The people of the ridge called everything east of the ridge and to the lake “Frogtown” because it was mainly marsh and swamp, and at night people would sit on their front porches they could barely hear each other talk for the croaking of the frogs. In the wet season, Frogtown expanded and after the first school was built on the corner of Ridge and Greenleaf in 1842, children often had to use rafts and boats to get to school during the wet parts of the year.
Ridgeville was the first name given to the Calvary station by the railway company. Mulford was Ridgeville’s first postmaster, first justice of the peace, first deacon of the First Baptist Church and the first to call the ridge “Ridgeville,” and make the name stick. Mulford lived in his second house for 10 years during which time he began construction of his third and final house. This two-story frame house, which he called Oakton, was located on the west side of Ridge Avenue just slightly south of where he built his first house, and it remained in the family for three generations. Mulford’s house at 250 Ridge Avenue stood until 1963, when it was torn down to build Evanston’s first condominium. Parts of this house were saved and given to the Evanston History Center.
Ridgeville Becomes Evanston
The name Ridgeville first officially appeared in 1850. Ridgeville’s first election was held on Apr 2, 1850 with 93 votes being cast. In 1851 the population of Chicago was 28,000 and that of Ridgeville was 443, which was approximately 11 persons per square mile. The first town assessment took place in 1853, estimating the value of the property at $6,000. Among the names of Ridgeville’s first residents were: General Huntoon, Eli Gaffield, William Foster, Paul Pratt and his wife and O. A. Crain.
In 1857, the General Assembly of Illinois, by special act, provided that the Township of Evanston consist of all of Township 41, Range 14 (Ridgeville) and one mile out of Township 41, Range 13 (Niles). The land that would become the City of Evanston was purchased from Dr. John Foster by a group of Methodist businessmen for a university. On Dec 29, 1863, the territory south of Foster, east of Wesley and north of Crain and Hamilton Streets became an incorporated town under general law. This was the first municipality within the limits of the town of Evanston.
Evanston was named for John Evans (1814–1897), a native Ohioan of Quaker ancestry. Evans was one of the founders of Northwestern University and Lakeside Hospital (Mercy Hospital today), served on the Chicago City Council and later was appointed governor of the Colorado Territory by his friend, Pres. Abraham Lincoln. Evans has recently been condemned for his role in the Sand Creek Massacre in which more than 150 unarmed Cheyenne and Arapahoe men, women and children were murdered.