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FEB o 2 REC’D
DEERFIELD PURLIC LIBRARY
9?p '' ••!!■ soa?j ROAD
DEER. p'L 60015-3098
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LYMAN WILMOT HOUSE
1840
Deerfield,Illinois
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Richard Hart
2735 Forest Glen Trail
Riverwoods, Illinois
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�LYMAN WILMOT I-JOUSE
601 WilmoL Road
Deerfield, Illinois
The origi^31 pioneer house, probably a cabin, was built ca. 1840, with
additions and revisions over the years. It is, I believe, the oldest
occupied building in Lake County, an opinion confirmed by the Director of
Archives of Lake County Museum, Wauconda, Illinois. The only older
standing structure being a log cabin erected, three years earlier which has
been moved and is a part of a historical village in a Deerfield,park.
At a later date, but still early, a coach house was added to the property
and used for the Wilmots' wagons, carriages, and horses.
The structures still show early detail, especially hand-hewn beams and a
stone'foundation in the house cellar.
A unique feature of the coach house is a tower section which once contained
an inside water tank. And in the house, still to be seen after more than a
hundred years, are the initials scratched in a windowpane of Roswell
Wilmot, one of Lyman Wilmot's sons.
After the deaths of Lyman and Clarissa Wilmot in the 1890s (they are buried
m Deerfield Cemetery), the property passed into the hands of various
members of the family and others to the present day. Although changes have
been made m the.property - to be expected in 155 years - it still retains
integrity as a pioneer home. Much of Wilmot1s original acreage has been
sold off over the years, but the remaining property, the size of three
normal house lots, is very impressive and is unique in the community on a
street bearing the historic Wilmot name.
Lyman Wilmot was.a seventh generation descendant of immigrants from England
who came to America m 1637 and were among the earliest settlers of
Connecticut. He was born in Boone County, New York, in 1806.
In 1834 Lyman's brother Jesse Wilmot journeyed to what is now the Deerfield
another on the western edge of the present village.
near one
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�-2its superintendent and his wife taught. The school bears their name to
this day. My children attended this school at one time and my grandchildren
do now, where they are "celebrities" to their friends because they live in
"Mr. Wilmot's house."
The Wilmot family were ardent supporters of the North's cause during the
Civil War. They were dedicated abolitionists and their home became a stop
on the Underground Railroad where slaves were harbored on their way to
Canada. One escaped slave was sheltered by them throughout the war.
The Lyman Wilmot family was significant in the founding and early develop
ment of the community of Deerfield, and their still-standing historic
residence - evolved as it may be - is probably the oldest occupied building
in Lake County.
This record of the pioneer Lyman Wilmot family was presented to the
Deerfield Historical Society by Richard Hart of Riverwoods, Illinois, an
owner of the property in June, 1995
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�The Wilmot homestead is located at 601 Wilmot Road. The original
house consisted of a kitchen and living room with a "ladder" stairway
to the space above them - the sleeping loft. One of the stories perpetuated
about the home is that it once was an underground station for runaway
slaves during the Civil War. Lyman Wilmot was known to have been an
abolitionist.
Several additions have been made through the years. In the 1920's
the sun porch shown below was added. This became the main entry to
the house.
The other structure on the property is the coach house, built to
house the coaches, or horse-drawn carriages, owned by the Wilmots. Three
garages are now on the ground level. The second floor was originally
a hay loft; it is now an apartment.
Attached to the coach house is a
shop, and an office that was formerly a greenhouse.
�SETTLING IN
The title of "disputed" first settler in Deerfield is held by
Jesse Wilmot. He came by flatboat up the north branch of the Chicago
River (that's the trickle under the bridge on Deerfield Road by the
Garden Apartments) and spent the winter of 1834 here alone, As he was
just scouting the area, he was not considered a settler.
Meehans and Lambs are listed as early settlers, but one historian
gives credit for first permanent residency to the Cadwells.
Jacob
Cadwe11 and his family came from Vermont and settled here in 1835.
As they settled around what is now the corner of Waukegan and Deerfield
Roads, the town became known as Cadwell Corners, That name, remained
until 1849-50 when there was a vote to rename the town. Many German
and Irish settlers had arrived by then. Irish people wanted another
Erin. John Millen (who was from Deerfield, Massachusetts) suggested
Deerfield as it seemed to fit the area with its abundance of wild deer.
When the vote was taken, Deerfield won by four votes.
Meanwhile Jesse Wilmot returned with his family and settled on land
that is now around Greenwood Avenue. He convinced his brother to
investigate the area, and Lyman did just that in 1837. He then returned
to New York for his family and finally settled in the fall of 1840 on
240 acres of wild land around what is now Wilmot School. Here Lyman
and Clarissa Wilmot raised six sons and three daughters.
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Please satisfy-my .curiosity: Is It true that the. house at 601 !
Wilmot, Deerfield, was,a station on the Underground Rah- f
. road, the pre-Civil War route by which slaves rumujig away
from the Sou.a v^ispirited to Canada?-^ Deerf{?ld . • ,
Partly .true — partly; because only part of, the hpuse,Va I • jj
small part, was a station. The'rest : of thO : house •^ 'V.'hlch
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actually was the h6'me;of abolitionist Lymafl Wilmot. .one'of
the founders of- DeerfieldIppg since has been replacedhy. «•;.
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• House wing (arrow) that once was Underground Rallroiid ^
station: Stopping place, on.Freedom Road,
a new main section, with attached porch; , the garage arid its
attached greenhouse .also have been added;,.One value f of;
the onetime ‘‘station’Viriightbd'tjiat it'string a?: a lessoilte
Deerfleldians’not to be impatient when- they are‘'waitmg''at
the Milwaukee Road station for a commuter traih that Is 5
minutes late. In Wilmot’s day, ^riders” ori the'Underground .
Railrodd;Sometimes had to wait days or evert'1weeks in-his
house’ until’the moment.seemed;favorable to■' hide'-’therii^under a load of hay, in a' wagon, "and move to the next %
station on the Freedom. Road.
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The weatherbeaten sign .reads, "This is the original site of the
home of the Wilmots, who settled here botween 1839-40." The orig
inal home served as an underground/station for run-away slaves. Ly;; man ;y/ilmpt was one-of the most successful farmers in Lake County.
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Sheldon Sullens, great grandson of Lyman and Clarissc Wilmot,
visits the original Wilmot home, on Wilmot Road, during a visit to
Deerfield last week. Welcoming him is present owner of the house,
Robert Young. Constructed in the late 1830’s it is one of the oldest
|: homes in Deerfield. Staff photo by Peggy Pollard.
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�House (left) ancl Coach House
House (real'1)
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Stone foundation in house cellar
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601 Wilmot Road
Main House - First Floor
RlC:?^D H.\RT
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601 Wilmot Road
Main House - Upstairs
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RICHARD HART
^33 FOREST GLEN TRAIL
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PAPCFL Oll-I hel 1 (-xc^pt tk+.^ori 300 feot «h*rH*«) It* HASM'.-C', &U?LZVX?.ZW« ««r
part, of t bn South 1/2 of th* Kor»hw.*» 1/4
?h< Korrhu».n 1/4 of
Stoirlon 02, ’"ovnrhlp 43 Kcrlb, Ponf^r 12 Sort- of the Third Principal
F.-rldlan, lr. VoV* County, Jlllr.ul*
PAPCSL rVOi "'ho
ICO f<*?t cf LM 1 lr. HAtfZKG'S SUBDIVISION of part of ihv
?ou;h 1/2 «f t.hr Kcr»h*vrl lA of the J’orthwrol 1/4 of Section j2,
•"ownrhlp 43 North, F.ang4 12 F.nrt of th* Ihlt-d Prlnclpol >.-rldler.#
In Lak" County,1 Illlurlr
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LEGEND
12 StSK^elery
3’. O'Plain Cemetery
f8. Louis Gastfield Home (7542;
9.
10.
11.
13.
14.
15.
16.
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John Millen home (1839)
Philip Brand home (1844)
& 12. Cadwell homes
Cadwell School (1848)
Alfred Parsons home (1843)
Philip Vedder home (1844)
Job Galloway home (1840)
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19. Andrew Meier home
20. Fred Fritsch home (1842)
21. Jasper Ott
22. Jacob Ott
23. John Jacob Ott Sr.
24. Lorenz Ott
25. Jacob Luther
26. Martin Luther (1835)
27. Jennings’ homestead
28. Stewart family
29. Dose home .
30. Vincent's Grist Mill
31. Wilmot School (1847)
32. Jame Duffy (1844)
33. Patrick Carotan (A841)
34. Ludlow home
......
35. Michael Meehan home (1835)
36. James O’Connor home
37. Dorsey home
38. Dawson home
39. Bartholamew Boylan
40. Michael Dawson
41. Michael Fagan
42. Dennis Lancaster
43. Michael Vore
44. McIntyres & Tullys
45. James Mooney
46. Philip Ott home (1836)
47. Roderbusch home
48. St. Mary's of the Woods Cemetery.
Here, in 1674, Father Marquette
erected a cross, preaching to the
Indians.
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TOWN op CUDA.
TOWN or DXERFIEID.
81
Hollister nnd Robert Bennett,- Constable*
John Bennett and R. P. Buck. This Town*
shi|) bos n school fund of $3,839 43. The only '
Post office in this Town is Flint Creek— J.
J. Bullock, Postmaster.
. '-n1® vuluation of property iu this Town for
was
thereon waSC/a kT""* °f
C°mpUted
iir peculiar location, has nevor, hithorto
iclod them the benefits of q pul)lic thorhfure through their midst; in consequence
vhicli, they have been kept somewhat in
back ground in u'business point of view,
ceping their lands at a low value, whilst
completion of this'Rail Road cannot fail
oubliug the'vahic ofihp.ir'rcill estite.
'he population of this Town, like that of
other Towns of the County, is made up
n various poVtions of the civilized world ;
as a community, the inhahitauts arc
■keel lor their temperate and indu'utrioui •
it
t well as for their perseverance and
S4?75o oo frh°th re'11 nnd personaI
TOWN OF DEERFIELD.
. 1-J“«r(ield is n fractional Township and lies
in the south-east corner of the County, nnd is
north by Shields, on the east
>y Bake Michigan, on the south by Cook
Cpunty, and on the west by Vernon.
J he.first settlement of this Town was comme. cod "i tho spring of 1836, by Jacob CadCaleb
'3 E°nS,l S,1?di*on °-. Philemon,
Uieh.Hirum,. and Edwin, who emigrated
from Norfolk, in the State of New York, in
the spring ofIS35. Among the balance oI
the early settlers of this Town, were Horace
inuTng the curly settlers of thisTown, v/cro
toll A.Whitfr,'JoshuaA.llarudon,JohnElls•t;
. II. Freeman, Amos Flint, I,. H.
e, ..ohert CtuUncc, Robert Bonnet, Jnred
nstock unci FrceU'iun Martin.
’hevfirst Town meeting in this Town was
1 ot the Ifouse ofNoble R. Haves. John
hillock Nvas chosen moderator, and Noblo
lays, clerk. The first set of Town ofti; wdVe ns follows : Supervisor, Philctus
erly ; Town clerk, Noble R. Hays ; AssesJacob McGilvra; Collector, Rob. Conmee;
:rseer of the Poor Francii Kelsey ; Coni*
sioners of Highways, James Jones, Lewis
3ute, Harvey Lambert ; Constables, ChesBehnett aqu Wallace Bennett; Justices of
Peace/ Innis Hollister and Robert Bcn*he present Town oftlcors are us follows :
ler-visor, Lewis II. 'Bute ; Town Clerk,
ri Sears; Assessor, Joshua lluindon’;
lector; John Juckson ; Overseer of 'thu
■r, "Robert 'Bennett ;• ComihisAftnc'rD 'of
hwHys, Ilaryey Lambert, Jumea Jones and
r "Wheeler; Justices of tho'Peace, Ittuis
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Dll3 lownship is mostly timbered .land
having no P-rairies, except a small skirt of he
Grand Prairie extending up a short distance
•into the south-rrost- portion of it.
There nro some two or three sWish
•streams passing through tins Town, flbwim.
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HISTORY OF LAKE COUNTY.
Bartlett, followed him west in 1836, locating
near Libcrtyvillc.
Richard and Ransom Steele came to the
county in 1S34, made claims and erected a house
about two and one-half miles south of Libcr
tyvillc. Returning cast for their families in the
early winter, they occupied the new home in
February, 1835. In this house, June 20, 1835,
Albert B. Steele was born. He was the son of
•Mr. and Mrs. Richard Steele, and was the first
white child born within the limits of what is
Sclllcrs Increase—River Claims Preferred—First
Census Taken—Partial List of Pioneers—
Trappers Who Departed When Permanent
Settlers Came—Stories of the Early Residents
—How They Came and Where They Located
—Wynkoop's Deer Park.
Richard and Ransom Steele, came to Lake
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County in 1835. Moses Putney also made a
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claim in the same neighborhood in 183.1, as did
Andrew S. Wells.
Jacob Miller came out from Chicago in 1834
and built a sawmill near the mouth of Mill
Creek, not far from the town line now separating
Warren from Newport; went back to the city
for the winter, and returned to the mill early
in 1835. He also erected a flouring mill, the first
in the county, as far as can be ascertained.
William Green prospected on the east side
of the river, in Libcrtyvillc, in 1834, but did
not permanently locate there until 1837.
Jesse Wilmot built a home in Deerfield in
1834, and) “bached" it for a year. Lyman, his
brother, spent the summer with him, then re
turning cast, where he remained until 1840, after
which, until his death,_ he resided in this county.
Joseph Flint located a claim in Cuba town
ship, probably in 1834, which was occupied by
his bachelor son, Amos Flint, who died in 1837
or 1838. The log house, whioh was jointly oc
cupied by an aunt, Mrs. Grace Flint, and V. H.
Freeman and family, burned during their first
winter,' leaving them in a pitiable condition.
Timber was plenty, however, and but little time
elapsed before a temporary shelter replaced the
burned structure. Flint Creek, in Cuba, still
bears the name of the pioneer of .that township.
Joseph Flint is understood to have returned cast
immediacy after locating the claim. Thomas
Ballard, who came to Vernon in 1835, also lost
a house by fire, but before his family or furniture
had been moved in.
It is probably true that Captain Wright’s was
the only family to spend the entire winter of
1834-5 in Lake County, although it is claimed
by William E. Sundcrlin that his uncle, Pclcg
Sunderhn, and family spent that season in their
log home tin the York House neighborhood north
west of Waukegan.
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claims taken up were almost entirely along the
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Dcs Plaines River. The early settlers signed
agreements that when the land was surveyed and
sold they would deed to each other any that
might be within the lines staked out as "claims."
These agreements were usually carried out, al
though some litigation resulted,
The river
claims were quickly taken and those bordering
the lakes or small streams, especially when it
happened that there was a grove located near,
were usually the next ones to be secured. Those
living along the river suffered most with chills
and fever—those banes of pioneer life— and the .
prairie settlers found some compensation for
being compelled to at once dig wells because of
at least partial exemption from the ague. The
agreements to deed back and forth any land
embraced in a claim, regardless of section lines,
accounts for the irregular shape of many farms
in various parts of the county, and explains the
long, narrow subdivisions so common along the
Des Plaines.
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It is not easy at this late day to make a
complete and accurate list of all who came in
1835. to separate them from those who came
a year or two later, or to state just the locali
ties where they settled. A few remained but
a short time, although a majority made this
their permanent home. The following list prob
ably embraces most of those who came in 1835:
In Vernon there were James Chambers, Clark
Knights, Alonzo Cook, Moody Rowd, Henry
Walton. Jonathan Rice. William Easton. B. F.
Washburn. J. M. Washburn*, Mathias Mason.
Asahcl Talcott, Roswell Rose, Andrew S. Wells,
Henry Wells, William Whigam. John Gridlcy
and his sons. Elisha. George and John T. Gridley. William Easton and his sons. Robert and
John Easton. John A. Mills. Erastus Bailey,
Matthew Hoffman and Moses Putney.
In Libcrtyvillc there were Richard Steele.
Ransom Steele. Davis C. Steele. Henry B. Steele,
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CHAPTER IV.
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The spring of 1835 brought many land hun-
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�TOWNSHIP OF DEERFIELD.-
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staff m the Quartermaster’s Department. From 1837 to 1861 he was on dutv
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during the Utah troubles and served in the Civil War until failing health caused - ■ J -<0$
him to be placed on the retired list by President Lincoln in 1863. For five years
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V.‘cc-^«Icnt of .the Trader’s National Bank of Chicago. After the
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fire in Chicago in 1871, he spent two years in traveling with his family and
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m 1880 settled in Highland Park where he now lives, tie has been Mayor and
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Alderman of that city. He was a member of the Aztec Club which was formed in 0
the City of Mexico by the officers of the army at the close of that war; also a
member of the Loyal Legion, Sons of the American Revolution, and other so
cieties. He was the author of "Turnley’s Narrative from Diaries, it u
The Turnleys,” and several other books and many speeches, lectures and poems
He died
in 1911.
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SSfiSliSS ■.
HENRY S. VAIL
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He was married, March 3, 1880, to Miss Jennie C. McCulloch, after making his
home in Highland. Park in 1878. He was one of the organizers of the Law and
Ureter'League.
LYMAN WILMOT
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October 6 1S55 Mr. Wilmot came to Lake County in 1840, locating in the
own of Deerfield. He died November 12, 1896.
