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Contents | Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6
The Civil War or, The War of the Rebellion
The events of the Civil War were still on the
tongues of old soldiers, as they were called, when we were boys. Some would talk and
relate much, while others were reticent to talk of those times unless persuasion was used
by one who was well acquainted with them. As a further example of the soldiers who talked
but little: some of us were in Ed Rhodes restaurant under the Bank one night when one got
to talking to the colored manager about some thing in the Rebellion. There was a mistake
in the argument and the facts were not there. The night watchman, Albert S. Henderson, was
in there, and from his own experience in that war gave way to his usual quiet, and very
interestingly related the facts. Very interesting and instructive were the experiences of
the old soldiers to us youngsters. We were always ready to sit and listen.
Probably the majority of the soldiers we learn of around here were enlisted men or were
volunteers as they were called. It was common practice though at the time of draft for a
man to pay several hundred dollars for a substitute to go for him. While some made no
secrecy of it, others have tried to have it forgotten. No mention is here made or
recalled.
When Abraham Lincoln called for more volunteers, and Illinois, far exceeding the quota,
responded in the slogan "we are coming Uncle Samuel three hundred thousand
more," many of our young men said "let's join up for three months; it'll all be
settled in that time." They were in for four years. Local groups and organizations
did what they could by making and sending provisions for camp or hospitals. Communities
were all interested in each others loved ones away in the dangers of battle, in privation
or in rebel prisons. Bob Purcell was in three of the rebel prisons and had enlisted as a
volunteer for what was thought would be but a short time. John C. Myers came home with a
bullet hole all the way through his head and carried a bad scar below his eye till he
died. Many never came home, having died in action, prison or hospitals.
The esprit de corps of the "Boys in Blue" was always fine when they got back
home from the war. Every Decoration Day was a wonderful day. Old timers came back to
Barrington as to a home coming. A long parade was formed, as now, in the morning,
following the band to Evergreen Cemetery. Some times the Ringwood (Illinois) Fife and Drum
Corps would lead the parade and how they could play such stirring marching tunes as
"The Girl I Left Behind Me," "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," and
"Yankee Doodle."
The parade was led at one time by Mr. Mayo, we are told, riding a white horse, or, as
we later remember it, by Albert S. Henderson, afoot, who in a loud clear voice called the
orders of the march. Halting at a veterans graveside, he would announce the name, and say,
"The Adjutant will read the record."
The Adjutant was often LeRoy Powers, who would read of the soldiers service, in what
Company and Division or Regiment, and whether cavalry, infantry or Light artillery, maybe
wounded at such a battle, and mustered out on a certain date. Then the Commander would
call out Comrade (naming the soldier in line) will decorate." Off went his war hat
and the soldier carefully laid a bouquet on his comrade's grave.
After all soldier's graves were decorated and a speech was heard, back to town they
marched where they were dined by the W.R.C., many of whom always marched in the parade. In
the afternoon, no church in the community being large enough, they assembled with the band
on a big platform erected in the middle of Grove Avenue under the huge soft maples at
Powers' or Burlingham's, or around the corner in Lincoln Avenue in front of Gleason's. A
male quartet sang and a good speaker gave the oration of the day. In the evening the
W.R.C. would put on, annually, one of the best entertainments of the year.
Once in a while a southern soldier in his gray uniform would appear on Decoration Day
in the parade. In some places the antipathy of war was dropped and the hatchet buried.
On the Sunday morning before Memorial Day the old soldiers attended some church in the
village in a body. In the afternoon a service was held in the North Church at Barrington
Center and the graves of the soldiers in the church yard cemetery were decorated. That
church, built in 1853 as a Methodist Church, was the enlisting headquarters in this
community during the Civil War.
It was felt by the American Legion and the W.R.C. that a historical marker should be
placed there to the memory of the place and occasion and to those who enlisted there. A
red granite boulder which had lain in the field west of North Hough Street and south of
the E.J. & E. Ry., and which was said to have been one of the markers for the old time
horseback mail carriers from Waukegan to Elgin, was moved to the west side of the
Barrington Center Methodist church and a bronze tablet was mounted on it bearing the names
of those who enlisted there in the Civil War.
In the Spring of 1933 Cecil Paxton, Chairman, with the rest of the American Legion
committee, Ed. J. Langendorf, Roy E. Wilmering and William Kessler scoured the records of
the country and communities around, gathered the names and received financial aid from
many in Barrington, Dundee and Elgin, and others interested. On the afternoon of
Decoration Day, May 30, 1933, the marker was dedicated by very impressive and fitting
ceremonies. Three living veterans of the Civil War who enlisted at that church were there
that day: Charles F. Helm of Helm Road, W.D. Ellis and Frank B. Perkins of Elgin. Men of
the First World War in uniform were the hosts. Probate Court Judge Charles C. Cutting was
the speaker at the dedication ceremony. Memories stepped back more than seventy years.
MILLER'S GROVE M.E. CHURCH
BARRINGTON CENTER
A RECRUITING STATION DURING CIVIL WAR AND THE CENTER OF WARTIME ACTIVITIES IN THE
PERIOD OF 1861 TO 1865. IN COMMEMORATION, OF THAT EVENT THIS MEMORIAL IS ERECTED AND
DEDICATED TO THE MEMORY OF THOSE PATRIOTIC CITIZENS OF BARRINGTON TOWNSHIP WHO SERVED THIS
NATION IN THE PRESERVATION OF THE UNION.
(Then followed the names of ninety-one veterans, listed in four columns.
Below are the two columns to the left:)
Andrew S. Abbott |
Benjamin Cockerton |
James Gothard |
Henry T. Abbott |
Cyrus J. Cole |
Thomas Gothard |
John W. Acker |
Joseph H. Collen |
Samuel Gould |
Frank Applebee |
John Cowdin |
George S. Griswold |
John C. Applebee |
Luther W. Davis |
Thomas B. Hackett |
Ira Benedict |
David H. Delano |
Safford J. Harlow |
John Benedict |
Alphonzo De Vol |
A.G. Harwood |
Orrin Bennett |
William DeVol |
Franklin W. Hawley |
Casius Beverley |
Albert Dodge |
Hiram W. Hawley |
Dwight C. Beverley |
Freeman S. Dunklee |
Charles F. Helm |
Samuel Blakesley |
William H. Earl |
Lewis B. Householder |
John Blanckman |
Charles F. Freeman |
Johnson Jackson |
Richard Boothman |
Chauncey Freeman |
Edward James |
James L. Buck |
George Freeman |
William James |
Hiram D. Cadwell |
Horace Freeman |
Davis F. Jayne |
William Dunham Church |
(Here are the names in the two columns at the right)
Wm. Ebenezar Jayne |
August Rieke |
George Washington Johnson |
Timothy Ring |
Justus Lane |
George W. Robinson |
Filkins Llewellyn |
Jane A. Robinson, Nurse |
Anson Lowe |
Watson W. Rowland |
William B. Lyard |
Eugene Sabin |
Daniel Manning |
Merril H. Sabin |
William McFarland |
Zenas Sabin |
George W. Miller |
Henry Schafer |
William Norton Miller |
Frederick Schultz |
George Morris |
George W. Snow |
John S. Murletus |
Nathan Squires |
Edward Nute |
Nathan Squires Jr. |
Emmett O'Connell |
Washington Squires |
John O'Connell |
Albert Stetson |
Charles Otis |
Silas Sutherland |
John Otis |
Winfield Sutherland |
Daniel Paul |
Garrett Tascha |
Frank B. Perkins |
Milton S. Townsend |
Josiah Pierce |
Canlo Webster |
George Pounder |
Henry G. Willmarth |
Henry Reuter |
Clark Wolaver |
THIS MEMORIAL TABLET ERECTED BY BARRINGTON POST NUMBER
158, THE AMERICAN LEGION, THROUGH THE AID OF FRIENDS AND THE DESCENDANTS OF THE ABOVE
NAMED VETERANS, MEMORIAL DAY, MAY 30, 1933.
Barrington has always reverenced the memory of its soldiers. Decoration Day has been
truly a Memorial Day, literally and in its memorial program.
There is no record of any early settler in the immediate area who was a soldier in the
American Revolution, but local cemeteries hold the graves of veterans of most of the
nation's wars since the Revolution. Here is the roster of veterans of early wars who are
buried here:
The War of 1812
Six veterans of that war are buried in Barrington Center Cemetery:
Cyrus Haven, died 1890.
John Hendrickson, died Nov. 25, 1877, aged 80.
Timothy James, died Aug. 18, 1858.
Lewis Light, died April 15, 1849.
John Seymour, died Aug. 27, 1876, aged 92.
Capt. George T. Waterman, died Sept. 13, 1880, aged 84.
In White Cemetery: Francis H. Kelsey, died Oct. 3, 1865.
In Evergreen Cemetery: Reuben Stevens, died in 1890.
The Indian Wars
In Evergreen Cemetery are the graves of three veterans:
James B. Catlow, Co. B, 7th Illinois Cavalry.
Oscar Maynard, Co. D, 7th Illinois Cavalry.
Wint Searies.
Spanish American War
In White Cemetery is buried Frederick Linders, 29th U.S. Infantry, who died
July 7, 1931.
The G.A.R., a nonpartisan patriotic organization, was composed of honorably discharged
soldiers and sailors of the Civil War, having the purpose of keeping alive the old
fellowship, caring for the needy survivors, and fostering memorials such as certain
monuments of action or the preservation of battlefields. Local organizations were called
Posts.
General Thomas W. Sweeney Post No. 275 was organized in Barrington, Illinois, in 1882
by Christopher Dickinson (a druggist where the east end of the laundry is now) with
fifteen members. The earliest recollection of their meeting place was in the Parker
building north of the slough lot at the northeast corner of Main and Hough Streets. When
that gave way to August W. Meyer's two story brick store, they met over Hank Abbott's Drug
Store on South Cook Street.
Time took its toll and the ranks began to thin, they "just faded away." Over
a period of years on Memorial Day one observing could see the "Boys in Blue"
more stooped and more of them using canes; and familiar faces missing from the ranks. As
they kept closing ranks, the membership of the local Post went down to nine veterans, and
on December 15, 1916, Thomas W. Sweeney Post No. 275 was disbanded and the charter and
records sent to the Archives in Washington, D.C. The nine last members here were Fred
Lageschulte, Robert Purcell, Sanford Peck, Henry Nordmeier, Robert Reynoldson, Edward R.
