The Devil's Carriage Comes to Heavenston |
In 1850, a group of devout Methodists, among them John Evans, Orrington Lunt, and Andrew Brown, founded an institution of "sanctified learning" which became Northwestern University. The site they chose along the shores of Lake Michigan was at that time part of a rural farming community known as Ridgeville. They purchased several hundred acres of farmland, enough for a university campus and a new town. Over the winter of 1853-54, Philo Judson, business agent for the new University, laid out the town; the NU trustees named the town Evanston after John Evans. Knowing the importance of the railroad to the future of the town and the university, Andrew Brown induced the Chicago & Milwaukee Railroad to route its tracks near the new town by donating the land for the railroad right-of-way as well as a depot site [Perkins, 16-22]. Up until that time public transportation in the area consisted of a stagecoach that ran along Green Bay Road and took a day and a half to go from Chicago to Milwaukee, and the ride was not exactly a smooth one: