Davlin's Corners (the History of Tower Lakes)
The land just
east of the Fox River, which now is the Village of Tower Lakes, was covered by
glaciers during the last ice age until just 11-12 thousand years ago. Soon after
the ice retreated, the area began to be used as prime hunting land by the first of
many tribes of Native American
Indians.
The first people here hunted the woolly Mastodons that roamed Lake County until 8,000
years ago. They were followed by Archaic Indians who made stone tools, and
Woodland Indians who were the first farmers in Illinois. Remnants of these
ancient cultures have been found along Kelsey Rd. near River Rd. and near Rt.
22. The 11,000 year old artifacts excavated in 1994 & 1996 on the McGraw
farm, just west of the Tower Lakes border, are the earliest known evidence of
humans in Lake County. In the last 1000 years, several successive Indian groups made this area
their home. The most recent of these tribes were
the Potawatomi in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.
The Prairie Band of Potawatomi farmed corn and other crops in the summer and hunted buffalo in the fall and
other
game in winter. Their homes were rectangular or oval with bark covered
dome-shaped roofs. In the 1833 Treaty of
Chicago, following the end of the Blackhawk War, the Potawatomi and other Indian
nations ceded all Northern Illinois land between Lake Michigan and the Winnebago River (Rockford)
to the United States. They began to move on to Kansas via Missouri and Iowa.
Some migrated to Wisconsin as well. (See also Part 1 of
A
History of Barrington).
The
first permanent European-American settler in Cuba Township was Amos Flint, who
built a cabin in 1834 near the present corner of Kelsey and River Roads, and for whom
Flint Creek is named. The area was part of Cook County from 1831 to 1836, then
McHenry County from 1836 to 1839. In 1839 McHenry was divided in half and Lake
County was formed. US surveys were completed in 1840 and land sales to settlers
began. Records of the Bureau of Land Management show that settlers bought land
in the area during the 1840's for $1.25 an acre from the U.S. Land Office. By
the mid 1800's most of the land which was to become Tower Lakes was occupied by
three of these hardy pioneer farm families whose members played influential
roles in the development of the villages of Wauconda and Barrington.
Hugh Davlin was one of the first pioneer settlers in Cuba Township. He and
his family arrived from Troy, New York around 1836. Although there were no roads
then, he chose land at the intersection of two main Indian trails. Like the
other settlers, he had to wait until after 1840 to formally process his
purchase. He bought the 80 acres surrounding his log cabin from the U.S.
government in 1845 for $100 and soon added an additional adjacent 240 acres. His son
Charles expanded it further, to what was described as the largest farm in Cuba Township by the time of his death in 1915. The second Davlin farmhouse, believed
built in 1865-9, still stands today at 108 East Tower Dr. A one-room school, the
Davlin School, was built around 1857 just north
of the farmhouse. The trails became roads, and the intersection by the school
and the Davlin farm (now Barrington Rd & Indian Trail Rd) became known as Davlin's Corners.
Another Irish immigrant, John
Murray, arrived in the 1830's and bought 80 acres of government land west of the
Davlins. They expanded and eventually had a farmhouse near the site of the current dam. His son Dennis
fought in the Civil War along with one of the Davlin sons.
John Lewis Brooks, a
Baptist minister who first came to Cuba Township in 1837, bought a 120 acre farm
in 1857 in the area now containing North Lake and North Lake Shore Dr. Elder
Brooks, as he was known, was
the first pastor in 1847 at the Old South Barrington Church on Penny Rd. at
Barrington Rd. He later helped build a Baptist church in Wauconda in 1856, now the
Federated Church. His son Eugene W. Brooks became the mayor of Wauconda
(1903-06), as did Hugh Davlin's great-grandson Charles E. (1953-7). A daughter,
Florence, and her husband William Paddock lived on the Brooks farm and
eventually owned it.