Clark, Eli Abbs of Chicago, Henry Schaefer of Elgin, and Matthew Umbdenstock of Prairie
View. These last veterans of the Civil War were put on the list of social members of the
local W.R.C. There were only five members attending the last meeting of the Post when
"they broke ranks and were mustered out."
Members of the Post
There are said to have been seventy-nine members of Thomas W. Sweeney Post No. 275,
G.A.R., here in Barrington. When the roster of membership was sought after the disbandment
of the local Post in December of 1916, it was learned that the records were in the
Archives of Washington. However, the following is a list composed from programs of the
past:
H.H. Hubbard |
F. Hollister |
George H. Comstock |
Milton E. Henderson |
Leopold Krahn |
George C. Prouty |
Charles C. Senn |
Edwin C. Freeman |
Samuel Clarke |
J. Buck |
Lawson Elvidge |
W.L. Clark |
H.H. Williams |
Christopher Sauer |
Henry Reuter |
Jacob Giss |
John C. Myers |
J.O. Selleck |
Sanford Peck |
W.H. Tuttle |
Jos. M. Topping |
John Bryan |
Eli Abbs |
John Cowdin |
Henry T. Abbott |
Enoch Colby |
Charles V. Bogart |
Frank Filkins |
C. Bollenback |
F.J. Filbert |
W.N. Babcock |
E.W. Fenton |
Ed. R. Clark |
James J. Gothard |
John B. Harrower |
John Groff |
William Humphrey |
Ernest Grever |
Geo. Wash. Johnson |
W. Thurston |
George D. Jayne |
Christian Knoff |
Fred A. Lageschulte |
Henry Lohman |
Robert Purcell |
William Kunz |
Henry Seip |
Gustav Meyer |
H.C. Schaefer |
David Meyer |
Peter Schultz |
Stuart Miller |
Jos. C. Whitney |
Ernest Packert |
Al. S. Henderson |
Jacob Sturm |
LeRoy Powers |
H.H. Church |
Hy. Galusha Willmarth |
Uriel R. Burlingham |
Albert G. Gleason |
William Heis |
Henry Nortmeyer |
C.M. Huntley |
Fred Wiseman |
J.T. Steepe |
James Seizer |
A.C. Palback |
Christopher Dickinson |
Jacob Schley |
Lewis H. Bute |
Fred Hager |
Fred Dohmeyer |
W. Hunt |
Robert Reynoldson |
Matthew Unbdenstock |
Richard Boothman |
Charles B. Otis |
There were other soldiers of that period in the community who may have belonged to this
post:
John Applebee |
Luther W. Davis |
Manning H. Nelson |
Frank Applebee |
Lyman L. Deill |
Philander H. Moulton |
Oscar E. Maynard |
Edw. Powers |
Samuel Gould |
Leonard Runyan |
Peter Smith |
Phillip Schick |
C. Dunn |
John. H. Shell |
Charles Kurzhalz |
Thomas W. Sweeney Woman's Relief Corps No. 85 as an aid to the Civil War Veterans, and
the vast amount of memorial and patriotic work, was organized here November 17, 1887, with
twenty-five charter members: Ada Sellick, Evangeline Clark, Margaret Buck, Emily Lytle,
Rhoda Lombard, Kate Runyon, Ann Hollister, Effie Runyon, Nettie Lombard, Margaret
Herriman, Libbie Miller, Emma Wool, Hannah Powers, Lillie Hitting, Florence Sizer, Sarah
Dohmeyer, Sarah Dickinson, Mamie Whitney, Arietta Sizer, Ada Boot, Grace Bennett, Lizzie
Peck, Emma Bute, and Mary (Clark) Nightingale, who died in October, 1947, the last of the
charter members.
No organization was more diligent or faithful to its cause. Patriotism was taught to
our youth; its activities were always stimulating; and flags were presented to school
rooms. They were active in the erecting and dedication of the Boulder Marker at Barrington
Center Methodist Church.
One of their outstanding activities was the Soldiers and Sailors Monument in Evergreen
Cemetery "erected by the W.R.C." and dedicated September 6, 1906.
Probably the biggest concert program of the year was put on Decoration Day night by the
Woman's Relief Corps.
A local group of the Sons of Veterans was organized here at one time but it was not
long lived.
A program issued at the time of the unveiling of the Soldiers and Sailors Monument in
Evergreen Cemetery, Sept. 6, 1906, listed the following members of the G.A.R. and W.R.C.:
General Thomas W. Sweeney Post No. 276, G.A.R.
H.H. Hubbard, Commander.
George H. Comstock, Senior Vice Commander.
Leopold Krahn, Junior Vice Commander.
Charles J. Senn, Chaplain.
Samuel Clark, Surgeon.
Lawson Elvidge, Adjutant.
H.H. Williams, Quartermaster.
Henry Reuter, Officer of the Day.
John C. Myers, Officer of the Guard.
Sanford Peck, Sergeant Major.
J.M. Topping, Quartermaster Sergeant.
Eli Abbs |
Ed. R. Clark |
Robt. Purcell |
Henry T. Abbott |
John B. Harrower |
Henry Seip |
Chas. V. Bogart |
Wm. Humphrey |
H.C. Schaefer |
C. Bollenback |
Geo. D. Jayne |
Peter Schultz |
W.H. Babcock |
Geo. Wash. Johnson |
Jos. C. Whitney |
|
Fred A. Lageschulte |
Barrington Woman's Relief Corps No. 85 Mrs. Ida Bennett, President
Emily Hawley, Senior Vice President.
Emma Wood, Junior Vice President.
M.J. Colekin, Chaplain.
Myrtle Bennett, Secretary.
Miss. Robie Brockway, Treasurer.
Mrs. Millie Cannon, Conductress.
Alice Olcott, Assistant Conductress.
Sarah Dohmeyer, Guardian.
Elizabeth Pletcher, Assistant Guardian.
Sarah Page, Patriotic Instructor.
Addie Lines, Press Committee.
Ethel Bennett, Musician.
Laura Page, Miss Lizzie Gilly, Mrs. H. Carmichael, Ella Jencks, Color Bearers.
Clara Alverson |
Irene Waterman |
Mary Elvidge |
Susan Church |
Olive Blocks |
Anna Otis |
Jennie Bennett |
Minnie Foreman |
Louise Boehmer |
Adie Johnson |
Amelia Colby |
Amanda Meyer |
Virginia Comstock |
Sadie Krahn Brush |
Louise Hawley |
Emily Gleason |
Etta Hawley |
Lizzie Peck |
Anna Hollister |
Mina Meyers |
Lydia Lytle |
Lottie McCay |
Emma Lageschulte |
Lydia Beinhoff |
Emma Myers |
Anna Grunau |
Hannah Powers |
Eva Castle |
Kate Prouty |
Carrie Kendall |
Marion Prouty |
Mae Lane Spunner |
Julia Robertson |
Lena Schultz |
Arietta Sizer |
Sophia Nordmeyer |
Gertrude Schwemm |
Eva Tuttle |
Mary Schaefer |
Paulina Lytle |
May Banks |
Mrs. Rich. Lytle |
Kate Gray |
The history of Barrington's part in the World Wars and the Korean Conflict is too
voluminous to go into detail here. Our community was as active as usual in its patriotic
duty. A local draft board was set up in the Blocks Building on South Cook Street (now
burned down), and almost every able-bodied man within the age brackets went into some
military service. Anxious hearts at home sent their prayers and cheer to their young men
scattered over the globe. Some foods were rationed; some materials were restricted by
certain priorities. Gasoline and tires were rationed.
Armistice Day following World War I, November 11, 1918, was a joy day for American
hearts. Celebrated several days previous on a rumor of peace negotiations, it broke out
anew more vigorously on the real day. Some business houses had to close up for the day to
preserve order and save stock and property. An early morning parade of adults and children
marching up and down our streets with music, singing, noise and gladness of jubilant
hearts.
The soldier boys began to come back home. Some had been wounded; Joe Robertson lost a
leg October 11, 1918, during the cross fire in the battle of the Argonne Forest; some
never came back. Our community lost a number of boys but less than in the second war. In
November, 1939, the Review listed eighteen from the Barrington community who had died then
or in the twenty-one years since the close of the first World War and that were buried in
or around Barrington. Some of that list were killed during the war.
The second World War called more of our young men. The Honor Roll in the west end of
the depot park at Cook and Park Avenue listed 647 names in the service, which included
eighteen gold star veterans. A complete list of those killed and wounded in these three
wars is not here given because, as we are told, it is too difficult to get and anything
less than an official list would possibly be inaccurate.
Yet, a list of those killed in the last World War, as enumerated in an issue of the
Courier-Review of November of 1945 and again in a May 1946 issue, reads with pathetic
feeling for those killed thousands of miles away in several places in Africa, in Asia, and
in South America, but with feelings of horror mixed with pride for our own who gave all
they could and had for us back home. Ten of them had been Barrington High School students.
There were a number of our men who have been awarded the Purple Heart as wounded
soldiers, an who are quietly going about their daily work again. Since the dawn of United
States history the record is filled with such as these who, with the builders at home,
have made us a nation. We are proud of our American heritage.
The Veterans Memorial Section
The Veterans Memorial Section in Evergreen Cemetery as a burial place for those without
relatives or ability to provide for their own grave, was conceived by Roy Willmering,
Graves Registrar Appointed by the Government, and Legion Service Officer, in the Spring of
1954, and was perfected by hard work and solicitation. A plot 40 x 82 feet, donated by
Evergreen Cemetery Association, was designed for fifty-three graves, including the nine
who were already buried there west of the Soldiers and Sailors Monument of 1906. A massive
monument of split-faced native granite stone was erected in the center of the lot. The
design and layout were the work of our very active Roy Willmering to whom much credit is
due beyond the original idea for directing the project to its completion. This Veterans
Memorial Section was dedicated by an impressive Memorial Day service, May 30, 1955.