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WARREN HENRY WILMOT was bom in Deerfield, Lake County, 111.,
October 6, 1855, the son of Lyman and Clarissa (Dwight) Wilmot. He received
is education in the district schools and Northwestern College at Naperville 111
He has been twice married: to Miss Minnie E. Vining in 18S0 and ten ’
later to Miss Eva P. Vant. He has served
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as
Supervisor
of
West
Dccrfield'fmmTgoJ
Schools and
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' 10S HeeHlty-P tS>MrSliy f°,r thE NortI,ern DistrIct of IlSis, October 22,
kegan Council v
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’r Republican ticket, and is a member of WauW A157’ (A‘ K * A‘ “'>* A‘ °- ** L°^’ No- 676/
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�RICHARD HART
2735 FOR FIST GI.HN TRAIT.
KIVFKWOODS. ILL. 60015
THE WILMOT FAMILY
some mention or Ri!'1 ?0,r,I<1 1,0 coinploto without
a. prominent part in** thi "1?fam ly wl,,ul‘ Played. such
yet or this lanraVimn ° affa,rs ,°r the community, and
Portrait and ninJA1”! «y *1° «je>«ber-remains here. The
"Lyman Wilmot Vho'fJlinf bum °f Lalt0 Couuty says:
dent and leading )
f fifty-one years has been a rcslNew York nadthe
r°» ,the to,wn °r Decrfiekl, claims
birth Is i , (hi Lb C,°i1l,s nativity. The place or his
the data s J«.y O22niOSf0?O,OfrVIme> *ro,om* County' and
Hnnnni. /n.
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1S0G. His parents were Jesse and
His lithe?::."0,0 WlAl,not* boLh Motives or Connecticut.
• vine N Y Ai.b?rn
3' 177°- and died In Colcs177R rt'iJ”. 0?loobcr 1J* isi°- HIs wire, born June 10,
and AnJCn in,1S53- They were the parents or five sons
and one daughter. The sons made tho remarkable record or having all lived to celebrate their golden, weddings,
brn.prt while„1?ne' the subject of this sketch, has cele- '
h s ml1
llby wedding or the sixtieth anniversary of
vaV m. P
Stopben B- the eldest of the five brothers,
■uni diVrt m rU,aryi,
mrUTied Mlss
Clauson,
years- I niv* m- ' M' 1,S77,1 :l1 1,10 !l80 °r sovonty-nlno
1799 am
?" y dil”elUc''- wns l,0''“ November 2.7.
1803' \vPfidoJCn July 14, iSO4; Amos, born March 3,
1 1 d. Bc,tSy Crawford, and died in 1S78, at the
ago °f seventy-six years; Asahcl was born March 24,
?n'!i0 ve Smith, and died in-St. Paul, Minn.,
" Millch' 18S?* at ,the aeo of eighty-four, having long
been a practicing physician; Lyman ia now cighty-fivo
i^nS °r,agc: : css' 1,10 youngest, was born September 13,
IIvh?A m n*
' afw‘fe Blftabeth Luther, and Is now
Missouri’ th° ag° °C cighty"one years in Carroll County,
hair months old. Roswell 0., born July 12, 1847, wa
married November 20, 1S70. to Miss Miranda C. Adams
and resides in Hodgldss, Delta County,' Colo. Dwigh
JunoC,n ml AandUSr n’ 1849' marrled L,zzIe Scholes
S intn SS ’ and i os Ides In Evergreen Colo. Ho wa
E Cn PII7n rSC,;lallV° l° the Colorado Legislature
Sr ifiE mr ln ia,nuary 19’ 1852« was married Decern.
hiCqm?M,1pi7|C' t0 E?,\v n ICIttell» and their homo is nov
”
Eb,??g0; W^ren Henry, born October 6, 185 5
Is now a resident ot Deerneld. The children 'ofder thai
pSeli!* Wer° b0rn ,n Ncw York aad those younger h
"Mr. Wilmot was engaged In farming In the town o
Greenwood, Steuben County. N. Y.. until 1837. when leav
‘ag b,s (am,,y» ho first came to Lake County on a pros
pcctlng tour, arriving at his destination on the 20th da\
°f fjay‘ JefQ* his younger brother, had preceded hin
this county in 1835, and had located In-what Is now
the town of Deerfield. Mr. Wilmot visited his brothei
and traveled over Northern Illinois Cor several monthand In November following returned to New York. h
the fall of 1840, ho emigrated from that state to Lain
hnUM.nr TUl !SJanV,y' com,ng ])y Loan» to Buffalo when
J.1® ansTei-red the teams to a steamboat and took pa*
Doornoi.1 (i!,lc«agr0,i Ari’lv,ng at that Port they drove t{
Dcoi field, their future homo. In February, 1S41 he pu r
wi,aiM,di°neJlUndreid aVd sIxLy acres of wild land, t<
which he afterwards added until he now has two hun
J red and forty acres., HIs farm is largely prairie am
for tlhft n^f°#i«eCtl0n 32, Where he has madQ his home
*®r J he past fifty-one years. It is considered one of tin
of thoam^ ° rarm3 Jn_ Dcorfleld. and tho owner is on.
t
m°st successful and leading agriculturists' oLal o County. In polItlc'araentimonUheils an earnest Re
publlcap. In early life he was an anti-slavery Whig ant
ins? Mo ™ accord with the original Abolitionists H(
lost his vote at the presidential election of 184 0 by rea
n°«! °, „1S removal t0
West that year. When the
Republican party was organized he was one of thos.
who took part in its formation In Northern Illinois H(
lias-never been a seeker Tor public ofilce and has server
only in minor local positions. lie was Moderator at the
lust town meeting held in Deerfield, and has served aAssessor for that town. During the draft he accepted
inwn'° / ?V?°iPl,.lar po?,tion of enrolling officer for hi*
IhrcateiietL * ° * 16 mad° enem,es and even had his life
"Lyman Wilmot. whoso name heads this record hav
ing lost his father when a child of four years, and his
mother being in poor circumstances, was obliged to
leave home at the early ago of ten and make his own
way in the world. He began as a farm hand. Ho was
obliged to work hard, enjoyed few comforts and no
luxuries. Ills educational advantages were limited to
a few months' attendance at tho district schools In tho
winter season. When ho arrived at tho ago of twentyfive he found that he had accumulated enough of this
world s goods to set up a home Tor himself and was marvied March 17, 1831. in his native town to Miss Clarissa
Dwight,
a daughter of Israel and Sarah (Porter)
_ . ,
m&w.-iaaasiwiiiii
K,.Us, “ “ »•
New
Mr. and Mrs. Wilmot have been blessed with a large
family, numbering six sons and live daughters- Vlrlrii
the eldest was born June 9, 1834. in Greenwood/Steuben
County, N. Y., murticd Surah Esther Hunter and resides
in Humcslon, Iowa. He served in tho ;Unlon Army In
tho lato war as a mumbor oT the Fifty-fifth Illinois Reir!
rnent, ci,listing October 5.18C1. He was under Shcrmln
In his march to the sea. and was mustered out in Dccom
bor. 1SG4. Adelia. born November 1. 1835. died Novem
ber S. of the same year. Adelia, the second or that
name, was born December 20. 1S3G, and became the wife
of Philip Glitzier July 29. 1857. He is numbered among
the early settlers of Deerfield Township and Is now de
ceased. Ills widow resides In Denver. Colo. Levi Davis
born January 4. 1839, married Sarah A. Hodgkins and’
resides at Ilodgklss. Delta County, Colo. Ho was also a
soldier of the lute war. enlisting on the lGth of Julv
1SG1. In the Forty-seventh Illinois Infantry, was wounded
at the battle of Old Lake, La., being crippled for life
and was mustered out at Springfield, 111., ]„ October*
•.S G 4. Lyman II.. born in Deerfield, III., April ’5 ls4 l ’
^_.,s single and resides on the old homestead. Mary horn
.
hv»?vio’«Wn!m0ti andm!lls w,r® aro members of the Presbytej Ian Church. They celebrated • their ruby or sixl'
w®d(llng annivorsary in March of the present year
Doth aro well preserved and enjoy, as they deserve7 th*
high, regard of all who know them. They have reared
J
family of children, of whom nine are livln" and
.usc ul and r®epected members of society -•
The Wilmot school and Wilmot road were named fnr
Lyman Wilmot. who was a leader in and example to 1
—"”y*, HIs name should ever be honored In Deer'
field by letalnlng it on school and road. No such fanev
.SIS S^!lll°son-WnUe'-- »?•
y/J
j J)//tu# ot
tuX:
^
*«//1
/ *7
�> he vn 0n‘‘ ^ Yopk1S35' W01° G'° «r.t HUbr.
an ‘imiu,?°
I?liern<!,d' The Cadwell homestead,'' on ?
n
1
trail which Is now the Waukegan Road," Is
at present occupied by Miss Loretta Heman.
Jesse Wilmot, who married Elizabeth
came up
the north branch of the Chicago River inLuther,
1 S3*1 and spent
the winter alone
brother I vnn„' Whoro U\c vII,a6e »ow is. In 1837, his
wife pi
cnme and ^ 1840 Lyman brought his
in n C,a,,slsa Dwight, to the 240 acres of "wild land *
In the vicinity or the Wilmol school.
’
'
and the Vemi 1'1?racc Lamb's la'ld
to the south.
u c Person, r fa,'m' ”ow Georeo Truitt's home, and
comb's (n^w Hoed's?,sI„'deU'6 'n,U' CXtentlC(’ west t0 HoU
east to Lewis Gastficld's, south •
to the Lamb farms.
' ’
j.
f’ Ly,nai; W»mot, thc elder, was a practical nurse
y
ber ministrations were also those of a country
r Physician. All who remember her recall her "water
j cure treatments in the years from 1S4 0 to 1880. She
£ always wore a black lace cap, and used a large doc\°ls
for diagnosis. I-Icr tall, slender figure appear?ta home meant comfort to the stricken, and ease of
t0 y°rried Parent- Mrs- Lange, and Mrs. Lewis
v Todd, and Mrs. Wilmot were the women who assisted
vat the arrival of infants, when physicians, graduate
-V' *<iCS’ ^nd anaesthetics were not considered necessities.
Miss Josephine Woodman has had a maternity home
f m her home for over twenty years, and it is now
i;*«5KCnfCt* as, ^iC J°sePbinc Woodman Maternity Home
; ?.he bas a bed *or but one patient. . Mrs. Albert Hagi
Sfjrs* Tl^odore Taylor, and Mrs. Fred Bleimehl (who was
iAlrs CntchJey), and Mrs. Carolyn Becker, have been
rpractlcal nurses.
ss iw*?.f:^U-s,rvery0uct?v,tlesmlne- Th" ‘3
Mrs.. Wessljng's recollection of the early history of this
locality are vivid ones. She was sixteen when Abraham
• Lincoln was assassinated, and she saw his body lying in
state in the courthouse in Chicago. She and her brother.
Silas, were In the Wilmot school when Lyman Wilmot
brought the sad news of Lincoln's death. .
The second day of the Chicago Are Mrs. Wessling was
on her way to Chicago, with her father and mother, to visit
her husbands cousin, Henry Wessling, and to see her broth
ers, Silas and George Brand, who lived in the Martin
btangcr tavern, when they met a man whose horse was so
covered with foam as to make the color or the animal In
distinguishable. I-Ic had ridden as far as Niles to tell the
people that Chicago was burning.
Philip Ott and Alfred Parsons wero In land buying business. From the letters of the former to the latter/one from
Hoopole Grove dated July 8. 1853, says: '‘You have boi^U
°tf bl\t U 13 aU wet land, except G acres, but
[vr\l
n Good grass land, and will by and by sell
ncll. Mi. Gloss, whom wo mot on the road to Prophets
nUn lp«f«W*trdiil0 !®t# ,b°UKht thc Dailey place for $350, and
'..r bmicht Vnlnri 3 P(on Sender's »-oad In Deerfield.
<5200 fm- n,f°P
0fC Jci3*?e w,lmot’ very good land for .
?2°0 foj the Company, and Intend to buy SO acres more off
the I-Icnry Place which will corner with the 40 acres that
you entered, and I think will bo of good valued us
look very good. Corn is eight Tcct high."
• 1
In comparison of land values, in 1917 the Wilmot school
board paid ?G02 an acre for Wilmot land. To the south
nm-olC M1}101’
sold a 120-acre farm for $200 an
f", wna
-it WOO an acre tor the flrst ten
S a^s.^blfe
same WlfmSTanc]
R°°° n"
:E
many
of the
On his way to the dedication of the Calvanlstlc or Refoi med Lutheran Church on Dundee Road about 184S
he went through the Frey farm, and remembers a little
snow bird s nest full of eggs in tho snow. The congrega
tion and visitors at the dedication ceremony were
"packed.In like herrings." Samuel Ott was the first
Sunday School teacher in the Wilmot School, assisting
Lyman Wilmot who was superintendent.
■7ft /,/ ty D-fc,-yu f,/' ,*)// /
/92-J?
l0‘' Un aC1'03 °£ tho
�p
T!1^ GUTZLER FAMILY
October*?ia^Qn©Gutz,ier was born ,n Sundhausen, Alsace,
was born rno
h,s w,f0* Margaret Elizabeth Hetzcl,
Germans n?,Crsthclm’ A,sacc* April 1G. 1S0U. They were
fntl sky that Phi'iip°k'! Gu“# -U,0m
W#“U,y ,,0°"|C’
had riding horses and other
u^l.rIes ln his home country.
when5 ,'LrVV?S, an,only daughter of wealthy parents, and
broi.rhV\
famlly came t0 Deerfield, Mrs. Guttler
She S oil USCi°U ,,ncns 5l,Hl silks, and a short time before
these shriii?;? ,Dece,nbuJ’ 7* 1351. she directed that some of
Lcrs
1 Ul be saved for eaeli of her four surviving daugharrJval ,n Deerfield, Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Gutzif,*
r1ronJ Je5jse Wilmot (brother of Lyman Wilmot)
of aUv^r'money aU< s,xly’acrc farm. paying for It two pecks
WnVl? mother of Philip Jacob Gutzlcr came with them.
iVsn \m.C, 3 not known t0 kcr descendants. She died about
Nnrih M
or elghtjr-eight. and was buried in tho first
ivoitli Northficld Cemetery.
Another member of the Gutzler household was old Grctel.
V. i huousekceper, who came to America with them. Grctel
cued about March. 18G0. She had some money "out," und
oy the will of Philip Gutzler (who died January 7. 185G)
as to be given a home with his.son, or have another found
.r her. A small house was built for Gretel across the
road, and after she died It became the property of Mr. Hess.
The will also provided that the eldest son (or one of the
two elder sons) should care for the younger Gutzlcr chil
dren, and pay to each one thousand dollars, when lie or she
became of age. Philip Gutzler, the eldest son, fulfilled these
requirements and acquired the homestead, eighty acres of
woodland, also sonic money invested.
Philip Jacob Gutzler, his wife, who was Margaret Eliza
beth Hetzcl, and their daughter, Salome (born in Gertshelm, July 9, 1837, and died In Deerfield in December, 1S50),
were burled in the old Evangelical Association Churchyard
In North Northficld. 111. About, fifty years later (about
’.905) under the supervision of Philip Jacob Gutzler’s daughter, Mrs. Lydia Himmel, the three caskets wero disinterred
intact and removed to the newer cemetery half a milcT'east
of the church.
Philip Gutzler was born In Gcrsthcim, April 2, 1830. and
camo to Deerfield with his parents In 1841. He attended
the Wilmot School, and lived the usual life of a boy on the
.farm. When he was nineteen the whole United States was
electrified by the rumor of astounding gold discoveries In
our newly acquired territory of California. It was almost
without inhabitants, and the field was open to all who could
get there. The wildest excitement and activity prevailed
throughout the country, and every city and village throbbed
with feverish Impulse to rush to the "diggings." The
boys on the farm "out west," as Illinois was then called,
did not escape-the contagion.
Tho maps then published showed all of the territory west
of the state of Missouri as a blank across which was printed
the words "Great American Desert." The difilculty of
reaching this unknown country restrained thousands from
the attempt, so that those only who possessed natural
courage or adventurous proclivities actually made the great
plunge.
In 1851, Philip Gutzler could no longer resist the golden
lure, and being then or age, felt that he was free to go,
and, in company with several other young men or the neigh
borhood (among whom were Jacob Ott and Ills nephew.
Jacob Ott. Philip Ott. Andrew Meier, George Arnold, Philip
Lehman and one of the Luther boys), started bn the Jour
ney. The "Argonauts” had several routes from which to
choose: A tedious sea journey around Cape Horn, a partly '
sea and partly land route across the Isthmus of Panama,
or Nicaragua, or Mexico, or following westward the buf
falo trails which were already outlined by the bleaching
bones of beasts and men who had succumbed to the hard
ships of the desert, or had been killed by tho Indians. Tho
• Dcorflcld party choso the routo across the Isthmus of Pan
ama.
i
/-//'/ /ftsl/ eg M'S. /gy.cM, (gl//
'92-
The ocean voyages, with the poor accommodations of tho
uotnrlnuiily lundoqunln vnminln. worn a much drnadod part
*»f llio JournXsy; but ail ho ulwayu wau n good a uullor, Philip
Gutzlcr was In better health and spirits than tho majority
or the paaoengoro when they came to anchor In tho Harbor
of Chagreo.
