Other Historic Sites of Illinois
Other Historic Sites of Illinois encompass a diverse array of locations that highlight the state's rich cultural, political, architectural, and social history. These sites include residences and landmarks that played significant roles in various movements, such as the abolition of slavery, the development of modern architecture, and the advancement of educational reforms. For instance, the Abbott House in Chicago is notable for its association with Robert Sengstacke Abbott, a pivotal figure in Black journalism who empowered African Americans to seek better opportunities in the North.
The Bishop Hill Colony represents a unique experiment in communal living initiated by Swedish religious dissidents, while the Charnley House showcases the evolution of modernist architecture through the works of Louis Sullivan and Frank Lloyd Wright. Other key sites include the Du Sable Homesite, marking the beginnings of Chicago, and the Lincoln Home, which served as a residence for Abraham Lincoln during his rise to prominence.
Each location tells a story of the diverse influences that have shaped Illinois, providing insights into the social reform movements, significant political events, and the contributions of notable individuals from different backgrounds. For those interested in exploring America's historical tapestry, these sites offer a compelling glimpse into the past, reflecting the dynamic interplay of culture and history in Illinois.
On this Page
- Abbott House
- Bishop Hill Colony
- Charnley House
- Crow Island School
- Davis House
- Dawes House
- Deere Home and Shop
- Depriest House
- Du Sable Homesite
- Grant Home
- Grosse Point Lighthouse
- Illinois and Michigan Canal Locks and Towpath
- Kennicott Grove
- Lincoln Home
- Lincoln Tomb
- Lindsay House
- Lovejoy House
- Marshall Field Company Store
- Millikan House
- Montgomery Ward Company Complex
- Nauvoo Historic District
- Old Main, Knox College
- Old State Capitol
- Old Stone Gate, Chicago Union Stockyards
- Riverside Historic District
- Robie House
- Sears, Roebuck, and Company
- Wells-Barnett House
- Willard House
- Williams House
- Wright Home and Studio
Other Historic Sites of Illinois
Abbott House
Location: Chicago, Cook County
![Riversidetower. Riverside Water Tower, Riverside Historic District, the first planned community in the U.S. User:Infidel taco [CC BY-SA 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0) or GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html)], via Wikimedia Commons 100259899-93661.jpg](https://imageserver.ebscohost.com/img/embimages/ers/sp/embedded/100259899-93661.jpg?ephost1=dGJyMNHX8kSepq84xNvgOLCmsE2epq5Srqa4SK6WxWXS)
![Spirit-of-Progress-01. The statue "The Spirit of Progress", on top of the Montgomery Ward Administration building, Chicago, a national historic landmark. By Steve Brown & John Verkleir [CC BY 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons 100259899-93662.jpg](https://imageserver.ebscohost.com/img/embimages/ers/sp/embedded/100259899-93662.jpg?ephost1=dGJyMNHX8kSepq84xNvgOLCmsE2epq5Srqa4SK6WxWXS)
Relevant issues: African American history, literary history
Statement of significance: From 1926 until his death, this house was the residence of Robert Sengstacke Abbott (1870-1940), the most successful Black publisher of his era. Through his newspaper, the Chicago Defender (established 1905), Abbott encouraged southern Black people to leave the virulently racist South and seek a haven in the northern cities, particularly Chicago.
Bishop Hill Colony
Location: Bishop Hill, Henry County
Relevant issues: Social reform
Statement of significance: Founded in 1846 by religious dissidents who emigrated from Sweden to establish a new way of life on the Illinois prairie, the colony was run as a commune until its dissolution in 1861. Its archives, artifacts, and structures today are important documents for the study of immigration, ethnic heritage, and nineteenth century communitarian societies.