Mr. Willmering informs us that, at the time of dedication of this Memorial Plot, there
were buried in and about Barrington, 160 war veterans -- 10 of the War of 1812, 2 of the
Indian Wars, 79 of the Civil War, 1 of the Spanish-American War, 45 of World War 1, 11 of
World War II, and 2 of the Korean War. 118 of these graves are in Evergreen Cemetery. The
others are in St. Paul, White, Smith, and Barrington Center.
Barrington's American Legion Post 158 was organized in 1919 and its charter was honored
with names of eighty-nine members. By 1952 it had 210 members.
Spencer Otis was the first Commander. Following him, other Commanders were: Dr. W.E.
Allen, Wilson Herren, Cecil E. Paxton, Jack Welch, Irving Hager, R.L. Mundhenk, E.J.
Langendorf, William Kessler, Noel Stayner, Paul Pohlman Sr., Frank Diehl, Martin
Schreiber, Kenneth Shoup, Arthur Martens, Harry Coffman, Paul W. Schroeder, John Matysik,
George Dietrich, George Whitcomb, A.G. Bjornberg, William A. Somerfield, Frank Malone,
Henry Muth, Albert Heitman, Earl H. Etters, Paul Cameron, Don W. Staehlin, Eugene E.
Rounds, Max J. Hembrey, Ray W. Wichman, Perry Conrad, Donald C. Williams, Francis B.
Kennedy, Harry A. Lindberg, Roy W. Klepper, Harry Etters, William W. Wilson, Alfred
Hauser, James L. Prow. Installed as commander in July, 1963, was Burton Wendt.
The Legion has fostered and promoted civic and patriotic projects. Among them are:
sponsoring Cub Pack No. 200; donating the flag pole in the Park, setting up the bronze
memorial plaque at the North Church at Barrington Center, granting scholarships to
outstanding pupils, cooperation in child welfare, helping drill the school band, buying
band instruments, helping the Scouts build the Scout Cabin in the East Park on Russell
Street, entertaining at Downey and at Elgin.
The American Legion Auxiliary was granted a charter March 18, 1920. On its charter are
94 women-mothers, wives and sisters of men in the armed forces in World War
I. Their
purpose is to aid the Legion in its memory of the departed the relief of suffering
veterans, presentation of flags to organizations and to instill patriotism in the growing
younger generation.
The V.F.W. Post No. 7706 in Barrington was established on June 9, 1946, William Hacker
who then lived on Exmoor Avenue being strongly instrumental in its organization. Arthur
Conrad was the first Commander and those who followed were: Phillip Johnson, 1947; August
Desort, 1948; William Foelschow, 1949; Roy Crumrine, 1950; Louis D. Miller, 1951; Harold
Lipofsky, 1952; Edwin Parke, 1953; Ralph Day, 1954; Leslie Willard, 1955; Sidney Kramer,
1956; Burnell Wollar, 1957; Walter Moeller, 1958; Robert Block, 1959; Roy Etters, 1960;
Benjamin P. Graber Jr., 1961.
This Post "is especially proud of its Americanism Program." It gives as much
as $3,500.00 a year to hospital work. It put the drinking fountain in the Depot Park in
May of 1948, which was dedicated on Memorial Day; sponsored a Boy Scout troop, and youth
activities.
The V.F.W. Auxiliary, organized in July of 1947, pays monthly visits to Downey Hospital
to entertain the Veterans there, and, with the V.F.W., presents flags to the schools,
enters keenly into the Children's Hospital work, and that of the Eaton Rapids (Mich.)
V.F.W. Home.
The Reserve Militia, properly named Company 37, the Depot Brigade of the Illinois
Reserve Militia, and commonly called at that time "The Home Guards", was
organized in 1918 during the absence of the regular Militia while in the service of the
U.S. Army in World War I.
Attorney Howard P. Castle Sr., was the promoter and was its Captain. Walter I. Martin
was First Lieutenant and Arnett C. Lines was Second Lieutenant. Sergeants were George
Carmichael Sr., Roy Waterman Sr., and R.M. Lines.
They met regularly for drill in the basement of Catlow's Hall on West Station Street
and later drilled in the open field where the A.& P. Store and The Gold Star Motor
Company are now on North Hough. Early of a Sunday morning they would march in from the
country, deploying as skirmishers through the wet fields at some distance back from the
County Line Road, using signals at intervals. Long marches into the country at night added
to the practice. The Militia went into camp in Kelsey's field on the Fox River. During the
race riot in Chicago our Company was called in and quartered in the North Side Armory. Men
took turns standing guard in the rain and all slept on the cement floor.
The Company was disbanded after the close of that war.
Before the advent of Barrington Station on the railroad, mail was collected and left
several times a week at certain rural wayside homes or taverns which were usually on a
more traveled road or trail like Algonquin Road (then called the Freeport Road) or on
Higgins Road.
The Squire Miller home at the northeast corner of Sutton and Algonquin Roads was such a
wayside place where mail was left. Another was the old Hecock place where the trail from
Little Fort (Waukegan) to Elgin, made by a horseback mail carrier, crossed what is now the
Grigsby place from the northeast to the southwest. That trail was still noticeable in more
recent years by the dwarfing of the trees.
Frank Hager, who lived as a boy on the Gothard place on West Cuba Road, said that the
Hecock log house sat among the yellow plum and apple trees on the north side of the road
in the east edge of the woods about where there is a ranch house now, and that that was
the first post office in the community. Mr. Hager said it was built of logs with some of
the logs projecting inward as supports for bunks. Window holes in the attic like port
holes in a fort had wooden doors or shutters on them fastened with leather hinges. He and
his boy playmates would look out of the portholes and pretend that they saw Indians
coming. He said that the horseback trail had been so well beaten that for years the growth
of trees was stunted there, and the trail to this day could easily be seen from a distance
by the depression in the tree line. They used to find bits of pottery and relics around
the place.
The office at one time was in the Innis Hollister home which stood for many years on
the northeast corner of Cuba Road and Route 59 and was much of a town meeting place.
The Little Fort Porcupine reported Aug. 11, 1846, that an Act of Congress had
established several mail routes in Lake county. Among them: Dundee via Barrington, Lake
Zurich, and Gilmer Gilmer to Libertyville; and another: Janesville via Lake Zurich,
Socrates, Rand and Sand Ridge to Chicago. Justus Bangs, first settler at Wauconda, and
owner of property in Cuba, held this contract for eight years and made the round trip, a
distance of 100 miles, once a week.
Early day post offices were where the postmaster lived or had a place of business. A
post office called Flint Creek was established and V.H. Freeman appointed postmaster July
1, 1839. Freman lived on Section 10 in Cuba township. John Sears, who lived on Section 15,
was appointed postmaster September 12, 1840. The next postmasters were Abel Keyes, Seth
Paine, Leonard Loomis and Alexander Fortune, taking the post office to Ela township. It
came back to Cuba with the appointment of Harvey Lambert, October 7, 1847; John J.
Bullock, July 26, 1849, and John Jackson, December 18, 1855. Bullock and Jackson probably
had their offices on Section 14.
A post office under the name of Serryse was established March 23, 1846, and George Ela,
who lived 3 1/2 miles east of Barrington was appointed postmaster. The next postmaster was
Frederick Ormsby appointed June 23, 1849; Adam Vandawerker, appointed April 7, 1851, lived
next east of Ela. The name of this office was changed to Ela February 16, 1852.
A postoffice was established at Langenheim (Cuba Station) April 26, 1892, with Charles
Lederle as postmaster. He was succeeded by Conrad Krause, February 8, 1894, and Krause
kept the post office until it was discontinued June 14, 1894.
An office was.established at Chicago Highlands April 10, 1902, and discontinued January
1, 1906. William Hobein was the postmaster.
The Barrington post office was established as Barrington Station January 29, 1856, and
John M. Porter was appointed postmaster. Postmasters succeeding him, and dates of their
appointment, were as follows:
Orson H. Crandall, February 19, 1857.
John M. Porter, June 5, 1857.
George Ela, March 29, 1858.
John M. Porter, May 3, 1858.
John Jackson, November 16, 1859.
David R. Richardson, March 19, 1861.
William Howarth, October 17, 1866.
Ansel K. Townsend, February 22, 1869.
Leroy Powers, August 19, 1875.
Name changed to Barrington May 21, 1883.
Leroy Powers, May 21, 1883.
Dell Loomis*
John C. Plagge, April 16, 1889.
William H. Meyer, June 30, 1893.
Millius B. McIntosh, November 23, 1893.
Henry K. Brockway, August 21, 1897.
George W. Spunner, February 13, 1915.
Henry K. Brockway (Acting), November 11, 1919.
Joseph D. Robertson, May 28, 1920.
Edwin J. Langendorf, February 25, 1931.
Cornelius C. Snyder (Acting), December 21, 1935.
Leslie B. Paddok, February 27, 1937.
Harry Jr. Wilkes, (Acting), October 1, 1952.
Hobart J. Berghorn, July 1, 1954.
*The roster is from official records, with the exception of Dell Loomis, whose name
does not appear. He is remembered, however, by the author and others. It is presumed he
was appointed during President Cleveland's first administration (1885-89) as postmaster or
acting postmaster. He was a Democrat and Powers was Republican.
Porter's office is said to have been in a building on East Station Street where the
police station is now located; George Ela's in his store on East Main Street, now the site
of Miller Oil Co.; John Jackson lived in what is now the 200 block of South Cook Street
and probably had his office in his home. Richardson's office was near the southeast
Cook-Park Avenue corner.
Howarth's office was in his store building on Park Avenue. Townsend had his office in
the John C. Plagge store, where Plagge later had his own office, and Leroy Powers had his
office in his store on South Cook Street. All three of these sites are now within the
walls of the First National Bank. Loomis had his office on East Station Street near the
present Barrington Laundry driveway. Meyer was in the Lageschulte block on the south side
of Main Street.
M.B. McIntosh located his office in a building he owned about the middle of the block
on the west side of South Cook Street and it is believed that Brockway remained in this
building until the office was moved to the southeast corner of Cook and Station Streets.
That was about 1905. Department records show the office at that location until August 1,
1919.
