Tuesday, October 21, 2025

Route 66 Rest Area Stop Bloomington, Illinois

  Rest area including a couple Route 66 displays and history marker



Bloomington-Normal Illinois
The first settlement in this area in 1822 was called Keg.  By the time a post office was established in 1828 the settlement was known as Blooming Grove.  McLean county was organized the following year and Bloomington, which was laid out in 1831 just north of Bloomington Grove on 22 acres of land donated by James Allin, was selected as county seat.  It was incorporated as a town in 1843, and a city in 1850.  In 1853 Illinois Wesleyan University was chartered here and in 1857 Normal University , first state-supported school of higher education in Illinois, was established in North Bloomington which soon changed is name to Normal.  The state Republican party was formally organized in Bloomington in 1856 at a convention called to protest the Kansas-Nebraska bill, which made possible the westward extension of slaver.  It was at this convention that Abraham Lincoln delivered his "lost speech" so called because no record of it was kept.  Several of Lincoln's close associates were local residents, including Jesse Fell, credited with the founding of Normal, Leonard Swett, lawyer and campaigner for Lincoln, and David Davis, appointed to the United States Supreme Court by Lincoln (1862-1877), and later United States senator.  Other distinguished residents include governors John M. Hamilton and Joseph Fifer; Adlai Stevenson I, vice president under Cleveland and Adlai Stevenson II, governor, twice presidential candidate, and United Nations Ambassador.

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