Charnley House
Location: Chicago, Cook County
Relevant issues: Art and architecture
Statement of significance: The Charnley House is important both nationally and internationally as one of the pivotal structures in the development of modernism in architecture. Its limestone and Roman brick walls are arranged with a strong sense of symmetry, but without any overt references to historical styles. Built in 1891-1892, it was one of the few major residential commissions of Louis Sullivan and was a benchmark in the architectural development of Frank Lloyd Wright, who was then a draftsman and designer in the office of Adler & Sullivan. The house remains close to its original condition, both inside and out. In 1995, in an effort to safeguard its future, Seymour H. Persky purchased it and donated it to the Society of Architectural Historians (SAH). Now serving as the national headquarters of the SAH, this seminal monument in architectural history is open to the public.
Crow Island School
Location: Winnetka, Cook County
Relevant issues: Education
Statement of significance: Constructed in 1940, Crow Island School was the model for the revolutionary Winnetka Plan, features of which are now familiar to most adult Americans. Built to embody the educational philosophy of Charleton Washburne, Winnetka’s city school superintendent (1919-1943), the design incorporated progressive concepts: grade level zoning, child-scale furniture, self-contained classrooms, flexible spaces, classroom access to the outside—in short, the child-centered school. This approach gained broad public acceptance in large measure due to the reputations of its architects, Eliel and Eero Saarinen, and the architectural firm of Perkins, Wheeler, and Will, which spread the design nationwide through its many commissions.
Davis House
Location: Bloomington, McLean County
Relevant issues: Legal history
Statement of significance: From 1872 until his death, this two-story Italian Villa-style mansion was the residence of David Davis (1815-1886), associate justice (1862-1877) of the United States Supreme Court. Davis is best known for writing the majority opinion in Ex parte Milligan, which restricts the right of military courts to try civilians. In a case involving generally President Abraham Lincoln’s controversial 1862 authorization of military arrest and trial, with suspension of habeas corpus, for draft resistance and other disloyal acts, and particularly a man sentenced to hang in Indiana, Davis wrote, “The Constitution of the United States is a law for rulers and people, equally in war and in peace.”
Dawes House
Location: Evanston, Cook County
Relevant issues: Political history
Statement of significance: From 1909 until his death, this two-and-a-half-story brick mansion was the residence of Charles Gates Dawes (1865-1951), first Director of the Budget (1921) and vice president of the United States (1925-1929). In 1924, Dawes chaired an international committee that produced the Dawes Plan, which, though it did not solve the World War I reparations problem, did arrange a rational schedule of payments to be made by Germany. For his efforts, he received the Nobel Peace Prize (1925).
Deere Home and Shop
Location: Grand Detour, Ogle County
Relevant issues: Business and industry
Statement of significance: From 1836 to 1847, this was the home and shop of John Deere (1804-1886), a skilled blacksmith who invented and manufactured a steel plow that could scour the tough prairie soil cleanly, unlike other plows that became clogged with the dark, rich soil. Deere’s farm implement thus made possible intensive cultivation of vast acres in Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois, bringing benefit to the entire United States.
Depriest House
Location: Chicago, Cook County
Relevant issues: African American history, political history
Statement of significance: From 1929 until his death, this was the residence of Oscar Stanton Depriest (1871-1951), the first African American to be elected to the House of Representatives from a northern state (1928). A Republican, Depriest lost his seat in 1934 to the first Black Democrat to be elected to the US Congress.
Du Sable Homesite
Location: Chicago, Cook County
Relevant issues: African American history, business and industry
Statement of significance: This is the site of the home of Jean Baptiste Pointe Du Sable (1745-1818), the Black pioneer, fur trader, and independent entrepreneur whose establishment of a trading post at this location marked the beginning of the city of Chicago.
Grant Home
Location: Galena, Jo Daviess County
Relevant issues: Military history, political history
Statement of significance: In 1865, the citizens of Galena presented this two-story brick house to General Ulysses S. Grant (1822-1885), the victorious Union commander. Grant lived here until he became secretary of war in 1867 and again, briefly, following the end of his presidency and trip around the world.