There were no lakes here in the 1800's. The farms prospered, especially
after the Chicago and North Western railroad was completed through
Barrington
in 1854. Barrington grew as a center of local commerce and became incorporated
in 1865. Wauconda incorporated in 1877 and became a dairy center and summer
resort. Davlin's Corners, being on the road between the two nearby villages, was
convenient to both. A blacksmith shop, operated by Brandy Walker, existed at Davlin's Corners
in the late 1860's. The stagecoach carrying mail between Barrington and Wauconda
passed through Davlin's Corners and along present-day Gateway Dr. from 1854 to
1913, when it was replaced by the Palatine, Lake Zurich & Wauconda Railroad.
In the summer of 1924, 70 acres of the Brooks/Paddock farm was sold to a
partnership called D&B (Myron H. Detrick &
William E. Brooks). Myron H.
Detrick was a Chicago industrialist & inventor who was also president of the
Palatine, Lake Zurich & Wauconda Railroad (1920-1930). He owned a farm near
Slocum Lake, just north of Tower Lakes. Detrick's partner
and farm neighbor, William
E. Brooks, was a farmer who went into real estate development and later became
known for the Williams Park subdivision built on his family farm at Slocum Lake.
Brooks was also a director of the PLZ&W Railroad. William E. Brooks' father and
sister had once owned a parcel next to the Paddock farm and they may have been
distant relatives of Florence Brooks Paddock. This partnership had the idea
of creating a lake, with the help of Vincent Davlin and his son Charles, by
building earthen dams between two pairs of hills along Mud Creek, which ran
through the three farms. The first was where the large suspension bridge linking the
east and west sides of the main lake now stands, and later one was added where the present
dam is. Detrick & Brooks
subdivided the Paddock farm into small lots, hired
Fred Watson, the railroad's Wauconda station manager, as sales agent and
began to sell summer cottages by the new lake. They hoped this resort
development, which they named Tower Lake
Park, would generate traffic for their
failing railroad. They built a 68 ft. steel observation tower atop the highest
hill on the west shore, planning to eventually extend it to 100 ft. It offered a
good view of the Fox River and gave rise to the name of the lake. The front page
feature story of the June 26, 1924 Wauconda Leader called Tower Lake Park
"one of the most beautiful spots in northern Illinois".
In December
1924, the one-room Davlin School burned. It
was rebuilt of red brick in 1925 and renamed the Tower Lakes School. It operated
until 1947 and is now a private home at 410 N. Rt. 59.
In
1925, Tower Lakes became the
center of a promotional plan by nationally prominent radio evangelist Paul
Rader, who started using the land as a revival camp grounds for his
Chicago Gospel Tabernacle religious group. In May 1925, he purchased the 70 acre
D&B Tower Lake Park property, plus much of the Davlin farm (the portion west
of Barrington Rd), the remaining 50 acres of the Paddock farm, the entire Murray farm and a
small part of the Gus Sick farm, for a total of 367 acres, including all of the
lake. Followers of Rader filled the grounds on summer
weekends in 1925. An estimated 2000 attended the Memorial Day
picnic. The plans
called for a 5000 seat tabernacle, hundreds of summer cottages, a radio station
and a welcoming beacon light atop the 68 foot high namesake steel tower.
As
it happened, these plans were not completed except a few summer cottages. Instead, a businessman - lawyer named Nazareth Barsumian
discovered the area. Born in 1883 at Aintab, near Antioch, Armenia, Mr.
Barsumian had developed a love of nature and outdoor living as a youth in his
native Armenia. After graduation from American College at Aintab, Mr. Barsumian
migrated to the United States in 1902 and settled in Baltimore. He attended
Johns Hopkins University and in the spring of 1905 moved to Evanston, Illinois.
He graduated from John Marshall Law School, carried on an oriental rug business,
and subsequently, real estate.
Mr. Barsumian first saw Tower Lakes in the fall of 1925. It did
not take much more than one look to convince him of its potential. A group of
Evanston partners, led by Barsumian, purchased the land from Rev. Rader,
planning to convert Tower Lakes into a residential subdivision. In the spring of
1926 he took over active management of the development, now called Tower Lakes
Estates. He was assisted by Alfred W. Bays, Northwestern University law
professor, for whom a street and park are named. A subdivision plat was laid
out for the former Davlin land east of the lake in 1926 and lot sales and more
cottage construction began.
