William Dennison Cary
William Dennison Cary was an American farmer and postmaster. He is the founder and namesake of Cary, Illinois.
Biography
William Dennison Cary was born on September 7, 1808, to John Flavel Cary and Esther Stanton in Sandy Creek, New York.William Dennison Cary's paternal grandfather was William Cary, who was a deacon in Lempster, New Hampshire and served as a captain both under John Fellows in 1776 and again in Bellow's Regiment of Militia during the Saratoga Campaign in 1777, where he was also present at General Burgoyne's surrender on October 17. William Dennison Cary has lineage to The Cary Family.
In 1830, William Dennison Cary married Lodemia Ells, who was one year older, in New York. Their first child, Cornelia, was born in 1832. Two years later, they welcomed another daughter, Hulda. In 1841, he and his family moved from New York to Illinois as Cary purchased of land. In the next few years, William Dennison and Lodemia welcomed four more children: John, Jane, William Dennison II, Susan, and Caltha.
As his family grew, Cary purchased an additional of land for $1.25 per acre through three separate purchases in 1844 and established Cary Station, a small farming community. In 1845, he built a red brick house on West Main Street, which still stands today.
In addition to farming, Cary briefly assumed the position of the second ever postmaster of Cary Station in 1857, after the first postmaster resigned the year prior. Shortly after his land was recorded on 23 February 1859, a single railroad that connected to Chicago and Janesville was built at Cary Station, where the modern day Metra Train Station is located.
Throughout his life, William Dennison Cary bought and developed more land, owning about at the time of his death in 1861.
Death
William Dennison Cary died on February 3, 1861. After his death most of his land was sold to various Cary Station residents to pay off outstanding debts.Lodemia Cary died in 1885, 24 years after her husband's death.
William Dennison Cary, his wife Lodemia, five of their seven children, and many of their descendants are buried in Cary Cemetery.
Legacy
During his lifetime, the community he built was known as Cary Station; it later adopted the shortened name of Cary and was formally incorporated on July 17, 1893.The red brick house that Cary built in 1845 still stands today. However, in 1966, the house was moved to a lot on East Ross Street, when Ameritech bought the West Main property. The present-day house includes two sections that were added later.
In May 2018, The Cary-Grove Historical Society unveiled a bronze bust of William Dennison Cary in Jaycee Park in Cary. The statue was sculpted by Guy Bellaver based on a daguerreotype picture, the only known surviving image of Cary.