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			 Now in its 20th year, this statewide list calls attention to 
			threatened historic resources in need of assistance in the form of 
			responsible stewardship, creative reuse plans, and/or advances in 
			public policy. The slow economic recovery, state budget crisis, and 
			a lack of available financing continue to challenge historic sites 
			throughout Illinois.  
			 
			“The sites named to the list, as well as the critical work of our 
			State Historic Preservation Office, are all exceptionally important 
			to not only local residents, but the local economy,” said Bonnie 
			McDonald, President of Landmarks Illinois. “By calling attention to 
			the potential for reuse and revitalization of these historic places, 
			we are encouraging job creation and economic development across 
			Illinois – something everyone can support.”  
			 
			The properties on this year’s list are: the home of the Schwinn 
			Bicycle Company co-founder, a Lincoln-era home in Springfield, an 
			1855 Greek Revival house and barn, an iconic fifty-foot statue 
			located in a state park, vanishing mid-century modern houses, a 
			former state hospital’s main building, key projects in the expiring 
			River Edge state historic tax credit program, a vacant archdiocesan 
			school, a large-scale industrial bakery, a southern Illinois 
			“thatched cottage,” an early Chicago movie palace, and lastly, the 
			vital office that administers the State’s historic preservation 
			programs. 
			  
			
			  
			 
			Since the inception of Landmarks Illinois’ Most Endangered list in 
			1995, a third of the listed properties have been saved, less than a 
			quarter have been demolished, and the rest are in varying stages 
			between being continually threatened and rehabilitation.  
			 
			Landmarks Illinois has been working to protect historic places 
			throughout Illinois for over 40 years. The not-for-profit works with 
			citizens and communities to preserve historic places and promote 
			awareness about them through education and advocacy. Landmarks 
			Illinois preserves historic places that enhance communities, empower 
			citizens, and catalyze local economic development throughout 
			Illinois. In addition to the Most Endangered list, the organization 
			also sponsors an annual awards program, two grant programs and 
			various educational events, including the co-sponsorship of a 
			bi-annual statewide historic preservation conference. Landmarks 
			Illinois also is working with state legislators to enact a statewide 
			historic tax credit program – The Illinois Rehabilitation and 
			Revitalization Tax Credit Act (SB 1250). 
			 
			The complete Most Endangered list, including individual property 
			press releases and photos, is available at www.Landmarks.org through 
			the “Press Room” link. 
			 
			 
			Landmarks Illinois 2015 Most Endangered Historic Places 
			(In alphabetical order) 
			 
			 
			Arnold-Crowe House 
			3329 W. Washington Blvd., Chicago (Cook County) 
			The Arnold-Crowe House in Chicago’s East Garfield Park neighborhood 
			is distinctive for its architecture and its connection to two noted 
			Chicagoans, but deterioration has left this 1904 mansion vulnerable 
			to demolition. Designed with Gothic and Moorish Revival influence, 
			the Arnold-Crowe House was a prominent home built at Washington 
			Boulevard and Garfield Park for Adolph Arnold, a successful 
			meatpacker and co-founder of the Schwinn Bicycle Company. The 
			mansion’s next resident was Robert E. Crowe, the prosecutor in the 
			dramatic Leopold and Loeb trial and co-counsel in the Iroquois 
			Theater Fire court proceedings. Later, the Arnold-Crowe House served 
			as the headquarters for a builders’ union and then became a church. 
			Vacant for many years, the home’s structural integrity is at risk 
			due to persistent water infiltration. A local restauranteur with a 
			strong investment interest in Chicago’s west side purchased the 
			house in 2011 with plans to rehabilitate it as his home. 
			Unfortunately, due to the high rate of foreclosures in the immediate 
			area, he was unable to secure the necessary bank financing. In the 
			meantime, a city inspection resulted in a demolition notice, despite 
			its significant rating in the Chicago Historic Resources Survey. 
			With a demolition hold in place, the owner has received offers for 
			the property, but fears for the house’s fate given the lack of 
			financing options as banks continue to be unwilling to provide 
			traditional financing in neighborhoods of disinvestment. 
			 