Grosse Point Lighthouse
Location: 2601 Sheridan Road, Evanston, Cook County
Relevant issues: Naval history
Statement of significance: A coastal brick tower built on the Great Lakes, Grosse Point Light Station was the lead navigational marker in the waters of Lake Michigan just north of Chicago Harbor. The light safely guided lakeborne traffic through one of America’s most commercially important and highly traveled corridors, a shipping route that connected the East Coast, Great Lakes, and Gulf Coast shipping interests. In recognition of the importance of this lighthouse to maritime navigation, Grosse Point Lighthouse was fitted with the first second-order Fresnel lens on the Great Lakes. Although the lighthouse was decommissioned by the Coast Guard in 1941, the second-order Fresnel lens remains in place in the lantern and all original buildings survive unaltered.
Illinois and Michigan Canal Locks and Towpath
Location: Northeastern Illinois
Relevant issues: Business and industry, naval history
Statement of significance: Begun in 1836 and completed in 1848, this canal linked Chicago to the Mississippi River, thus completing a continuous waterway to New York City and making Chicago a leading grain market and meat-packing center. Commercial use of the canal ended in 1933. It is now in Channahon State Park and is also recognized through the establishment of the Illinois and Michigan Canal National Heritage Corridor.
Kennicott Grove
Location: Glenview, Cook County
Relevant issues: Science and technology
Statement of significance: This was the home of Robert Kennicott (1835-1866), nineteenth century naturalist, explorer, and founder of the Chicago Academy of Sciences, whose career illustrates the development of scientific research in the Midwest.
Lincoln Home
Location: Springfield, Sangamon County
Relevant issues: Political history
Web site: www.nps.gov/liho/
Statement of significance: This was the residence of Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865), who lived here for most of the period from 1844 until 1861, an important era in his advancement from small-town lawyer to president of the United States.
Lincoln Tomb
Location: Springfield, Sangamon County
Relevant issues: Political history
Statement of significance: Dedicated in 1874, this is the final resting place of Lincoln, sixteenth president of the United States, his wife, and three of their four sons.
Lindsay House
Location: Springfield, Sangamon County
Relevant issues: Literary history
Statement of significance: For most of his life, this was the home of Vachel Lindsay (1879-1931), one of the major figures in the American poetic renaissance. Using evangelical rhythms to express his dreamlike conceptions, Lindsay created a style that was at once popular and unique. The house contains many of his drawings, writings, and possessions.
Lovejoy House
Location: East Peru Street, Princeton, Bureau County
Relevant issues: African American history, political history, social reform
Statement of significance:Owen Lovejoy (1811-1864), an influential abolitionist politician, lived here from 1838 until his death in 1864. He used this home to harbor fugitive slaves on their way north and several times he faced prosecution in the courts for his role in the Underground Railroad. Elected to Congress in 1856, he gained a national reputation through his congressional and party leadership and fiery antislavery speeches on the floor of the House.
Marshall Field Company Store
Location: Chicago, Cook County
Relevant issues: Business and industry
Statement of significance: This twelve-story granite building was designed to house the retail firm of Marshall Field, a pioneer of customer-service concepts.
Millikan House
Location: Chicago, Cook County
Relevant issues: Science and technology
Statement of significance: From 1907 to 1921, this three-story brick house was the residence of Robert A. Millikan (1868-1953), one of America’s best-known twentieth century scientists. In 1923, Millikan received the Nobel Prize in Physics for his work in demonstrating the existence of electrons.
Montgomery Ward Company Complex
Location: Chicago, Cook County
Relevant issues: Business and industry
Statement of significance: This complex served as national headquarters for the country’s oldest mail-order firm. Founded in 1872 by Aaron Montgomery Ward (1843-1913), the company established the consumer trust that made a large-scale mail-order business possible and set a standard for the mail-order industry that other firms found it necessary to emulate to compete.
