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Bourbonnais (Images of America: Illinois)

Author Vic Johnson, Bourbonnais Grove Historical Society
Publisher Arcadia Publishing
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Book Details
ISBN / ASIN073854096X
ISBN-139780738540962
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank2,688,464
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

The village name Bourbonnais is attributed to François Bourbonnais. He was a 19th-century French Canadian fur trader who maintained a post in a grove of trees along the east bank of the Kankakee River. This location became known as Bourbonnais Grove. Noel LeVasseur, a former American Fur Company employee, bought two sections of land in the grove in 1834 and established a settlement of immigrant French Canadians. At first, the village was called variously La Point, La Ville, and Vasseurville. A post office named Bourbonnais Grove opened in 1838. The village was known as Bourbonnais Grove until 1875, when it was incorporated as Bourbonnais. By the 1860s, Bourbonnais Grove had 1,719 inhabitants, a blacksmith shop, livery stable, hotel, and a new church dedicated to the Blessed Virgin Mary of the Nativity and built of native limestone. The images in this book depicting life in Bourbonnais have been gathered from local private and museum collections.