August 1, 1919, the office was moved to a building on the east side of South Cook
Street owned by George J. Hager and Henry J. Lageschulte, subsequently occupied for many
years as a meat market. September 1, 1929, the office was moved to the Huszagh building at
the corner of North Hough and Applebee Streets, and November 1, 1956, to the building at
the northeast corner of West Main and Garfield Streets, which was erected especially for
post office quarters.
The Barrington office was advanced to the third class on July 1, 1902, to the second
class on July 1, 1922, and to the first class on July 1, 1945. It was established as a
money order office June 1, 1875, and was designated as a postal savings depository
February 24, 1912. Postal savings depositories at Wauconda and McHenry were discontinued
during the past year and their accounts transferred to Barrington.
Rural free delivery of mail began in Barrington June 15, 1904. Four routes were
established and the carriers were Charles Hutchinson, Samuel L. Landwer, Ben Freye and
Herman Gieske. Hutchinson was the last of the four original carriers here to retire, and
when he retired on Feb. 1, 1946, he was the third oldest carrier in years of service in
the United States.
The first routes were 25 to 28 miles long, and teams of horses were used for 10 years
-- a cold, hard, wet job in bad weather. In 1914 the rural carriers used their own autos,
and routes were lengthened to 40 miles.
Freye resigned after a year and was replaced by Fred L. Rieke, who carried the route
for 17 years. When Rieke resigned in 1922, Walter L. Nightingale was appointed, but after
three years was transferred to postal clerk and H.K. Brockway, who was then serving as a
clerk in the office, took the route to have outdoor work. Brockway retired after two years
and the route was discontinued.
Gieske resigned in 1911 and was replaced by Francis L. Bennett. Landwer retired June
30, 1934 and his route was discontinued and the entire territory consolidated in two
routes. Better cars and better roads had made it possible for the carriers to handle
longer routes. Charles Hutchinson and Lovell Bennett were the remaining carriers. They had
to handle, sort and deliver mail for about 400 boxes on about 50 miles apiece. And
"Hutch" and "Rusty" came back each day smiling.
Increasing density of population was overburdening the carriers and a third route was
again established February 1, 1944, and Walter. L. Nightingale was assigned to the route.
Five years later a fourth route was established. July 1, 1956, three mounted routes were
instituted to better serve the growing subdivisions and the rural routes were again
reduced to two. Two additional mounted routes have since been established and in 1963 five
mounted carriers are serving routes averaging 35 miles, and two rural carriers are
covering about 112 miles.
Mail delivery in the village was commenced October 1, 1928. Hobart Berghorn was carrier
for the south side of the village and Walter L. Nightingale was carrier for the north
side. Cecil Paxton delivered the parcel post. The Barrington office in 1963 has 13 regular
and three substitute carriers serving 10 full routes, a parcel post route and an auxiliary
route.
Before this time of mail delivery, patrons had to call at the post office for their
mail. They would peek in the glass window of their box and, if there were any, they
stepped to the service window and asked for the mail to be handed to them. A few lock
boxes came into later use for a few of the busiest persons who, unlike the majority, did
not have the time to wait their turn in line at the window, or till the window was opened
after the mail was distributed. The post office in those days was a real meeting place for
people by date or otherwise.
Addenda
One point of keen interest at one time was the
fast mail trains, roaring through town as fast as they were allowed to go, and picking off
the mail bag on the run. The leather, steel riveted, padlocked mail bag was taken by the
postmaster to a crane that stood at one end of the depot platform beside the track and
hung on a steel arm projecting close to the passing mail train (so called mail train
because it had a mail car attached as well as express, baggage and passenger cars). The
mailman in the mail car would open his sliding door a bit and, throw up a shaped arm
toward the suspended mail bag and catch it in that arm, he in turn grabbing it and hauling
it in for further distribution. Then, throwing out a few bags again at the next town, he
would grab the mail bag from the mail crane again. It was a thrill to watch it. Mail was
seldom missed, but once in a great while the mail thrown out onto the platform rolled
under the train and was mutilated. When the dust from the "flying" train
settled, where was the mail bag?
For these many years the Post Office had been always on the Cook County side of the
village and on Cook Street or Park Avenue or Station Street, till on September 1, 1929,
Postmaster Joe Robertson moved it from 117 South Cook on the Cook County side to larger
quarters on the Lake County side at North Hough and Applebee Streets. That was the first
time in seventy-f ive years that the post office of the village was out of the Cook County
side.
It is a marvel how much mail was moved in and out of such small quarters as was there
and then occupied at Hough and Applebee: Four rural routes to be sorted and loaded; a star
route to be sorted and loaded; all of the village carriers sorting out and bundling their
mail; local boxes to be filled; heavy mail from Jewel, Barco and Burpee; window services
of flat mail, parcels, registered and postal savings; out-going mail to be sorted and
bagged and loaded; and constant clerical work and reports. Outside was the congestion of
customer's cars on a busy arterial highway, and big mail trucks with out-going or
in-coming mail trying to warp into a three cornered alley, besides all the rural cars in
the alley or on Applebee Street.
A new and much more commodius building was built for the post office in the summer of
1956 at Main and Garfield after the August W. Meyer home was moved away. The new building
was dedicated September 29, 1956, by district officials, U.S. Representative Marguerite
Stitt Church and Robert Justice, who was the regional postal service manager for the
Illinois-Michigan area. The move to the new quarters was made on Saturday and Sunday of
October 14 and 15 with no break in service. It afforded a new loading platform on
Garfield, and 4,650 square feet more floor space or nearly double that there had been on
Hough Street. In the Christmas season of 1956, the first season in the new place, 396,280
pieces of flat mail went through the cancelling machine, the peak day on December 18 being
56,000 pieces.
On January 1, 1949, Hobart Berghorn was made Assistant Postmaster, and was promoted to
Postmaster on July 1, 1954. In 1952 Cecil Paxton was made superintendent of mails, and
William Wilson was made foreman of mails. In 1953 Harry Wilkes said this office did over
$585,000.00 business and in 1954 did three quarters of a million dollars of business; in
1955 over $808,000.00 business, maintaining over three quarters of a million average ever
since.
Cecil Paxton retired September 30, 1956, after twenty-eight years of service, because
of ill health. Then Earl Schaefer moved up Paxton's place as Asst. Postmaster, and Orlin
H. Neurenberger took Schaefer's place as Supt. of mails. Mr. Wilson had resigned.
In 1955 they had one truck for parcel post delivery. In 1956 mail trucks were furnished
this office for its two mounted routes and its one auxiliary route. By 1959 it had four
trucks two of which were right hand driven.
A Post Office Department policy to supplant mail train service with truck service for
short hauls in metropolitan centers was instituted and since July 1, 1951, all mail in and
out of Barrington has been transferred by chartered trucks.
Where the mail messenger once transferred mail between the post office and the depot by
hand or with a wheelbarrow, Harry Homuth was the last mail messenger. The government
postal authorities then ceased sending mail to Barrington by train. From then on it was
hauled in and out of Barrington post office to Chicago by chartered trucks.
The first bank in Barrington was set up in the west end of the Lamey Building at 240
East Main Street early in November of 1889 by Dwigging, Starbuck and Co. as a private
bank. Mr. John C. Christ was their Cashier. They were not local men. In two weeks they
received their 6700 pound safe from Columbus, Ohio which they advertised in The Review of
November 23, 1889 to be "fire proof and burglar proof." In a very short time the
stock was bought by Mr. H C.P. Sandman, Mr. M.B. McIntosh and three others.
In September of 1890 the bank moved to one of M.B. McIntosh's buildings, 108 South
Cook. Mr. Sandman, who was a thrifty real estate owner and Chicago business investor, and
Mr. McIntosh who had been a local lumber dealer for years and who at that time was in the
real estate business, went into partnership, and the bank was known as the Bank of
McIntosh, Sandman & Co. Both men had been in business on opposite sides of the track.
Miles T. Lamey who substituted at times for Mr. Christ as cashier became the cashier for a
short time till Mr. Albert L. Robertson returned to Barrington from school and became the
cashier in March of 1891 and remained so until its close in 1932.
1893 John C. Plagge, a local merchant, lumber and feed dealer, rebuilt his store at the
southwest corner of Cook and Park Avenue, and the corner room of the new brick building
was occupied by the bank with a large vault behind the cashier's window.
McIntosh sold his interest in the bank to Mr. Ed. R. Clark, and the name was changed to
The Barrington Bank of Sandman & Co. Then very soon Mr. Clark's brother-in-law, Mr.
John Robertson, who had retired from his estate at Lake Zurich, joined the company, and it
then became The Bank of Robertson, Plagge & Co. Mr. Robertson, too, was a heavy land
owner. It was said his father owned 2000 acres in his front door yard south of Lake
Zurich.
The private banking business was reorganized in 1913 as the First State Bank of
Barrington with John Robertson as president, John C. Plagge as first vice-president,
Howard P. Castle as second vice-president, Albert L. Robertson as cashier, and Albert T.
Ulitsch, who was a former Western Union man, as assistant cashier.
The growing business of the bank demanded more room, so, the first of January, 1916,
the State Bank voted to buy of Mrs. Hannah (Henry, Sr.) Sodt at a quoted figure of $5,000
the south east corner of Park Avenue and Cook Street. The Sodt Building was moved back to
the south west corner of the block, and a new brick home for the State Bank was erected.
Mr. Henry J. Lageschulte increased his interest in the bank and became vice-president when
Mr. Plagge withdrew to organize the First Na.tional Bank of Barrington.
A group of Barrington citizens headed by John C. Plagge considered an additional bank
in the community. Plans and organization consequently were perfected in 1918, and on
January 19, 1919 the United States Treasury Department issued a charter to the First
National Bank of Barrington, Illinois, with John C. Plagge as president, George
Lageschulte as vice-president, and Frank C. Pundt as cashier. Capital stock was $25,000.00
and national bank notes were issued by that bank. Mr. Plagge, a pillar of the community,
died June 22, 1936, and Joseph M. Friedlander, treasurer of the Jewel Tea Company, was
made president. Mr. Pundt left the bank, and Mr. Charles Elsner of Chicago was made
cashier.
