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He first came to Illinois in 1806 in company with William McKendree, to look at the country, and, being highly pleased with it, resolved to make it his future field of labor.
He was a soldier in the war of 1812 and one of the heroes of the battle of Plattsburgh.
French Canadian fur trader Vetal Vermette, who stopped in the region briefly in 1823, returned later in the decade and established squatter's rights to the land.
In 1826, Jesse Walker, a Methodist preacher from Virginia, established an Indian mission in a forest south of present-day Plainfield.
In 1828 Walkers Grove was established by preacher Jessie Walker and family.
His first claim for land was made in 1828 and his cabin was erected the spring following.
James Walker, a son-in-law of Father Jesse Walker, was from Tennessee, who first located at Ottawa, but came to Walker’s Grove with his father-in-law in 1829.
In 1829 he had charge of the Desplaines mission and formed the first class at Walker’s Grove.
Jonathan Hagar was born in the city of Quebec and when ten years of age his parents removed to Vermont, where he resided until 1829, when he came west and settled in Michigan.
Thomas Covel came there from Ohio in 1830, and made a claim near the present village of Plainfield, remaining sometime, when he sold out and went elsewhere to find a home.
The first marriage was that of James Turner and Miss Watkins, in 1831, Rev.
The first post office opened in 1833, and the town became a stop on the stagecoach line between Chicago and Ottawa.
W. W. Wattles came there from Chicago in 1833 and bought out Timothy B. Clark, but some years later sold out and removed up north of Chicago.
In 1834 the Village of Plainfield was established.
In 1834, the southern portion of “Plainfield,” consisting of 13 blocks, was laid out by Chester Ingersoll and predated the creation of Will County.
He settled in the township in 1834 and remained there several years, but finally sold out and went to Racine, Wisconsin.
Metcalf came in 1835, entered a claim, but soon after sold out and went away.
The first resident physician was Doctor Charles V. Dyer, who came there in 1835.
In 1835, however, things were changed somewhat, and a postoffice was established in Juliet and Doctor Bowen appointed postmaster.
In fact, it was near the year 1836 that it began to be called Plainfield.
In the fall of 1836 the first church building was erected at a cost of $2,500.
The site of the congregational church is a part of Levi Arnold’s land addition to Plainfield (the southeast quarter of section 9). Daniel Chapman, a farmer and teacher from New York, enrolled as a congregationalist at Oberlin and was ordained in 1842.
Clarke died at his son’s, the late Barrett B. Clarke, in Dupage township, in 1848.
There he improved a large farm, but sold it and went to California in 1849.
Adah Royce sold a half-acre parcel to the Trustees of the Congregational Church where construction of the church began in 1850.
The township was organized in 1850, under the general law for the organization of townships, and Leander Hamlin was elected the first supervisor.
Another road of the 1851 era, the Oswego-Indiana Plank Road, was established through the heart of Plainfield’s business district.
One of the first great enterprises in the county was the building of the Oswego & Northern Indiana plank road, in 1851.
In 1867, the Masonic Lodge was established in Plainfield and by the later part of the 19th century they were looking for a new home.
The Universalists built their church in 1868 at an expense of $6,000.
In April 1869, both the northern and southern parts of the village were again incorporated.
However, in 1869, it was moved, due to transportation problems, to Naperville and renamed North Central College.
The following year he removed to Joliet and there was his home until his death in 1869.
Then on June 30, 1877 all portions were incorporated under the general law of the State.
The EJ&E Railroad (Elgin, Joliet, & Eastern Railway) was operational in 1886 and provided freight service and grain transportation for the thriving agricultural community.
1888 and has elements of the Queen Anne and Shingle styles.
1889 The home was originally constructed circa 1889 and was the first residence built within Hall’s Subdivision and served as the final residence for Wallace Peter and Carrie Hall.
It is a Queen Anne style residence constructed in 1890.
1897 and is an Eclectic Queen Anne.
The structure was begun in 1897 but was not completed until the following year due to the untimely death of Mr.
The house was constructed circa 1903 and this two story residence exhibits many of the distinctive features of an American Queen Anne style, including an asymmetrical facade with a dominant front-facing gable and an eclectic variety of windows.
Electric Park opened to tremendous fanfare in 1905.
Plainfield’s main thoroughfare, Lockport Street, was chosen as the route of the Lincoln Highway, which began in 1913.
Clinton Hartong, a Plainfield native who managed the local lumberyard, built it in 1924.
Plainfield was served by the Joliet, Plainfield & Aurora Bus Line, which began in 1924.
By 1960, Plainfield had grown, attracting many new residents, businesses and industries.
The local park district was established in November 1966.
In 1976, the village celebrated its bicentennial, and a new village hall and police station were constructed along with other improvements throughout the village.
14907 S. (803 N.) Bartlett Avenue was designated in Fall 2007 as the Village's fourth landmark, and it was the first property in the East Side Historic District with landmark status.
Posted by Will County ILGenWeb | Mar 23, 2015 | History | 0 |
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