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Lexington, Illinois

Lexington is a city in McLean County, Illinois, United States. The population was 2,090 at the 2020 census. There are two theories regarding the etymology of the city name. One says it was named for the Battle of Lexington, where General Gridley's father fought.[3] and the other that it was named for the home town of James Brown, the town's co-founder.[4]

Lexington
Location of Lexington in McLean County, Illinois.
Location of Illinois in the United States
Coordinates: 40°38′49″N 88°47′03″W / 40.64694°N 88.78417°W / 40.64694; -88.78417[1]
CountryUnited States
StateIllinois
CountyMcLean
TownshipsLexington, Money Creek
Government
 • MayorSpencer Johansen
Area
 • Total2.05 sq mi (5.30 km2)
 • Land2.05 sq mi (5.30 km2)
 • Water0.00 sq mi (0.00 km2)
Elevation748 ft (228 m)
Population
 (2020)
 • Total2,090
 • Density1,021.01/sq mi (394.20/km2)
Time zoneUTC-6 (CST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC-5 (CDT)
ZIP Code(s)
61753
Area code309
FIPS code17-43094
GNIS ID2395695[1]
Wikimedia CommonsLexington, Illinois
Websitewww.lexingtonillinois.org

History edit

Origin and original town design edit

Lexington was laid out on 4 January 1836 by Asahel Gridley (1810–1881) and James Brown (c. 1802- ?). Gridley was a lawyer and banker from Bloomington who would eventually become the richest man in McLean County; Brown was born in Lexington, Kentucky, and Lexington, Illinois, seems to have been his only attempt at founding a town.[5] Its founding was part of a great real estate boom that swept across the nation. Within a few months of the founding of the town seven other new towns were laid out in McLean County: Concord (now Danvers), Hudson, Le Roy, Livingston, Lytleville, Mt. Hope and Wilksborough. In common with other towns founded during the 1836 boom, and unlike many later towns, Lexington was designed around a central public square with streets running true north-south and east-west.[6] In the case of Lexington, the original town consisted of 36 blocks, each containing six lots. Like most of the towns of the 1836 era the town was built along the line that divided woodland from prairie; the southeast corner of the town was just within the limits of timber.[7] Like most Mackinaw River towns, Lexington was laid out on higher ground some distance from the river itself.

First advertisement and sale of town lots edit

Gridley and Brown first offered lots in the town for sale at a public auction on 30 April 1836 at 10:00 in the morning. They began their printed advertisement for the sale by telling readers that the town was on the main road from Springfield, via Bloomington, to Chicago and that their new town was a mile from the Mackinaw River. They wrote that Lexington "is located on the margin of a fine rolling prairie, near a large and inexhaustible body of the best timber the country affords, sufficient to justify the immense settlement already being made." They told potential buyers that there were two saw mills and a fulling mill nearby. Moreover, they added, building had already begun. For those with good security, one twelve months credit was available.[8]

The pre-railroad era edit

Between 1837 and 1854 the survival of Lexington was in doubt. The great land rush that peaked in 1836 gave way to a severe lengthy national depression. True to their word, Gridley and Brown had begun some construction. Their first structure was used as a store, but in less than a year the business had failed and the building was hauled away to Bloomington. The first house was briefly occupied, but it was soon moved to the rival town of Clarksville, which was located a few miles downstream. No one was certain exactly what route the Springfield-to-Chicago road would take. Clarksville tried to attract the road by building a bridge across the Mackinaw River and the 1840 town of Pleasant Hill, which had been established just upstream from Lexington, was doing its best to attract traffic.[9] The county began to demand taxes on the large number of unsold lots in the town; by the early 1850s over 300 Lexington lots were offered for sale to satisfy unpaid taxes.[10] The town square was used for grazing cattle. Yet some continued to believe in the new town. Jacob Spawr (1802–1902) had moved into Lexington a year after the store had departed. He built a house of a type known as a double log pen, a dog trot, or sometimes two-pens-and-a-passage: essentially it was nothing more than two log cabins facing each other with a common roof. This building served as dwelling, post office and tavern. Because Lexington was halfway between the county seats of Pontiac and Bloomington, Spawr's house provided a convenient stopping place: Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas were frequent guests. In the 1850 United States Census Spawr's occupation is listed as "landlord". By 1854 it was estimated that there were only about a dozen families in Lexington.[11]