Occupying at first the corner room in the Plagge Building vacated by the State 108
Bank, they took over the store space in the south portion of the same building in less
than five years. George Lageschulte bought the building from the Plagge estate. In 1927 he
built on a new front and added the building space of the Leroy Powers store recently run
by Phillip A. Hawley. They now own their own building.
Thus Barrington had two banks: the first State on the east side of Cook Street and the
First National on the west side of Cook, both at Park Avenue. The run of bank failures
following the panic of 1929 had escaped Barrington till in January of 1932 when, after a
steady run of withdrawals, the State Bank called in a state examiner on the 28th and was
"closed for adjustment." Frozen assets had been slow in liquidating, and,
although some stockholders were pouring more cash in, the run on the bank continued to a
crisis. A vote of confidence signed by 82 business men was sent to the State Bank
officials. An effort was made by the National Bank and by the depositors to take over the
business. It required 100% of the stockholders. The committee appointed to secure that
consent reported that they lacked the consent of two, so a receiver was appointed.
Depositors were repaid about 95%. The stockholders held the empty bag besides paying the
receiver assessments double their stock held. The real estate was sold to a syndicate
headed by Dr. B.P. Graber.
A tribute by the Barrington Review of February 4, 1932 is worthy of quote: "The
statement as of December 31, 1930 showed total deposits of $721,497.22. The statement of
December 31, 1931 showed deposits of $385,857.09. The fact that the bank could stand the
heavy withdrawals of funds amounting to nearly 60% in slightly less than thirteen months
reflects that that institution was in comparatively good condition and under good
management. The withdrawals were to a great extent the result of unfavorable business
conditions in 1931."
In 1942 the interior of the First National Bank was remodeled to meet the needs of its
growing business. In 1947 a new vault and safety deposit boxes were installed in the
basement. In 1953 the bookkeeping department was moved to the second floor where doctors
had formerly had their offices.
As of June 30, 1934, the assets had grown to over two millions. In December of 1943 to
$4,041,828.15. On May 7, 1954, the capital stock and surplus were raised to half a million
and reserve to $250,000.00 making a capital structure of three quarters of a million
dollars and they declared stock dividends.
Ray Jurs, a local young man who had been in the bank's service for a few years, was
advanced in 1939 to the position of cashier. This responsibility he held for four years.
In 1955 he was elected president of the bank, Carl O. Anderson was elected Executive Vice
President, Russell Paulson was advanced to the position of Vice President and Comptroller.
In 1958 the stairways were changed, an automatic elevator was installed (the second one
in Barrington), the whole banking.floor was rearranged to allow twelve teller windows and
one sidewalk window on Park Avenue for after hour service. The original door at the north
end was brought into use and gave access to the bank by two entrances. In March, 1958, the
deposits were $16,106,538.00. In January, 1962, the resources were in excess of
$24,000,000.00 and its depositors over 17,000.
As evidence of growth, the expansion of business warranted in 1961 the purchase of the
property next door west on Park Avenue, the old Howarth store, later Lipofsky Brothers.
The Continental Hardware sold out, the building torn down, and the First National Bank
with its large addition handsomely extends both ways from the corner on both Cook Street
and Park Avenue.
Trust powers were acquired by the bank January 1, 1959, and on March 1, 1960, the name
was changed to First National Bank and Trust Company.
The First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Barrington was started by a few men
in March of 1934 with a beginning capital of $1,836.00. On May 5, 1937, they were granted
Charter No. 92 as the First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Barrington, Lake
County, Illinois. The first President was Attorney Howard Brintlinger who held that
position for about two and a half years. Arnold Sass was Vice President; Wirt Lawrence was
Secretary; Q.R. Paulson was Treasurer. These four officers together with Earl Schwemm,
Russell Walcott and R.L. Huszagh were the board of directors.
Their first business home was in the Real Estate Office of Wirt Lawrence at 116 East
Main Street for about fourteen years. Their next home was in the Lamey Building at 240
East Main. After three years there, they moved into their own new building at 115 South
Hough Street in 1953.
Arnold Sass, who followed Howard Brintlinger as President, resigned June 30, 1958,
after nineteen years in office. He was followed by Martin H. Schreiber who had previously
been president for one year but withdrew till he recovered his health.
Twenty years after its organization the assets had grown to two and a half million
dollars with over thirteen hundred saving accounts. In 1960 its assets were $6,353,437.00
with 3348 accounts.
There has always been a keen interest in culture, an eagerness for knowledge, among our
Barrington people. The old Literary Society, the Debating Club, both before we had a high
school, and the Chautauqua Circle which studied art, literature and history, and even an
attempt at one time to establish the Barrington Academy evidences the literary craving of
our forebears.
When a desire for the loan and exchange of books got to be frequent, Wm. J. Cammeron's
drug store in what is now the east half of the Ben Franklin Variety store at 133 Park
Avenue became the place to borrow a donated book. That was April 3, 1915. The Barrington
Woman's Club was strongly behind this idea and boosted for books till a room on Cook
Street over George Wagner's market -- formerly the Hank Abbott Drug Store -- was rented
and different women of the Woman's Club took turns on certain days as librarians. Mrs.
R.C. Work and Mrs. Gertrude (John) Schwemm were among the Club's committee who kept its
needs and promotion ever before the public. Later the library moved to 119 E. Main Street
over Ed. Rieke's confectionary store, -- now Marie's Bakery. Olive Dobson took over as
librarian and did an excellent job in the work. To further this essential feature of civic
welfare, several attempts were made to get permission of the voters to levy a small
library tax but did not get it until April of 1924. By a vote of 670 to 285 a tax of one
and one eighth mills through the village budget was allowed, and in 1926 a Library Board
was elected.
Before the voting of the library tax, a stimulus to better library organization was the
initial gift of $1,000.00 left by Mrs. Caroline (George) Ela who died February 28, 1914.
Frank Hecht later gave $1,000.00 in memory of his mother.
In 1933 the library was housed, by the gracious permission of the Village Board, in the
council chamber of the village hall. The trustees moved into a back room of the new
addition.
The Woman's Club deserves credit, more perhaps than our Public offers, for the years of
struggle that they put up to keep buying new books, to keep a librarian, to keep a place
for the library and try to keep some one responsible for building fires and keeping the
place warm and so forth. New books were added as funds could be spared. Many books were
donated from Personal libraries. Good reference works and wholesome fiction has been the
maintained policy of our library. The circulation, after inventory of 1956, was eleven
thousand books.
The space in the village hall was too small for the book stacks alone and but little
space was available there for reading and study. So, by a successful vote in November of
1953, the library board was permitted to purchase a site for a new library. A lot on South
Hough Street at Monument Avenue 125 by 150 feet was purchased from Frank C. Weyer in the
old Hawley pasture. One argument for this site so far from downtown was that with
two-thirds of the library cards in the south half of the village this spot would be midway
of the Hough Street and the Grove Avenue elementary schools. A library tax of four and a
half mills in 1955 and a jubilee parade followed.
A building bond issue for $60,000.00 was authorized on June 5, 1956, by a vote of 279
to 83 and were bought by Scott, Wyandt of Chicago offering a premium of $102.60 and an
interest rate of three and a quarter per cent. In September of that same year ground was
broken and the building, as planned by architect Ralph Stoetzel, was under construction.
Cornerstone laying was on October 14, 1956, and the building was completed in June, 1957.
The beautiful building is of Williamsburg style, of one story on Hough and two story on
the west with two large picture windows in the spacious base- ment reading rooms. The
walls are of waxed elm throughout, with a fine office opposite the main entrance.
On July 2, 1957, the library in the old location in the village hall was closed and all
was moved up the street to their new home. On July 8, it was opened to the public. A
housewarming was held or Sunday, July 21, with a flag presentation by the V.F.W. It was a
credit to the board and all the interested boosters who made the dream a reality. A
beautiful terrace garden in memory of one of its former boosters, Mrs. Nellie Hammond, was
laid at the north end of the building.
Another event in 1898, a great year in our advancement, was the coming of the telephone
to Barrington on a village franchise. The Chicago Telephone Company began its service here
with eight subscribers. The first switchboard was in the Barrington Review office, a small
frame building on North Cook Street where the Northern Light is now. In August of that
same year, 1898, it was moved to the three story Commercial Hotel on East Main Street
where the Strand Dress plant is now. Mr. Linus R. Lines was the proprietor, and operator
of the telephone. Miles T. Lamey's Review office was phone No. 1 and Attorney Clark
McIntosh was phone No. 2. Phones were on the wall and were a brown wooden case with a
stationary mouth piece. To call the operator for a connection to another phone, one had to
grind the bell crank on the right side of the phone box.
In 1903 when Arthur C. Schroeder of Manitowoc was local manager, the switchboard was
moved into premises of their sole use in the small shack which was originally Billy
Hamilton's carpenter shop at the northwest corner of East Main and Ela Streets. It was
close up to the sidewalks in the yard where the Cities Service Gas Station is now. Mr.
George Wilburn, now retired from managerial service, was operator there. That building was
moved in 1940 to 108 Grant Street.
As the growing service demanded more room, they moved to their brick building across
Ela Street to the northeast corner of the same intersection. That building soon had to be
enlarged for rnore switchboards.
In 1923 the Chicago Telephone Company became the Illinois Bell Telephone Co.
In 1940 the Barrington switchboard had 1550 phones, an increase of one hundred in two
years. In 1953 we had 3712 phones here. In that building they had switchboard positions
for thirty-eight operators, and at the height of their service from that building they had
one hundred fifteen operators listed at one time.
Their business office was established at 213 Park Avenue in August, 1946, when more
space away from the exchange building was necessary. Then it was moved to 113 East Main
Street.
In 1956 Manager Robert L. Pearson announced that Barrington was to have a large
building erected at 430 East Main Street to house a new system of dial telephoning and
automatic connections much faster than waiting for operators; that Barrington's exchange
would be DUnkirk, calling DU 1- plus four more figures. Ground was broken by the officials
in January of 1957. A brick building set on deep caissons was completed and the
change-over was made on Sunday, April 20, 1958. An open house followed, which revealed to
the layman the marvels of telephony. The Pacific coast was called and answered in a matter
of seconds without any operator. Still there were twenty-four positions on the switchboard
for some calls. On Tuesday, February 19, 1959, for instance, five thousand toll calls went
through the Barrington office. The building is so constructed that there is still
opportunity for greater expansion.
