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Within the NENA boundaries, historic homes abound. In 2000, the Spring/Douglas
Historic district was named on the National Registry of Historic Places.
The Spring/Douglas Historic District is located in the north section of Elgin on
the east side of the Fox River. The district encompasses both sides of Spring
Street and Douglas Avenue for a distance of twelve blocks. These two streets
run parallel to each other northward from the downtown area. The district
terminates north of River Bluff Road.
Like much of the city, this historic district developed during Elgin's boom
years of the late 19th century. Much of this land was platted and subdivided in
the 1840s and 1850s and the earliest remaining dwellings in the district date
to just before the Civil War. The growth of the city's dairy industry and the
establishment of the Elgin National Watch Company resulted in a dramatic
increase in Elgin's population towards the end of the century. Housing
construction moved northward from the downtown area and by 1890 an electric
streetcar line ran up Douglas Avenue. Dozens of homes were built on these two
streets which reflected the popular national architectural trends of the period
including the Queen Anne and related styles.
Douglas Avenue was called "Elgin's Fashionable Avenue" by a local newspaper in
1884 and it was home to many of the city's leading citizens. Numerous large
dwellings were also built on Spring Street and this section of the city was one
of the preferred residential areas of the turn of the century. In addition to
the residential construction, the Sherman Hospital was built just east of
Spring Street during the 1890s. This hospital complex greatly expanded in the
next century and today is an important institutional landmark adjacent to the
district.
The district continued to develop in the early 20th century and many fine
Colonial Revival and Prairie style dwellings were built in the years just
before and after World War I. Both streets were largely developed by 1930 and
only a few buildings were constructed after this period. The Spring/Douglas
Historic District continues to contain some of Elgin's finest historic
architecture and it remains an attractive residential section of the city.
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