Out of the past ... preserved for the future

LaSalle County Historical Society looks backward and moves forward

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Maybe history wasn't your favorite subject in school. Perhaps you find yourself dozing during a program aired on the well-known History Channel. And even if you own a few antiques, maybe you're one of those people who like all those new-fangled objects, rather than those steeped in tradition and longevity.

Well if that aforementioned paragraph describes you, don't despair. There are many who ride the river of today, rather than jumping aboard the bandwagon of yesterday.

But if you feel a little guilty about not knowing the history of the place you call home, you might want to visit the LaSalle County Historical Society's (LCHS) Museum in Utica, where the people there are excited about the past ... and even more excited about helping you learn about the history of LaSalle County.

LCHS President David Reed and past President Stan Dziedzic love LaSalle County, and even more than that, they love the county's history. The pair have countless stories to tell, and they do so in a way that not only makes you want to learn more, but they cause you to become very interested in the people, places and things that helped shape your life today.

"The main goal and purpose of the LaSalle County Historical Society is to preserve and promote the unique and rich history of LaSalle County," Reed said. "We do that in many ways. However, the most obvious and visible way we obtain that goal is through the everyday operation and maintenance of the LaSalle County Historical Society Museum in Utica."

Reed said the main reason for the organization of the LCHS was to protect the interest of Starved Rock from becoming too commercialized. The group, which was founded in the early 1900s, raised enough money to buy Starved Rock and then donated it to the state of Illinois.

The LCHS two-story museum, built by Utica founder James Clark, was constructed of St. Peter sandstone in 1848 and originally used as a granary/warehouse on the banks of the Illinois and Michigan Canal.

When the Clark warehouse fell into disrepair in the mid-1960s, Edmund Thorton, a past president of the LCHS who had connections in Springfield, talked a demolition crew into holding off their destruction of the historic building. The LCHS ended up purchasing the old granary for $1. Reed and Dziedzic credit Thorton, who still attends LCHS meetings today, for saving the building.

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