By April, 1960, all of the eight party lines in the village had been Converted to one
and two party lines. By July of that same year all four party lines in the village were
changed over.
An admirable record at the switchboard was that of Miss Frances Bauman, who retired
after 32 years of service, 28 years of that time in the Barrington exchange and 18 years
as chief operator.
Until 1898, almost every home had its own well and hand pump close by the side door.
Wells were usually hand dug, about 4 feet in diameter, bricked up or lined with field
stone, and varied from twenty odd feet to sixty or more deep around here. Dick Earith and
Jay Palmer were the usual well diggers in the 80's and the 90's till Jay Palmer and his
son Steve went into the business of driving or drilling and piping deeper wells for those
who needed deeper wells and a greater supply than could be gotten from the more shallow
wells, which sometimes depended somewhat on surface seepage and rains for water in them.
It used to be a belief by some that the use of the "witch stick" could locate a
vein of water. A fork of a small branch was cut like a sling shot crotch, and, holding it
by the two fork ends out horizontally a little taut, they walked around thus till they
observed the handle end of the cut twig pointed abruptly downward. Well, they did it, and
they found water at various depths.
Several big fires in the village caused our people to see the need of better and
greater water supplies. There were three public wells down town: one on the north side of
East Main Street west of the C. & N.W. Ry. crossing, which was dug there in front of
Sandman's elevator; one at the southeast corner of Cook on Station Street; and one across
the street from the National Bank about sixty-eight feet north of the Bank Tavern. The one
on Station at Cook had water in it as long as there was water in M.B. McIntosh's frog pond
at the opposite corner of the block at Grove and Lake. The one at Park and Cook was in a
wash from Grove Avenue hill and was used the most. Water troughs for stock and teams were
at all three wells. After the water works came, the flag pole and the band stand were
moved from the Cook-Park well which was filled up and lost in excavating. When Park Avenue
was widened at that point and they were sinking a sewer catch basin, the old well was
discovered much to the mystery of the younger generation. From that well was pumped water
in testing several hand fire pumps -- as related in the chapter on The Fire Department.
Then followed the agitation, to a conviction, that Barrington must have a deep well,
and big pumps to fill a stand pipe reservoir and water mains laid out by an engineer. Old
ordinance No. 65 passed by the village board December 22, 1897, signed by Lyman A. Powers
as a clerk and by Henry Boehmer as president, directed Barrington should proceed in
creating a water works system. A contract was let to Charles H. Patten of Palatine for the
complete works in 1898. A well was bored three hundred feet deep under where the landing
in the village hall now is on Hough Street. Water mains ten inches and smaller were laid
in the streets from the well to the pumps, from the pumps to the big round roofed
reservoir in the back yard and from the reservoir to an open standpipe on the hill south
of town. The pumps were steam operated and engineered by William Hager on the entire first
floor of the village hall. The standpipe was 18 by 50 feet setting on the ground -- not on
legs like some that do not have a natural elevation as we do; and it used to be pumped so
full it ran over and flooded down Hough Street till the neighbors phoned to Bill Hager
that the stand pipe was full. Then a gauge was installed signalling to the pump room when
the float on the water neared the top.
When the water works was completed, a demonstration was given at the flag pole near the
old well, near the old depot. With the pumps going and the standpipe full, it gave a
pressure, the contractor told us, of sixty pounds to the square inch, and the new fire
department shot a stream of water over the top of the flag pole, which was eighty-five
feet high.
The bucket brigades and the wet blankets were now to be a thing of the past.
On October 4, 1920, ordinance No. 77 was passed, signed by John C. Cadwallader as clerk
and August W. Meyer as president of the village board, fixing the rates charged for water,
and requiring that water meters be installed at water users' expense by March 1, 1921.
Minimum use was set at $1.50 per quarter of the year. Prior to this time a flat rate was
charged for each faucet. Rates charged were:
First 5,000 gallons used, $1.50 per quarter
Excess of 5,000 to 10,000 gallons, 25c per each 1,000 gallons
Excess of 10,000 to 20,000 gallons, 20c for each 1,000 gallons
Excess of 20,000 to 30,000 gallons, 15c for each 1,000 gallons
Over 30,000 gallons to be fixed by ordinance or contract.
Later on, the stub ends of the water mains on the side streets were connected with each
other, making U turns, for better service in emergency, which enabled the Chicago Board of
Fire Underwriters to give us a cheaper base rate for fire insurance.
In 1929 a second well three hundred feet deep was drilled on Station Street, the old
round reservoir was taken out because of seepage, the tramp house was moved away, and a
new rectangular reservoir was built on its location on the west line of the village lot.
Some complained there was an odor to the water, so an aerator was constructed to eliminate
it. Turbine pumps in the Wells lift the water through the aerator to the -reservoir.
Centrifugal pumps in the pump house on Station Street pump the water from the reservoir
through the city water mains to the standpipes on the hill. In April, 1954, a new
standpipe of a half a million gallons capacity was erected. It was fed by a new main laid
from Station street midway of the blocks west of Hough Street on easements, south through
Lill Street. Continued residential and industrial growth convinced village officials early
in the 50's that a third well ought to be dug. In June 1963 a site was purchased on Bryant
Avenue in the Northwest section and the preparation of detailed plans was begun.
We have come a long way since the little pact between Wm. Hager and August W. Meyer,
the big store owner. Bill lived where the funeral home is on West Main Street, and August
lived across the street where the Post office is now. Bill had a drilled well and erected
a windmill and tank, and water was piped across the street to August Meyer's house, barn
and lawn. Block 8 had a party plant also. In the rear of John C. Plagge's house on Cook
Street, the residents of the block drilled a well, erected a tank and a pump which
supplied the residents of that block, who were Leroy Powers, Fred Frye, J.C. Plagge, Thos.
Freeman, Fred Hawley, Urial Burlingham and E.W. Townsend.
(As written for that Department's fiftieth anniversary)
Barrington had some big fires in the early days, and certain conditions bid fair for a
much worse one unless the village had more water and some fire fighting equipment. On the
13th of March in 1890 a big fire burning one man to death, started in a hotel on the west
end of the block on North Railroad Street where the Drover Motor Company has been, and
swept east through the frame row of hotels, homes and businesses and stopped only by
tearing down Emil Schaede's 18 foot building ahead of it after futile attempts of the
engine of the midnight train to pull out the William Hill house with a four inch rope.
A few days later the Fred Buck mansion on West Lake Street went up in smoke, and a
great shower of burning shingles dropped their fire brands in a strong southeast wind on
the home of Dick Earith, saved only by blankets on his roof kept wet by a hand bucket
brigade. A fire began in the C.C. Henning's saloon and burned out the rest of the block
through Grebe, Stott, Grunau in 1892 or 1893. When the August W. Meyer store big fire
began in 1898, it swept the entire block with no fire fighting equipment or water to stop
it.
So the village naturally worried about what would happen if a fire began in the two
blocks of all frame buildings on the south side of Main Street. It would clean up the row
from Hough Street to the bank. There was no whistle; and the church bells, especially the
big Zion Church bell, were the only alarm.
Better alarms were the whistle on Gieske's Barrington Steam Laundry, which became
available in 1901, and the whistle on the Bowman Dairy Co. plant on Applebee Street in
1904.
There were three village wells, hand dug. One was at the southwest corner of Cook and
Station Streets which held water till its frog pond feeder at the northwest corner of Lake
and Grove went dry; another was on the north side of East Main just west of the railroad
track near what was Sandman's elevator and later the site of Foreman's saloon; the other
was near the old flag pole at the northeast corner of Park and Cook. Fire equipment
salesmen held public demonstrations down town on a huge kindling pile soaked with
kerosene. The mayor shot a gun to call the men with the pump a block away. It was a two
handled pump on four wheels like Billy Wilmer's speeder. The well went dry and the fire
kept on burning unmolested. A bigger pump was tried later where Triangle Park now is, with
the same failure.
A big mass meeting was called to propose water works. We always felt that Dr. Kendall's
little speech cinched the undertaking. A contract was let to Charles H. Patten of Palatine
and in 1898 we had a well drilled; a standpipe, water mains, hydrants, a reservoir
installed; and a new village hall erected. A try-out with the fire hose shot a stream of
water over the top of the old wooden 85 foot flag pole and we were told the water pressure
was sixty pounds to the square inch -- with both well pumps going (one from the well to
the reservoir and the other from the reservoir to the standpipe.)
A Fire Department was organized June 15, 1898, with thirty-seven volunteers listed. Mr.
Ed. J. Heise of the Creamery was the organizing President. John Brommelkamp was Fire
Marshall, George Stiefenhoefer was Secretary, and Carl Naeher was Treasurer. At the next
meeting they adopted a constitution which was approved by the Village Board, but they
reduced their membership on the charter (it is understood at the Board's request) to
twenty men. Every man was assigned duties, and regular meetings, practices and roll calls
were held with faithful attendance required. For some time each man was paid twenty-five
cents for attendance at each meeting, and they soon began paying each man $2.00 for labor
at a fire. The Secretary was paid $5.00 a year. Oyster suppers and many ball games were
put on for fun as well as to meet expenses. Firemen were sent to State Fire Conventions,
Henry Schroeder being among the first, who brought home a good report of suggestions and
demonstrations at Princeton, Illinois.
At the beginning "there were two hose teams within the company as well as a hook
and ladder company, but the hose teams were soon united. This organization joined the
State Fire Association in 1900, and that association made frequent requests of the Village
Board to pass certain helpful and protective ordinances. It got the Board to pass an
ordinance charging outside fire insurance companies a 2 per cent tax on fire insurance
premiums in Barrington.
The first fire fighting equipment was a two wheeled hose cart, hand drawn, and was
still in usable condition at the time of the Department semi-centennial. Next was a
combination hook and ladder truck and hose reel with coats, hats, boots, axes and pike
poles, pulled either by team, or ropes reeled out for men to pull. Later came the Ford
truck bought in November, 1919.