			
			  
			Black Hawk Statue  
			Lowden State Park, 1411 N. River Rd., Oregon (Ogle County) 
			Nestled within trees lining the east side of the Rock River, the 
			iconic Black Hawk statue stands nearly fifty-feet-tall on a high 
			bluff overlooking the beautiful landscape of Lowden State Park. The 
			statue is located less than one mile north of the city of Oregon and 
			twenty-five miles southwest of Rockford. Designed by noted Chicago 
			sculptor Lorado Taft, generations of Illinoisans have visited Black 
			Hawk during family vacations and school field trips since its 
			dedication in 1911. Despite several repairs and patches over the 
			decades, the now 104-year old statue is in desperate need of full 
			conservation – its concrete body in some places is so deteriorated 
			that if not addressed immediately there is a risk that the damage 
			will quickly accelerate and the majority of its original details 
			will be lost. Friends of the Black Hawk Statue Committee have 
			galvanized financial and pro-bono support for Black Hawk’s $825,000 
			restoration price tag. However, the bleak outlook for next year’s 
			IDNR budget, along with bureaucratic procedures that have slowed the 
			contracting process and elevated the budget, have already delayed 
			the scheduled restoration by nearly a year. A successful restoration 
			of this treasured Illinois monument will likely require pressure 
			from financial contributors, local officials, and the public.  
			 
			 
			Bowen Building, Peoria State Hospital 
			4125 W. Pfeiffer Rd., Bartonville (Peoria County) 
			The Bowen Building, the centerpiece of the National Register-listed 
			Peoria State Hospital complex, has been largely unoccupied since the 
			closure of the hospital in 1973. Sited on a hill in Bartonville, the 
			complex was the result of the Illinois General Assembly’s 1895 
			provision for a state insane asylum. Since the closure of the Peoria 
			State Hospital, efforts to rehabilitate the 1902, 3-story, limestone 
			Bowen Building have been unsuccessful. The non-profit Save the Bowen 
			Foundation has facilitated the reopening of the building in recent 
			years for group tours, but is unable to achieve a major 
			rehabilitation. The foundation needs to find a developer for the 
			project in 2015 to avoid condemnation and demolition. Eligible for 
			federal historic tax credits, the foundation is hopeful that the 
			iconic Bowen Building can be saved. Central Park Theater 
			3535 W. Roosevelt Rd., Chicago (Cook County) 
			The first of many large “movie palaces” built by the theater 
			corporation of Balaban & Katz, the 1917 Central Park Theater is one 
			of the earliest theater designs of the noted architecture firm Rapp 
			and Rapp. The Italian and French Renaissance-influenced 1, 780-seat 
			theater, located on the once-bustling Roosevelt Road corridor in 
			Chicago’s North Lawndale neighborhood, was designed in the style of 
			a European opera house. The model set forth in the Central Park 
			Theater soon became the norm in movie house design, but the theater 
			also served as a more traditional live performance venue – Lawndale 
			native Benny Goodman made his professional debut there in 1921. The 
			theater has weathered shifting neighborhood demographics and long 
			bouts of disinvestment, showing movies until 1971, when it was 
			purchased by the House of Prayer Church of God in Christ which 
			continues to worship there. The building is now in court for 
			numerous code violations and the small congregation cannot afford 
			the critical repairs needed. It is anticipated that the building 
			will soon be put on the market, thus facing the financing challenges 
			common throughout the Lawndale community. 
			
			  Condell House 
			605 S. 4th St., Springfield (Sangamon County) 
			Built in 1842, the Condell House is one of Springfield’s oldest 
			surviving structures but is currently facing a City-ordered 
			demolition unless a new owner can be found. The house originated as 
			a wing of the First Methodist Episcopal Church and was purchased and 
			moved to its current site in 1852 by John Condell, a prominent local 
			businessman. The house, located in the Governor’s Mansion Historic 
			Zoning District, features Greek Revival detailing and a deep setback 
			from the street. Despite its significance to the Springfield 
			community, the Condell House has remained largely vacant and a 
			victim of steady deterioration since 1985. In late 2014, the house 
			was placed on the City of Springfield’s “demolition delay” list, 
			allowing for a final period of time to find an alternative solution. 
			Local advocates, along with the Springfield Historic Sites 
			Commission, continue to seek a new owner with the capacity to repair 
			the historic house. The neighborhood surrounding the Condell House 
			has been the subject of large-scale reinvestment, highlighted by the 
			rehabilitation plans for the Executive Mansion and the redevelopment 
			proposal for an entire city block. The Condell House has the 
			opportunity to be a participant in this ongoing neighborhood 
			revitalization if a new owner is found to save this vital part of 
			Springfield’s history. William H. Coventry House & Barn 
			7704 Rt. 14 N., Harvard (McHenry County) 
			Currently for sale as part of a 287 acre, commercially-zoned tract, 
			the William H. Coventry House & Barn is located at Harvard’s 
			northern gateway. The 1855 house and its outbuildings were 
			rehabilitated in 1994 by Motorola as housing for visiting executives 
			to its Harvard manufacturing facility. Closed in 2003 and under 
			different ownership, the former Motorola campus and Coventry 
			buildings have deteriorated significantly, diminishing their 
			property value and placing the historic residence and barn in 
			danger. Local preservationists from the Harvard community have 
			voluntarily made minor repairs, but without full access to this 
			privately-owned property, any further stabilization is difficult. 
			New and dedicated ownership is needed of this historic parcel, which 
			can be divided from the larger campus. The City of Harvard, Harvard 
			Economic Development Corp. and the McHenry County Historical Society 
			are working together to identify possible buyers or solutions that 
			would ensure the preservation of the historic Coventry property. 
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Historic Properties in the River Edge Redevelopment Zones 
Elgin Tower Building, 100 E. Chicago Ave., Elgin (Kane County) 
The Hobbs Building, 2 N. River St., Aurora (Kane County) 
Madison Theater, 500 W. Main St., Peoria (Peoria County) 
The Murphy Building, 234 Collinsville Ave., East St. Louis (St. Clair County) 
Ziock Building, 416 S. Main St., Rockford (Winnebago County) 
Set to expire on January 1, 2017, the River Edge Redevelopment Zone (RERZ) 
Historic Tax Credit was created to revive and redevelop challenged historic 
properties in five river-adjacent Illinois cities: Aurora, East St. Louis, 
Elgin, Peoria, and Rockford. SB 1642 - the River Edge HTC extension bill – calls 
for the extension of this critical financing program. If not extended, many 
historic buildings in these cities will never have the opportunity to be 
redeveloped and put back on the tax rolls. The five buildings highlighted 
represent the variety of historic commercial buildings that are important to 
their business districts, but all require the RERZ incentive to make good 
financial sense for rehabilitation. The extension bill would allow the credit to 
sunset in January of 2022. The historic tax credits offered in the RERZ 
districts have made huge strides in downtown revitalization in Rockford and 
Peoria, but more time is needed for other critical projects to be completed. 
 
 
Mid-Century Modern Houses 
Statewide 
The staggering number of mid-century modern houses up for sale and vulnerable as 
tear-downs in the Chicago area and or unable to sell throughout Illinois 
underlines the challenge of marketing these unique homes built from the 
1940s-1970s. Communities continue to lose architecturally significant homes from 
this period to demolition. Often, these homes contain open floor plans, small 
kitchens, seemingly outdated materials, and design features such as windowless 
or full-glass walls that lead many realtors to view them as less desirable and 
list them for their land value. Many nationally significant architects who were 
based here designed these homes, including Edward Dart, A. James Speyer, and 
Keck & Keck. The increasing loss of mid-century modern residential buildings 
will continue unless they are identified and protected by local landmark 
commissions. Greater understanding of their design qualities and use of 
available incentives for their rehabilitation will also help these misunderstood 
gems continue to sparkle for their communities. 
  
 
Schulze Bakery 
40 E. Garfield Blvd., Chicago (Cook County) 
Once the highest-producing baking company in the country the Schulze Bakery 
building in Chicago’s Washington Park neighborhood was built in 1914. Local firm 
John Ahlschlager & Son designed the plant to efficiently accommodate the 
programmatic requirements of large-scale industrial baking while still employing 
highly decorative terra cotta ornament and detail on the exterior. While the 
building retains a high degree of its historic integrity, it has stood vacant 
since 2005, leaving it prone to deterioration and damage by vandals. The owners 
are committed to renovating and reusing the building – potential reuse plans 
have envisioned mixed-use retail and residential or a data center – but without 
the assistance of a state historic tax credit (SB 1250), the financing continues 
to be very difficult and the owners may need to sell the historically rich 
plant. Further, the plant is situated next to a vacant lot and in close 
proximity to the expressway and heavily trafficked arterial streets, making it 
an attractive location for strip-mall or big-box development. The Washington 
Park community is deeply committed to saving the building, and the Local Support 
Initiatives Corporation (LISC) conducted a Quality of Life plan for the 
neighborhood in 2009 which largely centered on retention and rehabilitation of 
the Schulze Bakery. For large-scale historic buildings like Schulze, an added 
financial incentive for rehabilitation is greatly needed.  
 