The railroad comes to Lexington edit

On 4 July 1854 the railroad, which would soon be known as the Chicago and Alton, reached Lexington. Suddenly everything changed. A grain warehouse which had been built by Thomas Kincaid was hauled across the tracks, given a passenger platform, and put to use as a railroad station. Dawson and McCurdy built a grain elevator. Three denominations erected churches.[12] The town formed its own government; their first act was to buy up the stock of the two local whiskey sellers and pour the contents of the bottles into the mud of Main Street.[13] The Mahan brothers built a downtown windmill.[14] A new hotel was built. Lexington boomed. By 1865 the first brick block had been erected.[15] On 21 November 1860, the train brought Abraham Lincoln to Lexington, where he spoke a few words of goodbye to his old friends; on 2 May 1865, just before noon, another train passed through Lexington, this one holding Lincoln's body.

People v. Chicago and Alton Railroad Company edit

The town of Lexington soon became the focus of a case that would change American legal history. Soon after railroads began servicing the Midwest, it became evident that, if a railroad could unilaterally set its own freight rates, it could soon drain most of the wealth from nearby farmers. The result, in Illinois, was a new state constitution that in 1870 gave the government a role in setting railroad and warehouse rates; the wording and legal arguments behind this part of the new constitution was the work of Bloomington lawyer Ruben M. Benjamin (1833–1917). A test case was needed, and Benjamin settled on Lexington. The Chicago and Alton Railroad only charged four dollars and thirty five cents to ship 1,000 board feet (2 m3) of lumber from Chicago to Bloomington, but asked for five dollars to ship the same amount of lumber the shorter distance from Chicago to Lexington. In 1871 Benjamin brought suit against the railroad. The railroad responded that it was forced to charge less to ship lumber to Bloomington because there was more competition there than at Lexington. The case worked its way up to the United States Supreme Court where People v. The Chicago and Alton Railroad Company became part of the celebrated Granger Cases, named for the Granges of the Patrons of Husbandry, a group that had argued for rate regulation. These cases, at least for a time, established the right of governments to regulate corporations.[16]

President Roosevelt comes to Lexington edit

Of all the events in the history of Lexington, perhaps the best remembered was the day President Theodore Roosevelt came to town. By the afternoon of 15 July 1902, a crowd of twenty thousand people had gathered near the Chicago and Alton tracks. A long grandstand had been erected and covered in red, white and blue. The Chief Executive and hero of San Juan Hill shook hands with the reception committee, but declined to leave the train. Roosevelt gave a brief but rousing talk from the observation platform at the back of the train. The crowd roared its approval. It was the only time a sitting president had visited the town.[17]

Lexington and Route 66 edit

Transportation was always the key to the success of Lexington. The city got its start as a rest stop on the Chicago Trail, which was part of the larger Pontiac Trail between Chicago and St. Louis. The very first mention of Lexington's name in the press in 1836 included mention of the town's location on the stagecoach road between Springfield and Chicago. Lexington's success as a town was later assured when it became a railroad station between Springfield and Chicago. During the twentieth century, rail traffic slowly declined and was replaced by road traffic. By World War II, only two trains a day stopped at Lexington, and all passenger traffic by rail ended in 1946.

In 1915, a paved road along the former stagecoach route, which almost exactly paralleled the Chicago and Alton Railroad rail line, reached Lexington. This paved road was known as State Bond Route 4 or SBI 4, and it followed the Pontiac Trail between Chicago and St. Louis. In November 1926, there was a general renumbering of state highways following the creation of the U.S. Route System, and Route 4 became Route 66. For the next 50 years, Lexington was a popular stopping point on this famous American road. In 1955, U.S. Route 66 was locally widened to four lanes, as a partially divided highway with a grass median between the northbound and southbound lanes along much of its stretch. U.S. Route 66 served the community until 1978, when Interstate 55, which also closely paralleled the old highway, was opened to traffic and Route 66 was thereafter decertified. However, near Lexington, much of the old highway may still be driven, as the 1955 roadbed of the southbound lanes was retained as a two-lane county road (the disused northbound lanes remain nearby).[18]

Schools and sports edit

John Patton Log Cabin and the Lexington Community Unit School District 7 campus, including Lexington High School, are located in Lexington

Geography edit

According to the 2010 census, Lexington has a total area of 1.33 square miles (3.44 km2), all land.[19]

Demographics edit

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
18801,254
18901,187−5.3%
19001,41519.2%
19101,318−6.9%
19201,301−1.3%
19301,292−0.7%
19401,284−0.6%
19501,181−8.0%
19601,2445.3%
19701,61529.8%
19801,80611.8%
19901,8090.2%
20001,9125.7%
20102,0607.7%
20202,0901.5%
Decennial US Census

As of the census[20] of 2000, there were 1,912 people, 760 households, and 550 families residing in the city. The population density was 1,820.3 inhabitants per square mile (702.8/km2). There were 803 housing units at an average density of 764.5 per square mile (295.2/km2). The racial makeup of the city was 98.95% White, 0.10% African American, 0.21% Native American, and 0.73% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 0.42% of the population.

