Downers Grove Park District • 2455 Warrenville Road • Downers Grove, IL 60515 • (630) 963-1304 •  dgparks.org

Downers Grove History

Downers Grove HistoryLearn what happened in Downers Grove long ago!
From 1832 to 2007, this timeline illustrates some of the most important historical events in the community.

1832 - Pierce Downer (then 50 years old) moves from New York to Downers Grove. He claims 160 acres of land at 1.25 an acre in the area that would become Downers Grove.

1835 -The Dexter Stanley family moves from New York to the area. This is the first complete family to move to Downers Grove.

1836 - The Blodgett family, originally from Massachusetts, moves from the Naperville area to Downers Grove. Israel Blodgett, a blacksmith and farmer, purchases over 500 acres of land.

1838 - Israel Blodgett and Samuel Curtiss clear land to develop a road on the site of 1816 Indian Boundary. They plant Maple trees along the road.

1839 - Reverend Orange Lyman builds his home at 806 Maple Avenue. This is the oldest home in Downers Grove today.

1845 - Henry Carpenter opens a general store and post office. He also sells land to build houses.

1846 - The first school district is built at Maple Avenue and Dunham Road.

ca.1850 - Israel Blodgett becomes a "conductor" for the Underground Railroad. If caught, he would face a $1,000 fine or 6 months in jail.

1851 - The Plank Road, now known as Ogden Avenue, is constructed and it runs from Chicago to Naperville. It is 16 feet wide and a toll is required to use it.

1860 - The Plow Boys political group campaigns for Abraham Lincoln for the Presidency.

1861- 1865 - Over 100 men from Downers Grove serve as soldiers during the Civil War, including 3 members of the Blodgett family and Judge Walter Blanchard (who died from wounds received at the Battle of Chattanooga in 1863).

1864 - The C.B.& Q Railroad, now known as the Burlington, Northern & Santa Fe Line, is built through Downers Grove

1867 - Lincoln School, the area's first 2-room brick school house, is built.

1870 - The population of Downers Grove totals 350.

1873 - T.S. Rogers becomes the first President of Downers Grove.

1883 - The Downers Grove Reporter is founded.

1885 - Downers Grove has one police magistrate and one police officer for the Village's 500 people.

Late 1880s - Dickie Tool Works opens.

1890 - A road, now known as Highland Avenue is built. A livestock yard still exists in downtown Downers Grove. The Village's 2,500 residents continue to walk on wood sidewalks and look at unpaved streets.

1891 - Washington School opens and has one teacher for the entire high school class.

1892 - Charles Blodgett moves his family's home to the back of the property, which recently had a modern-day address of 812 Randall Street, and constructs his home on Maple Avenue. Although modern by Victorian-era standards, it lacks indoor plumbing, electric, central heating and telephone service.
Charles Blair McDonald and his Chicago Club colleagues establish the first nine-hole golf course in the United States.

Historical Downers Grove photo1893 - Downers Grove experiences a devastating fire. It is commonly referred to as the World's Fair Fire. The Village hires its first night police officer for $25 per month. Charles Blair McDonald and his Chicago Club colleagues add nine more holes to the existing golf course; thus, the establishment of the first 18-hole golf course west of the Allegheny Mountains.

1894 - A water tower and pumping station is constructed.
Carpenter's drug store has the only telephone in town and it costs 20 cents to call Chicago.

1895 - Downers Grove's Base Ball Club plays teams located along the C.B.&Q Railroad line.

1898 - Volunteer fire department is organized.

1899 - The Village builds its first electrical plant. However, there was only electricity at night because there are not enough customers during the day.

1900 - Downers Grove's first football team practices at night only at the corner of Warren & Forest Avenues because it has the only streetlight in town.

1906 - Dickie Tool Company's disastrous fire. The Village purchases an 1,100 pound bell to be used to call out the volunteer fire department.

1911 - Grant Dicke joins the Downers Grove Fire Department.

