Blackstone, Illinois
Blackstone is located in Illinois
Blackstone
Blackstone
Blackstone is located in the United States
Blackstone
Blackstone
Coordinates: 41°05′04″N 88°41′27″W / 41.08444°N 88.69083°W / 41.08444; -88.69083
CountryUnited States
StateIllinois
CountyLivingston
TownshipSunbury
Elevation735 ft (224 m)
Time zoneUTC-6 (Central (CST))
  Summer (DST)UTC-5 (CDT)
ZIP code
61313
Area codes815 & 779
GNIS feature ID404529[1]

Blackstone is an unincorporated village in section 7 of Sunbury Township, Livingston County, Illinois, United States. Blackstone is 10 miles (16 km) southeast of Streator and 13 miles (21 km) west of Dwight, Illinois. Blackstone has a post office with ZIP code 61313, a grainery complex, and a small rubber-products plant[2]

History

The town was named after 19th-century railroad executive Timothy Blackstone, then president of the Alton Railroad.[3] A post office was established in 1870.[4]

Blackstone was situated on the western extension of the Chicago & Alton Railroad, nearly midway between the cities of Streator and Dwight. The land where the town was located originally belonged to R. B. Hamilton. About the time that the line of the railroad was completed, the land was purchased by William Shepard of Jersey County, Illinois. He commissioned A. C. Huetson to lay out the town which he completed on January 6, 1870. The original plat consisted of eighty acres.[5]

The first house within the limits of the town had been built by R. B. Hamilton prior to the arrival of the town and the railroad. Shortly after the survey was completed, Frank McIntosh built a general merchandise store and R. B. Hamilton erected a warehouse for storing grain. By 1878, the warehouse was idle, the business having been absorbed by the Kent Brothers who had built a grain elevator.[6]

Once Blackstone was established, the post office of Sunbury Township was moved to the town. Charles A. Holton was Blackstone's first Postmaster. Early settlers in Blackstone included J. L. Colier, Enoch Sherick, R. D. Gregg, J. T. Trainor and J. A. Fout. Colier was a blacksmith. Fout was a carpenter who built many of the early houses in Blackstone.[7]

In the early years of Blackstone, there were no organized churches. Sunday services of several denominations were held by turns in the two room schoolhouse on the north side of the village. The United Methodist Church in Blackstone was built in 1879 at the cost of $5,000.00. St. Bernard Catholic Church was located four miles east of Blackstone and began service in 1880. The first church was a frame wood building. The brick church was later built in 1895 at a cost of $7,000.00.[8]

Notes

  1. 1 2 U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Blackstone, Illinois
  2. ZIP Code Lookup Archived 2011-06-15 at the Wayback Machine
  3. Historical Encyclopedia of Illinois and History of Livingston County, 1909, p. 830
  4. Callary, Edward (2009). Place Names of Illinois. University of Illinois. ISBN 9780252090707.
  5. The History of Livingston County, Illinois, 1878, pp. 561-562
  6. The History of Livingston County, Illinois, 1878, pp. 561-562
  7. The History of Livingston County, Illinois, 1878, pp. 561-562
  8. A History of Livingston County, Illinois, 1991, pp. 14-15

References

  • Historical Encyclopedia of Illinois and History of Livingston County, Edited by Newton Bateman, Paul Selby, Christopher C. Strawn, Fordyce B. Johnson and George H. Franzen; Munsell Publishing Company, Chicago, 1909
  • The History of Livingston County, Illinois, Illustrated; Published by Wm. Le Baron, Jr. & Co., Chicago, 1878
  • A History of Livingston County, Illinois; Compiled by the Livingston County History Project; Printed and Published by Curtis Media Corporation, 1991
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.