Pages
▼
Friday, September 18, 2009
Daniel Wright - County's First Non-Native Settler
Daniel Wright (1778-1873) is considered Lake County's first permanent non-native settler. Native Americans were the original stewards of the land we call Lake County. There were also French and British fur traders, who were seasonal inhabitants from about the mid-1600s.
Wright was born in Rutland, Vermont in 1778. He was a farmer and served in the War of 1812. Although he was known as "Captain" he served in the war as a Lieutenant with the 1st Rifle Company, 3rd Regiment of the Vermont Militia.
In 1814, he moved his family to Ohio, and in 1832 began to explore land in Illinois. Rumors of good, cheap farm land led Wright to Fort Dearborn (later known as Chicago) where trappers told him of good hunting along the Des Plaines River near what would become Half Day (later Lincolnshire).
Wright was the first of the American newcomers to stay year-round in what would become Lake County, Illinois. Though many of the county's history books note that Wright arrived in 1834, in a letter to the Waukegan Weekly Gazette in 1868, Wright stated that "the native tribe of Potawatomi... helped me raise my first rude log cabin in June 1833."
This public statement is significant when put into the context that the Spring 1833 date puts Wright's arrival prior to the signing of the Treaty of Chicago on September 26, 1833. In this treaty, signed between the U.S. Government and the United Nation of Chippewa, Ottawa and Potawatomi Indians, the tribes relinquished their last tracts of Great Lakes’ land, and the land was opened to non-native settlement. Accordingly, the trickle of settlers began in the spring of 1834.
Shown here is an artist's rendering of Wright's cabin. Wright stated that in the fall of 1833, a prairie fire swept through the area burning his crop of hay and forcing his family to find shelter along the Des Plaines River bank. Fortunately, the cabin was unharmed since it had been built with green timber.
Wright never purchased the land he settled on, but his grandson, William Whigham, did. Wright farmed the land along the Des Plaines River until his death in 1873.
In 1909, the Lake County Historical Society placed a memorial rock near the intersection of Milwaukee Avenue (Route 21) and Aptakisic Road just west of the Des Plaines River where Wright had settled.
The rock was from the site of today's St. Mary's of the Lake Seminary in Mundelein, and taken by wagon on dirt roads to Half Day by the Bairstow Company of Waukegan.
William Whigham, Wright's grandson, was photographed with the memorial rock about 1909. You will notice that the date carved into the rock to honor Wright's arrival is 1834. Hence, the continued confusion about when he arrived in Half Day.
The "X" marked in ink on the photograph on the left side of the rock, denotes the location of Wright's cabin. In his golden years, Wright lived with his grandson in a woodframe house on the southwest corner of Milwaukee Avenue and Aptakisic Road, now the site of a commercial development.
In 1996, the Illinois Department of Transporation determined that the rock needed to be removed from the road right-of-way. They contacted the Lake County Discovery Museum to assist with finding an appropriate location. The Friends of Ryerson Woods and the Lake County Forest Preserve District agreed that the rock should be placed on public land where it could be enjoyed by all. With this in mind, and the fact that much of the land now preserved in the Ryerson Conservation Area was once owned by Wright's descendants, Ryerson Woods was chosen as the location. Photo of the Daniel Wright memorial rock at the Ryerson Conservation Area.
Just for context, in what year did Illinois become a state?
ReplyDeleteThanks for your question. Illinois became a state in 1818, and Lake County was established in 1839.
ReplyDeleteI'm curious if anyone knows exactly where Daniel Wright's house stood on the SW corner of Aptakisic/Milwaukee (understanding that the exact site may now be covered by commercial development). I'm very curious. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteWright's log cabin was on the west side of the river bank. If Aptakisic road continued east to the river, that'd be about the spot. Later, he lived in a frame house on the southwest corner of Aptakisic and Route 21. The house was about 750 feet south of Aptakisic Road. He probably lived in two houses at this location, first in a pre-1860 house, and then in his grandson's (William Whigam) post 1870 house.
ReplyDeleteThanks for reading!
does he have anything to do with daniel wright school cus i go there
ReplyDelete>> daniel wright school <<
ReplyDeleteThe school is named after Daniel Wright.
Was this Daniel Wright the grandfather of the Wright brothers (father of Milton Wright)?
ReplyDeleteWhat a story it would make if that were true!
ReplyDeleteThe Wright name in this family ended with Daniel Wright. His sons died unmarried.
His daugthers married into the Stoughton, Woodward, and Whigham families.
Thanks for reading.
A wright is an Old English name for a maker or builder, so it's very common. Shipwright, wheelwright, millwright, etc.
ReplyDeleteI’d love to chat more with you about this post-I’m related to Daniel Wright.
ReplyDeleteFor further research on Daniel Wright, please email ddretske@lcfpd.org.
ReplyDeleteThere are 2 cabins located at Ryerson Woods, in Riverwoods. I was recently riding my bike and noticed that one of the cabins is no longer. I’m not sure if it was torn down or moved to a different location.
ReplyDeleteFrom Mick Zawislak's article in the Daily Herald, 4/19/23: "With a new environmental education center underway at Ryerson, two 1940s era cabins which had served that purpose for decades were sold at a nominal price to be repurposed elsewhere."
ReplyDeleteFor a copy of the full article, please email me at ddretske@lcfpd.org.