To Protect and Preserve: An Early History of the Forest Preserve District of Cook County, Illinois, 1900-1930

The Chicago Region


Cook County encompasses more than 1,600 square miles in northeastern Illinois. It extends about forty miles north to south and stretches westward about thirty miles from Lake Michigan to the Fox River Valley. As of 1900, the county’s population was 1,838,735 (compared with more than five million today), and more than 90 per cent of the population resided in the city of Chicago.

Much of the outlying county land was fallow or dotted by farms, small towns, or villages. The largest suburbs at that time were found along the North Shore of Lake Michigan and included Winnetka, Wilmette, and Kenilworth. Other settlements straddled major rail lines in the region. Among them were Arlington Heights, Palatine, Elmhurst, Riverside, La Grange, Summit, Oak Lawn, Blue Island, and Harvey. The suburban enclaves of Evanston, Oak Park, and Cicero bordered on the city of Chicago and grew rapidly during the early twentieth century.

The county presented a diverse set of ecologies:

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