Development proceeded slowly but in an orderly pattern. In 1927 the present
dam near the southwest corner of Tower Lakes was constructed, replacing the
simpler dam there. This deepened the beautiful south section of the main lake
and brought the total lake acreage to 66. A Texaco? filling station
and a Tea Room existed at Barrington Rd. & Indian Trail Rd. in the 1930's.
Growth
proceeded to the point that a governing agency was needed and the Tower
Lakes Improvement Association (TLIA) was formed in August 1930 and chartered
by the State on February 27, 1931. Harriet W. Graham was elected the 1st TLIA
president. Around 1939 another dam was constructed on
farmland north of the main lake and the 6.5 acre North Lake was formed. By this
time, nothing but ruins remained of the steel tower, which once
stood along Summit Drive at the development's
highest point. By Sept. 1940, there were 30 families in year-round residence and
53 others with summer or weekend homes. In the 1940's and 50's, the move to convert
summer cottages to year-round use accelerated. In 1941, subdivision plats were recorded
for undeveloped lands in the North Lake and Summit Dr.-Scenic Dr. areas. Mr.
Barsumian deeded the lakes, shorelines and park lands to the Tower Lakes
Improvement Association in 1938, 1946, 1959 and 1960.
Mr. Barsumian died in 1963. His son Edward Barsumian (estate trustee), Mr.
Howard A. McKee (successor trustee), wife Rose Barsumian and Mr. Khoren
Hussissian, completed the development of the remaining undeveloped lands in the
original 400 acre Tower Lakes Estates area. These lands were owned by the
Nazareth Barsumian Estate, Mrs. Barsumian, and the Tower Lakes Foundation, a
charitable organization founded by Mr. Barsumian in 1954, chiefly to aid
education.
In the 1960's, neighboring villages were rapidly expanding their territory.
TLIA leaders concluded that incorporation was the best avenue to protect their
interests, particularly to provide more options to fund road improvements and
control building and zoning. On September 12, 1966, another cherished goal of Mr. Barsumian was realized
when Tower Lakes residents voted to incorporate as a Village. TLIA President
Cyril C. Wagner was elected the 1st Village President, a post he held for 13
years. Subdivision
development and annexation brought additional areas into the community over the
next 30 years, including South
Hills, Marian Hills,
West Hills,
Fenview
Estates, Country Club
Estates and Tower Trails.
The latter two subdivisions are on former Davlin farmland east of IL Rt. 59/Barrington
Rd. Other parcels
were added to square off Village boundaries. The additional areas continued to
match the original plan of the community for open space preservation and
recreational use. The Barsumian successors donated over 30 acres of additional
open space to TLIA and to the Village in 1969.
From it's inception in 1966 until 1991, Village government operations and records,
including the Police Dept, were run out of the homes of the various officials.
Meetings were held at the former Gooch/Baird & Warner real estate office on
Rt. 59, a building which had served in earlier decades as Mr. Barsumian's
community administration building. In 1991, the Village obtained temporary
storage and meeting space in the neighboring village of Lake Barrington at their
former Park District building on Kelsey Rd. In March 1992, the Village leased
office space in
the Market Place shopping center in Lake Barrington. In 1995,
the Village purchased the Baird & Warner real estate office at 400 N. Rt. 59
in the center of Tower Lakes, establishing the first permanent Village
Office and Police Station. The community's focal point had returned to
"Davlin's Corners" though at the same time it's only remaining commercial place of
business closed.
In 1995, the Village entered the utility business by purchasing the Tower
Lakes Water Company's assets from private owners. Residents approved a bond
issue to fund a series of upgrades to the water
delivery system.
History
of Village Officials
Virtual Museum (follow these links to tour our on-line
"museum")