
that someone else might buy it, so desirable a purchase it seemed" made
an offer of$40,000, a sum very near the asking price, put $2,000 down, negotiated
the rest by mortgage and promissory note and bought himself a town. Later that
year, on April 1, 1867, the Hammonds moved to their new home.
The doctor's memoirs
continue: "All
seeming pleasant and propitious, I began as much as I could to workup the
project I had in view of building
a town."
It took Hammond nearly a year and a few false starts before he found nine
investors interested in developing and improving the land. In addition to an
initial investment of $5,000each member of the new Glencoe Company agreed to
pay construction costs of a church and school and annual upkeep for a pastor
($100 a year) and teacher ($50), as well as building two homes in the development
and living in one. Several of the partners never kept the last part of the
bargain and sold both the houses they built. Several more, it turned out, were
more interested in subdividing for profit than long-term beautification of
the site.
In Dr. Hammond's
words: "The
parties making the company were John L. Beveridge, Philo Judson, Luther L.
Greenleaf, Charles H. Morse, Chancellor
L. Jenks, Stephen P. Lunt, Dr. John Nutt, Dr. John F. Starr, Charles E. Browne
and myself. They were all good men in a general sense, but for the special
purpose of building such a town as I desired to make, some of them were good
for nothing--in short, were stumbling blocks in the way and actual hindrances
to the making of such features as would make a pleasant impression on any one
at the first view."
Dr. Hammond's
favorites among his new partners were his good friend Dr. Nutt, "the
best of all the company," and Greenleaf, "the strongest and most
aggressive man... always ready and in the lead of whatever was proposed to
be done."
Greenleaf and Morse were partners in the Fairbanks Morse Scales Company and
the latter let his partner take care of the Glencoe business, never even visiting
the town as it was being built. Nevertheless, Morse seems to be the only investor
who made a considerable amount on the venture in the end.
Lunt had plans drawn for the most expensive house in town but abandoned the
project and sold the property to Judson when he ran out of funds. Jenks leased
his home, on Sheridan and Hazel, to the minister and never lived there himself.
Judson's own home, Cloverly, stood where the Glencoe Public Library is today.
Gen. Beveridge, who was his son-in-law, later became governor of Illinois.
There were problems, almost from the beginning. Cattle soon overran some 1,000
Norway spruce trees planted in the new town. A disagreement between several
of the partners and Dr. Hammond and Mr. Browne over the 160 less desirable
acres in the marsh (Greenleaf and some others claimed Browne had misrepresented
the location), caused a lasting rift and the strong-minded Greenleaf lost his
former enthusiasm for the venture.
A new collaborator,
an independent landowner outside the Glencoe Company, was greatly cooperative
in helping to build the new town. Franklin Newhall,
fondly referred to in some accounts as "Grandpa," owned a large tract
of land east of the railroad tracks from Park Avenue north, almost to County
Line Road. He voluntarily contributed money to build the church, gave a share
of land for the park and helped the others to plot out the space.
With Grandpa Newhall and his brother adding their number to the original settlers
and Glencoe entrepreneurs, there were 26 homes in the village when it was incorporated
on March 28,1869. The first election was held the following year. Philo Judson
won the post of president. According to Dr. Hammond, Judson moved away a year
or two after that.
Grandpa Newhall's generosity was amply rewarded in later years, Dr. Hammond
observes with a touch of bitterness, when he reaped the benefits of the improvements
made by the Company by selling off his land when prices were high.
The others could
not hold outgas long and, with the nationwide Panic of 1873, parcels of land
were
sold off to meet individual investors' indebtedness. Land
values did not recover until the 1890s and among the big losers was Hammond
himself. According to a memoir written by Granville Hall in 1924, "the
Glencoe adventure" was some 20 to 30 years ahead of its time.
NUTS AND BOLTS, SEWERS AND STREETS
The early village consisted of scattered homes, a small schoolhouse, church
and depot and a couple of stores, loosely connected by dirt roads. People drew
their water from wells. Homeowners put up their own oil lamps on posts, donating
them to the village to maintain. A lamplighter made regular rounds. Electricity
did not come to town until1903, when one arc light was purchased from the Highland
Park Electric Light Company on a trial basis. Pleased with the newfangled contraption,
the village council promptly ordered 46 more.
After the Glencoe Company plotted out the village, a peculiar system of street
naming was instituted; theme decided to name all streets running north and
south, allocating theist-west routes to their wives. Old maps show the feminine
taste ran to birds and names of trees. South was once Maple Avenue; Park Avenue
was Eagle. This was the first street to be graded, from the depot to Bluff
Street, in 1872.
There were plank sidewalks and dirt roads until 1888, when a special assessment
financed gravel on Vernon Avenue. Other streets were graveled and, by the 1890s,
a few macadam roads built. The business district was paved with bricks in 1914
and concrete arrived in 1919. With systematic grading and paving of the streets,
storm sewers were installed. Snow plowing began in 1886. By this time, cattle
no longer roamed through the town.