Travel ucroiiii the liilhimm wan by cniiouu, or buugon, up
tho Chagres River, following about tlio samo lino as the
Panama Canal, was dug- sixty years later. Part of the
distance tho men walked and over some of the way they
wero carried In chairs strapped on the backs of the natives.
These natives, who beforo the "Gold Rush" were exception
ally honest people, by two years' contact with American
radians, had been changed to thieves and murderers, and
the whole route across tho Isthmus was Infested with Amer. lean, English and Spanish highwaymen, who pounced upon
defenseless travellers at every opportunity. After crossing
the Isthmus there was another sea journey (which some
times took three months) beforo they passed through the
Golden Gate, and stepped ashore upon the "Promised Land.”
Philip Gutzler’s next five years were spent In the vicinity
of San Francisco, Sacramento, Monterey, and Santa Cruz.
For five years tho "rush" continued. Some of the dis
coveries were wonderful, but the greater number of people,
wrought to a pitch of nervous frenzy by the myriad reports
flying about, were too easily Influenced to leave a locality
of moderate wealth to plunge into the unknown beyond the
mountains.
After months of fruitless searching for the proclaimed
‘Inexhaustible focus of gold," they would return those who
had not succumbed to privation—poverty stricken and rag
ged, to find the claims they had left already occupied.by
fresh arrivals.
This sort of work was too uncertain to suit Philip Gutzler,
so after two years of Indifferent success at placer mining,
lie started-to grow wheat. Some of the time that he was In.
California flour was as high as one dollar a pound, and
many a man mined half a day to pay the price of a loaf
of bread.
Sugar cost a dollar a pound, and butter two dollars and
a half.
The producer’s profits were certain and though not large
compared to that of the most fortunate gold seeker’s, at any
rnto Inrgo onougli to prove tho wisdom of his choice.
Philip Gutzler prospered until ho had a severe attack of
typhoid fever. With .this, and its attendant ills, he was
sick for a year. A man nurse was employed when the
most ordinary labor cost ten dollars a day. Eggs >vere
ono dollar each, and milk seventy-five cents a quart. This
year’s sickness cost Philip Gutzler a small fortune, but,
even with such* great expense, the years spent in Californfa
pyi>—l profitable.
The first letter to reach him from his Illinois home told
of his mother’s death, and after being away five years, he
was called home by the death of Ills father. By that time
a railroad had been built so the Journey was not attended
with so many hardships.
?
On his return It was arranged that Philip should tako his
father’s farm, care for the younger children of the family,
and as his six brothers and sisters became of age, to pay
each one thousand dollars.
On July 29, 1857, Philip Gutzler married Adclla Wilmot
daughter of Lyman and Clarissa Dwight Wilmot. The re
mainder of his life was spent on the old homestead where
ho led tho active life of a successful farmer. Plls last six
years were marred by falling health, and on. June 30, 18S2,
he died at the age of fifty-two, respected as a man of the
highest honor. After his death the farm was sold to George
Stryker.
Michael was tlje second son or Philip Jacob Gutzler and
his wire, Margaret Elizabeth I-Ictzcl. Michael was born
June 15, 1833,, In Gcrsthcim. Alsace. He married Mary
I weed, November, 1855, In Waukegan, III. They made their
home In Mount Vernon, Iowa.
Mary Elizabeth (always called by her second name) was
Vjri1
1®; 184*; married John Stryker on March 27,
iSGO. 1 hey lived ln Northficld. then in Ravenswood, III
whero Mrs. Stryker died December 27. 1914. She was burled
In Grnccland Ccmotcry.
, *r.ayy’ b0Trn October 30. 1842, In Deerfield, III,, married
111 StorHngJI?|UCt ° CbIctlE:o' January 5, 1859. She died
Anna Lydia (always known as Lydia), who was born
S°“il0r,7n-,,,o*.<"-J,,llDoonrfioMl
Chl«eo.
EviuigoUca,
‘-ha
auperfect w !iv cs^lh rtii °t 1 Tosc whTch°K
�m
Clil«:n(r0 Novci!*’i** 1
rc?!;r
'vo,mi,,» a,,d “Nor her death In
managed ably to
^^rand
s,“u"
.„
wont to a place In ,„e
tl"** when the toucher "bourdo 1 uro iid'u„!i AT wwro fho
mio of Adel la's pupils asked ir Ji
o ,u?lU ono morning
house next week. 1 “Next week?*
c?mo to tIle,r
better do. Ma says she wants vo„ fflYe>i m£*m’ and *a
and tho flour aro all gone ’’ 1 7
1
0 befor0 tho ^
gTSM?
Sho attended ^ifso^ooli1 ^Iattl0)! b°™ “ay 24. S'
western Uni versify <?]?«?; afwr)vard &0'ne to the Northa»d Cook Counties’
?
1,1 various places ImLalco
Eanlzed the 0 A O Snfl,1Ci; frIand-’ E*nma Hall. or:
°‘ln llm hshd a l0ne’ °*<sten1e In Deerfldd!'' 1 “t,rar* eQ'
■
where she married Elmer'E "hllMc?
CoIoradoHattlo Gutzlcr Miller dfnd rLM . ’ November 14. 1888.
after she heeame°adIjWdCemb0r
1888' 'C33 lbaa a
tended schoSserit„GLaker^3 Vor» >avcU 23. 1802. Ho at■■led Anna L. Hodman or hI^ aild
c,llcaEo. Ho mareast 31, 1SS-1. They movedTn ?° “• I_ ,cnry Col"u>'- I"-. An-
wGo°rf Henry''^ut’m^ 'S ^ f3°Utb
dale Mich EanV°°HnA?ad0my and ^Ulsdale College, H'Us
USs! He mm rled MarJ"Si a aa“la™" ia Colorado In
Stryker) of Doorfinid n
oStijlcci (daughter of George
make hla
l1i8?°i. ?? returncd ^
G. 1920.
en,c,d ,n lsy3- and died hero January
tended locaKsc lio»|“ ! ml NmLl
", "
3‘ 1SG'k Ho at'
In l.artncrshl,,
h'
" ,."°Sor" Ulli/«‘sUy. llo was
when George rotui-nclto iim, * 2?0,'?c- l" CoIoiad°. and
et the ranches and’stock
L°Vl Look «
vlllc^Coforado, GOctobo;n28r‘lsS7NOD
thou'- y-
n
'n Lcad--
Franco. In tho Argonno Forest!
°n the batt,c,1<:Id3 •«*
citizens. ?lol*d*id'V?n h'ls tomn c0m>n>nilty’s most useful
March 31, 1927. Ho was
nadlum' Colorado,
llenver, „„ Ulu (Iay l.ororo hm'ii xt^thl'"? n"!, 9°mcloryversary.
M,xly-thhd birthday annl-
neafl'relg'ueen.qa,!fLru3nu!uair0V0'’1'le,r 27> 18CG' When
Northwestern University ho
u\°}£slng atudcnt In
January 2S. lSSd
llc is buwl^ d,pbLhci^ ^ Evanston.
Frances Willard, the noted tomnl..in Dcc.rn°ld Cemetery.
Sunday School tiacher
tcmpcrance advocate, was his
is a g^dua?eCofC
7' 1875- She
vcrslty: graduate of ScotL S^io^ 'n" ^ l> Pcnvcr Un«*
She was married on I<>br^
°C E,O0utIon.
SkInker of Denver. Colorado ^vh'ero 9<.h«t0 Gco,’e(' M«>->’ay
furnished the details of tills* most iniorno^ rf3,dc3lory, also some new material iov thl iS fJStI"er tamlly '"*•
Adella Wlhnot (who married^hnin rutlrtfv'i
Bi?ryyears of age when she came fro
v01 p was but four
wltli her parents In 1840. Her colon hi York ,to Dcc,’dcld
tho Bradley. Dwight Porte. PvS
ancestry Includes
and Bancroft fnml ies^ whiio M,/1„e7l-xNe'vbcrry. Willis,
berry library In Chicago a ul in
l" thc New!
genaloglcal records.
other libraries containing
In her old age many were the storied
i
...
her grandchildren of the singing
/
i
l?}a lo
ing bees" that were held in thp\rh«ni \ ‘l
110 sPc11’
‘‘apple parings,” and the "eon.1 hikings "h°US°*
, Qnd of the
In the neighborhood of the Wlhnot *’ ’ and tho quiltings
and Doarfleld Scliools.
nnd of one hostess who reached
111 o acme of clocaiico hv
providing little dishes ,U saucers/°
SCt l!,0,p cups ^hllj
they drank tea from their
S ch ool°h c fat ho i^Took °h c r *t If.lj her ty vl Uodte ° the WiImot
in tho Academy. This was such n Ion 1° pur.BU0 a courso
It was necessary for them to rcinal i Sn!'0,,F .J®l,Pncy that
in Half Day (a distance reached In
/ n,g U at an
In an automobllo today). After-sunnof. M,nu half nn hour,
about tho fireplace and talked, while Two nli®,”10*1 ^athorcd.
i n rni'iim*
.
Old WOHlAn pIioMa.i
corner. Hnn
One old ________
woman ...
told that
whr»n
'T°men chatted'.
- sno was
was na hn'"'
baby •
wns so small that she could Ho
10o Wns
father's hand and rest”lic!• “)»oad 'on1 h°l,,Ul^ falm of her.'
Tho other old c-ono. Intently i, to°ostod
Cor a
ishinent, Inquired. "And did you i|VQS-* r (l ,n eroat aston-.
ness came thc reply. "They .said I did n,w!‘ 1>e,rcct serious-
....... ....... .
-t^^ AS5:^ns„t■
M
jmsSHSiwH?s“-
pissn
Piiilll
SSdW, toeot!.lorramois m ne . They ‘stt uck" l' rich-0'
AUlerson'broth'Tld's 111031
IlllisSIsli
Aldersou were very religious More* ri,nI „m0t a?d John
century later when Lyman mido^ils last visit to"^^? 1.“
i'X*., 10y °nce.1,ad held- Then John Aldorson said? "iS
toi tune was not meant for us for if «#« i.n,i
’ That
never could have served my Lord and &«.«??■ .SCCUTrcd it I
satisfaction that they haS°noTwhlwd\heath!n0ghf0ra ^hV0*
S’ :SS'C Ss
avSF - “■ *■»=,ts,:;
He never
tease l.rm'about''l,olHga" old mamiT" Sl?le,\ 1Slla’ llked ‘®
loads and slow traveflnc U ^vnl r ' ,In tho days of bad
many of tho household suinlfM rS!,,,d ^J^enient to buy
Jew happened to stoo at nli wn ^,0»nl l,eddlei's. One day a
Ste.t£"vf‘“
looting sheath/ It was obvIo s M,^^ U,,der the ^
woiild bo useful for many things
* new ,nvent,on
nearly stranded by''im^'efforts tT'kn ,nl?"<led and was
^ t^o„m us: at “vr *50
Dcei-nold of tho "Safety first" Wen.^
•l'-.
Introduet,on ‘"to
�.d;Mon's Club with u membership of 17. Like the J. O. Tt.
Club ibis organ!-/.alion has for its purpose Christian
P% T sorvlco nml fellowship. Two inonihoru of the club uro
l OHO
The president of Iho
. oMcom la tbo Sunday School,
•allduh In a mmulior of the church council Tbo uidwrlng
*'or
:BMiJt *1 tho divine niwvlr.im In In charge of the Young Mon h
2- ui ?W.j Club. Two inciuliui'H iiorvu uu mauagum of U»o ill. 1’nul it
Honihl. The club was organized In Iho spring of 1!)G.
>' v.i tM Tbo present olllcors of Iho organization arc: l'Toyd Bock,
-9vjS
President; Alfred Schwab, Treasurer; Alfred Johnson,
set-'Mjft g®. Socrctary.
As
•■•lloth clubs meet every Sunday morning for religious
Instruction, and one evening a month, for business, soiemand fellowship.
Pod
ood
was |f ffc'THE. EVANGELICAL ASSOCIATION CHURCH
• iftffi& Tlio Evangelical Association Church in Amorica was
;ory, v,g£ &$$■<founded by Jacob Albright among the Pennsylvania Gcrd Inm gSS'mani In Novoinlier, 1803, in Lebanon, County, Pcnnsyltl\e '.S gS'Yftnla. "These people have a dialect, customs, and traits
nlon
SgSpH'ot.character peculiarly their own," according to tho hiseacli m pElorlon of The Annals of the Evangelical Association of
v'ii M.Norlh America and • History of. ti»o United Evangelical
tho I|f; Church, ltcv. A. Stapleton. The first; church and printheld
lug olllcc of tbo Evangelical Association was erected In
i guy l |llE 1816 In Now Uorlln. Union County. Pennsylvania. This
church Is really a Cerman Methodist Church, but Is an
$ &Tentirely Independent one. The original members wore
culled "Albrights."
, .
servWhJ
stify- % f-vis■ 'lyTlio first Evangelical Church in Illinois was organized
the Stnngcr Grove, the home of Martin Stangcr, father
m on;..y*
of George Stangcr of Deerfield. Iho other families who
s and 'ifc,
Jolnod the Stangers were the Luther, Jacob Ott, Jacob
serv-'i^
ed to % fctiXKichor, and Countryman families. The first minister
s say, *■# Kwas ilcv.. lloess, who came on horseback fromlonnsylLlon?
vanla to preach. Three churches in succession were
come
built-near the Nurlhllelcl Cometory. The first church
i con-;i??fe^.vna a crudo log one built In 18*17 on a hill west of the
nation ^ cemetery on tbo land of Mike Schoelle.
Iho second
memwuh on the Nicholas Miller farm, where the parsonage
in re- tMlftnow Blands, and was later sold lo John Forko, who
loro It down and moved it to his farm in Wheeling.
®$*“orly-flvo years ago the third one was built on the souLliber. :®®VC8l corncr of JoIlu Slreicher's land given for the pur^gwjl^Tho Philip Brand family walked from their farm a
mm
„ DLL iBsSfinllo north of Deerfield to the North field corncr to nlMr.
'
' ■'I'E^’vlond church services, a distance of four miles.
harcU-$ KjJroml helped hew Lhe logs for the first church.
*
Sfe . Whon more settlers came to West Deerfield township.
(%.iorYiccB wero held In the homo oT Philip Glitzier. MiuTl,iors who preached In the Gutzlcrhomo wero Devs.
^yfilooffort. Gocsslo, Laeglcr and Hlmmcl. The children
. 7. gffiof tlio German families attended Sunday School In tho
nations •’P*lS\Vllmot School, whero Lyman Wllmot was Supcrlnlcnd1800.r ' /®f«nt, and tho services were In English. Children caino
itor of t Sfoffrom long distances to attempt to speak English and
ircssed ••Miouru Tho Bible In tho language of their adopted
romote + a?i?counlry. Samuel Ott helped Lyman Wllmot as trams2h and
Iflutor' aml assistant superintendent. These Immigrants
2>Voro Lutherans in the mother country, hut as they so)
the or- vgjfclourncd in Warren, Pouu., for about two years, they
W. T. :J ^idoplcd this new sect which had conceived a more strict
r, Min- i j§3doctrlno of personal conduct, particularly on the lluuor
’• Anna v ■■l^nupslloii.
, .
izabeth \Tho' last Northllold Evangelical Association Church.
T^callod tho O’Plaiu Church, on the southwest corncr of
and at .y tg&DunUoo and Saunders Hoads, was built in 1880. The
c inter- T wfunilud Evangelical Church across tho road was built
propor-' ^®iuT8!)0.
urch in 7:
Noto from the Conrcrenco Book;
■fi&vlu 1842 salaries of ministers wcr.o fixed at ?Gu per
t; Mrs. .'i iSyVoo.r for an unmarried man. ?105 Tor married men, and
olinson,"*j
additional for each child under fourteen years of
•••vMv/J •
an extra amount for traveling expenses.' "This
ll’S
«»UB08 considerable rejoicing. There was a surplus in
• i iSibo Conference Treasury that was also divided."
Young
ju 1843 the Illinois district had a Des Plaines circuit,
Club, a -i
iho. presiding elder was C. Kopp. In 184*1, Clirls•«ce and V SwtJau Llnlner was elder for Lilia district. On June 11.
, some
MO. John Jacob Escher was "newly received" in tho
• y comullies Conference. In 18*1(1 lwo oldors were ap• ra aro-;j Pointed'for tho Des Plaines distrief. C. Kopp and Samuel
ized in • [Sjjlckovcr. In 18*17, on the ».)es Plaines circuit. C. Anthe of- ;• ’^jronsloin and George Messu*- -{wurn appointed. In 1848,
oorolary
®G00rgo EhcIioi* was rocolvco
i the conference.
ry.
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R. A. Nelson
Qrocery and Market
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DEERFIELD, ILL
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Telephone Deerfield 6
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Deerfield Filling Station
ALVIN W. KNAAK, Prop.
Qasoline—Oils—Qreases
CAR GREASING A SPECIALTY
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trict have more letters daily than all the rest oi: the county, yet are left dependent on
post station called Otsego, five miles out of town on the nearest route from Chicago to
Milwaukee.”
i
The first post office in Deerfield Township was in the Median settlement, under
the name of Emmett, in 1846. The second was established on January 13, 1849, in St.Johns,
A’hich name was changed to Port Clinton on March 19, 1850. Both were forerunners of the
; first post office in Highland Park, on December 14, 1861. St. Johns was located on a
r' bluff on both sides of the first ravine to be crossed on entering Fort Sheridan reservaat the main south gate. It was named by John Peterman and John'Hettinger, of German
extraction, who laid out the town, and incorporated it under their Christian names.
