Access this tour for free

Experience this tour for free. Available through our app.

Download or access the app

iOS Android Web

PocketSights Map

STQRY Directory / PocketSights / West Park Walking Tour

West Park Walking Tour

22 Stops
Cover for West Park Walking Tour
Preview Tour

Tour Overview

Lake Forest’s West Park Neighborhood Walking Tour

Walking tour created by Lake Forest Preservation Foundation

www.lfpf.org

The West Park neighborhood’s dramatic history ties it to the earliest pioneer days locally, to the community’s evolution as an estate district, and to the development of Market Square, the first planned town center created for motor vehicles. Over a century after its creation in 1907, the park and neighborhood have developed much as laid out by architect and planner Howard Van Doren Shaw. The land from Westminster north to Atteridge Road was part of a pioneer cluster of farms settled in 1837 by an extended family of Methodists from Cork, Ireland—Coles, Swantons and Atteridges.

Architect Shaw developed the farms west of Green Bay Road as estates from 1907 to 1916 and then working with estate owners locally developed a park and neighborhood for young men and their families working in local businesses and professions serving the country places of the Onwentsia Club members. The first southern part was laid out prior to 1907, from Westminster north into the current parkland and including Sunset Place. Then in 1907 a group of Chicagoans active in Onwentsia and led by architect Shaw, John V. Farwell, Jr., and local developer John Griffith conceived of a plan to move quickly to secure the last open land along Green Bay Road for this park and the neighborhood. This area includes Woodland Road, the north section of Summit Avenue, the north section of Oakwood Avenue, and Atteridge Road. The lots were sold at auction in late July 1907 and could only be bought by members of the Young Men’s Club. The lots were to be paid off in five years. The Young Men’s Club clubhouse was projected on Shaw’s plan to be built on the park south of Woodland Road.

The early lot owners and soon residents of the neighborhood mostly were working locally in small businesses or in professions or public service. Descendants, who today live in the neighborhood, represent many of these. Today the neighborhood remains true to the scale and styles envisioned by planner Shaw and his reform era founders and partners. Though some of the houses have been changed and some of the lots developed later than the rest, the neighborhood overall stands as a testament to the foresight, practicality, and generosity of this City. Beautiful era group of estate community leaders on one hand and newly dedicated local residents on the other hand.

Stops

  1. Stop 1: 777 North Green Bay Road

  2. Stop 2: 85 East Sunset Place

  3. Stop 3: 849 Summit Avenue

  4. Stop 4: 857 Summit Avenue

  5. Stop 6: 873 Summit Avenue

  6. Stop 7: 883 Summit Avenue

  7. Stop 8: 887 Summit Avenue

  8. Stop 9: 895 Summit Avenue

  9. Stop 10: 901 Summit Place

  10. Stop 11: 120 East Woodland

  11. Stop 12: 139 East Woodland

  12. Stop 13: 166 Atteridge Road

  13. Stop 14: 90 Atteridge Road

  14. Stop 15: 947 Oakwood Avenue

  15. Stop 16: 908 Oakwood Avenue

  16. Stop 17: 903 Oakwood Avenue

  17. Stop 18: 865 Oakwood Avenue

  18. Stop 19: 845 Oakwood Avenue

  19. Stop 20: 827 Oakwood Avenue

  20. Stop 21: 819 Oakwood Avenue

  21. Stop 22: 132 East Westminster Avenue

  22. Stop 23: 112 E Westminster Avenue

Map