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The 1836 plan of the town of Hudson was interesting in several respects. First, most central Illinois towns of the 1830s were laid around a central public square, but Hudson had none. [9] Second, the town of Hudson had both "in lots" - and "out lots". The "in lots" formed the core of Hudson and were standard blocks of lots like any other town.
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Hudson Township is located in McLean County, Illinois. As of the 2010 census, its population was 2,571 and it contained 1,021 housing units. As of the 2010 census, its population was 2,571 and it contained 1,021 housing units.
America's First Black Town: Brooklyn, Illinois, 1830-1915, Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 2002. "Examining Structural Racism in the Jim Crow Era of Illinois," in The Materiality of Freedom: Archaeologies of Post-Emancipation Life, edited by Jodi Barnes, pp. 173–189, University of South Carolina Press (2011).
The new Revival Room restaurant and bar, which opened in Hudson last month in a 189-year-old building, ... The 1834 building was originally a general store downstairs, with the owners living ...
Hudson, Illinois, a town in McLean County; Hudson, Indiana, a town in Steuben County; Hudson, Iowa, a town in Black Hawk County; Hudson, Kansas, a town in Stafford County; Hudson, Maine, a town in Penobscot County; Hudson, Massachusetts, a town in Middlesex County Hudson (CDP), Massachusetts, the main village in the town; Hudson, Michigan, a ...
Hubbard lived in Hudson and attended school there; he stayed in the village until he was 16. The original wing of the house was built in 1857 by a doctor from Buffalo, New York, Silas Hubbard. In 1872 the two-story section of the house was constructed in a typical I-house design.
Because in Illinois at that time it was illegal for railroads or their officials to establish new towns, much of the land was then transferred to two McLean County real estate developers, Jesse W. Fell (1808 – 1887) and Charles W. Holder (1819 - 1900). These two men laid out the town of Towanda and filed the plat on December 7, 1854. [6]