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P.O. Box 19423
Lenexa,
KS 66285
913-708-5119
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ILLINOIS LEGENDS
Dwight - Not Just A
Bump In The Road |
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West Main Street in
Dwight,
Illinois, 1928, vintage
postcard
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Dwight,
Illinois
is a pretty little town of some 4,500 residents whose motto is “Not
Just A Bump in the Road,” which you’ll find to be a true if you take
the time to stop and explore this old
Route 66 town.
It all began in the early 1850s when two railroad
surveyors by the names of James Spencer and T.C. Myer camped near what
would soon be the town of
Dwight. Within a few
years, the railroad was built and when the first
Alton and Sangamon (later
the
Chicago
and Alton) train came through from
Chicago to
St. Louis in 1854, there were
just two small wood buildings and a water tank. They called the
“station” West New York. However when Richard P. Morgan,
another survey engineer, was asked to give the place a name, he
suggested Henry
Dwight of New York who had
invested a fortune into the building of the railroad. And so it
was.

Dwight
Train Depot in 1946, vintage
postcard.
The Train Depot still stands and is on the
National
Register of Historic Place.
At this
time railroad stops often became towns and
Dwight
was no different. Morgan went on to build the first mill in 1859
and donated the land for the Presbyterian Church. A man named
David McWilliams soon built a store that did a booming business during
its first year. Later he would help to build the first school in
town and started the town’s first bank, now known as the Bank of
Dwight.
In 1879
Dwight
was a still a quiet railroad town when young Dr. Leslie Keeley opened
the doors of the Keeley Institute, the first medical institution to
treat alcoholism as a disease. By the 1890’s Keeley Institutes were
located in nearly every state in the nation and many overseas.
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When Keeley died in 1900, his partner and friend,
John R. Oughton, became president of the
corporation. Oughton renovated a building that was used as the
Keeley Club House and adding to it, made it his home, which was known as
“The Manse.” Today, the building operates as a restaurant with large
banquet facilities and is called the Country Mansion.
The Keeley
Institute continued to operate until 1966 when hospitals began to deal
with the disease of alcoholism. Today the building houses the Fox
Developmental Center.
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When
Route 66 barreled
through town, it bypassed
Dwight’s
downtown district, so the town responded with new businesses along the
highway.
Big Al’s Hot Dogs will be one of the first things you see
as you enter
Dwight on
Route 66.
Soon you will pass Ambler’s Texaco Station. Built in 1933, it
later became The Marathon Oil Station and serviced travelers until 1998.
The building is currently being restored by the community and will serve
as visitor’s center.
Further on
down the road you will see another
Route 66 era station
that has been decked out with all manner of gas station paraphernalia, and
Feddersen’s Pizza Garage, an old car dealership that has been converted
into a pizzeria.
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Big Al's Hot Dogs in
Dwight,
Illinois,
September, 2004, Kathy Weiser.
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Off
Route 66, in downtown
Dwight,
there are several historical buildings that the town has taken care to
preserve. The beautiful stone railroad depot, built in 1891, houses
the
Dwight Historical
Society and the Chamber of Commerce. This building is on the
National Register of Historic Places.
Also downtown is the First National Bank building designed
by Frank Lloyd Wright in 1905 and the former Keeley Institute, with its
priceless stained glass windows depicting the
five senses.
The
Prairie Creek Public Library, housed in an old
carriage house, The Country Mansion, the Pioneer Gothic Church, and the
historic Windmill in the City Center, are all also on the National
Register of Historic Places.
Your next stops on ole'
Route 66
are
Odell and
Pontiac, where you are sure to
see lots more of the
Mother Road
era.
Kathy Weiser/Legends
of America, © January, 2005
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The Ambler-Becker Texaco Station, built in
1933 later served as Marathon Oil Station until 1998. One of the
longest running stations on
Route 66,
the community of
Dwight has plans to restore it as a visitor's center. September,
2004, Kathy Weiser. |

This old station in
Dwight as
been decked out with all kinds
of gasoline paraphernalia, September, 2004,
Kathy Weiser.
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From the Rocky Mountain General Store
 66
Package Deal - This
Route 66 Package Deal includes both the
EZ66
Guide For Travelers and the
The Route 66 Map Series. The EZ 66
Guide includes
up-to-date maps, attractions, tips and games. The map series
includes a packaged
set of eight fold-out
roadmaps, one for each
Route 66
state, providing clear, detailed driving directions. This
set will provide you with the basic tools for providing an easier journey
on what can sometimes be a confusing piece of pavement. Ships
Priority Mail!
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