Then came the handsome Pirsch engine bought July 2, 1926. It added a considerable
force, enough to blow one man completely out of the way when he strenuously objected to
their turning the hose on a fire. That was as effective, probably, as exercising their
prerogative of detaining and arresting anyone hindering work in fire extinction or
refusing to aid when called upon by a fire official. In 1948 that Pirsch was still in use
and the Village's only engine. The Company kept in the engine house two engines belonging
to the Countryside Fire Protective District with proper arrangement for village use.
There was always keen competition for teams of horses to be the first to get to the
engine house on Station Street (where the pump house is now), to haul the hook and ladder
combination truck to the fire. The first team there got $5.00 for its service.
The first hose cart was kept back of the village hall. In 1900 a fire equipment house
was built on Station Street where the new pump house and second well are now. For a time
the engine was kept in the Gold Star building at Station and Park Avenue till the village
hall was remodeled. The old frame fire house was sold and moved away, the steam pumps
taken out of the village hall and two electric Deep Well Turbine pumps put in the new pump
house as well as three booster pumps for service from reservoir to standpipe. The
abandoned space in the village hall was made over into offices and a fire company house,
much to the dismay of the venerable Croquet Club who had used the front yard as a borrowed
time club, but were ousted when it became a driveway for the Fire Department.
Something had to be done about a quicker fire alarm than running from door to door
ringing door bells and shouting "Fire," or ringing church bells, or relying on
the railroad engine blowing a whistle. A two hammered bell was put on the fire house, and
the old school bell was put in the gothic belfry on the village hall.
Although this has been a voluntary company from the start, that is, no standing company
of men at the station, and men are subject to call only, they have had an enviable record
that can not be excelled for promptness of response and speed to a fire (when people are
not too excited to give on the phone the correct location where they live). They have lost
but very few fires and never a home, with the possible exception of one. Some, like the
Mrs. Delilah Jayne home on West Main Street (fire from the basement up through the walls
to the roof) were hard fought but conquered. The Plagge Grain Elevator spontaneous
combustion in July of 1909 was the only complete loss (other than three old hay barns)
because there are no windows or doors accessible to the granary bins of an elevator.
The hardest fought fire we knew of in those days was on the night of February 2, 1907
when the Pomeroy Roller Flour Mill, North Hough and Franklin, caught fire. Flames ran up
four stories on the wooden elevator pipes and were coming out of the west wall when
discovered by night watchman Ed. Magee. People were covered deep in bed on that cold
night, and it seemed like forever to get anyone out or to hear that two-gonged bell. Yet a
very few of us got the truck out, more joining on the way or at the fire till it was put
out with only a $1,800.00 loss. But, it was fourteen degrees below zero, and the nozzle
men, like Wilbur Harnden and Steve Palmer were relieved at the hose because they were so
covered with a solid armor of ice it was difficult to direct the hose. Such were the
hardships that demanded a still better fire protection.
Some of the other fires were: Lageschulte Brothers elevator in 1900; C. & N.W. Ry.
roundhouse twice; Lamey Review building June 5, 1904; Bowman Dairy June 3, 1904; J.F.
Gieske Laundry 1906 and 1907; Dan Lamey store, 1908; V. Hawley Drug Store in the Sodt
Building, January, 1916; Pecak Building, 1926; Jewel Tea Company; Groff Building, Landwer
barn; Public Service Substation; Schwemm's and Nightingale's barns; Locomotive Terminal
Improvement Co. at west end of Lake Street; Granger house on South Grove (two pumps for
three hours); Plagge Greenhouse (three pumps for six hours); the Ed. Blocks building with
Jack Graham's radio business in the Fall of 1952, a complete loss, but complete protection
to the adjoining buildings.
The following were organizing members but, as noted, the number was limited by the
authorities to twenty on the charter although most of them got in later when the count
permitted:
Ed. J. Heise |
Sam Landwer |
John Westphal |
Wilkes Wilmer |
Frank Searles |
Steve J. Palmer |
Hy. S. Meier |
Hy. Brasel |
Wm. Schnetlage |
Wm. Shales |
Geo. Schaefer |
"Dick" Barker |
Aug. F. Miller |
John Brasel |
Arnold Schauble |
Hy. Kirmse |
Frank Gieske |
Hy. A. Landwer |
Chas. Horn |
Frank Plagge |
Ed. Hackmeister |
Fred Meister |
Emil Naeher |
Chas. Hutchinson |
Ed. Blocks |
Nich. Stranger |
Hy. T. Schroeder |
Carl Naeher |
Fred Stott |
Herman Schwemm |
Geo. Elvidge |
Vern Grebe |
Hy. K. Brockway |
Ed. Peters |
Chas. Peterson |
Geo. Stiefenhoefer |
|
Jno. Brommelkamp |
Fire Marshalls
John Brommelkamp |
Chas. H. Miller |
Frank Plagge |
Wilbur Harnden |
Wm. Shales |
Irvin E. Landwer |
Hy. T. Schroeder |
Herb. Homuth |
John Donlea |
Fred Grabenkort |
Hy. S. Meier |
Victor D. Rieke |
Jim McKay |
Harold E. Martens |
Secretaries were: George F. Stiefenhoefer, Henry S. Meier, Wm. B. Shales, Samuel L.
Landwer, Victor D. Rieke, Walter Seaverns, Gotlieb C. Miller, Ed. Meyer, Walter Ahrens,
Harold Martens, Kenneth Grebe.
On January 2, 1940, an ordinance was passed by the Village Board that firemen must be
between the ages of 21 and 35 to join and must retire at 65, or sooner if physically
disqualified.
In 1959, the Department felt the need of a better emergency truck to replace the former
one of 1953 which in its faithful use served 103 oxygen calls and 516 fire calls. A
popular subscription brought more than enough to pay for the new $6,000.00 truck,
including extra equipment. This addition was dedicated July 4, 1959.
This history would be incomplete without mention of the lightning striking the old Zion
Church steeple on the morning of March 20, 1916, in a blinding snow storm. The fire
company was called out and Fred Grabenkort with an axe in his belt climbed that 115 foot
steeple, stood inside of the framework at the top and chopped out the fire. Like all
faithful firemen, he was modest of his good work.
Addenda:
Ordinance No. (old) 69 passed October 1898
creating the Fire Department and authorizing the Board to appoint a Fire Marshall was
signed by Henry Boehmer as President of the Board and by Miles Lamey as Clerk. It gave
strong powers to the Company.
The Fire Department of Barrington was incorporated in July of 1940 with four officers
and an executive committee of three. Negotiations with the Countryside Association began
in May, 1940, and have continued to date with changes of remuneration, and mutual use of
equipment.
This Department belongs to the Illinois Fire Association and sends men to its college
of instruction almost every year. It belongs to the Lake County Association.
Water fights were a source of fun for a number of years. Their annual steak fry was
another item of social pleasure after hard work. Carnivals with the V.F.W. added to the
treasury, which during the war bought war bonds and later grew to an amount ready for new
equipment when needed. Red Cross and First Aid work were taken up during the war.
Better lighting at night was wanted. The old lamp posts had served their purpose as a
leaning post for some and for the faithful kerosene lamps. Mud crossings and board walks
with loose boards and sometimes holes in them -- some walks were up on stilts without
railings -- were precarious at night; and business houses too often were burglarized when
it was too dark for watchman to see what was going on.
An electric system was voted and a franchise granted on June 16, 1897, to Albert E.
Phillbrink, Judson S. Joslyn, Horace E. Shedd and Henry J. Brownell of Elgin trading as
the Chicago Engineering Co. The village board at that time was Henry Boehmer, president,
and Trustees were John Hatje, John Collen, William Grunau, Luke Willmarth, and William
Peters.
Lights were hung across the street at every intersection and a block up longer
stretches. The washing of smoky and easily broken lamp chimneys, filling with messy
kerosene, trimming dirty wicks and the danger of upsetting, all gave way to electric
wiring in the homes. A generator was installed in the new light plant building at the
north end of Harrison Street near the "J" Wye about where the Jefferson Oil yard
now is.
So in 1898 another big stride was made in the modernizing of our village. In that same
year, too, the old wood framed village hall trial sat high up over the calaboose on a
stone foundation was sold and moved up Station Street as a residence. Charles H. Patten
built the present brick building; the addition to the rear for a boardroom being added in
1933.
The old electric light plant had its weaknesses; and light was shut off at eleven
o'clock at night and turned on again in the morning. Later the street lights were left on
till midnight. Late home comers after that hour found it necessary for the night watchman
to trail along, by request, and see that the fair sex got there safely in the dark.
Early one morning when the lights slowly faded out, a hurried call to the light plant
found Emil Naeher lying before the switch board electrocuted. Then Wm. Hager ran the plant
for some time, being elected village engineer by the board at a salary of $40.00 a month.
Carbon arc lights were first installed in the business district, but the arc light did
not hold steady and were soon considered not the right type on the kind of current in that
plant, and were changed to incandescent. Direct current was changed to alternating
current. However, five hundred watt lights were installed on tall cement poles in the
business area February 5, 1931, and were paid for by special assessment on the business
district property.
The electric light system was assigned by the Chicago Engineering Company to Albert L.
Robertson and was so recognized September 22, 1909 by ordinance No. 59 signed by Edw. F.
Kirby as village clerk and Miles T. Lamey as village board president. Then in the next
month, October 6, 1909, Albert Robertson assigned his interest to Edw. B. Lake as the
Northern Illinois Lakes Light and Power Co. After that the local system and plant at the
end of Harrison Street was hooked up with Crystal Lake, it then connected with Waukegan
from whence has come our power for many years.
About this time the systems of Dundee, Algonquin, Crystal Lake, and McHenry were
acquired by the same company, who in 1910 assigned these companies to the North Shore
Electric Company which was taken over by the Public Service Co. of Northern Illinois in
1911. Our substation in Barrington, which was No. 84, was built in 1910 or 1911. This
substation on North Hough Street beyond the L.Y. & E. was established to reduce and
distribute the current for local use. During a bad storm in 1921 the lightning arrester in
this local substation ignited escaping gas, the explanation was, and the brick building
with its equipment was blown up. A well formed pile of brick and rubbish was all that was
left. Light service was cut off. Young Mr. McCready, who was on duty, was killed. Wilbur
Harnden and Wilkes Wilmer had the other tricks on duty there. By daybreak an enormous
transformer was on the ground from Joliet, hauled in on a low slung truck, and electric
service was soon restored through that big transformer in a little wooden shanty. There
was at that time but little if any circuit hook-up with other towns for such emergencies.