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first post office in the village of Deerfield was established May 4, 1850.
Deerfield was a settlement of buildings at the crossing of Waukegan Road and Deerfield
Road, but in those days, the roads were muddy except where planks were laid for wagon
wheels, and there were farms on both sides of the rutty road west thru the Wilmot farm to
the Des Plaines River. Caleb Cadwell was appointed post master, and the first office was
in his home. He owned buildings on both sides of Waukegan Road. Assisted by his daughter,
Rosclla, Cadwell served until 1854. A list of the postmasters in Deerfield since Cadwell:
Appointed
August 19, 1886
Walter II. Mi lien
Lewis Beecher
February 14, 1854
December 8, 1890
Jacob C. Antes
Eliab Gifford
October 28, 1854
Mathias Horenberger October 29, 1894
Hobart J. Milien
June 8, 1859
December 9, 1898
James H. Fritsch
Madeson 0. Cadwell
August 27, 1861
Samuel P. Hutchison November 21, 1906
Lyman Wilmot
March 26, 1864
August 15, 1914
Arthur J. Ender
Nelson C. Hall
August 31, 1866
July 31, 1922
Mrs. Fred H. Meyer
Mrs. Jane McCartney May 29, 1867
June 8, 1926
Fred H. Meyer
Christian Antes
January 15, 1869
March 1, 1934
John J. Welch
Christian M. Willman November 14, 1958 and
presently Deerfield Postmaster
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For seventeen years there was a post office serving the area north of
§£■ Deerfield, including Lake Forest. It was established in 1887 in Lancasterville, in the
area later called Everett. This postal service was discontinued in 1909, however, when
^4 Rural Free Delivery started out of the Deerfield post office, when Samuel P. Hutchison
was postmaster in an office in his general store on Deerfield Road near Waukegan Road.
& RFD was authorized by Congress in 1904 but did not start in this region until five years
later. Using a horse drawn mail wagon, the carrier was William Carl "Billy” Ott, less
*
than four feet tall, but devoted to his daily tasks over dirt roads in much adverse weaA) thcr and road conditions.
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Abolition
Tho abolitionist sentiment existed in Deerfield
and Its adjacent areas. A “station" on the
Underground Railroad was operated by Lyman
Wilmot, and a runaway slave was received here
and given quarters for the v/lnter of 1058 at the
home of Lorenz OIL’ Abolitionists from Highland
Park would come to Deerfield to debate the Issuo
at the corner of Deerfield and Waukegan Roads.1
The runaway slave, Andrew Jackson, was 20
years old and came from a Mississippi plantation.
His father was the plantation owner, a white man,
and because of this, the slavo received greater
liberty than other slaves, providing /him with an
opportunity to escape. His flight from Mississippi
was an ordeal which included temporary capture
by his pursuers.*
i
Jackson lived with the Ott family, and did
chores while there. He built a while picket fence
and gale, but asked that it be taken down when
tho slaves were freed-German thrift could not ac
cede to this request. In the spring, Jackson was
taken to Chicago from where ho sailed to Canada.
He corresponded with the Ott family from there.4
The abolitionist sentiment was not universally
embraced, however, and many men were unable
to acknowledge a personal involvement in the
abolition Issuc-parlicuiarly In the resulting war.*
Antiv/ar sentiment was so strong that a bounty
was required to induce enlistments. The bounty
was $40 per man at tho beginning of the war, but It
was 51 COO by the end.*
There were a few “copperhead” and "a lodge or
two ol Knights of the Golden Circle,"* which wore
southern sympalhiziers, but “never constituted an
effective fifth column."' A strong Union League
existed to counteract any disloyalty that may
have disgraced the County.*
V
:
CIVIL WAR
Doorflold Grand Army of tho Republic
Captain McCaul’s Shield Guards were ap
parently the first volunteers. Their formation was
announced on April 20, 1061, and Ihcy Joined an
I
Irish regiment In Chicago.'* On April 29, 1061,
nlnoly volunteers from southern Lake County art
rived at Waukegan." On May 4,1061, the Union RIv
fie Guards were formed. On June 6, the County
Board of Supervisors appropriated 55,000 for
bounties to encourage enlistments."
During the summer of 1061, Companies C and F
of the 37lh Illinois Infantry were organized. Cap
tain Eugcno B. Payne and Captain Erwin B.
Messer were tho officers of these Companies.
During the winter of 1061-1062, half of Company I,
45th Illinois Infantry, and half of Company F of the
C5th Infantry were organized; Company G of the
51st Illinois Infantry was organized, and all went
to Camp Douglas.w it Is not certain whether Virgil
Wilmot, the son of Lyman Wllmot who operated
the underground railroad, served In the 45th" or
the 55lh" Illinois Infantry.
Thomas Mooney of Deerfield had the unique
service record of serving on both sides. He was In
ducted Into the Confederate Army while working
as an engineer on a Mississippi River steamboat,
but escaped after two years and Joined the Union
Army."
,, , ..
Several Deerfield men died as a result of the
Civil War, cither from Illness, Injuries received In
battle or from the hardships of the prison camps.
Several more were crlpplod. Those who served In- .
elude the following:
1. Mario Word Flolcholt, Tho History of DoorNoId, Glonvlow
Pross, 1928, p. 107.
2. Ibid.
3. Ibid.
4. Ibid.
5. Ibid., p. 49.
0. Ibid.
o! Richard Holsladlor, Tho American Ropubllc Vol. I: to 1865,
Prontlss Hall, 19G4, p. G14.
9. nolchclt, loc. ell.
10. Ibid.
11. Ibid.
12. Ibid.
13. Ibid.
14. Ibid.
15. Ibid., p. 115.
10. Ibid., p. 50.
13
RICHARD HART
*735 FOREST GLEN TRAIL
KjVBIlWOODS. ILL. 60015
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During lhal Mrs! year in Lake Counly, his young
son
n Daniel, Jr. died on September 7, 1034, and his
wife. Ruth, died on Seplember 10” Another son
died a year later. No cause of death Is suggested
in the materials available, but the prevalence of
epidemic diseases in late summer has been
documented.
i
A prairie lire destroyed Wright’s winter hay sup
ply and the Indians helped him to survive the first
winter.”
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Wright’s daughter, Caroline, married William
Whlgham in 1036. It was the first marriage In Lake
Counly, and Hiram Kennlcott, first Justice of the
Peace, performed the ceremony at the •'Mill" on
the Dos Plaines River.”
The Wright farm spanned the Des Plaines River,
and port ol it is now the Rycrson Conservation
Area in Rivorwoods. Wright died December 30.
1073 at the age of 95. His farm was In the name of'
William Whlgham on the 191G Plat Map. Ho had
married Rachel Millard in 1045.”
The first soltler In Deerfield Township was
Michael Meehan. Ho arrived in a covered wagon
drawn by two oxen and settled on Section 10 on
Telegraph Road in 1035, between Half Day Road
and Wilmol Road.” Meehan was born In 1000 at
Meath, Ireland. He married Drldgel Monahan In
1032, and emigrated to the United Slates that
same year. Ho went first to Salina, New York, and
later to Michigan, but in tho aulumn of 1035 he
came finally to Deerfield. The Indians hod not loft
the area yet, and the township was still in its
natural state. Meehan plowed the first furrow in
the township.”
Ho was relatively well slocked with provisions
when he arrived in Deerfield, for he had several
barrels of flour and a barrel of beef and pork. He
also had the cash to purchase seed, oats and
potatoes in the following spring, and he bought
the first piglet and first pair of kittens as well. He
erected a log cabin on the 225 acres that pre
empted, and the land hod not yet been surveyed
(therefore it was still government land obtained
from the Indian Treaty). Ho loft the farm for a brief
attempt at gold mining in California in 1052 but
realized the futility and quickly returned. ”
Meehan continued to work his farm until 1076
when, at the age of 60. he retired, sold his farm to
James O’Connor, a neighbor and rclatlvo and
moved to Highland Park.”
The first settler In what Is now the Village of
Deerfield was Jacob Cadwcll (or perhaps Horace
103*" »• Cadwcl1 ond Laml) arrived |n Deerfield in
Jacob Cadwcll and his wife, Ruble Rich
Cadwcll, had five sons and' two daughters: .
Madison, Philemon. Caleb, Hiram, Edwin, Rubio
Roseth and Jcrusha Rosina.” They all settled on
what is now Waukegan Road near Deerfield Road
For a time this was called ’’Cadwell Corners” but
later it was changed to ’’Deerfield Corners ” The
approximate locations of their homos Is given In
the History ol Dccrliold. by Roichelt. but those
locations are no longer contemporary. The •
7
Cadwell lands were pre-empted under one of the
pro-emptlonblllspassedafter1030(butboforolhe
Distribution Pre-emption act).”
Caleb Cadwell was appointed the first
postmaster In Deerfield In 1050.” The Cadwells
built tho first school — Cadwell School — and
Rosella was tho first teacher. The Cadv/ell School
was opened In 1840, but the Wilmol School - tho
first In the township — was opened In 1847.”
Horace Lamb came to Deerfield In 1835, tho
same year as the Cadwells. It Is not clear, actual*
ly. who was tho first to settle here. Tho Lamb property was located between what Is now
Waukegan road and tho east slough north from
the county lino Into what 13 presently tho country
club. These were later the Vetter and Parsons proparties.”
K
The Wllmols, too, wero among the first settlers
Josso Wllrinot came up tho North Branch In 1034
and landed at what Is now Greenwood Avenue ”
Having stayed In Deerfield through tho winter, ho
returned In 1837 to tho east to bring his own fami*
ly and his brother, Lyman, and his family. Both
families settled west of the village along Wilmol
Road In the Deerfield Road area (none of which
existed at tho time, of course). Tho farm tho
Wilmols built was considered one of tho best and '
most productive In tho area.”
Lyman Wilmol had cloven children, six sons
and five daughters. Ho built the first school In tho
township; tho Wilmots were patrons of education.
They were also abolitionists, and operated a sta
tion on the "underground railroad” which aided
runaway slaves to escape Into Canada.” Mrs.
Clarissa Wilmol, Lyman's v/Ife, was a practical
nurse and midwife who administered to the Infirm
In the absence of the physician, and performed
some diagnostics with tho aid of a medical
manual.”
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John Klnzlc Clark was among tho first whites In
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20. Ibid.
21. Ibid.
22. nolclioll, op. ell., p. 0-9.
23. 1910 Plat Map of lako Counly.
24. Rolcholl, op. ell., p. 109.
25. Ibid.
26. Halsoy, op. ell., p. 422.
27. nolclioll. op. ell., p. 109.
2U. I lalnos. op. ell., p. 01.
29. Ibid.
30. nolclioll, op. cll„ p. 110.
31. Ibid., p. 19.
32. Ibid., p. 30.
33. Ibid., p. 10.
34. "It was a navlgablo river at Iho time," according to Mrs.
Rulh Potlla.
35. Halsey, op. cl!., p. 425.
30. Rolcholl, op. clI., p. 107-108.
37. Ibid., p. 78-79.
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2735 FOREST GLEN TRAIL
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Ihe Deerfield area. He was the classic bucksklnn*
ed frontiersman. His mother, a Virginian, had
been captured and raised by the Shawnee and
married an English officer at Fort Wayne, Indiana.
Clark's uncle, John Klnzle, was a noted Chicago
pioneer, and his stepfather, Jonas Clybourn, was
also numbered among Chicago’s first settlers.
John Klnzie Clark was raised with the Indians.
He had acquired their ways and was called "In
dian" Clark by settlers, but the Indians named him
"Nannlmoa," the prairie wolf. He was a skilled
hunter and a man of great endurance. He was an
express rider between Fort Wayne, Chicago and
Milwaukee, and brought supplies to Deerfield by
pack saddle. For two years, 1031-33, ho oven serv
ed as the Chicago coroner.
Clark had an Indian wife and a number of
children In Wisconsin, but lator In life married a
whllo woman. Pormclla Scott of DcKalb, and settl
ed In Deerfield. This marriage produced two
daughters, Elizabeth and Haddassah, who marrled Hobart and Walter Millen respectively.
His attempts to farm In Northflcld met with
failure. Clark was a hunter, not a farmer, and his
friends, the Indians, came to hunt and camp with
him on his farm. After he served In the Civil War,
he bought a home In Deerfield In 10G5. Ho is
buried in the Deerfield Cemetery.
Clark was the true frontiersman, apparently not
very adaptable to the agrarian transition that took
place during his lifetime. Those frontier skills
were best suited for survival In the hostile pre
settlement environment which so devastated
those lirst settlors, but they proved to have little
value In post settlement Deerfield.5'
library to read this book and find out about the
past. Sho lists among tho first settlors—given . v
here with the dale they arrived—the following: .' v>:
\r
Captain Wright
Jonathan Kcnnlcott
Jcsso Wllmot
Horace Lamb
Tho Cadwells
Martin Luther
Michael Meehan
Oil
Mooney
Muhlko
Lyman Wllmot
John Millen
Job Galloway
Carolan
Lancaster
Rockcnbock
James O'Connor
Fred Frltsch
Alfred Parsons
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Deerfield Town Named
In 1040 the township was called "Lo Clair.””
The Selection of a permanent name for tho
township — as distinguished from the vlllago
which was not Incorporated or named until
1903—occurred In 1849. A township meeting was
held at the home of Michael Meehan on Tc-legraph
Road. The Irish Immigrants suggested the name"Erin" for Ireland, but John Millen from Deerfield,
Massachusetts, suggested the namo "Deer
field"—noting, a3 the Indians had.observed, that
deer In abundance was a characteristic of tho
area. Tho voto was 17 lo 13 In favor of Doorflold.”
Trannportallon Sytlom
Tho early trillion* entered Lake County and
Oeerfietd via several lyr.tornn of Ingress, Tho
rivers and Lake Michigan were major elements of
the transportation system. (Tho waterways had
not been "Improved" yet by tho dredging and
channelization they later received.). Overland
transportation wa3 limited to Improved roads, and
tho railroad was not available until 1855 when
track was laid through Highland Park.
Transportation v/as Important to tho ooltlor, not
only as a means of Ingreoa but os a moans for
shipping farm products to market and for com
munication v/ith other places, primarily Chicago.
In addition, seed grain, livestock, implements,
food, clothes, medicines and supplies had to be
.brought into tho community.
Tho pioneer made the trip to Chicago, 26 mltos
Irorn Deerlield, v/ith regularity and sometimes on
loot.."One neighbor v/ould be selected to go to
Chicago to make purchases for the entire com
munity. Ox teams were used sometimes, and at
The First Families
Many settlers arrived in Oeerfietd during the
period from 1835 to 1845. In The History ol Deerticld Mrs. Reichelt has gone into the history ol a
number ol them and it is worth the trip to the
Vi. tUi'3., p. 107.
*/». tuvj.. p. i io.
40. lUicJ., P. to.
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(1836):,
i
The Ott Family
The Ott Family came to Deerlield Irorn Y/arren,
Pennsylvania, but their birthplace v/as
Baidenhcirn, Alsace. The Oil’s were related to the
Wessling and Rockenbach families. These set
tlors of German descent who migrated from
Alsace lo Deerfield obtained their land from
speculators who v/ere profiteering in the v/ake of
pre-emption, but the land was good, a "Garden of
Eden," and its value v/as certain. They built
homes along v/hal is now Sanders Road, and their
roll includes: Casper Ott, Samuel Ott, John Jacob
Ott, and John Jacob Ott, Jr., Marlin Luther, Jacob
Luther, and families named Duffy, Dose, Ste/rar*.
and Jennings. They worked their farms and
became steadfast members ol the Deerfield com
munity. lr» 1930 the On family reunion at the Deer
field Centennial celebration v/as the largest.
1
(1834) James Duffy "
Lewis Gasltleld
(1834) Androw Meier
(1835) Sloward
(1835) Ludlow
(1836) Dawson
(1835) Dorsey
(1836) Boylan
(1836) Fagan
(1837) Yoro
(1837) Mclntyro
(1039) Tull/
(1840) Roderbusch
(1041) Doyle
(1041) McCraror
(1041) Hoyt
(1042) John Jacob Ott
(1042) Philip Brand
(1043) Philip Vetter
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vr°a. Tho c() , S, !’mS t0 11,0 "Noi'Ul K>,0»° Wo«l"
Gc^(l to brlj, 1 bntVn, ,?/« >0 mY UmImu Station was oxMll-
»st
ar*on ui° c,,,cr'-
'°i*cst, and to Yi™!.^001
,0 IriK,lIju,<I Bark and Luka
>o»\ la Ki'oiillv h. r U wIUl ,,a K»’:uid opera in ilio suiurado coinmunll! f?tJ,Wr .Vr U,° <*«>I of a hlgli
'Highland Sr vl °‘ L !° WomoM 1,10
nee-eon to
M proBrinii f J n °xr'5lU,S C,ub' 'v,u‘
excellent cuiAmorleuu n£vni\?»i*ol*HVSlu,ro C,lai>,cr Daughters ol*
ith its film i^?,i .!U0U (f,,r 11,030 w,,° aro eligible)
Gerfield's doslVabllNv0 *U,<1 °l,lllcal,onal work, adds to
ecsii ability as a residence place.