There were 760 households, out of which 35.7% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 58.4% were married couples living together, 11.1% had a female householder with no husband present, and 27.6% were non-families. 24.6% of all households were made up of individuals, and 10.3% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.52 and the average family size was 3.00.

In the city, the population was spread out, with 26.9% under the age of 18, 7.5% from 18 to 24, 29.0% from 25 to 44, 24.3% from 45 to 64, and 12.3% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 37 years. For every 100 females, there were 96.3 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 92.0 males.

The median income for a household in the city was $46,146, and the median income for a family was $54,336. Males had a median income of $40,031 versus $24,917 for females. The per capita income for the city was $20,898. About 3.1% of families and 4.4% of the population were below the poverty line, including 6.6% of those under age 18 and 5.1% of those age 65 or over.

Lexington was laid out on 4 January 1836 By Asahel Gridley and James Brown.

Notable people edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Lexington, Illinois
  2. ^ "2020 U.S. Gazetteer Files". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved March 15, 2022.
  3. ^ Pierson, A. V. (March 1914). "How Lexington Was Named". Lexington Unit-Journal (Souvenir ed.). Retrieved November 1, 2008.
  4. ^ Lexington, Illinois: 150 Years (Lexington: The Lexington Sesquientennial Committee, 2007). pp. 4-5.
  5. ^ History of McLean County, Illinois (Chicago: William LeBaron, 1879). pp. 190-191.
  6. ^ Sublett, Michael D., William D. Walters, Jr. and Sotherd Modry. Commentary on a Cornbelt Countryside (Bloomington: Illinois State University Department of Geography-Geology, 1973). pp. 105-107
  7. ^ McLean County Combined Atlases, 1856-1914 (Bloomington: McLean County Historical Society and McLean County, Genealogical Society, 2006)) iv-vi, 2-3, 113
  8. ^ Sangamo Journal (Springfield, Illinois) 16 April 1836, p.3.
  9. ^ History of McLean County, 1879, p. 489.
  10. ^ Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois) 15 January 1851
  11. ^ History of McLean County, 1879, p.490.
  12. ^ Lexington, Illinois, 150 years (Lexington: Sesquicentennial Committee, 2007) pp. 34-35.
  13. ^ Hasbrouck, Jacob, History of McLean County, Illinois (Topeka and Indianapolis: Historical Publishing Company, 1924). 2:108.
  14. ^ Architectural Historical Tour: Lexington, Illinois (McLean County Arts Council, 1979). no page numbers.
  15. ^ History of McLean County (1879). pp. 34-35.
  16. ^ Solan Justice Buck. The Granger Movement (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1913). p.141.
  17. ^ Lexington Illinois, 2007, p.31.
  18. ^ Lexington, Illinois, 2007, 35-37.
  19. ^ "G001 - Geographic Identifiers - 2010 Census Summary File 1". United States Census Bureau. Archived from the original on February 13, 2020. Retrieved December 27, 2015.
  20. ^ "U.S. Census website". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved January 31, 2008.
  21. ^ 'Illinois Blue Book 1977-1978,' Biographical Sketch of Gilbert L. Deavers, pg. 155
  22. ^ Davis, Henry Blaine Jr. (1998). Generals in Khaki. Raleigh, NC: Pentland Press, Inc. p. 188. ISBN 1571970886.
  23. ^ 'Official Directory of the Forty-Second General Assembly of Illinois-1901,' Talbott & Hamann Press, Springfield, Illinois: 1901, Biographical Sketch of Arthur Judson Scorgin, pg. 46
  24. ^ "11/02/2007 - Birthday Anniversary of Founder Joseph L. Settles". Indianapolis, Indiana: Tau Kappa Epsilon. Retrieved November 13, 2008.

Further reading edit

  • The Complete History of Lexington High School Basketball by Rick Stephey (published 2004).

