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Rugged
terrain becomes site of new University, community
The
land now occupied by Northwestern University and the City of Evanston
was the site of unincorporated farms and swampland 150 years ago.
That lightly populated rugged terrain became home to a new university
and new municipality, thanks to the vision of Northwestern's founders
who played a dual role as University leaders and community developers.
The founders purchased the first land for the University in 1853, two
years after the State of Illinois granted a charter to establish Northwestern
to serve the Northwest Territory.
They first selected 379 acres of lakefront property known as the Foster
Farm. The Foster property extended from roughly Lincoln Street on the
north to Dempster Street on the south.
The second land purchase a year later was the Billings Farm, extending
along the south side of Central Street, from Sherman Avenue west to about
Asbury Avenue.
In 1854, Philo Judson, Northwestern's business manager, surveyed and
platted the lands, using the name "Evanston" in honor of founder John
Evans for the new community. The Illinois Legislature changed the name
of the community from Ridgeville to Evanston in 1857 and the city was
incorporated in 1863.
The Robinson Farm was purchased in 1855, extending Northwestern's holdings
west along Noyes Street, from about Orrington Avenue to west of Asbury.
The Snyder Farm, located between Dempster and Greenleaf and the lake
and Chicago Avenue, was bought in 1865. Founder Orrington Lunt in 1867donated
property in northwest Evanston, now the site of Ryan Field and athletic
facilities.
The establishment of Northwestern University and the development of a
community began to attract more people to the area. By 1860, 831 people
lived in Evanston, most of them affiliated with the University. By 1870,
Evanston had 3,062 residents.
The founders sold and donated land to create a model community - beginning
what became the University's long-standing policy of returning non-educational
properties to the tax rolls.
The University surveyed, laid out streets, platted, cleared and graded
the land that became the heart of Evanston, including the central business
district, and began a massive drainage project to expedite development.
Northwestern donated almost all of the land for the first streets and
alleys. It sold or donated land for the city waterworks, public schools
and parks.
Northwestern also donated or made land available at nominal rent to religious
denominations, including Presbyterians, Congregationalists, Baptists,
Episcopalians, Methodists, Swedish Methodists, Free Methodists and the
African Methodist Episcopal Church. It also assisted other educational
institutions in locating here, including Garrett-Evangelical Theological
Seminary, Seabury-Western Theological Seminary, National College of Education,
Kendall College and Roycemore School.
The University continued its policy of selling land not used for educational
purposes a century after its founding. It went to court in 1972 to win
permission to sell property donated by John Evans, and in 1976 the Board
of Trustees reaffirmed a policy of divestiture of commercial real estate.
The sale of properties has reduced the total Northwestern University
land holdings to 242.8 acres, far less than its original 680 acres and
the maximum 2,000 acres authorized by the State of Illinois. The holdings
account for about 4.5 percent of all the land in the City of Evanston.
Of the total 242.8 acres, 10.4 acres is leased to other nonprofit institutions
-- Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary, Seabury-Western Theological
Seminary, Roycemore School and the Evanston Historical Society; 1.8 acres
is income-producing property; and 84 acres was created as a lakefill project
at Northwestern's own expense in 1964.
As Northwestern reduced its early land holdings - eventually retaining
only 158 acres of the original 680 -- the City of Evanston grew. It absorbed
the Village of North Evanston and the Village of South Evanston and annexed
other property.
The 19th century farms and swampland - at first home only to a fledgling
institution of higher learning -- gave way to a new community that grew
to 8.5 square miles and a population of more than 73,000.
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