DEERFIELE) athletic association
yers iaCthf,n«tl^thIcti,c ARSOciation» of which Jack
cn of tho Viii tl°n jUld •sl)0n30l'»
composed of young
‘H Players7
^ who aro chaml»°» baseball and footuong suburbaii"SM?i^S.
School I« second to uono
bool Is far qinJ'i E l»SC ,?<, »8, Tbo Deurfiel<l Grammar
uuerous V-niV ? 1 -L? w iaL il was lon years ago.. The
eiiAc^s [0?,“bB3 the vicinity, such as Briergate,
irnon RldVo
u' ^ 1 hfim, lOxmoor. Oiiwontsla,
JiscL
’ i'nMS ,Ij°f;;oh- r-alco Siioro, Bob O' Link.
iliev Nonhinoo? in?01/ 1,llIn1ois' Mlss,0» ^idgo,,.Sunset
n Coimtrv Pln°i ' ? uo f* Columbian, Hunters', and Big
'it congestion UlL,iyc beautiful open spaces lliat preTiicro aro. four churches,
ono Catholic, and* three
olostanl in Deortiold ami a public library.
ho shopping facilities aro good for a village. Two
goods stores, Schells' and Oloudorf's; three grocery
anfi-a'AV' Nb,w,‘,»- M««ry (!a.in“ld1,. 8,i
mil Jh, ,
l,Cl\cr ?h01’- °r Wm. SLeinluius: tho Kuv
•shoni
1,cic,*,i,J,(l h‘,;MiL.v parlor; tlireu bar2>«ioi)s. Matt Hoffman a. Chris Sifferl's ami Scavu/./.o'.i;
ec restaurants, Bcrtolini and Lcncioni's, the Bluebird,
i “la »*">****: two confectionery stores, the Brier
ect Shoppe and tho Bluebird; two drug si ores, T. J
^!C’o„anAd
aml I[ouL’s; Coleman’s Variety
ic. an A. and 1. store; fruit store; two tailors and
™Svf\ Ylln1C0,lt Silveri ami North Shore Cleaners: the
n/iCTu«n-a iC1;Vr' t1.W0 1.,lun,ljh,kr and heating establishn .s, william H, Us'Toil's and Milton kraut/.; two elecshops, William Seiler’s, and William Desmond’s; one
varo store, thill of .lack Not/.; one riminco ami tin
./ohn .1. McMahon's; two garages, Knaak'n and Bote
rcn<l s; four real cslato and liisurauce oMlccs. Charles
iscliull's, Frank Russo’s, Foxworlhy's, and Vnnt and
gs; one delicatessen and confectionery or FdwarU
tmolil: three nurseries, lvottrascli Bros., Franlcon
s. and F. D. Clavoy; two lumber and coal companies.
Deerfield Lumber Company. Tho Mercer Lumber Co
tlie Lake County Coal and Material Company- tho
0 oil station; tho Standard Oil Company plant; the
rAcid Interior Finish Company; Tho DcorlleliU Slate
k; Tho Deerfield Chevrolet Sales Company; Tlio BuCoiislrucllou Co»‘»mny (water mains and sowors);
Kapscliul Da'-lo Construction Company (roads and
ng); Tho Po-ry Konst Battery Shop: a number of
tors and decorators. Ross Sherman. MeCIarvio. WilKrcli, Builders, Kd. Sogert, John Huhn. It. 10. and
. Bettis, A. I. Johnson, Alex Taylor. Cashmoro. Tliilo
, Frank .labohs. C. B. Foxworthy. W. Altkcu; tivo
drillers. L/neoln Pettis, and Alvin Moyer; two hricks. the Illinois and tho National; Lliroo piano teachers,
ices Bledcrsladt. Mrs. C. C. Bettis, Bertha Weiss;'
•'s Music Shop, for radios and piano tuning;
ik's Music Store, for pianos, radios and victrolas;
Hotel Deerfield; Tlio Herman Frost Newspaper
icy and pool room; ono sowing machlno agency, that
. I-I. MuMko; two sowor contractors, Howard Stryker
Gcovatf Burnett: Arcliio Antes, sign painlor; • Ira
, edan’it contractor; Kurl Frost, concrete blocks;
x -l. He's Deerfield Filling Station; Ira Hole's Dcerl
raised 1 Company; Tho PaxlorcL (.'onstrnelion Com1 and lining contractors aro Ccorgo Botlls, Fred
o mon or Wolf. August Huolil; a shoo ropalrlag
ark con Tnnlnlon): a Deerfield bakery; a millioncage) tint (Call llDlt); two band leaders, H. 10.
known'rank Russo. Among the dairy companies
r in CXisorvIco In Deerfield arc tho Bowman Hoh-
rnim
following Horn:
^4
a uiig
ao, x j
t (, jiad tho
board will redistrict township
A ...
<■« «ot Now lVoalnct at Supervisor,. Moat
According to .Schedule—Action on
Waukegan Delayed
Ita.lroad traded ,l°ad a,,d tho
St. Paul
orVl!«tn^r217A,,,,U,a.t 1>art oC Wcat Doorfieid lyliig south
it SV A. na and west of tho railroad tracks?
«.r 11.0 Viit uay"iK.,,arl ot WosL Duol'"l!,d ly"'s ,lorl"
‘‘UNDERGROUND RAILROAD” ACTIVITIES
The first real Information of Andrew Jackson, the run.
away slave. Samuel Ott Imparts to tills generation In tho
winter of 1858 a mulatto, about 28 years of age. came to he
home of Lyman Wilmot, tlio Abolitionist, at night Yla the
IJiidergrbund Hallway,’* from Mississippi. Tho lake was
r »/0M. so the black man could not bo scut across to Canada
therefore ho had been taken to Deerfield. Mr 'Wilmot
brought tho slave to tho Lorenz Ott homo
0t
so that tho children could go to school. to do tho chores,
keeping a runaway slave was against llin law imt *i,A
Abolitionists felt Unit they wero In tho right by disobeying
an unjust law Andrew Jackson's father was u whlto man*
II i “mi'o1 tCt mm 1 H. fnthcr'u plantation where ho saw his
uliito sis lei s. the plantation owner was more lenient to
ns son than to his other slaves, and Andrew learned more
than hill companions, therefore Hie desire to be free so
uvarcjuiin the lad Unit it led him to attempt to escape, but
bloodhounds (rucked him, and ho was brought back. In
Ids second attempt at freedom he was successful, and lie
crossed the Ohio River, where lie was sent on his journey
north.
!
by tlio tliiirty farmer. WIioii spring came, and tlio roads
w' Alu,l'uw Ja°k«on prepared to leave. Lorenz
Ht made him a now suit, and gavo him money for boat
fare, and Lyman Wilmot
took him
to Chicngo, wlicro he
..
.
escaped
to...
Canada. After
.
roachlng tlio slaves’ liaycn. Ail•iIuMvrlto °or° hiS ,,crneracl.oraf wh0 fiad taught him to read
and wi ito, of his safe arrival, and that was tho last that
they over heard of him. Samuel Ott was fourteen years of
ago at the time, and he recalls much that the negro did
wnile here.
From another source it is learned that the slave, An' !i! «i!? <Si°rn'*! cacapo wna Ifianncd bccauso ho had been
My Id ml master round It necessary to sell me. None
sold
•C the siaves were given any education as our masters
thought that we would rebel or outwit thorn, But a friend
told mo that the sun rises In tho east and sets in the west
and that as ono goes further south It gets warmer, and
going norlli It gets colder, Willi tills information only. I
decided
to run away. I was soon captured for my inaster
, ,
had discovered my absenco soon artcr I left, and had sent
“r,,S ?rtcr„nur Whcn taking mo hack to tlio planta-
lion my captor (led my arms with a rope, which was
u.'miC,T l° iU,° JlfJrSL‘- and made mo walk In front of. him.
I d
1 W0S0^t•,(, 11,0 roi,° and talked along as If
I Nvcio not trying to escape. Soon I noticed that my master
was sleeping, so I dropped the rope, and Jumped Into the
woods. Most of the tlmo I hid during tho day. and often
“y
wore so close to my hiding place that I could
hear my master giving directions to them.
Several times I was without rood for a number of days.
Many
limes
f ale raw
ii
.
taken from a field wlion I nassed
.0no lIn,° 1 r°II in a barrel when I was looking
foi food, and oven though I hurt my. hip sovoroly I maif
safely hidden, ale I hem. These
ran,- and when
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Grave of Lyman and Clarissa Wllmot
in Deerfield Cemetery
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�WILMOT SCHOOL HISTORY
f
On March 3,
1845 Lyman and Clarissa
Wilmot deeded one quarter acre of land
at the northwest corner (corner of
Wilmot and Deerfield Roads today)
of their farm for .a school,
first Wilmot School
The
(a township,
not a village school) opened in
1847 with Rosella Cadwell as the
firs.t teacher.
According to the deed (which, by
the way,
tg
is still in the possession
of the district,
^
kept in a bank vault),
the land for Wilmot School reverts back
■SIP
asisfltsi
to the heirs if it is used for any
purpose other than a school or if the
land remains vacant for three years.
The first schoolhouse was built by Lyman Wilmot of logs.
It is said that tHe school had to face south so that Mrs. Wilmot
could see the children enter the building.
Does the door that the fourth graders use today face
south?
A second schoolhouse was made of rough boards and had a
dirt floor.
The third building, built in 1858, burnt to the
ground before it could be used.
A fourth structure was built
immediately using the same foundation,
This building still
exists today
1 .as part of a house at 294 Kenmore Avenue.
(It was first moved to the corner of Pine Street and
Deerfield Road and later moved to Kenmore.)
In 1904,
the fifth building was completed,
frame, one-room structure.
This was a
It, too, is still standing....
as part of the Schmitt house at 1660 Deerfield Road.
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Wilrnot School, Deerfield,» Illinois
/ 0*7-T
�LYMAN WILMOT HOUSE
And Why It Will Not Be On The National Register
In the summer of 1994 my wife and I, together with our daughter and her husband, bought
die Lyman Wilmot House at 601 Wilmot Road in Deerfield.
From die beginning I was intrigued with the unique property because of its age and the
historic importance of the Wilmot family, who were very prominent in the early
development of Deerfield.
It was my hope to gain acceptance of the house and coach house on the National Register
of Historic Places. To that end I researched the history of the property and the Wilmot
family. Unfortunately, there was little about the house available except numerous
references to the fact that the original structure—still inside the present house somewheredated from 1840, making it, I believe, the oldest occupied building in Lake County. I
hoped some old photos of die buildings might become available, but none did.
I had much more success in developing information about the Wilmot family. Because of
my interest and experience in genealogy I was able to trace die Wilmot family back seven
generations to the year 1637 when the first Wilmot came to America from England.
I also located and corresponded with a number of Wilmots around the country, several
closely connected to die Deerfield family, who sent me interesting information and
encouraged my National Register quest.
But, alas, it is not to be! I was done in by siding—that and two extensions added to the
house at unknown times in the past. These revisions, it was judged, changed the character
of the structure too much to meet the National Register criteria (despite some early touches
to be seen—a field stone foundation, several hand-hewn beams in the cellar, and the initials
of one of Lyman Wilmot’s sons scratched in on an old window pane over a hundred years
ago). The later siding was the biggest problem. The National Register, it seems, takes a
dim view of modem siding.
One of die criteria taken into account in assessing a property’s qualifications for listing in
the National Register is the historic importance of the occupants. Lyman Wilmot and his
wife were significant in the early development of Deerfield. He was a community leader
and an office holder. They were ardent supporters of the Union and opened their home as
a station on the Underground Railway, harboring escaped slaves. In addition, they
donated the land at Wilmot Road and Deerfield Road for Deerfield’s first school, which
bears their name and where they both served, he as superintendent and she as a teacher.
It was my hope that the historic importance of the Wilmots would be enough to overcome
whatever problems the house presented, and I believe I would have been successful had
not previous owners of the property “modernized” so much.
But in 155 years what else could one reasonable expect?
I have given the Society a copy of the information I developed on the property.
Richard Hart
Riverwoods, Illinois
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Lyman Wilmot House
Description
An account of the resource
This collection consists of records related to the Deerfield Public Library's research into whether or not the Wilmot house could be proved to have been a stop on the Underground Railroad.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2002
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0013
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Lyman Wilmot House
Description
An account of the resource
Photocopy of book by a resident of the Wilmot House with historical information about the house and the owner's attempt to get the house registered as a National Historic Place. Handwritten note indicates that this copy was received from the Lake County Discovery Museum on 5 Feb 2002.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Hart, Richard
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Hart, Richard
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
06/1995
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0013.026
A. Stapleton
Abolition
Abolitionism
Abolitionists
Abraham Lincoln
Adelia H. Wilmot Gutzler
Adelia Wilmot
Adelia Wilmot Gutzler
Agriculturalists
Ague
Albert B. Steele
Albrights
Alderson Brothers
Alfred Parsons
Alonzo Cook
Alsace
Alvin W. Knaak
American Civil War
American Civil War Battle of Old Lake Louisiana
American Civil War Union Army Enrolling Officer
Amos Flint
Amos Wilmot
Andrew Jackson
Andrew Meier
Andrew Meler
Andrew S. Wells
Anesthetics
Anna L. Hoffman
Anna L. Hoffman Gutzler
Anna Lydia Gutzler
Anna Lydia Gutzler Himmel
Anthony Sullivan
Anti-Slavery
Anti-Slavery Activities
Antiwar Sentiment
Apple Parings
Argonne Forest France
Arthur J. Ender
Asahel Talcott
Asahel Wilmot
Auburn Hair
Aztec Club
b.F. Washburn
Baldenheirn Alsace Germany
Bancroft
Bartholomew Boylan
Bartlett
Benjamin Marks
Betsy Clauson
Betsy Clauson Wilmot
Betsy Crawford
Betsy Crawford Wilmot
Bible
Bicentennial History of Deerfield
Billy Ott
Boone County New York
Boylan
Bradley
Breastpin
Bridget Monahan Meehan
Broome County New York
Buffalo New York
Buffalo Trails
Business Woman
Butter
C. Augenstein
C. Kopp
Cadwell
Cadwell Corners
Cadwell School
Caleb Cadwell
California
California Gold Rush
Calvinist Church
Camp Douglas
Canada
Canoes
Cape Horn
Captain McCaul's Shield Guards
Captain Wright
Carolan
Caroline Wright Whigham
Carolyn Becker
Carriages
Carroll County Missouri
Casper Ott
Cattleman
Chagres River
Chargres Harbor
Charles Gutzler
Charles Levi Gutzler
Chicago Coroner
Chicago Courthouses
Chicago Illinois
Chicago River North Branch
Christian Antes
Christian Jaquet
Christian Lintner
Christian M. Willman
Clarissa Dwight
Clarissa Dwight Wilmot
Clarissa Wilmot
Clark Knights
Coach House
Colesville New York
Colorado
Colorado State Legislature
Confederate Army
Connecticut
Cook County Illinois
Copperheads
Corn Huskings
Country Physician
Countryman
Cow
Crown Hill Cemetery
Cuba Township Illinois
Dailey
Daniel Wright Jr.