External links edit

  • Patton Cabin Collection, McLean County Museum of History

lexington, illinois, lexington, city, mclean, county, illinois, united, states, population, 2020, census, there, theories, regarding, etymology, city, name, says, named, battle, lexington, where, general, gridley, father, fought, other, that, named, home, town. Lexington is a city in McLean County Illinois United States The population was 2 090 at the 2020 census There are two theories regarding the etymology of the city name One says it was named for the Battle of Lexington where General Gridley s father fought 3 and the other that it was named for the home town of James Brown the town s co founder 4 LexingtonCityFlagSealLogoLocation of Lexington in McLean County Illinois Location of Illinois in the United StatesCoordinates 40 38 49 N 88 47 03 W 40 64694 N 88 78417 W 40 64694 88 78417 1 CountryUnited StatesStateIllinoisCountyMcLeanTownshipsLexington Money CreekGovernment MayorSpencer JohansenArea 2 Total2 05 sq mi 5 30 km2 Land2 05 sq mi 5 30 km2 Water0 00 sq mi 0 00 km2 Elevation 1 748 ft 228 m Population 2020 Total2 090 Density1 021 01 sq mi 394 20 km2 Time zoneUTC 6 CST Summer DST UTC 5 CDT ZIP Code s 61753Area code309FIPS code17 43094GNIS ID2395695 1 Wikimedia CommonsLexington IllinoisWebsitewww wbr lexingtonillinois wbr org Contents 1 History 1 1 Origin and original town design 1 2 First advertisement and sale of town lots 1 3 The pre railroad era 1 4 The railroad comes to Lexington 1 5 People v Chicago and Alton Railroad Company 1 6 President Roosevelt comes to Lexington 1 7 Lexington and Route 66 2 Schools and sports 3 Geography 4 Demographics 5 Notable people 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory editOrigin and original town design edit Lexington was laid out on 4 January 1836 by Asahel Gridley 1810 1881 and James Brown c 1802 Gridley was a lawyer and banker from Bloomington who would eventually become the richest man in McLean County Brown was born in Lexington Kentucky and Lexington Illinois seems to have been his only attempt at founding a town 5 Its founding was part of a great real estate boom that swept across the nation Within a few months of the founding of the town seven other new towns were laid out in McLean County Concord now Danvers Hudson Le Roy Livingston Lytleville Mt Hope and Wilksborough In common with other towns founded during the 1836 boom and unlike many later towns Lexington was designed around a central public square with streets running true north south and east west 6 In the case of Lexington the original town consisted of 36 blocks each containing six lots Like most of the towns of the 1836 era the town was built along the line that divided woodland from prairie the southeast corner of the town was just within the limits of timber 7 Like most Mackinaw River towns Lexington was laid out on higher ground some distance from the river itself First advertisement and sale of town lots edit Gridley and Brown first offered lots in the town for sale at a public auction on 30 April 1836 at 10 00 in the morning They began their printed advertisement for the sale by telling readers that the town was on the main road from Springfield via Bloomington to Chicago and that their new town was a mile from the Mackinaw River They wrote that Lexington is located on the margin of a fine rolling prairie near a large and inexhaustible body of the best timber the country affords sufficient to justify the immense settlement already being made They told potential buyers that there were two saw mills and a fulling mill nearby Moreover they added building had already begun For those with good security one twelve months credit was available 8 The pre railroad era edit Between 1837 and 1854 the survival of Lexington was in doubt The great land rush that peaked in 1836 gave way to a severe lengthy national depression True to their word Gridley and Brown had begun some construction Their first structure was used as a store but in less than a year the business had failed and the building was hauled away to Bloomington The first house was briefly occupied but it was soon moved to the rival town of Clarksville which was located a few miles downstream No one was certain exactly what route the Springfield to Chicago road would take Clarksville tried to attract the road by building a bridge across the Mackinaw River and the 1840 town of Pleasant Hill which had been established just upstream from Lexington was doing its best to attract traffic 9 The county began to demand taxes on the large number of unsold lots in the town by the early 1850s over 300 Lexington lots were offered for sale to satisfy unpaid taxes 10 The town square was used for grazing cattle Yet some continued to believe in the new town Jacob Spawr 1802 1902 had moved into Lexington a year after the store had departed He built a house of a type known as a double log pen a dog trot or sometimes two pens and a passage essentially it was nothing more than two log cabins facing each other with a common roof This building served as dwelling post office and tavern Because Lexington was halfway between the county seats of Pontiac and Bloomington Spawr s house