Following this catastrophe a mesh work of circuit hook-ups was established over
northeastern Illinois to meet such emergencies.
In November, 1947, the 29th, the Public Service Company held open house for a new
service station built for construction men and equipment just north of their substation.
Martin H. Schreiber came here in 1925 as local manager and later as district manager,
for twenty-eight years, retiring on August 1, 1953 after forty years and two months with
the Public Service Company. He then took over the task of President of our village board.
On the 9th of June in 1905 a franchise was granted to the Northwest Gas Light &
Coke Co. to enter Barrington from Niles with gas mains. What a blessing to every kitchen
and the cooks therein. They assigned it in 1913 to the Public Service Company of Northern
Illinois, one of Samuel Insull's companies. The gas and electric service were under one
company and on one bill till February 1, 1954, when the State of Illinois required a
separation, and the gas part of the Public Service Company of Northern Illinois became The
Northern Illinois Gas Company, with office at Aurora, Illinois. Natural gas was turned
into our artificial gas on November 13, 1931. Until that time our gas was 535 BTU. In 1932
after the addition of natural gas the BTU was 800. In 1947 it was stepped up to 1000 BTU.
No more was the old wood stove to be a kitchen necessity for cooking. With the advent
of the furnace for heating the home, cooking over a hot wood fire in the summer gave way
to gasoline cook stoves, and that in turn gave way to the carefree labor saving gas. The
days of ashes, soot, blackening the kitchen stove, or the coal base burner and the dust of
coal-binfilling was to be delegated to antiquity for those who used gas or oil. Irregular
cold and heat -- roast near the fire or freeze in the corner -- were gone. The reservoir
at the back of the wood stove for hot water was gone along with the task of the poor boy
who had to fill it so frequently, for the gas heating hot water tank took its place. Now,
with the coming of comforts of electricity, water pressure and better heat, one could
forget the bath in a wash tub and bathe in a warm bath room with a bright electric light,
plenty of warm steady heat, and hot or cold soft water. Just set the thermostat at night
and get up in the morning in a comfortable house. This generation does not know what it
was to get up on a very cold frosty morning and start a fire and freeze till it heated up.
Before Barrington had a sewer system, its only drainage was the creeks and natural
slopes toward lower places, the Kilgobbin Creek has its source in the area & around
Hillside Avenue between Cook and Dundee Avenue, more especially in what was known in the
days before 1950 as Hawley's pasture (Monument to Hillside and Hough to Dundee Avenue). It
flowed north down what is now Lill Street to Main Street, and then catered northwest to
"Spile Creek" south of the C. & N.W. Ry. beyond the "J" tower.
The southeast part of the village drained into a slough which is now part playground,
and part parking lot north of East Russell at the end of Lincoln Avenue. It was drained by
"Billie's Ditch" (named for its owner William Collen) into a creek under the
railway track near Spring Street, past the northeast corner of the Mrs. Purcell home
(southwest corner of Spring and Main), under the old telephone company exchange building
(northeast corner of Ela and Main), then through Henry Gieske's yard (northeast corner of
Cook and Franklin), across Block O and west on Liberty Street under the "J"
track into the "Spile Creek" north of the C. & N.W. Ry., south of the
Northside Park.
The "Spile Creek" had its source in McClure's slough which was that low area
east and northeast of the Jewel Tea Company plant, and runs west through Jewel Park, north
of the Barco plant and southwestward under the E.J. & E. And under the C. & N.W.
west of the tower, past the village treatment plant, westward and northwestward into Flint
Creek, which was named for Amos Flint who was the first white settler in Cuba Township.
From that junction, Flint Creek flows northward on its last stretch into the Fox River.
Amos Flint's house was at the junction of Flint Creek and the Fox River and was still
remembered after Flint's death by some of the old timers.
But the creeks as sanitary drainage sometimes caused an unhealthy seepage into wells
and were poor water for children to play in. Also, every home had an outdoor toilet which
could not be disposed of until we had water works to operate indoor toilets. That called
for a properly tiled sewer system.
Scarlet fever and other epidemics were common, typhoid fever was a terror and took all
too many lives and crippled many more. The only remedy was a complete sewer system. A sand
filter was made in 1908 at a point in the "Spile Creek" below the junction with
the Kilgobbin Creek at the north end of Hager Street, south of the track. This caught some
of the sewage, but during a good rain when the creek was higher and ran faster, the sand
filter beds were of little or no avail. But only parts of the village were served by that
sand filter.
In 1926 a combined sewer system for sanitary and storm water in one line of drainage
was constructed at a cost of $325,000.00, (ordinance No. 88, June 15, 1925). An Imhoff
plant with rock filter beds was installed in place of the sand filter, but was declared
obsolete when the plant was enlarged in 1935 and 1936. But storm water from hard rains and
roof draining into the filter beds at the treatment plant caused an overflow down Flint
Creek.
The sludge was polluting the stream west of town through the country estates. The
condition was bad and anything but pleasant on a warm or humid day as it flowed through
the green lawn yards of those newcomers west of town. Yards which they had tried to
beautify and landscape only to find a sewer of untreated discharge was invading their
premises. True, they bought their places under those conditions, but the Illinois law says
that no natural streams of water shall be polluted.
The complaints of those property owners to the village did not get satisfactory
results, so a suit was brought in the upper court and a decision was handed down by Judge
Shurtleff on May 21, 1931 that Barrington must abate the nuisance and correct the cause.
It is obvious that a dual system was the wrong type.
The sanitary sewer occupied the center of the street in most places, and was covered
with a heavy cement pavement. In 1935 and 1936 a separate storm sewer system was installed
at an additional cost of $388,000.00, and was in operation July 1, 1936. Where a sewer
line was already down in the center of the street it was left there to be the sanitary
sewer and a storm drain was layed along the curbs or under sidewalks -- removed and
renewed -- and ran down the creek beyond the village and beyond the filter beds at the
treatment plant.
The village treatment plant was enlarged to a capacity for 5,000 persons. The affluent
was tiled all the way to Flint Creek north of the Northwestern Railway several miles
beyond Barrington. Analysis of the discharge is now at a very high rate of purification. A
usage charge of $15.00 a year began at that time.
Summit Street, south of Hillside, was given advantage of the sewer system with an
extension of the service and was tiled across the Northwestern tracks at Prairie Avenue.
In 1956 the area east and north of the Northwest Highway and south of Main Street east to
the village limits was provided with sewers installed by the Cassidy Construction Company
at a saving of $27,000.00 less than the Special Assessment No. 709. The recommendation of
the Judge allowing the rebate was pleasantly received. In 1958 the northwest corner of the
village was tiled out southwest across the track to the village treatment plant.
The village of Barrington voted more than two to one in November of 1956 against a
movement by the Metropolitan Sanitary District to extend its boundaries over this end of
Cook County and included Barrington. They took us in, regardless of that referendum that
definitely said "No", and action was begun for disconnection. Arguments for such
action were based on the fact that we had a complete drainage system of our own and that
lying in the Fox River Valley over a ridge away from the Chicago area drainage, we drain
into the Fox River. Then too, the village lays only half in Cook County and the other half
in Lake County, which would give only half of the village drainage system to the Cook
County system control, and the Lake County half would be holding the bag for the other
half, and the septic treatment plant and outlet. On October 17, 1957 it took County Judge
Otto Kerner only a few minutes to grant the petition and set the Village of Barrington
free from connection or obligation to the Metropolitan Sanitary District.
No account of our sewer system would be complete without mention of the good work of
John H.D. Blanke, who is a civil engineer and was, and is, chairman of the committee of
sewage and water. At the time of construction, John was everywhere and into everything
pertaining to the villages undertaking of a good sewage system. He knew what the village
engineers advised and what the blue prints called for. He knew what the contractors should
do. He knew from training and common sense what must be done. He was down into many a
catch basin being built. At one time, with only a flashlight, he crawled on his hands and
knees more than a block and a half through the sewer line on Hough Street from Main Street
south checking the inlets joints and so forth. John was fearlessly outspoken in his
objection to ideas or propositions at times at board meetings, but his adverse opinions
were founded on practical knowledge or an engineer's trained feeling that it was not for
the public good, which often created disappointment, not to mention wonderment but at
election he always was a winner.
In 1958 a new and bigger machine to rod out the village sewer mains down the tree-lined
streets was purchased. Tree roots infested the sewer mains down the streets and clogged
the flow of water, or sewers would otherwise back up.
When the backfill was in the trenches made by the new sewer system, the streets of the
village were in a terrible condition. The old time ditch bordered street of dirt or gravel
or both, was dusty in dry weather before the sewer digging. So the residents sprinkled the
roads in front of their homes to prevent clouds of flying dirt, till the village oiled the
roads. Then, with every street having been dug up so deeply, and there being no bottom or
solid bed of gravel, traffic was almost impossible with deep soft holes in so many places.
The only remedy was a solid pavement. Some villages had narrower pavement than others.
While the narrower would cost a bit less, they would not permit two cars to pass each
other in our long blocks where cars were parked along both sides of the street. Many of us
asked for 32-foot width to grant that ability. Some streets were paved 28 feet, some 30
feet and some 32 feet.
Dundee Avenue and Main Street to the Northwest Highway were our first paved streets and
were layed by the state in 1922. East Main Street was a part of Route 19 which came
through the village from the Highway down East Main, North Railroad and out Cook Street
north before the Northwest Highway was farther built and routed around Barrington on the
east and north.
The rest of the village was paved in 1927 and 1928 and paid for in twenty year bonds.
Barrington is hilly, and there were worse hills and hollows then than now. But pavements
were often put below or above grade, or shifted to one side to accommodate natural
conditions thus avoiding putting some home in a damaged situation again. Hough Street was
taken over in 1928 by the State of Illinois as an arterial highway.
In 1958, Park Avenue and Lake Street were given a coat of blacktop. North Hough Street
in 1959 and a block of Franklin from Cook to Hough, after it was widened, were given the
same treatment, adding much to driving comfort.
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