Under an 1893 agreement Winnetka supplied the Village of Glencoe with water
from its newly built water system. In 1928, Glencoe opened a pumping station
of its own. Sanitary sewers were contracted in 1900 and augmented in 1906.
Glencoe hooked into the Chicago Sanitary District drainage canals in 1913.
A telephone exchange opened in Holste's store, corner of Park and Vernon Avenues,
in 1896. The first village hall was built on Vernon Avenue at a cost of $1,000--including
council chamber, offices, firehouse and jail--in 1893. A fire engine house
and police station were added in 1917.
THE BODY POLITIC
The Village of Glencoe run smoothly nowadays, with angry disagreements cropping
up only occasionally, in conjunction with emotional issues like deer control
or the closing of schools. 'Twas not always thus.
Early in Glencoe's
history there was resentment on the part of early settlers who had been eased
out
of power by the Glencoe Ten. In 1873, the "old
timers" won the election, got back their power and, to perpetuate their
clout, divided the village into four wards. Boundaries shifted; so did the
number of votes in the ballot box. The system was abolished in 1881.
But tempers were
still hot. In1897, councilman Michael Gormley, "one
of the most forceful and brainy men among Glencoe pioneers," according
to Granville Hall, rose to speak in violent opposition to a bill and dropped
dead of a stroke on the council floor.
In 1914 Allen G. Mills, a busy attorney with a practice in Chicago, was serving
as village president and losing a lot of sleep. With only one policeman in
town, residents were calling the Mills residence at all hours with their complaints.
There had to be a better way and Mills found it in a town in New Hampshire.
In 1914,Glencoe adopted the council-manager system, the eleventh town in the
nation to do so.
In 1933, 700 people
turned out for a mass meeting called by influential resident Otto Barnett,
who asked
the provocative question: "How bad are Glencoe
politics?" There were at least three parties running candidates at that
time: Caucus, Economy and Independent. The issues at stake seem to have involved
Mr. Barnett's re-election to the Library Board, which was inexplicably linked
to a highway referendum.
At the 1936 Town Meeting, residents originally adopted the Caucus Plan as
the method of providing a nonpartisan slate of candidates for the Glencoe Village
Board, the Glencoe Park District Board, the Glencoe Library Board and the District
35 Board of Education.
POPULATION, PEOPLE, PRIDE
In 1869, the newly incorporated Village of Glencoe held some 150 people. According
to census figures, that number more than doubled by 1880 and grew to 569 in
the next ten years. Some 200 of that number were children of school age. There
were 1,020 Glencoe residents at the turn of the century and by 1920 the count
had grown to 3,381.
Population stabilized between6,000 and 7,000 over the next 30 years. By 1960,
however, it had jumped to 10,472, an increase of nearly 3,500 from the decade
before. These figures probably reflect increased prosperity following the war
years and the nationwide baby boom. By 1969 the number of people in the village
had grown to 11,500.
Children grow up leave home; developers run out of land. The 1990 census recorded
8,500 residents, comprising3,310 households, living on 3.85 square miles of
land that includes parks, beaches, three golf courses and two commercial districts.
If Anson Taylor were to pass through town today, he probably would keep on
going in search of wide-open spaces. Dr. Hammond, on the other hand, would
be astonished at a reality that surpasses his most grandiose dreams.
In the '60s and early '70s, Glencoe ranked third in the nation in median family
income for communities of its size. In 1990, the median family income, $125,306,
placed the village second in Illinois, seventh in the nation for its size.
More than wealth has contributed to the village's prestige. Poets, statesmen,
skating champions, generals and captains of industry have either grown up in
Glencoe or chosen it as their home.
The most famous Glencoe resident is the late Pulitzer Prize-winning poet,
dramatist, Harvard professor and former Librarian of Congress, Archibald MacLeish,
who graduated from the Glencoe school in 1907.
Film actors Bruce Dern and Lili Taylor grew up in Glencoe, as did TV star
Fred Savage. Silent screen idol John Barrymore once spent the summer here.
Television is represented by Chicago anchorman Walter Jacobson and ABC correspondent
Ann Compton, who both spent their childhoods in Glencoe, and longtime resident
Newton Minow, attorney, author and former chairman of the Federal Communications
Commission.
Earle Hoover, of vacuum cleaner fame, chose Glencoe for his home as did advertising
giant Leo Burnett and former Chicago Bears quarterback Mike Tomczak. August
Zeising, president of American Bridge Co., later a division of U.S. Steel,
lived in Glencoe for more than 50 years and contributed the land where Kalk
Park now stands. The senior Paepkes of Container Corp. lived here in the summer.
Their son, Walter, and his wife, Elizabeth, moved to Aspen, Colorado, to set
up the music festival there. The Keatings of Ekco pots and pans lived in Glencoe,
as did Judge James Wilkerson, the man who put Al Capone away, and Melville
Stone, founder of the Chicago Daily News.
From early pioneers to the movers and shakers of today, Glencoe seems a pretty
good place to come from or be going to.
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