|
|
Cub Scout Pack 400 |
|
||||
| x | ||||||
| x | ||||||
![]() Little Red School House Nature Center West side of Willow Springs Rd. (104th Ave.), 1/2 mile south of 95th St. 9800 Willow Springs Road Willow Springs, IL 60480 (708) 839-6897 Download Map Download Trail Map
The "Little Red School House" is
part of the historic past of Palos Hills in which it is more or less
centrally located. It was built in 1886 to replace a one room log
cabin school - the first school building of the area. The Little Red
Schoolhouse was originally located a little north of where old 99th
Street joins the Black oak Trail. Country lanes used by its former
students still can be seen and enjoyed by hikers. In 1932 the school
house was moved to Boy Scout Camp Kiwanis. The actual moving was
done by a local resident with only one mule and log rollers. Classes
continued in this building until 1948.
In 1952 it was moved to its present site. In 1955 its doors reopened as a school - unique and always interesting. For, in place of the three R's, fascinating stories are told to children and grown-ups who visit here, stories about forest preserve plants and animals and the earth of which they live. Before the written history of man, Indian hunters followed the receding glacier that once covered northern Illinois. They found the southern end of Lake Michigan swampy and teeming with game. Flint chips and an occasional arrow point can be found almost anywhere in this region. In 1 504, there were two Indian villages near here - one at the intersection of Archer Ave. and 107th St. and the other about where the town of Palos Park is now located. Archer Ave. was a very important trail used by Indians and early settlers. Fifty years ago Longjohn Slough was merely a wet prairie where farmers cut wild hay. Palos Hills farmers used to haul feed for Chicago's horses -- a round trip of about 10 hours! Old timers remember hunting rabbits in a hollow that is now Maple Lake, and one resident made a living just hunting and trapping The land on which the schoolhouse now stands was a fruit orchard planted in 1806. Visitors in the spring still enjoy its pear, apple and plum blossoms. |
||||||