Davis C. Steele
Dawson
Dedham Massachusetts
Deerfield Area Historical Society
Deerfield Argonauts
Deerfield Assessor
Deerfield Centennial Celebration
Deerfield Corners
Deerfield Filling Station
Deerfield Garden Apartments
Deerfield Historic Village
Deerfield Historical Cemetery
Deerfield Historical Map
Deerfield Illinois
Deerfield Massachusetts
Deerfield Our Athenian Club (OAC)
Deerfield Postmaster
Deerfield Public Library
Deerfield School
Deerfield Town Hall Meetings
Deerfield Township
Deerfield Township Post Office
Deerfield Village Store
DeKalb Illinois
Delta County Colorado
Dennis Lancaster
Denver Colorado
Denver University
Denver University Preparatory Department
Deputy United States Marshall
Des Plaines River
Diphtheria
District Schools
Dorsey
Dose
Doyle
Duffy
Dwight
Dwight Porter Wilmot
E.J. Ginter
Edwin Cadwell
Edwin Kittell
Eggs
Eglon Washington
Electa Hoyt
Electa Hoyt Bennett
Eliab Gifford
Elijah M. Haines
Elisha Gridley
Elizabeth Clark Millen
Elizabeth Gutzler
Elizabeth Gutzler Stryker
Elizabeth Luther
Elizabeth Luther Wilmot
Ella Wilmot
Ellen Eliza Wilmot
Ellen Eliza Wilmot Kittell
Elmer E. Miller
Emma Hall
Emmett Post Office
England
Epidemic Diseases
Erastus Bailey
Erin
Erwin B. Messer
Eugene B. Payne
Eva P. Vant Wilmot
Evangelical Association Church
Evangelical Association Church Des Plaines Conference District
Evangelical Association Church of North America
Evangelical Association Churchyard
Evangelical Church
Evanston Illinois
Evergreen Colorado
Fagan
Farm Hand
Father Marquette
First Presbyterian Church
Flatboat
Fleet as a Deer: History of the Deerfield Post Office
Flint Creek
Flour
Flour Prices
Flouring Mill
Fort Sheridan Army Station
Fort Wayne Indiana
France
Frances Willard
Francis McGovern
Frank Herbert Gutzler
Fred Fritsch
Fred H. Meyer
Frederick Muhlke
Frey Farm
Frontiersman
Genealogical Records
Geneva Illinois
George Arnold
George Brand
George Escher
George Gridley
George Henry Gutzler
George Messner
George Murray Skinker
George Stanger
George Stryker
George Truitt
German
German Methodist Church
Gerstheim Alsace Germany
Gersthelm Germany
Glenview Press
Gold
Golden Gate
Golden Wedding Anniversaries
Grace Flint
Graceland Cemetery
Graduate Nurses
Grand Army of the Republic
Grand Prairie
Grandchildren
Great Chicago Fire
Greenhouse
Greenwood New York
Gretel Gutzler
Haddassah Clark Millen
Hand-Hewn Beams
Handwritten Notes
Hannah Bunnel Wilmot
Hannah Wilmot
Harriet Emma Gutzler
Harriet Emma Gutzler Miller
Harriet Wilmot
Hastings Subdivision
Hattie Gutzler
Hattie Gutzler Miller
Hay Loft
Heavy Timberland
Henry B. Steele
Henry County Illinois
Henry Gutzler
Henry Place
Henry S. Vail
Henry Walton
Henry Wells
Henry Wessling
Highland Park Alderman
Highland Park Illinois
Highland Park Mayor
Highland Park Post Office
Highwaymen
Highwood Academy
Hillsdale College
Hillsdale Michigan
Hiram Cadwell
Hiram Kennicott
Hiram R. Bennett
Historical and Statistical Sketches of Lake County
Historical Encylopedia of Illinois and History of Lake County
History of Deerfield
History of Lake County
History of the United Evangelical Church
Hobart J. Millen
Hobart Millen
Hodgkiss Colorado
Holcomb
Hood
Hoopole Grove Illinois
Hooppole Illinois
Horace Lamb
horses
Hoyt
Humeston Iowa
Hunter
Illinois
Illinois Republican Party
Iowa
Irish
Israel Dwight
J. Wesley Speelman
J.M. Washburn
Jacob Albright
Jacob C. Antes
Jacob Cadwell
Jacob Himmel
Jacob J. Escher
Jacob Luther
Jacob Miller
Jacob Ott
Jacques Marquette
James Chambers
James Duffy
James H. Fritsch
James Hamilton
James Mooney
James O'Connor
Jane McCartney
Janesville Wisconsin
Jasper Ott
Jennie C. McCulloch
Jennie C. McCulloch Vail
Jennings
Jerusha Rosina Cadwell
Jess Wilmot
Jesse Wilmot
Job Galloway
John A. Mills
John Alderson
John Cochran
John Dwight
John Easton
John Forke
John Gridley
John Halsey
John Hettinger
John J. Welch
John Jacob Escher
John Jacob Ott
John Jacob Ott Jr.
John Jacob Ott Sr.
John King
John Kinzie
John Kinzie Clark
John Matthews
John Millen
John Peterman
John Streicher
John Stryker
John T. Gridley
Joliet Illinois
Jonas Clybourn
Jonathan Kennicott
Jonathan Rice
Joseph Flint
Josephine Woodman
Josephine Woodman Maternity Home
Justice of the Peace
Knights of the Golden Circle
Lake County Board of Supervisors
Lake County Discovery Museum
Lake County Historical Archives
Lake County Illinois
Lake County Museum
Lake County Museum Archives
Lake County Transportation Systems
Lake Forest Illinois
Lake Michigan
Lamb
Lambs' Farm
Lancaster
Lancasterville Illinois
Land Buying Business
Land Surveys
Law and Order League
Le Clair Township Illinois
Leadville Colorado
Lebanon County Pennsylvania
Levi Davis Wilmot
Lewis Beecher
Lewis Gastfield
Libertyville Illinois
Life Insurance Business
Linens
Literary Society
Little Alice Mine
Little Jonny Mine
Lizzie Scholes
Lizzie Scholes Wilmot
Log Cabin
Loly Wilmot
Lorenz Ott
Loretta Heman
Louis Gastfield
Loyal Legion
Ludlow
Luther
Lutheran Church
Lydia Gutzler
Lydia Gutzler Himmel
Lyman H. Wilmot
Lyman Willis Gutzler
Lyman Wilmot
Madeson O. Cadwell
Madison Cadwell
Madison O. Cadwell
Magnus Tait
Margaret Elizabeth Hetzel
Margaret Elizabeth Hetzel Gutzler
Marie Ward Reichelt
Martin Luther
Martin Stanger
Mary Elizabeth Gutzler
Mary Elizabeth Gutzler Stryker
Mary Gutzler
Mary Gutzler Jaquet
Mary Louise Stryker
Mary Louise Stryker Gutzler
Mary Tweed
Mary Tweed Gutzler
Mary Wilmot
Mary Wilmot Bennett
Masonic Order A O Fay Lodge No. 676
Maternity Home
Mathias Horenberger
Mathias Mason
Matthew Hoffman
McCrarer
McIntyre
McIntyres and Tullys
Meath Ireland
Meehan
Meehan Settlement
Mexican American War
Mexico
Mexico City Mexico
Michael Dawson
Michael Fagan
Michael Gutzler
Michael Meehan
Michael Mehan
Michael Yore
Michigan
Midwife
Mike Schoelle
Milk
Mill Creek
Milwaukee Wisconsin
Minnie E. Vining Wilmot
Miranda C. Adams
Miranda C. Adams Wilmot
Mississippi
Mississippi River
Missouri
Moderator
Monterey California
Moody Rowd
Mooney
Moses Putney
Mount Vernon Iowa
Mr. Alderson
Mr. Brand
Mr. Gross
Mr. Hess
Mrs. Albert Hagi
Mrs. C.L. Rockenback
Mrs. Critchley
Mrs. Fred Bleimehl
Mrs. Fred H. Meyer
Mrs. Fute
Mrs. Gutzler
Mrs. Lange
Mrs. Lewis Todd
Mrs. Lyman Wilmot
Mrs. P.J. Gutzler
Mrs. Richard Steele
Mrs. Stryker
Mrs. Theodore Taylor
Mrs. Wessling
Mrs. Wilmot
Muhlke
Myrtle Estelle Gutzler
Myrtle Estelle Gutzler Skinker
Nanimoa
Naperville Illinois
National Register of Historic Places
Native Americans
Nelson C. Hall
New Berlin Pennsylvania
New York
Newberry
Newberry Library
Newport Illinois
Newspaper Clippings
Newton Bateman
Nicaragua
Nicholas Miller
Niles Illinois
Nora May Fuller
Nora May Fuller Gutzler
Norfolk New York
North Northfield Cemetery
Northern Illinois
Northern Illinois Republican Party
Northfield Cemetery
Northfield Evangelical Association Church
Northfield Illinois
Northwestern College
Northwestern University
O'Plain Cemetery
O'Plain Church
Ocean Voyages
Offensive Language
Office
Ohio River
Olive Smith
Olive Smith Wilmot
Orman Rockenbach
Otsego Post Office
Ott
Our Athenian Club (OAC)
P. Gutzler
P.J. Gutzler
Panama
Panama Canal
Parmelia Scott Clark
Parsons' Farm
Patrick Carolan
Peggy Pollard
Peleg Sunderlin
Pennsylvania
Pere Marquette
Peter Luther
Philemon Cadwell
Philip Brand
Philip Gutzler
Philip J. Gutzler
Philip Jacob Gutzler
Philip Lehman
Philip Ott
Philip Vedder
Philip Vetter
Physician
Physicians
Pioneers
Placer Mining
Pony Express Rider
Port Clinton Illinois
Porter
Portrait and Biographical Album of Lake County
Pottawatomie Native American Tribe
Practical Nurse
Prairie
Prairie Fire
Prairie Settlers
Prairie Wolf
Prairies
Prentiss Hall
Prophets Town Illinois
Protestantism
Public Office
Pyncheon
Rachel Millard
Rachel Millard Wright
Racist Language
Radium Colorado
Railroad
Ranches
Ransom Steele
Ravenswood Chicago Illinois
Raymond A. Nelson
Raymond Gutzler
Reformed Lutheran Church
Republican Party
Rev. Goessle
Rev. Himmel
Rev. Hoeffert
Rev. Hoess
Rev. Laegler
Richard Hart
Richard Hofstadler
Richard Steele
Ripon College
River Claims
Rivers
Riverwoods Illinois
Robert Bennett
Robert Dygert
Robert Easton
Robert Young
Rockenbach
Rockenback
Roderbusch
Rosella Cadwell
Roswell O. Wilmot
Roswell Rose
Rubie Rich Cadwell
Rubie Rosella Cadwell
Ruby Wedding Anniversaries
Rural Free Delivery
Ruth Pettis
Ruth Wright
Ryerson Conservation Area
S.L.
Sacramento California
Salina New York
Salome Gutzler
Samuel Dickover
Samuel Ott
Samuel P. Hutchison
San Francisco California
Santa Cruz California
Sarah A. Gutzler
Sarah A. Gutzler Speelman
Sarah A. Hodgkins
Sarah A. Hodgkins Wilmot
Sarah Esther Hunter
Sarah Esther Hunter Wilmot
Sarah Porter Dwight
Sarah Rapp
Sarah Rapp Gutzler
Sawmill
Schmitt
Scott Saxton College of Elocution
Seattle Washington
Shawnee Native American Tribe
Sheldon Sullens
Shields Township Illinois
Shop
Silas Brand
Silks
Singing Schools
Skokie Marsh
Sons of the American Revolution
South Chicago Illinois
South Dakota
Spelling Bees
Springfield Illinois
St. Johns Illinois
St. Mary's of the Woods Cemetery
St. Patrick's Cemetery
St. Paul Minnesota
Stanger Grove Illinois
Stanger Tavern
Steamboat
Stephen B. Wilmot
Sterling Illinois
Steuben County New York
Steward
Stewart
Stock Business
Stone Foundation
Sugar
Sun Porch
Sundhausen Alsace Germany
Survey Plat
Taxes
Temperance Advocate
Texas
The American Republic
The Turnleys
Thomas Ballard
Thomas Mooney
Timberland
Town Meeting Moderator
Trader's National Bank
Trustee of Schools
Tully
Turnley's Narrative from Diaries
Typhoid Fever
Underground Railroad
Union Army 37th Illinois Infantry Company C
Union Army 37th Illinois Infantry Company F
Union Army 38th Wisconsin Infantry Company D
Union Army 45th Illinois Infantry
Union Army 45th Illinois Infantry Company I
Union Army 47th Illinois Infantry
Union Army 51st Illinois Infantry Company G
Union Army 55th Illinois Infantry
Union Army 55th Illinois Regiment
Union Army 65th Illinois Infantry Company F
Union Army Bounty
Union County Pennsylvania
Union League
Union Rifle Guards
United Evangelical Church
United States
United States Army Quartermaster's Department
United States Congress
United States Marshall Service Northern Illinois District
United States of America
Utah
V.H. Freeman
Vedder Farm
Vermont
Vernon Township
Vincent's Grist Mill
Virgil Wilmot
Virginia
Wagons
Walter H. Millen
Walter Kittell
Walter Millen
Warren Henry Wilmot
Warren Illinois
Warren Pennsylvania
Water Cure Treatments
Water tank
Waterways
Wauconda Illinois
Waukegan Illinois
Wessling
West Deerfield Township
West Deerfield Township Supervisor
West Deerfield Township Treasurer
Wheat Farmer
Wheeling Illinois
Whig Party
William Carl Ott
William E. Sunderlin
William Easton
William Green
William T. Sherman
William Whigam
Willis
Wilmot Elementary School
Wilmot Road
Wilmot School
Wilmot School Agreement
Wilmot School Board of Education
Windsor New York
Wisconsin
World War I
Wright
Wright Farm
Y of A Waukegan Council
Yore
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Lyman Wilmot House
Description
An account of the resource
This collection consists of records related to the Deerfield Public Library's research into whether or not the Wilmot house could be proved to have been a stop on the Underground Railroad.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2002
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0013
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Wilmot House -- Lyman Wilmot
Description
An account of the resource
Handwritten
Rationale for why research is being done.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0013.003
Chicago Historical Society
Cook Memorial Public Library
Deerfield Illinois
Deerfield Public Library
Diana
DuSable Museum
Fremont Genealogy Collection
Internet
Jack A. Hicks
Lake County Discovery Museum
Lake County Discovery Museum Archives
Lyman Wilmot
Mundelein Illinois
National Register of Historic Places
National Underground Railroad Group
Sally Brickman Seifert
Underground Railroad
United States Park Service
United States Park Service Resource Center
Waukegan Public Library
Waukegan Public Library Lake County Collection
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ba882e07edf4401359405f34f0d33d01
PDF Text
Text
Deerfield Public Library
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Browsing
Spring 2018 | deerfieldlibrary.org
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The one-tap reading app of your dreams
Details on page 2
�As you know from reading our
quarterly editions of Browsing,
the Deerfield Public Library is
so much more than books. We
provide gathering space and
programs for people of all ages.
Our professional staff carefully
review and select databases to
supplement our collection.
The Library allocates
approximately 5% of our
annual budget to provide our
community with access to
current electronic resources.
All the resources can be
accessed from the Library’s
website, deerfleldlibraiy.org.
Click “Research” along the top
Libby: The Fast Lane
to Reading Happiness
Checkout the newest and
easiest way to read e-books
from OverDrive. Same
account, same books with a
new and improved look!
Libby was designed to get
people reading e-books and
e-audiobooks as quickly and
seamlessly as possible. Libby
is available for Android, iOS
(iPhone/iPad/iPod touch) and
Windows 10 devices.
Lucky you! There's
never been a better time
to begin.
It’s going to be love at first
tap!
Many long-time e-book
readers have let us know how
much more they are enjoying
their digital experience since
Libby came into their life!
menu bar, and then “Online
Resources” to view our
current offerings.
In addition to Libby, which is
featured in this issue, we
provide access to over 50
popular magazines with
RBDigital Magazines.
Often these magazines have
enhanced content that you will
be able to access right from
your device.
Our more popular databases
include our collection of
consumer resources. Consumer
Reports is always a top choice,
and there’s also Chicago
Consumers Checkbook, which
provides ratings and advice on
everything from automotive
repairs to financial services. We
have recently added Auto
Finance Resource,
a unique database that helps
the consumer develop a finance
strategy for the best loan rates
based on location and car
model. It also provides advice
for dealing with pushy sales
people and how to manage your
entire vehicle purchase from
start to finish.
Ancestry is one of the most
well-recognized genealogy data
bases available, containing
thousands of census records
and photos. Its sister site,
Heritage Quest, provides
PERSI, Revolutionary War
records, and Freedman’s Bank
documents.
These arejust a few of the
electronic resources that we
provide. Find out more by
visiting our website, or stop by
to speak with a librarian in
person. We are always happy to
help you discover new services
at the Library!
Amy Falasz-Peterson
Library Director
“The more I use the Libby
app, the more I love it,”
said Vicki Street, executive
director of the DBR Chamber
of Commerce. “The design
looks more modern, like
other popular apps, and in
turn is more intuitive. It’s
simple, user-friendly,
and fun.”
Features you will love
• You have the option to
download titles for online
and offline reading or
stream them to save space.
• Your book will display in
a simple, beautiful format
regardless if the title is a
novel, comic or graphic
novel, reference material,
cookbook, or Read-Along.
• Libby remembers your
place in the book and book
marks across your devices.
Your Quick Start:
1. Install the Libby app from your device’s
app store.
2. Open the app, scroll down and tap on Find My
Library, and select Deerfield Public Library.
3. Tap on This is my Library.
4. Tap on add it now and enter your DPL card
number, and tap on Sign In.
�Please register in advance at the Library, by phone at 847-945-3311 or at
www.deerfieldlibraty.org. Registration opens Wednesday, February 14.
Adult Programs
Booh and Film Discussions
Copies ofthe books available at the
self-service holds shelfa month before
the discussion. Drop-in.
New Location!
Thursday Booh Biscussions
Program held atPanera, 1211 Half
Day Rd., Bannockburn. Attendees are
welcome to orderfood and drinks off the
mem to enjoy during the discussion.
Copies are available on the holds shelfa
month prior. Drop-in.
Perfect Little World
by Kevin Wilson
Thursday, March 8,10:30-11:30am
Set in a psychologist’s utopian exper
iment involving children collectively
raised apart from their biological
families, a pregnant teen struggles
with the group’s growing hostilities.
History of Wolves
by Emily Fridlund
Thursday, April 12,10:30-11:30am
While living with her parents in a nearly
abandoned counterculture commune,
14-year-old Linda finds her perspectives
and desires changed by the scandalmarked arrest of a teacher, and the
secrets of a new neighbor family.
This Is How It Always Is
by Laurie Frankel
Thursday, May 10, 10:30-11:30am
A family reshapes their ideas about love
and loyalty when youngest son Claude
reveals preferences for girls’ clothing and
refuses to stay silent.
Boohs with a Twist
No One is Coming to Save Us
by Stephanie Powell Watts
Monday, March26, 7:30-8:30pm
JJ Ferguson has returned home to
Pinewood, North Carolina, to build his
dream house and to pursue his high
school sweetheart. But as he reenters
his former world, where factories are in
decline and the legacy of Jim Crow is still
felt, he’s startled to find that the people
he once knew and loved have changed
just as much as he has.
Evicted by Matthew Desmond
Monday, May 21, 7:30-8:30pm
A Harvard sociologist follows eight
families in Milwaukee as they struggle
to keep a roof over their heads. Eviction
as a cause of poverty is examined along
with how people forced from their homes
experience extreme disadvantages. Its
scenes of hope and loss remind us of the
centrality of home, without which
nothing else is possible.
nxrnuOTiiTttttrrnffi
for film Butts
m registration required.
