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The original item was published from 6/24/2020 1:22:34 PM to 7/16/2020 12:00:01 AM.

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Posted on: June 24, 2020

[ARCHIVED] Replica Horse Trough Installed in the Downtown

Horse Trough

Last week, the Village’s new replica horse trough was installed as a centerpiece in the downtown at the intersection of Crescent Boulevard and Main Street. In 2019, the original horse trough was removed from its location and delivered to Max-Cast, Inc. in Kalona, Iowa, a company that specializes in sculpture and foundry services. This began the year-long process of full refurbishment of the original horse trough and the creation of the bronze replica. 

The original horse trough, which was significantly deteriorated, is currently being restored and covered with a white coating. It is anticipated to be on display permanently in front of the Civic Center this summer for residents to enjoy.  

History of the Historic Horse Trough

Long an icon of the Village of Glen Ellyn, the cast-iron horse trough was donated to the Village in 1907 by William C. Newton, a prominent businessman and a trustee on the Village’s first Board, which held its inaugural meeting on August 1, 1882. He was the son of Dr. Lewey Quitterfield Newton, one of Glen Ellyn’s earliest settlers and the town’s first doctor.

The original horse trough, designed to provide water for horses and dogs, was situated in the intersection of Crescent Avenue and Main Street. By 1911, just four years after Newton had donated the horse trough, traffic had become so heavy that it was hazardous for horses and dogs to drink from the fountain. It was moved east and placed on the south side of Crescent. At one point, the horse trough was situated on Duane Street east of Main Street, not far from the Glen Ellyn station on the Chicago, Aurora and Elgin electric line (now the Illinois Prairie Path). In the years after World War II, the horse trough was returned to its original place in the intersection of Crescent and Main, filled with flowers instead of water.

The horse trough was designated a Village Landmark in 2012.

(written history by Village Trustee Kelli Christiansen)

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