Summit
By Robert Kott
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About this ebook
Robert Kott
Robert Kott, a lifelong Summit resident, is an emeritus member of the Illinois State Academy of Science and president of the Summit Area Historical Society. His writings have appeared in numerous publications, from the Times newspaper of Lyons to Illinois State publications and the journal National Geographic Research.
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Summit - Robert Kott
Society.
INTRODUCTION
Summit occupies land of great antiquity and strategic and transportational importance. It was considered home by residents from about present-day Narragansett Avenue west along Archer Avenue to the area of the western terminus of the Chicago Portage and Summit Ford, and into present-day McCook and south to a point near present-day Justice. Traditionally it once included the Point of Oaks, the area of the Chicago Portage National Historic Site, and the banks of the Des Plaines River. An examination of historic newspaper articles from the 1833 to 1925 period attests to this.
After Summit’s incorporation in June 1890, and with the formation of the Clearing Industrial District and later Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago, it became a nearly landlocked community of lesser size. Today it comprises a 2.3-square-mile village, including the Argo neighborhood, the Summit-Argo Post Office service area, and the larger Argo-Summit/ Bedford Park Elementary School District No. 104.
Waterways comprise 0.2 square miles or 6.58 percent of the village. Summit is 13 miles southwest of Chicago’s downtown and had a racially diverse population of 10,637 inhabitants in the 2000 census. It is primarily Mexican (44 percent), Polish (12 percent), and African American (12 percent), with lesser Irish (4 percent), Italian (3 percent), Latino (2 percent), and Arab (2 percent) populations.
Known for its extremely diverse ethnic mix, it was first peopled by Native Americans, seasonal fur traders, French, English, native mixed-blood pioneers, Scots, and eastern Yankees in the 1830s; Irish canallers
by the late 1830s; and Germans in the 1840s. There was a second flood of immigration here in the 1880–1910 period with Poles, Croatians, Slovaks, Russians, Italians, and Dutch with some African Americans, Mexicans, and Greeks arriving by 1910. Since then there have been several spikes in immigration, adding Yugoslavians, Arabs, East Indians, and most recently a large influx of Mexicans and other Latin Americans.
Historically Summit was known for the quality of its produce, especially vegetables grown on local farms for sale in Chicago, with urbanization taking hold by 1907 with the establishment of the Corn Products Refining Company corn-milling and processing plant (one of the largest in the world). After 1918, manufacturing and services diversified, but the natural advantages of Summit as a transport and distribution center have always flourished with food-processing companies with attendant rail yards, waterways, and highways playing a major role in its progress and economics.
Summit, Lyons, Riverside, and the city of Chicago have an intertwined and inseparable geological and historical relationship; all are parts of the much larger entity called the Chicago metropolitan area. The further we go back in time, the more regional our heritages become. Political fragmentation into legally determined
municipal units is often misleading and unnecessarily divisive. Political boundaries change, but history does not. We share in the common roots of this region—its advantages, problems, and prospects—and we face a common future.
The Lake Chicago Outlet northern channel, now containing the Lower Des Plaines River, was left when ponding meltwaters behind the last Wisconsin glacier carved through the encircling Wedron Formation glacial deposits at Summit and conducted the overflow of Lake Chicago down a nearly two-mile-wide passage to the Illinois River 14,000 years ago. The younger trickling Des Plaines River claimed southwesterly flow through it when falling water levels in the Lake Michigan Basin became separated by the surficial continental divide, with flow from the Chicago River to the east. By 2,000 years ago, the Chicago Portage water and/or land route between the eastern and western watersheds became a natural portal to the North American interior. This primarily water route depended on seasonal variations in water levels between the Chicago River and Lower Des Plaines River. It has been estimated that at the time of the spring freshets and during times of high water of both watersheds, there was a continuous waterway between Lake Michigan, the Chicago River, and Lower Des Plaines for about 48 days a year, resulting in no real portage or land carry between waterways. Falling water levels required boat carries or portages of between one to more than seven miles between the navigable waterways of this route for 173 days per year. The remaining 144 days of the year required land carries on the nearby North or South Portage Roads between frozen or parched waterways of the route in excess of 7 miles up to even as far as 100 miles.
Still, the stage was set 2,000 years ago for the Des Plaines Valley to contribute to the growth and progress of the Chicago region by providing the most convenient land and water routes from Lake Michigan to the Illinois River and hinterlands.
The human prehistory of the Summit Beach began around 12,000 years ago with generations of Native Americans beginning with those of the Paleo-Indian period. As these first humans to enter our area carried on hunting activity here, they left behind distinctive stone tools indicating Eskimo-type subsistence heavily dependent on hunting larger animals for meat and gathering plant foods to a lesser extent. Next came the Archaic period (with early, middle, and late components), between 10,000 and 2,600 years ago, that saw an increasingly concentrated riverine hunting and gathering culture grow here as our environment became more hospitable to smaller game animals and food plants. The earliest presently known artifact find from the Summit Beach region include stone tools of this period of cultural history.
Between 2,600 and 1,000 years ago, the Woodland period (divided into early, middle, and late components) came into vogue, and the use of pottery in addition to diagnostic stone tools is noted, especially with the adoption of the more sedentary and well-established, far-ranging influence of the middle-Woodland-period culture with its dense deposits of flamboyant artifact assemblages, earthworks, and richly outfitted burial mounds. These people still focused on hunting, gathering, and fishing and utilized corn to a limited extent by about 1,300 years ago. The late-Woodland-period hallmarks include the addition of effigy and geometric mounds, which were sometimes used for burials and which thoroughly perplexed the early white settlers of the general Chicago area that found them long after their construction.
The final prehistoric period found in our area is the Mississippian period, which saw committed corn agriculture, use of shell tempering in clay pottery, and a diet more focused on floodplains and backwaters.
Our local Mississippian-period people lived in hamlets and frequently in a more conservative Woodland manner, living in smaller residential sites near waterways, utilizing corn to a lesser extent than other Illinois Mississippian people, making either shell-tempered clay for pottery (Fisher ware) or grit-tempered pottery (Langford ware) between 900 to about 1640, and developing the use of the bow and arrow over the earlier atlatl. The historic period began in 1673 when Fr. Jacques Marquette and Louis Jolliet, returning from their exploration of the Mississippi River, documented Illini-speaking Kaskaskia-band American Indian near Starved Rock that undoubtedly used canoes, hunted almost exclusively along the Illinois River, and knew of the Chicago Portage Route. It was