Tuesday ‘New Movie’ Night
March 13,27, April 10,24, May 8, 22
TUESDAY FILMS BEGIN AT 6:30pm
Come to the Library for New Movie
Night on select Tuesdays this
Spring, and preview the hot new
release of the week. As we get
closer to each date, you can check
our website or at the Media desk
for a listing of upcoming showings.
Spring Discussion Series:
Oscar Best Picture
Contenders
THURSDAY FILMS BEGIN AT 2:00pm
The Academy Awards will be
announced on March 4 and it is
likely that one of the films below
will win the Oscar for Best Picture.
There will be a brief discussion
both before and after each movie.
Thursday, March 22:
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing,
Missouri, Rated R, 115 minutes
Thursday, April 19:
The Shape of Water, Rated R,
123 minutes
Thursday, May 17:
The Post, Rated PG-13,115 minutes
Classics Booh Biscussion: American Poetry
Thursday, April 26, 7:00-8:00pm
In our new, quarterly sessions, we’ll discuss the literature you were
(supposed!) to read in school, or a forgotten classic. For National
Poetry Month, we’ll discuss a selection of classic poems by American
writers. Pick up a poetry packet at the Adult Services desk or on the
Holds Shelf. Register in advance. Q
3
�Adult Programs
Please register in advance at the Library, by phone at 847-945-3311 or at
wvmdeerfieldlibrary.org. Registration opens Wednesday, February 14.
SCORE SA
ADULT PLAY TIME
FOR THE LIFE OF YOUR BUSINESS
Adults Only. Register in Advance
Resources for Small Businesses
LEGO and Nostalgia Game Night
Monday, March 12, 7-8:30pm
Kids aren’t the only ones who need time for A
play! Playtime shouldn’t end when we grow
up. Join us for a night of play with classic video
games, LEGO®, coloring, and more. ©
m
Thinks and Drinks Trivia
Wednesday, April 11, 7:30-9:00pm
Deerfield GolfClub, 1201 Saunders Road
Think you know it all? Prove it at the Library’s trivia night
at the Deerfield Golf Club. Play individually or teams up to
four and test your knowledge of world trivia.Refreshments
unll be served and prizes will be awarded to the biggest
know-it-alls! ©
Game Night @ Warehouse Eatery
Thursday May 10, 7:00-9:00pm
Warehouse Eatery, 833 Deerfield Road
Get ready for an evening of play at Warehouse Eatery with
the Library’s collection of board games like Pandemic, The
Settlers ofCatan, or Ticket to Ride. Don’t know how to play?
We’re happy to teach you. Appetizers will be served and
prizes awarded. ©
Vagabond Traveling:
How to do it Like a Pro
Wednesday March 28, 7:00-8:00pm
Join vagabond traveler Brian Michalski
as he shares his 22-month solo backpack
ing journey of working and volunteering
around the world in Australia, Asia,
Europe, Hawaii, Mexico,
and Cuba. Learn money
saving tips, how to
utilize the best travel
apps, the realities of
hostel life, visa
applications, and
tons more to help you
travel like a pro. ©
4
Bringing A Book to Market
Saturday April 14, 10:30-11:30am
Tbdd Stocke, vice president and editorial
director at Sourcebooks, will discuss how
to approach a publisher, what a publisher
does (and does not do), and what book
editors look for. He’ll also discuss the
opportunities and the challenges of
self-publishing and how to connect
with your readers. ©
1
u
The Secret to a Financially
Stress-Free Future for Small
Business Owners
Wednesday March 14, 7:00-8:00pm
Holly Bach from SCORE covers the
leading causes of financial stress for small
business owners today. The program also
includes the trends and pitfalls that have
gotten us here, how to get out from under
them, and the four key financial concepts
that need to be part of every business
owners financial picture. ©
Stop Hacking Before They
Stop You
Tuesday April 10, 7:00-8:00pm
Ignorance can make you an easy target.
Learn about hackers, their tools and
motives, and how to protect yourself and
your business. Mark Lieberman from
SCORE presents. ©
PLACE Program: April Showers
Bring May Flowers-Poetry
and Crafts
Saturday, April 21, 1:30-3:30pm
Adults, Teens
PLACE (Public Library Access and
Community for Everyone) programs
welcome adults with intellectual and
developmental disabilities as well as their
parents and caregivers.
Join us for an afternoon of reading,
conversation, crafts, and fun with this
poetry-centered program. It will include
a springtime poetry reading, followed by
crafts. Light refreshments will be served.
Q
�Please register in advance at the Library, by phone at 847-945-3311 or at
www.deerfieldlibrary.org. Registration opens Wednesday, February 14■
MONEYSMARTWEEK
APRIL 21-28,2018
Auto Finance Resource: A New Online Resource
Monday, April 23, 7:00-8:00pm
This Library resource will save you time, money, and plenty of frustration
when shopping for a new car. Learn how to compare interest rates from
local banks and credit unions, calculate the cost of loans, and navigate the
car financing process. Q
Is it the Right Time to Retire?
Saturday, April 28,10:00am-12:00PM
There’s a lot of talk about “the number” - the specific amount of money you
need to retire. But retirement planning involves much more. Karen Chan,
CFP, discusses how to look at your overall financial picture and gather the
information that will help you make an informed decision. 0
10 Tips for Getting the Most from Your Retirement Money
Saturday, April 28, 1:30-3:30pm
The right strategy can help you get the most from your IRA, 401(k), or
other retirement plan. Rollovers, qualified charitable distributions, Roth
conversions, and other tools can help you manage income taxes, streamline
(or even avoid) distributions, and simplify your life. Q
Paper Cut Art Workshop
Thursday May 3, 7:00-8:30pm
Paper artist Corinne Dean will help you
create a paper cut work of artjust in time
for Mother’s Day. A variety of designs will
be available. 0
Music Discussion:
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
Inductees 2018
Tuesday May 1, 7:00-8:00pm
Take a look at the bands and artists that
were inducted in the 2018 Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame. This year’s inductees
include The Moody Blues, The Cars, and
Bon Jovi. We’ll talk about each band, listen
to their hits, and discuss their impact on
the history of Rock and Roll. We’ll also
talk about some of the bands that didn’t
make the cut and their future chances. 0
Local Author Fair
Saturday,
June 16, 10:30am-12:30pm. Interested
authors should contact Kay Palecek
at 847-580-8955 or kpalecek@
deerrieldlibrary.org.
yTlAuthors must have a
book that has been published within
the last two years and be a Lake
County resident.
Adult Programs
Writers Workshop:
Turning Life into Fiction
Saturday, May 5, 10:00am-12:00pm
Writers often base their stories on actual
people, places, and events, either from
their own lives or the lives of others.
But translating real life into compelling
fiction can be a challenge. Author
and writing teacher Carmela Martino
describes the steps in the process along
with how to create composite characters,
research setting details, and more.
Hands-on exercises to help jumpstart
your writing process will be provided. Q
Veterans Tour of the Deerfield
Historical Cemetery
Saturday May 12,10:30am-12:00pm
All Ages
Explore Deerfield's military history with
a special walking tour highlighting the
veterans buried in the Deerfield Historical
Cemetery. Note: The tour takes about an
hour and goes over uneven terrain. Meet
at the Cemetery gate on Waukegan Road.
o
ft
Deerfield Train Station
History Tour
Sunday May 20, 1:30-2:30pm
All Ages
This guided walking tour will explore the
history of the Deerfield Train Station,
which this year celebrates 100 years in
its current form. Learn about the famous
“No Kissing” sign, why our train line is
orange on Metra maps, and more stories
about the only building in Deerfield on
the National Register of Historic Places.
NOTE: Meet inside the train station
building. 0
5
�Adult Programs
Please register in advance at the Library, by phone at 847-945-3311 or at
wumdeerfieldlibrary.org. Registration opens Wednesday, February 14.
New! Kindle E-readers Now
Available for Checkout
Kindle E-readers are now available for
lending as part of the Library’s mobile
device lending program. The E-readers
come preloaded with books selected
from the New York Times bestseller list
and many of the Library’s own Book
Discussion Group titles. Checkout
period for E-readers is three weeks.
For more information, stop by the
Library or visit deerfieldlibraiy.org.
Available to Deerfield Library
cardholders.
TECH CONNECTIONS
Drop-in Tech Help
Alternate Thursdays
3:00-4:00pm Library Lobby
Staff will be available to answer
questions about your devices,
downloading books, music, and
movies from the Library’s website.
Each date will also highlight other
resources and services available
at the Library.
March 8:
Libby & Hoopla
March 22: Mobile Device Lending
Library - Roku, WiFi
Hotspot, and Kindle
6
April 5:
Tips to Speed Up Your
Computer
April 19:
Money-saving Online
Resources
May 3:
Genealogy
@ the Library
May 17:
iPad & iPhone
May 31:
Streaming Services Netflix, Hulu, and more
Clean Up to Speed Up Your
Computer
R
If you haven’t already signed up for our
new year-long reading program, there’s
still plenty of time. Stop by the Adult
Services desk for more information.
Patrons can also sign up online at
deerfieldlibrary.beanstack.org/reader365.
Prizes will be awarded monthly, and
those who complete all 12 months will be
entered into a grand prize drawing.
Snapchat & Instagram Basics
Thursday, March 8, 7:00-8:00pm
Learn how to remove programs, manage
the space on your computer, and find and
delete files you’re not using to get your
machine running efficiently. Q
Thursday, April 12, 7:00-8:00pm
Learn how to use the popular pho
to-based social media apps Snapchat and
Instagram. Class includes taking and
editing pictures and how to share them
with your friends and family. Q
Introduction to eBay
3D Print Your Own Flower
Thursday, March 15, 7:00-8:30pm
Are you ready to make some money by
selling your stuff on eBay? Join us for an
introduction to this marketplace website,
and leam more about the basics of buying
and selling on eBay.com. O
Tuesday, April 17, 7:00-8:00pm
Leam about Tinkercad 3D printing
software and create your own decorative
flower using the Library’s own 3D printer.
We’ll create a basic flower together and
then everyone will have time to customize
their creations before submitting their
projects. Printing fees will be waived for
class participants. 0
How to Back Up Your Computer
Thursday, April 5, 7:00-8:00pm
Have you ever lost a digital photo,
music file, or important document that
you thought was safely saved to your
computer? Come learn how to back up
your important computer data and never
lose a file again. 0
�Please register in advance at the Library, online at deerfieldlibrary org under
“Programs", or by calling 847-580-8962. Registration begins Wednesday, February 14.
NOTE: For Teen programs, Grades 6-12 are welcome.
Note exceptions with listings.
Calling all S.TAR Volunteers!
Print in 3D!
• Teen volunteers grades 7-12 are needed
for the Library’s upcoming Summer
Reading Program! Volunteers assist
with signing participants up for the
Reading Program, handing out prizes,
and putting together goody bags.
• Interested in being a Big Buddy?
Volunteers in our Book Buddies
program will be matched with young
readers and meet once a week for six
weeks to read aloud together, play
games, make crafts, and have fun!
• You can be a Summer Reading
volunteer or a Big Buddy or both! Pick
up an application at Youth Services
beginning April 2. Applications must
be submitted by Sunday, May 6.
Wednesday, March 7, 5:30-6:30pm
Celebrate Teen Tech Week by creating
your own cell phone stand! You’ll learn
how to use Tinkercad to design the stand
from scratch, then we’ll show you how
our printer puts it all together. Fees for
3D printing of this project will be waived
for class participants. ©
Teen Advisory Board (TAB)
Meeting
Looking for ways to be seen and heard
at the Libraiy? As a TAB member you
can help Nina, the Teen Librarian, plan
programs, create content for our website,
and keep the Teen Space awesome!
There are plenty of snacks and drinks
for all AND any hours you contribute to
TAB meetings and programs count as
volunteer service in the community.
Upcoming Meetings
Tuesdays @ 5:00pm
March 13, April 10, May 8
For more information contact Nina
Michael at nmichael@deerfieldlibraiy.org
^EBflELDPUBlICUB/froi.
OF
BOOKS
Grades 6 and up
Stop by the Teen Space (or online)
starting in Februaiy to vote for your
fav book. See page 8 for details.
Bad Art Party
Wednesday, March 14, 7:00-8:00pm
It’s time to forget the rules, get messy,
and create some “bad” art! Chill out
with zero pressure and see what you can
make. A prize will be awarded for the
“worst” piece of art. ©
Dungeons & Dragons
@ the Library
Thursday March 15, 5:30-7:30pm
Immerse yourself in a vibrant fantasy
world with the role-playing game, Dungeons
& Dragons. You’ll fight monsters, solve
puzzles, eat pizza, and (hopefully) save
the day. No experience required! ©
MONEY
SMART
WEEK
Money Smart Teens
Throughout the month ofApril
Money Smart Week is April 21-28. Keep
an eye out for available resources in the
Teen section of our website throughout
the month of April, including tips for
budgeting as a Teen, saving for college
and other expenses, and fun trivia to get
your brain in gear.
Page to Screen Movie Night
Monday, April2, 6:30-8:30pm
Watch The Giver by Lois Lowiy come
alive on the big screen. Popcorn and
drinks will be provided, and a copy of
the book will be raffled off to one lucky
winner! ©
Pizza and Paperbacks
Monday, April 16
7:00-8:00 pm
Join Nina, the Teen Librarian, for a
discussion of Warcross by Marie Lu,
while munchin’ on some pizza. Please
register in advance, as free copies of the
book will be given to participants
to keep.©
Online Offense:
Choose Privacy!
Tuesday May 1
7:00-8:00pm
Every May the American Library
Association sponsors “Choose Privacy
Week”. This year empower yourself by
learning simple and effective tips for
protecting your identity from hackers,
scammers, trolls, and bots. We’ll play
games and offer handouts that will equip
you with the confidence to combat those
online offenders! ©
FREE ACT and SAT Practice
Tests @ the Library
SAT Practice Test
Saturday April 7, 9:30am-1:00pm ©
ACT Practice Test
Saturday May 12, 9:30am-1:00pm ©
7
�Children’s Programs
/?v All children’s activities, except those designated as “drop-in", require registration. Please register in advance in person, online at
w deerfieldlibrary. org under “Programs”, or by calling 847-580-8962. Registrationfor all oftheprograms listed here begins on Wednesday,
February 14.
FF
Family Friendly programs with multi-age appeal and group registration option.
In addition to specific programs offered for children with special needs, we are also happy to make reasonable accommodations so that your
child can participate in all our programs. For more information about programs and services for children with special needs, please contact
Julia Frederick atjfrederick@deerfieldlibrarj.org.
A
Drop-In Activities
■■of"" i
BOOKS
Round of32: February 13-20
Round of16: February 21-27
Exciting 8: February 28-March 6
Favorite 4: March 7-13
Championship Game: March 14-27
Drop-in Storytime
Wednesdays at 10:30am or 1:00pm, March 14,21; April 11,18,25; May 2
Children with an adult
Enjoy stories, songs, and fingerplays in this drop-in storytime for all ages!
Drop-in Crafts
Winning titles announced on
March 28.
Deerfield Public Library is pleased to
announce our 5th annual Ibumament
of Books! Starting February 13, stop
by Youth Services or go online
(deerfieldlibrary.org) to vote for your
favorite teen titles, chapter books,
graphic novels, picture books and
early readers. Will your favorite make
it to the championship game? \bte
early! Vote often!
L
Family Time
Saturdays at 10:00m, March 3-May 26, Children with an adult
Come to the Youth Program Room for a drop-in stoiytime the whole family
will enjoy!
Monday, March 12-Sunday, March 18, Monday, April 2-Sunday April 8,
Monday, May 21-Sunday May 27
Stop by the Youth Services department to make a fun craft!
LEGO Club
Wednesday March 7, 4:30-5:30pm, Tuesday, April 3, 3:30-5:30pm,
Wednesday May 9, 4:30-5:30pm, All Ages
Join us for an hour of building and show off your creativity at LEGO®
Club! Build your own design or follow the monthly challenge, ff
J
V
Minecrafternoons
Bad Art Night
Mondays at 4:30-5:30pm
Grades 1-3: March 5, April 16
Grades 4-6: April 2, May 14
Minecrafternoons are back! We’re going
to dig deeper into Minecraft as each week
we work together to build a new project.
Wednesday, March 14, 4:30-5:30pm
Grades 3-5
It’s time to forget the rules, get messy,
and create some “bad” art! There’s no
pressure to create anything perfect or
beautiful tonight. Just dig-in and see
what you can create. A prize will be
awarded for the “worst” piece of art. ©
o
Tech Explorers
Thursday, March 8, 4:30-5:30pm
Grades 3-5
Explore STEM concepts like circuits,
robotics, and engineering through
hands-on experimentation with our
Discovery Kits! ©
8
Time to Tesser:
A Wrinkle in Time Celebration
Monday, March 12, 4:30-5:30pm
Grades 3-5
Share your love for the classic story
and cheer on the release of its new film
adaptation with a party that will include
games and hands-on fun. Prior knowledge
of the book and movie are not required all are welcome! ©
Springtime Dance Jam
Friday March 16,11:00-11:45am
Children up to age 6 with an adult
Shake your sillies out at this actionpacked dance program. Children will find
their rhythm with shakers while singing
along to their favorite songs. No
registration required! ff
�Family Craft: 3D Print Your
Own Four-Leaf Clover
Saturday, March 17, 10:30-11:30am
Ages 6 and up with an adult
Share the love of 3D printing together
with this spring craft. Grown up/child
pairs will work together to create a
four-leaf clover using Tinkeread Fees
for 3D printing ofthis project will be
waivedfor classparticipants. ©
K-9 Reading Buddies of the
North Shore
Monday, March 19 or Monday,
April 23
6:00-7:00pm, Grades 1-5
Our furry, four-legged friends are back!
