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Butler School (Oak Brook, Illinois)

National Register of Historic Places in DuPage County, IllinoisOak Brook, IllinoisSchool buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in IllinoisTwo-room schoolhouses
ButlerSchoolOakBrook
ButlerSchoolOakBrook

Butler School is a historic building in Oak Brook, Illinois. Frank Osgood Butler donated the land for the two-room schoolhouse in the late 1910s. The building became a meeting place for locals, and hosted the first club to use the term "Oak Brook" to refer to the surrounding settlement. The former school was briefly used as the village hall, police station, and library, until new buildings were constructed for those purposes in the 1970s. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2003.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Butler School (Oak Brook, Illinois) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Butler School (Oak Brook, Illinois)
Kroc Drive,

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Latitude Longitude
N 41.834722222222 ° E -87.946111111111 °
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Kroc Drive

Kroc Drive
60523
Illinois, United States
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ButlerSchoolOakBrook
ButlerSchoolOakBrook
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Mammoth Spring (Illinois)
Mammoth Spring (Illinois)

Mammoth Spring: 46  or Mammoth Springs is a water spring in York Township, DuPage County, Illinois, United States. It was used from 1861 to the early 20th century; the spot is now on the property of the DoubleTree hotel in Oak Brook near Elmhurst, Illinois.It opened suddenly in 1861 on the Talmadge family farm, and was used until 1889 for irrigation. Around 1874, Mammoth Spring was described as "located in the highway, between lands owned by G.H. Talmadge and Robert Reed": VI  and a drawing of the George H. Talmage farm, with a portion of the spring shown and labeled, appears in the same book.: 46  The road is named Spring Road because of the wooden conduit extended along it from the spring; a wooden conduit was constructed in 1889, and from 1889 to 1916, before being depleted, the spring supplied all of the water for nearby Elmhurst (including supplying the source water for the Elmhurst Spring Water Company) and some of the water for Oak Brook (including supplying the source water for the Mammoth Spring Ice Company).Eventually artificial ice replaced natural ice, after which the Mammoth Spring Ice Company was sold in 1910. The City of Elmhurst took over the water supply from the Elmhurst Spring Water Company in 1916, and drilled its own wells as well; Mammoth Spring was abandoned as a water source for Elmhurst sometime between 1918 and 1927. The spring's original trough was destroyed when Spring Road was widened in 1979.