provided a convenient stopping place Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas were frequent guests In the 1850 United States Census Spawr s occupation is listed as landlord By 1854 it was estimated that there were only about a dozen families in Lexington 11 The railroad comes to Lexington edit On 4 July 1854 the railroad which would soon be known as the Chicago and Alton reached Lexington Suddenly everything changed A grain warehouse which had been built by Thomas Kincaid was hauled across the tracks given a passenger platform and put to use as a railroad station Dawson and McCurdy built a grain elevator Three denominations erected churches 12 The town formed its own government their first act was to buy up the stock of the two local whiskey sellers and pour the contents of the bottles into the mud of Main Street 13 The Mahan brothers built a downtown windmill 14 A new hotel was built Lexington boomed By 1865 the first brick block had been erected 15 On 21 November 1860 the train brought Abraham Lincoln to Lexington where he spoke a few words of goodbye to his old friends on 2 May 1865 just before noon another train passed through Lexington this one holding Lincoln s body People v Chicago and Alton Railroad Company edit The town of Lexington soon became the focus of a case that would change American legal history Soon after railroads began servicing the Midwest it became evident that if a railroad could unilaterally set its own freight rates it could soon drain most of the wealth from nearby farmers The result in Illinois was a new state constitution that in 1870 gave the government a role in setting railroad and warehouse rates the wording and legal arguments behind this part of the new constitution was the work of Bloomington lawyer Ruben M Benjamin 1833 1917 A test case was needed and Benjamin settled on Lexington The Chicago and Alton Railroad only charged four dollars and thirty five cents to ship 1 000 board feet 2 m3 of lumber from Chicago to Bloomington but asked for five dollars to ship the same amount of lumber the shorter distance from Chicago to Lexington In 1871 Benjamin brought suit against the railroad The railroad responded that it was forced to charge less to ship lumber to Bloomington because there was more competition there than at Lexington The case worked its way up to the United States Supreme Court where People v The Chicago and Alton Railroad Company became part of the celebrated Granger Cases named for the Granges of the Patrons of Husbandry a group that had argued for rate regulation These cases at least for a time established the right of governments to regulate corporations 16 President Roosevelt comes to Lexington edit Of all the events in the history of Lexington perhaps the best remembered was the day President Theodore Roosevelt came to town By the afternoon of 15 July 1902 a crowd of twenty thousand people had gathered near the Chicago and Alton tracks A long grandstand had been erected and covered in red white and blue The Chief Executive and hero of San Juan Hill shook hands with the reception committee but declined to leave the train Roosevelt gave a brief but rousing talk from the observation platform at the back of the train The crowd roared its approval It was the only time a sitting president had visited the town 17 Lexington and Route 66 edit Transportation was always the key to the success of Lexington The city got its start as a rest stop on the Chicago Trail which was part of the larger Pontiac Trail between Chicago and St Louis The very first mention of Lexington s name in the press in 1836 included mention of the town s location on the stagecoach road between Springfield and Chicago Lexington s success as a town was later assured when it became a railroad station between Springfield and Chicago During the twentieth century rail traffic slowly declined and was replaced by road traffic By World War II only two trains a day stopped at Lexington and all passenger traffic by rail ended in 1946 In 1915 a paved road along the former stagecoach route which almost exactly paralleled the Chicago and Alton Railroad rail line reached Lexington This paved road was known as State Bond Route 4 or SBI 4 and it followed the Pontiac Trail between Chicago and St Louis In November 1926 there was a general renumbering of state highways following the creation of the U S Route System and Route 4 became Route 66 For the next 50 years Lexington was a popular stopping point on this famous American road In 1955 U S Route 66 was locally widened to four lanes as a partially divided highway with a grass median between the northbound and southbound lanes along much of its stretch U S Route 66 served the community until 1978 when Interstate 55 which also closely paralleled the old highway was opened to traffic and Route 66 was thereafter decertified However near Lexington much of the old highway may still be driven as the 1955 roadbed of the southbound lanes was retained as a two lane county road the disused northbound lanes remain nearby 18 Schools and sports editJohn Patton Log Cabin and the Lexington Community Unit School District 7 campus including Lexington High School are located