Register children for a 15-minute
slot to read to a trained therapy dog.
Please register in person at the
Youth Services Desk or by calling
847-580-8962. ©
Sphero Obstacle Courses
Thursday, April 5, 1:30-2:30pm
Grades 1-4
Try your hand at driving Sphero robots
through obstacle courses after you
work with a team of creators to build
them out of recycled materials. ©
3D Design and Print
Monday, April 9, 4:30-5:30pm
Grades 3-5
Come learn all about our 3D printer!
You’ll design something awesome in
Tinkeread and we’ll print it for you
to keep or give as a gift. Feesfor 3D
printing ofthis project will be waived
for class participants. ©
Dinosaurs vs. Robots
Wednesday, April 11, 4:30-5:30pm
Ages 5-8
Come learn from Mark Anderson how
to draw cool dinosaurs on one side of
the page, and awesome robots on the
other! Will they fight? Share some ice
cream? You decide! ©
The Adventures ofTintin
Saturday, April 14, 1:00-3:30pm
Ages 7 and up
Prepare for action and adventure as
we celebrate this classic comic book
hero! There will be hands-on activities
and a drawing for a Tintin memento
to remember your special afternoon
followed by a screening of Steven
Spielberg’s The Adventures of Tintin
(1 hr. 46 min., PG). ©
Family Engineering Night
Tuesday, April 17, 6:30-7:30pm
Ages 6 and up with an adult
Join us for building challenges with
KEVA Connect Building Blocks, DIY
Marble Runs, and more engineering
fun!© ff
1,000 Books Before
Kindergarten Celebration
For participants in our 1KBKprogram
Saturday, April 21, 11:00am-12:00pm
Celebrate the joy of reading! Whether
you’ve read 1,10,100, or 1,000 books
together, we hope you’ll join us for this
reading party. We’ll read, play games
and do a craft together. ©
Stonytimes
Registrationfor all programs listed here
beings on Wednesday, February 14.
Please register in advance in person,
online at deerfieldlibrary.org under
“Programs”, or by calling 847-580-8962.
Baby Lapsit Storytime
Thursdays at 11:00am
March 15,22; April 12,19,26; May 3
Ages 0-12 months with an adult
It’s never too early to start reading to your
baby! Join us for stories, rhymes, and songs
for you and baby, plus social time after the
program. ©
Toddler Tune
Mondays at 10:00am, 10:30am OR 11:00am
March 12,19; April 9,16, 23, 30
Ages 1-2 years with an adult
One and two-year-olds with their caregivers
are invited to a special weekly storytime,
including songs and movement activities
designed just for them, plus social time
after the program. ©
Make-it: T-Shirt Tote Bags
Wednesday, April 25, 4:30-5:30pm
Grades 3-5
Give an old t-shirt new life at this
recycled craft program in honor of
Earth Day. Bring in an old t-shirt and
together we’ll transform it into an awe
some tote for all your stuff! No sewing
required. ©
Poetry Party
Thursday, April 26, 4:30-5:30pm
Grades 1-3
Join with other kids to celebrate
“Poem in Your Pocket Day” and
explore, create, and share poetry in
the most unexpected of places. ©
Preschool Storytime
Tuesdays at 10:30am OR 1:00pm
March 13,20; April 10,17,24; May 1
Ages 3-5 years
Three- to five-year-olds have a program just
for them! We’ll listen to stories, sing songs,
and have fun while building early literacy
skills. ©
Drop-in Storytimes - no registration
required! See page 8for details.
9
�Children’s Programs
Free Comic Book Day
Saturday, May 5, All Day
Join us for a celebration of Free
Comic Book Day! FCBD is an annual
event when major publishers release
special issues of comics that are given
away for free at comic book stores and
libraries across North America. Visit
the Library to join in the celebration
of comics and all things pop culture;
answer trivia for a chance to win
prizes, and pick up a free comic while
supplies last!
KiDLS:
Dig in the Dirt
Saturday May 12
1:00-2:00pm, Grades 1-4
Let’s dig deep and learn about soil,
seeds, and gardens. Crafts and
activities abound in this exciting
program filled with surprises where
we explore the roots of gardening. ©
Little KiDLS:
Green and
Growing
Saturday May 12,11:00-11:45am,
Ages 4-6 urith an adult
Let’s dig deep and explore dirt and
seeds and the gardens they create.
We’ll do crafts and activities to
develop your green thumb. ©
Let’s Play Games!
March 6 and 20
We’ll play math and other board games.
We’ll also create our own board games to
play together on the 20th. ©
Discover Discovery Kits
Reader’s Theater Rehearsals
jSuper Stolie Guacamole!
Saturday May 19, 11:00am-12:00pm
All Ages
Super Stolie presents a
Spanish-English bilingual show for
the whole family featuring original
songs, stoiy time in both languages, a
family dance party and a live guacamole-making demonstration (and tasting
after the show!) Stolie will give
instruction, sing and read in both
English and Spanish as well as
teaching key words, so this bilingual
show is for little language learners
at all levels! © ff
SENSORY PROGRAMS
April 24 and May 1
Everyone will have a role in our first-ever
Reader’s Theater! From performances to set
design to invitations, come take part in the
fun.©
Reader’s Theater Performance
May 15
Adults, please plan to attend this special
performance of our first-ever Reader’s
Theater! ©
Big Homeschool
Ages 7 and up, Tuesdays at 3:00-4:00pm
Let’s Play Games!
March 6 and 20
We’ll play math and other board games.
We’ll also create our own board games to
play together on the 20th. ©
Escape the Room
Sensory Storytime
Sensory Friendly Family Film
Fridays, March 9, April 20
11:00am-12:00pm, All Ages
Join us for an inclusive and inter
active stoiytime filled with stories,
songs, sensory play, and socializa
tion! Children of all abilities with
their siblings and caregivers are
welcome. Wo registration required.
Please let us know if any accom
modations are required, ff
Wednesday May 9,
4:00-5:45pm, All Ages
Enjoy the film, Monsters, Inc., with
the whole family at the Library!
The Library welcomes families and
children of all abilities to er\joy a
movie with the lights turned up, the
sound turned down, and the option
to walk, dance, and sing, during the
movie. No registration required.
(Rated G, 1 hr. 32 min.) ff
10
Little Homeschool
Ages 4-6, Tuesdays at 2:00-2:45pm
April 10
Explore STEAM concepts with Makey-Makey,
Strawbees, KEVA Planks, and more. ©
Jedi Training Academy
Saturday May 5, 1:00-3:00pm, Ages 6
and up with an adult
Calling all Padawans and Rebels! Your
Star Wars skill and knowledge will
be put to the test in the Jedi 'Gaining
Academy. Explore the Star Wars
universe through games, crafts and a
fun trivia contest! ©
Homeschool Programs 'X
April 10
Use your puzzle solving skills to crack codes,
solve ciphers, and escape the room! ©
Project Fair Preparation
April 24 and May 1
Everyone will have a chance to present a
project at our first-ever Project Fair! These
two weeks will be spent creating projects
and making invitations. ©
Project Fair
May 15
Adults, please plan to attend our first-ever
Project Fair! ©
�More to Know
A World of Reading: Language Resources for Youth
Is your child looking to learn a new language or enhance their current language study? Look no Jurther than our
expanding Youth World Languages collection - on the book shelves and online!
Books and More
The consolidated in-house collection includes books, DVDs,
and CDs in a variety of languages such as Spanish, Chinese,
French, Russian, and more. The collection is organized by
language; within each language, materials are sorted by
format and genre. Whether patrons are browsing just for fun
or entering the library with a specific need in mind, this cen
tralized setup makes the language resources easier to locate.
If there is a language not yet in the collection that you’d like
to see represented, please share your thoughts by speaking to
a staff member or leaving a note in the comment box located
by the Youth World Languages collection.
OBONJOURgPRONTO
IHELLOoSEllOlal
HALOOiE
TiraSSgK’i“3gHALU>
3=
S
Online Resources
The library also subscribes to Mango Languages and Little
Pim, a suite of digital resources created to support patrons of
all ages in language acquisition. Mango Languages includes
resources for at least 17 native languages, and Little Pim is
specifically designed for young children to use as they develop
their language skills.
The libraiy’s e-resources (deerfieldlibrary.org/onlineresources) also support language learners. Britannica
Online features an embedded language translator, and
materials in other languages can be accessed through Hoopla.
Let us know what you think! It will be exciting to watch the
collection evolve as community members let their ideas,
interests, and languages be known.
sZ7 Friends of the Deerfield Public Library
• Become a Friend: Membership dollars help fund items for
the Library. We can’t do it without your help! You can use
the form below, or you can join online at
deerfteldlibrary.org/friends-of-the-library.
• Meetings: Remaining 2018 meetings are March 26, May 21,
July 23, September 24, November 26. Meetings are at the
Library, 7:00pm. Visitors welcome.
The Friends can be contacted at 847-945-3311 x8895 or at
friends@deerfieldlibrary.org.
ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION
Your annual membership will enhance the materials and programs at our library so that it will better serve you and your family.
I would like to become a member of Friends of the Deerfield Public Library for a year at the following level:
_$15-$29
Good Friend
_$100—$249 Best Friend
_$30—$49 Family Friend
_$250—$499 Loyal Friend
NAME.
_$50—$99 Dear Friend
_ $500 + Partner
.ADDRESS.
(List name(s) as should appear in our publications)
PHONE.
E-MAIL.
□ Please check this box if you do not want your name listed in any publication.
PAYMENT OPTIONS: 1) Credit card: deerfieldlibraxy.org/friends-of-the-library 2) Checks payable to: Friends of the
Deerfield Public Library, 920 Waukegan Rd. Deerfield, IL 60015
The Friends are a 501 (c) (3) nonprofit group. Contributions may be deductible under IRS regulations.
Does your company have a matching gift program?
11
�Deerfield Public Library
920 Waukegan Road
Deerfield, Illinois 60015
Non Profit Org.
U.S. Postage
PAID
Deerfieeld,IL
No. 196
Important Library Numbers
• Telephone: 847-945-3311
• Library home page and catalog:
www.deerfleldlibrary.org
• To ask a reference question:
reference@deerfleldlibraiy.org
Carrier Route Presort
Deerfield Postal Patron
Upcoming Holiday Closings and Late Openings
THE LIBRARY WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY
THE LIBRARY WILL OPEN AT 1 Oam
iday, February 19-Presidents' Day
Sunday, April 1 - Easter
Monday, May 28 - Memorial Day
February 27
March 22
April 25
May 17
;.t ' i■ i
Deerfield Public Library
Amy Falasz-Peter
library Director
17 580-I8901
afalaszpeterson@deerfleldlibrary.org
Library BoardMembers value
your opinions!
Maureen Wener, President
847-530-8408
wenerm@yahoo.com
Ken Aboseh, Secretary
84 7-948-5390
ksabosch@aol.com
Seth Schriftman, Treasurer
847-770-21530
sethschiiftman@gmail.com
Luisa Ellenbogen
312-543-7258
rmgshgmom@yahoo.com
Mike Goldberg
847-945-0076
mikegoldberg@mac.com
Howard Handler
312-925-2597
hhandler@deerfieldlibraiy.org
Kylei Stone
248-7162-1309
kyle. evan.stone@gmail.com
Libraiy Hours
Mon.-Thurs: 9:00am-9:00pm
ay:
9:00am-6:00pm
irday:
9:00am-5:00pm
Sunday:
1:00pm-5:00pm
' :
FOOD DRIVE
Benefiting the West Deerfield Township Food Pantry
March 1-22
The Food Pantry serves approximately 250 township residents
each month who find themselves in need, either on a long-term or
temporary basis. Starting March 1, you can drop off donations in
the Library’s lobby of non-perishable foodstuffs, household cleaning
items, and personal hygiene products, including:
• Canned protein (tuna, chicken, ham)
• Pasta and Pasta sauce
• Lunchbox friendly foods
• Coffee and Tea
• Canned fruit
• Tbilet paper
• Jelly or Jam
• Paper towels
• Macaroni & Cheese
• Laundiy detergent (small size)
Please check the expiration date, and donate non-expired foods, only!
RECYCLE YOUR SHOES!
April 1-23
Bring in almost any type of footwear, in any condition. Please try to keep pairs together:
tie laces, or secure with rubber bands.
NOT accepted: Snow boots, moldy shoes, and shoes in pieces, no bottoms.
Look for the collection box in the lobby. Sponsored, by SWALCO
Donate shoes and receive a reusable, PVC-free green Libraiy tote bag. While supplies last
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletters
Description
An account of the resource
The historical archive of the Browsing newsletter, which is the quarterly newsletter put out by the Deerfield Public Library and lists all of the programming as well as news for the library.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1986-present
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Browsing | Deerfield Public Library | Spring 2018
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
03/2018
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Searchable PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010.127
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
March - May 2018
3D Printing
A Wrinkle in Time
Academy Awards
Amazon Kindle eReaders
American College Test (ACT)
American Library Association (ALA)
American Poetry
Amy Falasz-Peterson
Ancestry.com
Asia
Australia
Auto Finance Resource
Bannockburn Illinois
Bon Jovi
Brian Michalski
Britannica Online
Carmela Martino
Certified Financial Planner
Chicago Consumers' Checkbook
Chinese
Choose Privacy Week
Consumer Reports
Corinne Dean
Cuba
Deerfield Bannockburn Riverwoods Chamber of Commerce (DBR)
Deerfield Golf Club
Deerfield Historical Cemetery
Deerfield Illinois
Deerfield Public Library
Deerfield Public Library 1000 Books Before Kindergarten
Deerfield Public Library Adult Services Department
Deerfield Public Library Board Games
Deerfield Public Library Board of Trustees
Deerfield Public Library Book Buddies
Deerfield Public Library Book Discussions
Deerfield Public Library Book Group Collection
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletter
Deerfield Public Library Discovery Kits
Deerfield Public Library Dungeons and Dragons
Deerfield Public Library Email
Deerfield Public Library Homeschooling Services
Deerfield Public Library Kids in Deerfield Love Science (KiDLS)
Deerfield Public Library Kindles
Deerfield Public Library Local Author Fair
Deerfield Public Library Movie Showings
Deerfield Public Library Music Discussions
Deerfield Public Library Online Resources
Deerfield Public Library Programming
Deerfield Public Library Public Library Access and Community for Everyone (PLACE)
Deerfield Public Library Read Without Boundaries
Deerfield Public Library S*T*A*R Volunteers
Deerfield Public Library Sensory Friendly Programs
Deerfield Public Library Staff
Deerfield Public Library Storytimes
Deerfield Public Library Summer Reading Programs
Deerfield Public Library Technology Classes
Deerfield Public Library Teen Advisory Board (TAB)
Deerfield Public Library Tournament of Books
Deerfield Public Library Tours
Deerfield Public Library Website
Deerfield Public Library Youth Services Department
Deerfield Train Station
Deerfield Train Station No Kissing Zone
Dinosaurs
Dungeons and Dragons
Earth Day
eBay
Emily Fridlund
Europe
Evicted
Free Comic Book Day
Freedman's Bank
French
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library
Genealogy
Harvard University Sociology Department
Hawaii
Heritage Quest Online
History of Wolves
Holly Bach
Hoopla
Howard Handler
Hulu
Instagram
iPads
iPhones
J.J. Ferguson
Jedi Academy
Jim Crow Laws
Julia Frederick
Karen Chan
Kay Palecek
Kenan Abosch
KEVA Connect Building Blocks
Kevin Wilson
Kyle Stone
Lake County Illinois
Language Resources
Laurie Frankel
LEGO
Libby by Overdrive
Little Pim
Lois Lowry
Luisa Ellenbogen
Mango Languages
Marie Lu
Mark Anderson
Mark Lieberman
Matthew Desmond
Maureen Wener
Metra
Mexico
Michael K. Goldberg
Milwaukee Wisconsin
Minecraft
Money Smart Week
Monsters Inc.
National Poetry Month
National Register of Historic Places
Netflix
New York Times
Nina Varma Michael
No One is Coming to Save Us
North Shore K-9 Reading Buddies
Overdrive
Pandemic
Panera Bread
Perfect Little World
Periodical Source Index (PERSI)
Pinewood North Carolina
RBDigital Magazines
Reader's Theater
Retirement
Robots
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
Roku
Russian
Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT)
SCORE Chicago
Searchable PDF
Seth Schriftman
Settlers of Catan
Shoe Recycling
Snapchat
Solid Waste Agency of Lake County (SWALCO)
Sourcebooks
Spanish
Sphero
Stephanie Powell Watts
Stephen Spielberg
Streaming
Super Stolie
Teen Tech Week
The Adventures of Tintin
The Cars
The Giver
The Moody Blues
The Post
The Shape of Water
This is How It Always Is
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing Missouri
Ticket to Ride
Tinkercad
Todd Stocke
Vagabond Traveling
Vicki Street
Warcross
West Deerfield Township Food Pantry
Wifi Hotspots