 
St. James Academy 
220 Illinois St., Lemont (Cook County) 
The historic St. James Academy (now known as St. Patrick School) exemplifies the 
growing number of shuttered archdiocesan schools. Built in 1883 in a simple 
Italianate style, the school is one of just a dozen Joliet-Lemont limestone 
structures still standing in Lemont, a town where quarrying 
was the major industry from 1850-1900. Students from 1st through 12th grades 
attended classes at the original St. James school building (renamed St. Patrick 
School in the 1890s) until 1963, when a new school building was constructed 
nearby. Low enrollment later prompted the Archdiocese to merge St. Patrick 
School into another school in Lemont in 2003, so that both the old St. James and 
newer school buildings were left without a purpose. When the newer school 
building was converted into a parish center and meeting space, old St. James 
remained vacant. Periodic inspections by the Archdiocese revealed structural 
support problems, but these have not been addressed in at least a decade. As a 
result, breaches in the roof have allowed water to enter the interior, which has 
become severely deteriorated. Although the Village of Lemont designated St. 
James Academy a local landmark, the parish today views the historic building as 
an unusable drain on their budget. Aside from the roof structure and interior 
deterioration, the school exterior is stable and retains a high degree of 
historic integrity. Local preservationists are working with the Village to 
explore opportunities for the right developer to rehabilitate and reuse the 
building. 
  
  
 
State Historic Preservation Office 
Springfield  
Governor Rauner’s proposed FY2016 budget zeroes out funding for the Illinois 
Historic Preservation Agency (IHPA) Preservation Services Division, our State 
Historic Preservation Office (SHPO). What we do not know at this point is if 
funding will be restored, if the Division will be moved to another agency, or if 
the administration proposes to cut preservation altogether. The federal 
government requires each state to have a SHPO to manage federally-mandated 
programs like Section 106 regulatory review, Certified Local Government (CLG) 
grants, the National Register of Historic Places and the administration of the 
Federal Historic Tax Credit program that requires staff design review of 
rehabilitation projects on behalf of the National Park Service. Federal funds 
flow into Illinois to pay for these services. Landmarks Illinois is advocating 
to restore state funding for the SHPO and maintain or grow its capacity to 
manage these vital regulatory review and incentive programs. The SHPO staff last 
year alone assisted private developers and property owners with Federal Historic 
Tax Credit rehabilitation projects totaling $726.6 million in private investment 
– a higher total than in any other state. That translates to approximately 3,600 
Illinois construction jobs. A loss of staff and budget to the SHPO will slow 
down project reviews and have a major impact on the real estate development 
community, job creation and put Illinois at risk of losing matching Federal 
funds and millions of dollars in private investment.  
 
 
Thatchcot House 
515 S. 13th St., Herrin (Williamson County) 
The charming and unique Thatchcot House in Herrin has fallen on difficult times 
since a fire in 2000 severely damaged its interior, but its storied history and 
significance in the community bolsters hope that a preservation solution remains 
possible. Originally a traditional bungalow constructed in 1915, early owners 
Hal and Violet Trovillion and local builder J.H. Kuehner collaborated to 
transform the house into a whimsical interpretation of an English thatched 
cottage, dubbing it “Thatchcot.” In addition to serving as their residence, 
Thatchcot was home to the family’s printing company, Trovillion Press, which 
published high-quality editions of short books through 1963. The house, which 
was to be a showpiece for the Trovillion’s fine art collection, was adorned with 
leaded-glass windows, exotic wood paneling, a flagstone terrace, and an iron 
prow from a 19th century Venetian gondola mounted to the exterior chimney. Equal 
care was taken in creating the rich landscape, which featured exotic plantings, 
a vine-covered stone fence, and a spherical sundial from Sweden. The devastating 
fire in 2000 severely damaged Thatchcot’s interior and the current owners have 
been unable to restore the house while the insurance payment remains disputed. 
The landscape has also suffered from the loss of many original plantings and the 
theft of the metal sundial. Until sufficient funding is acquired or an 
alternative solution determined, the charming “thatched cottage” of Herrin 
remains vacant, boarded, and threatened by continued deterioration. 
				 
			[Bonnie McDonald, President, 
			Landmarks Illinois] 
			
			  
			
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