In the book "Organized Crime in Chicago" by Robert Lombardo, on page 42 it mentions a "Birneyville, IL, 18 miles west of Chicago along the Santa Fe rail line in DuPage County", where there was a gambling joint called the Stockade in 1904.
Here's a link to the book: http://books.google.com/books?id=JpC8T1r8ZSUC&pg=PA42&lpg=PA42&dq=birneyville,+il&source=bl&ots=JV0tsPlMHM&sig=nQIxdk37XGiPRtEy355s2r5OZsg&hl=en&sa=X&ei=RCG2UonVBsblyQH2wYHoAw&ved=0CC4Q6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=birneyville%2C%20il&f=false
Strange!
The Stockade story shows up in a few places, but only mentions it being in DuPage County, with nothing about Birneyville.
I wonder if it was just a local term for the area, not an actual name. My mom's hometown in So. Il. has a sparsely-populated part everyone calls 'Shakerag' (and has for over 100 years), but it still falls under the actual municipality name.
I don't know if there is any connection, but there was a "mob" house in Du Page County that was torn down 20-25 years ago. It was a large '50's-'60's ranch that stood on the west side of Rt. 83 maybe a quarter mile north of Bluff Road.
I would imagine it was a party house, good for a poker game, a little action on the side, etc. There may have been a particular crime connected to it but I don't remember that.
Was that the Birneyville location of long ago? Relatively close by was Teidtville, an unincorporated area near 91st. & Wolf Rd. famous for the old Sante Fe Speedway, now annexed by Willow Springs.
I consulted a 1932 Illinois Standard Oil road map and there is a Byrneville shown three miles SW of Teidtville, right along the Sante Fe tracks. At that time there was no main road designated as Rt. 83, only some improved roads and two lane blacktop in what was basically the sticks in that era. Byrneville was only about a half mile from what is now Rt. 83 and Bluff Rd.
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 12/22/2013 02:56PM by b.a.hoarder.
Byrneville, according to this person's account, "...In the early 1900s the unincorporated area now known as Palisades was called Byrneville.." Here is a link to some photos:
It would appear that either Mr. Lombardo or his editors got the spelling wrong. At some point in the process, the Stockade ancedote was either told orally (bIr is a more common spelling for that pronunciation) or the spelling was "fixed" by an editor. After all, who hasn't had misspellings forced into their documents for placenames by an automatic spell checker at least once?
Despite the spelling "problem" in Robert M. Lombardo's book, all other indications point to the spelling of "Byrneville." The AT&SF mileage matches, the sign on the railroad depot matches, and all other geographic references match.
Thanks.
Brian J. Patterson.
bowler Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> Here is an excerpt from the book and it is
> definitely Birneyville:
>
> http://books.google.com/books?id=JpC8T1r8ZSUC&pg=P
> A42&lpg=PA42&dq=birneyville+illinois&source=bl&ots
> =JV0unJeKBS&sig=I7eHqFJpnDzTRMAmvAIg5ekDmsw&hl=en&
> sa=X&ei=rbu8UvyhLOnV2QW6sIGACA&ved=0CDcQ6AEwAg#v=o
> nepage&q=birneyville%20illinois&f=false
Yep, "Byrneville" is the corrected spelling. I found a number of articles in the Trib archives from 1905 mentioning this town and The Stockade. I'll do some more digging and report back.
Here's the location on a current topo map:
http://www.mappingsupport.com/p/gmap4.php?ll=41.713611,-87.933611&z=14&t=t4
To see historic topos and aerial photos of the location:
http://www.historicaerials.com/aerials.php?scale=1.6E-5&lat=41.7124644639649&lon=-87.9347932260741&year=1939
Byrneville is shown on railroad maps of the Chicago District, including this one from the 1924 [i]Rand McNally Commercial Atlas[/i]
http://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/s/oel6z9