Joseph Naper
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Joseph Naper | |
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Born | 1798 |
Died | August 23, 1862 (aged 63-64) |
Resting place | Naperville Cemetery, Naperville, Illinois |
Occupations |
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Known for | being the promoter and co-founder of Naper's Settlement in 1831, the oldest frontier Illinois town |
Relatives | John Murray (brother-in-law) |
Joseph Naper, also known as "Joe Naper" and "Captain Joseph Naper" (1798–1862), was an early
Early life
Joseph Naper was born in Bennington, Vermont, and traveled west with his parents during his youth to Ashtabula, Ohio, where he learned to be a ship builder from his father, Robert Naper, of Alwyn, Scotland.[1] In 1809, Joseph Naper's sister Amy Naper married John Murray of Ashtabula, Ohio, who would later become one of the founding settlers of Naperville, Illinois. The Naper family ships traded goods on the Great Lakes, frequently stopping at Fort Dearborn on Lake Michigan. On an early trip, Naper acquired lots near the fort, as did many of the first settlers to reach the Chicago River port.
Town builder and politician
On a later trip in 1831, on the Telegraph, a ship built by Joseph Naper, he was joined by his brother John Naper. The Naper families and five other families settled in the area, first known as Naper's Settlement, which later would become a part of DuPage County. Joseph Naper platted the town of Naperville, surveying the property and was elected to the Illinois House of Representatives for the first time in 1836. Here, Naper laid the groundwork and supervised passage of the 1839 bill which separated DuPage County from Cook County. Joseph Naper also served on the same committee with Abraham Lincoln, then a newly elected legislator from the Springfield area.
Military service
Joseph Naper served as an
Businessman and village president
In the 1850s, Joseph Naper was one of the founding stockholders for the short-lived "Southwest
Death
On August 23, 1862, Joseph Naper died in Naperville, Illinois and was buried in Naperville Cemetery.
References
- user-generated source]
Sources
- Richmond, C.W. and H. F. Valletta. A history of the county of DuPage, Illinois. Chicago: 1857.
- Richmond, C.W. History of DuPage County, Illinois, Aurora, IL: Knickerbocker & Hodder, 1877.
- Blanchard, Rufus. History of DuPage County, Illinois. Chicago: O.L. Baskin & Company, 1882.
- DuPage Roots. Wheaton, IL: Du Page County Historical Society, 1985.
- Gingold, Katharine Kendzy (2007). Ruth by Lake and Prairie; True Stories of Early Naperville. Gnu Ventures Company. ISBN 978-0-9792419-0-1.
- Williams, William W. (1878). History of Ashtabula Co., Ohio. William Bros.
- Anonymous (1894). Portrait and Biographical Record of Cook and DuPage Counties. Lake City Publishing Company.
- Naperville, Illinois History Page Archived June 7, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
- A photograph of Capt. Naper