1915 - The "new" library is built on Curtiss Street.

1917 - Downers Grove no longer has a "President", but develops a position for a Mayor and Commissioners.

1918 - Downers Grove's first Boy Scout troop is established.

1921 -Downers Grove purchases its first motorized fire truck.

1922 - Dr. James Breasted participates in the opening of King Tut's tomb in Egypt. Lottie Holman-O'Neill is the first woman to be elected to the Illinois State Legislature.

1928 -The Tivoli Theatre opens. Downers Grove High School is built (now known as Downers Grove North High School).

1932 - Downers Grove is 100 years old.

1934 -The Burlington-Zephyr train makes its first passage through Downers at 85 miles per hour.

1934-1936 - Downers Grove A's, the local hard ball baseball team, holds the DuPage County title.

1940 - Downers Grove native Arthur Chester is the chief designer for the P-51 Mustang fighter plane.

1945 - Downers Grove native Fred Lester is killed in battle and receives the Medal of Honor.

1947 - The Burlington Twin-City Zephyr passenger train crashes at the Main Street train station.

1963 - Sterling North, a past Downers Grove resident, writes the book Rascal.

1964 - Downers Grove South High School is built.

1967 - Grant Dicke retires from the Downers Grove Fire Department after 50 years of service.

1970 - The population of Downers Grove reaches 32,000.

1974 - The 55th Street park is renamed Patriots Park in honor of the men and women who fought for our freedom. The pond is renamed Barth Pond in memory of a Downers Grove police officer killed in the line of duty.

1976 - Good Samaritan Hospital is constructed at a coast of $33 million.

1977 - The Downers Grove Park District Museum opens in the 1892 Blodgett House on Maple Avenue.

1982 - The Village hosts its first Heritage Fest in honor of Downers Grove's Sesquicentennial. Girl Scouts honor Daddy Wells, who was a life-long advocate of girl scouting.

1998 - Cammi Granato wins an Olympic Gold Medal for the Women's hockey team.

2000 - The population of Downers Grove is slightly more than 48,000.

2007 - Downers Grove native Tom Lesatz completes the Iditarod Dogsled Race with a record of 11 days, 20 minutes and 53 seconds.

2008 - The 1846 Blodgett House, which has sat at 812 Randall Street for approximately 116 years, is moved back near its original location, now known as Wandschneider Park.

 

Artifact of the monthartifact rolmonica

Advertised as “a player piano in your pocket,” the Rolmonica promised to enable any would-be harmonica player to perform like a pro. Patented in 1925, the Rolmonica went into production in 1928 by the Rolmonica Music Company of Baltimore Maryland. The instrument was made of Bakelite, an early form of plastic, and used paper rolls with punch holes that controlled the pitch as the user blew into a mouthpiece and turned a crank that unspooled the music roll.

Several hundred different songs were produced in Rolmonica format, ranging from classical music, such as “O Sole Mio,” to traditional songs—”Yankee Doodle” and “Turkey in the Straw”—to contemporary tunes like “Oh Marie, Marie.”

The Rolmonica was just one of several instruments that used player-piano technology to create pre-programmed music. Automated zithers, concertinas, accordions, and the “violano virtuoso” (a combination piano and violin), were used to make music in the home and as a teaching aid. The Rolmonica, however, seems to have been marketed more as a novelty item, sold through advertisements in magazines and comic books aimed at children.
The Rolmonica remained in production into the 1940s, but the increasing popularity and availability of radios and record players drove them, like other mechanized instruments, out of even the novelties market. However, there remains a number of Rolmonica enthusiasts today, who continue to collect, repair, and perform on the instrument.


Picture of the monthwilliam blodgett


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

William and Edith (c.1935)
William, son of Charles Blodgett and grandson of early settlers Israel and Avis Blodgett, and his family were the last Blodgetts to live in the family house at 831 Maple Avenue.

 



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