Nauvoo Historic District
Location: Nauvoo, Hancock County
Relevant issues: Religion
Statement of significance: For seven years, this was the principal city of the Mormons and the headquarters of their church. Originally known as Commerce, it was here that the Mormons began settling in 1839, following their flight from northwestern Missouri. Nauvoo, the largest city in the state, was abandoned by most of the Mormons in 1846 after their leader, Joseph Smith (1805-1844), had been killed by a mob and state authorities had grown increasingly hostile.
Old Main, Knox College
Location: Galesburg, Knox County
Relevant issues: Political history
Statement of significance: The oldest building on the campus of Knox College, Old Main is the best-preserved site associated with the Lincoln-Douglas Debates of 1858. The seven debates between Democratic senator Stephen A. Douglas and Republican challenger Abraham Lincoln keynoted the momentous issues of the sectional controversy that was carrying the nation toward disunion and civil war.
Old State Capitol
Location: Springfield, Sangamon County
Relevant issues: Political history
Statement of significance: From 1837 to 1876, this structure served as Illinois’s fifth state capitol. Abraham Lincoln was a member of the first legislature that sat here (1840-1841). He made his noted “House Divided” speech here (1858), in accepting the Republican nomination for the US Senate.
Old Stone Gate, Chicago Union Stockyards
Location: Chicago, Cook County
Relevant issues: Business and industry
Statement of significance: From about 1879 to 1971, this triple-arched, rough-faced limestone gate was the main entrance to the Chicago Union Stockyards. The Stockyards, founded in 1865 to consolidate the many scattered stockyards in Chicago into an efficient unit, symbolized Chicago’s role as a major meat-packing center.
Riverside Historic District
Location: Riverside, Cook County
Relevant issues: Art and architecture, cultural history
Statement of significance: Designed in 1868-1869 by Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux, Riverside was the first planned model community in the country, arranged so that open spaces and parkland would be a part of urban living.
Robie House
Location: Chicago, Cook County
Relevant issues: Art and architecture
Statement of significance: Designed and constructed from 1907 to 1909, the Robie House has won international acclaim for Frank Lloyd Wright’s achievement in modern architecture. Designed in his Prairie style, the house utilizes an open plan.
Sears, Roebuck, and Company
Location: Chicago, Cook County
Relevant issues: Business and industry
Statement of significance: Constructed in 1905-1906, this complex has been symbolic of the company’s dominance of the mail-order industry. Founded in 1893, Sears, Roebuck, and Company was the country’s largest mail-order concern by 1900. The complex contains the printing plant that for many years produced the Sears Catalog, the company’s principal selling instrument.
Wells-Barnett House
Location: Chicago, Cook County
Relevant issues: African American history, social reform, women’s history
Statement of significance: From 1919 to 1929, this three-story brick building was the home of Ida B. Wells (1862-1931), African American teacher, journalist, and civil rights advocate. Almost single-handedly, Wells began the fight to awaken the world’s conscience to the realities of lynching; in addition, she crusaded for the rights of Black women.
Willard House
Location: Evanston, Cook County
Relevant issues: Social reform
Statement of significance: Constructed in 1865, this was the home of Frances Willard (1839-1898), who made the temperance movement a national force. She became president of the Women’s Christian Temperance Union in 1879; her house is now the headquarters of that organization.
Williams House
Location: Chicago, Cook County
Relevant issues: African American history, health and medicine
Statement of significance: This was the home of Daniel Hale Williams (1858-1931), one of America’s first Black surgeons, among whose accomplishments are one of the first successful heart operations (1893) and the establishment of quality medical facilities for African Americans.
Wright Home and Studio
Location: Oak Park, Cook County
Relevant issues: Art and architecture
Statement of significance: Built and rebuilt by Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959), this is the place where he lived and practiced (1887-1909) in the “First Golden Age” of his long career.
Terras, Donald J. "Brief History." Grosse Point Lighthouse, www.grossepointlighthouse.net/history.html. Accessed 28 May 2024.
"Visit a State Historic Site." Illinois Department of Natural Resources Historic Preservation Division, dnrhistoric.illinois.gov/experience/sites.html. Accessed 28 May 2024.