in LexingtonGeography editAccording to the 2010 census Lexington has a total area of 1 33 square miles 3 44 km2 all land 19 Demographics editHistorical population CensusPop Note 18801 254 18901 187 5 3 19001 41519 2 19101 318 6 9 19201 301 1 3 19301 292 0 7 19401 284 0 6 19501 181 8 0 19601 2445 3 19701 61529 8 19801 80611 8 19901 8090 2 20001 9125 7 20102 0607 7 20202 0901 5 Decennial US Census As of the census 20 of 2000 there were 1 912 people 760 households and 550 families residing in the city The population density was 1 820 3 inhabitants per square mile 702 8 km2 There were 803 housing units at an average density of 764 5 per square mile 295 2 km2 The racial makeup of the city was 98 95 White 0 10 African American 0 21 Native American and 0 73 from two or more races Hispanic or Latino of any race were 0 42 of the population There were 760 households out of which 35 7 had children under the age of 18 living with them 58 4 were married couples living together 11 1 had a female householder with no husband present and 27 6 were non families 24 6 of all households were made up of individuals and 10 3 had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older The average household size was 2 52 and the average family size was 3 00 In the city the population was spread out with 26 9 under the age of 18 7 5 from 18 to 24 29 0 from 25 to 44 24 3 from 45 to 64 and 12 3 who were 65 years of age or older The median age was 37 years For every 100 females there were 96 3 males For every 100 females age 18 and over there were 92 0 males The median income for a household in the city was 46 146 and the median income for a family was 54 336 Males had a median income of 40 031 versus 24 917 for females The per capita income for the city was 20 898 About 3 1 of families and 4 4 of the population were below the poverty line including 6 6 of those under age 18 and 5 1 of those age 65 or over Lexington was laid out on 4 January 1836 By Asahel Gridley and James Brown Notable people editAlice Ambrose 1906 2001 philosopher at Smith College 1964 1972 Gilbert L Deavers 1931 2006 born in Lexington Illinois state representative teacher and businessman 21 Odus Creamer Horney U S Army brigadier general 22 Ed Kinsella 1880 1976 MLB pitcher for the Pittsburgh Pirates and St Louis Browns William R Roy 1926 2014 congressman from Kansas 1971 1975 Arthur J Scrogin 1853 1926 born in Lexington Illinois state representative and farmer 23 Joseph L Settles 1871 1943 one of the founding fathers of Tau Kappa Epsilon 24 John A Sterling 1857 1918 born in Lexington congressman 1903 1913 and 1915 1918 Alex Tanney 1987 football coach and former professional quarterback References edit a b c U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System Lexington Illinois 2020 U S Gazetteer Files United States Census Bureau Retrieved March 15 2022 Pierson A V March 1914 How Lexington Was Named Lexington Unit Journal Souvenir ed Retrieved November 1 2008 Lexington Illinois 150 Years Lexington The Lexington Sesquientennial Committee 2007 pp 4 5 History of McLean County Illinois Chicago William LeBaron 1879 pp 190 191 Sublett Michael D William D Walters Jr and Sotherd Modry Commentary on a Cornbelt Countryside Bloomington Illinois State University Department of Geography Geology 1973 pp 105 107 McLean County Combined Atlases 1856 1914 Bloomington McLean County Historical Society and McLean County Genealogical Society 2006 iv vi 2 3 113 Sangamo Journal Springfield Illinois 16 April 1836 p 3 History of McLean County 1879 p 489 Pantagraph Bloomington Illinois 15 January 1851 History of McLean County 1879 p 490 Lexington Illinois 150 years Lexington Sesquicentennial Committee 2007 pp 34 35 Hasbrouck Jacob History of McLean County Illinois Topeka and Indianapolis Historical Publishing Company 1924 2 108 Architectural Historical Tour Lexington Illinois McLean County Arts Council 1979 no page numbers History of McLean County 1879 pp 34 35 Solan Justice Buck The Granger Movement Cambridge Harvard University Press 1913 p 141 Lexington Illinois 2007 p 31 Lexington Illinois 2007 35 37 G001 Geographic Identifiers 2010 Census Summary File 1 United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on February 13 2020 Retrieved December 27 2015 U S Census website United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 31 2008 Illinois Blue Book 1977 1978 Biographical Sketch of Gilbert L Deavers pg 155 Davis Henry Blaine Jr 1998 Generals in Khaki Raleigh NC Pentland Press Inc p 188 ISBN 1571970886 Official Directory of the Forty Second General Assembly of Illinois 1901 Talbott amp Hamann Press Springfield Illinois 1901 Biographical Sketch of Arthur Judson Scorgin pg 46 11 02 2007 Birthday Anniversary of Founder Joseph L Settles Indianapolis Indiana Tau Kappa Epsilon Retrieved November 13 2008 Further reading editThe Complete History of Lexington High School Basketball by Rick Stephey published 2004 External links editPatton Cabin Collection McLean County Museum of History Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lexington Illinois amp oldid 1207769470, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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