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Caspar Ott Cabin

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Caspar Ott Cabin
General information
Architectural styleLog cabin
Address450 Kipling Pl, Deerfield, Illinois
Completed1837
Renovated2001

The Caspar Ott Cabin is the oldest standing building in Lake County and one of the oldest in the state of Illinois. Built in 1837, it is located in the Deerfield Historic Village.

History

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The single-room log cabin belonged to the family of Caspar Ott, a French tailor born in 1812, and his German wife Elisabetha Trier. Where both of whom raised their seven children.[1] The building's age, estimated to be from 1837 has been confirmed by the Lake County Convention & Visitors Bureau as the oldest still standing in the county.[2]

One story that comes from the cabin is that in the winter of 1858, a 28 year old runaway enslaved person named Andrew Jackson (no relation to the president) from Mississippi found refuge in Deerfield via the Underground Railroad. A man named Lyman Wilmot recommended the Ott family cabin. Jackson remained with the family until spring of 1859, and he helped to build a fence around the home in the meantime. Come spring, Caspar crafted the man a new suit, Wilmot travelled with him to Chicago, and paid for Jackson's ship fare headed further north.[3][4]

It seems prior to the turn of the century the cabin was abandoned. In 1970 the cabin was rediscovered underneath plaster of the dining room in the Siljerstrom farmhouse. That same year, it was moved to the Deerfield Historic Village by the Deerfield Historical Society, which was founded just prior in 1968.[5] In the 1990s a fundraising campaign began in order to pay for renovations which were completed in 2001. The Historic Village includes the cabin, the George Luther House (1847), the Bartle Sacker Farmhouse (1854), the Little Red Schoolhouse (c.1890), and the Carriage House (c.1905).

References

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  1. ^ "The Deerfield Historic Village". Deerfield Area Historical Society. Deerfield Area Historical Society. Retrieved January 28, 2025.
  2. ^ Sheryl DeVore (May 23, 2019). "Log house takes kids back to era of dunce caps, stove pipe hats". Local News. Chicago Tribune. Retrieved January 28, 2025.
  3. ^ Marie Ward Reichelt (1928). "HISTORY OF DEERFIELD ILLINOIS" (PDF). archives.deerfieldlibrary. Deerfield Library. Retrieved January 28, 2025.
  4. ^ Diana Dretske (February 20, 2014). "Freedom in Lake County". Dunn Museum. Retrieved January 28, 2025.
  5. ^ "Historical Society". Village of Deerfield, IL. Village of Deerfield. Retrieved January 28, 2025.