It is hard to believe that in just over 20 short years, a town has grown so much. But Huntley has been growing and changing rapidly, going from around 2,400 residents in 1990 to around 24,000 residents in 2013. Even one simple aerial photo shows the major changes that have taken place. The following is a comparison of Huntley in 1990 and Huntley in 2013.
1990: The farm at left was bustling, still producing products needed throughout the area.
2013: Today, the house is abandoned and falling into disrepair. The barn was burned down by vandals and the red pole barn has since been razed.
1990: Main St. flowed easily into Huntley/Dundee Blacktop with an extra cut over that was common in a few roads in and outside of Huntley. The old Latimer farm house still stood at this odd intersection.
2013: Traffic has been now rerouted to a new section of road east of the old intersection. Today, the old section remains little more than a driveway for the water treatment plant. The farm was razed long before the road changed and remains empty minus a few trees.
1990: The water treatment facility on Huntley/Dundee Blacktop was the only one for the town, and was smaller in comparison. Within the late 1980s, Huntley residents finally topped the 2000 mark, and any major subdivisions were not even in the planning stage yet.
2013: Due to the higher amount of residents flooding into the town in the late 1990s/early 2000s, the facility needed to expand, and with the addition of Del Webb's Sun City, a second water treatment facility was constructed west of town.
1990: The old 1924 high school had just been razed, due to "structural issues." Right before demolition, it was owned by A. E. Robinson Co. The house to the east of the old school was still standing, a fine example of architecture on Huntley's main drag.
2013: Not only is the site of the old school still empty, but due to a dispute with the village, the owner of the house hastily demolished the structure, saddening many in the town. All that remains is the crumbling sidewalk that once led to the wrap around porch.
1990: The skeleton of the old water tower still stood behind the businesses on Main St. Rendered unnecessary in the 1970s, the legs and base for the tank loomed over the town, keeping a watchful eye of the tracks and all activities in the village.
2013: All that remains are a couple of the footings of the old wooden water. The structure collapsed in a windstorm, erasing it off the map for good.
1990: McHenry County FS was still in full swing. Since the town was still mostly farming, the business was still relevant to the town's economy. Across the tracks, H. D. Catty Corp. was running as strong as ever. Since moving to the town in the mid 1900s, the business had been working hard at supplying foil for wrapping products like Klondike Bars.
2013: Gone with the times, both businesses have since disappeared. McHenry FS would not last much longer after being photographed, and the buildings would sit vacant for years. The dilapidated fertilizer building just west of the water tower was the first to go. Later Dean Foods would purchase the main property and raze the old mill and the tractor dealership. H. D. Catty Corp. moved to a new facility due to their need for more space. The building stands empty today.
1990: Rt. 47 was just a two lane road. It is hard to tell if lights had been installed by this point or not, but in the mid '80s, it was just a four way stop. The businesses were still all occupied and regularly visited. Little had changed since the road's completion in 1936.
2013: Rt. 47 has been widened to four lanes and a median after decades of talk on expansion. Because of the widening, many businesses, including all that are pictured, were razed due to being in the path of the right-of-way. Marlowe Feeds, which stood prominently in the 1990 photo, was dismantled. All the sites are empty today, with the exception of Pfaff Auto, which is now the new welcoming sign for the village.
These details are just a few of many things that have changed as time has raced forward. There are even more differences in the photo that I did not touch on. See if there is anything that looks different from just a couple decades back than what exists today. You'll be shocked!
Showing posts with label Huntley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Huntley. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 26, 2013
Sunday, June 9, 2013
Then and Now: T. S. Huntley/ A. B. Brinkerhoff House
Sitting on picturesque Woodstock St. is a home that once housed one of Huntley's most prominent residents. In fact, it housed the man after which the town was named. Thomas Stillwell Huntley constructed this house when he moved into the town he laid out, but that wasn't until a decade after he came west to his future village.
Born March 27, 1807, Thomas S. Huntley grew up in New York and married Eliza Fox before moving out to Grafton Township in 1846. Huntley purchased 640 acres around the northern part of the township and set up his farm. He would only gain more land thanks to his insight with the railroad. He had caught word that the new Chicago and Galena railroad was to pass through the southern part of the township, so Huntley purchased property along the proposed route and earmarked land for businesses, churches, a cemetery, and the town square. When the town was founded in 1851, T. S. Huntley had expanded his land holdings to 880 acres. Soon after, he would construct his new home in the fledgling village.
Finished in 1856, Huntley's new home was a two story wood frame house constructed in the Federal Style. Two double story porches were located on the south side of the house. Huntley moved himself and his family into the new home. T. S. and Eliza had three kids, Harriet F., William, and Charles C. All three kids preceded Thomas in death. His wife Eliza also preceded him. Huntley, however, did remarry. In 1876 at the age of 69, Thomas married Emma Brinkerhoff. They had one child: Thomas. S. Huntley II. Emma passed in 1882, and T. S. Huntley passed in 1894 at the age of 87. This left T. S. Huntley II as the only heir to the house, but due to his young age, the house was willed to T. S. Huntley's brother-in-law, Abram Brinkerhoff. Abram was given the instruction that when T. S. II reached age 30, that the house would be his. The house, however, was showing its age and the notorious Woodstock street termites had taken its toll. This led Abram to have a massive renovation performed to the house.
In 1906, after much damage had been done by termites and age, Abram Brinkerhoff commissioned the old Huntley house to be renovated. This renovation included digging a basement, replacing termite damaged beams, and doubling the size of the house. As was popular at the time, the clapboard siding gave way to stucco, and the two double story porches became single story. A large porch was also added to the Third St. side of the house. To do much of the work, Abram hired local contractor John Kalsow. Kalsow had to endure a lot to meet the Brinkerhoff's vision of perfection. For instance, Abram had Kalsow install the front staircase three times, having to rip it out twice to do it over. Kalsow also had to redo the built in China cabinets for two years before Mrs. Brinkerhoff was satisfied. But even with tough demands, the house was finished and the "Brinkerhoff mansion" became a staple of Woodstock St.
Since the renovation since 1906, the house remained mostly the same, although by time the current owners, Tom and Barbara Conley, purchased the house, there was a lot of work that needed to be done to bring the house back to its former grandeur. Once again, the termites had begun to take their toll, and the house needed a full restoration. And the loving caretakers did just that. The house was returned to its former glory and even placked by the Huntley Historic Preservation Commission and the McHenry County Historical Society. Today, this lovely home and its gardens sit proudly at the top of the hill on Woodstock St. for all passers-by to enjoy.
Born March 27, 1807, Thomas S. Huntley grew up in New York and married Eliza Fox before moving out to Grafton Township in 1846. Huntley purchased 640 acres around the northern part of the township and set up his farm. He would only gain more land thanks to his insight with the railroad. He had caught word that the new Chicago and Galena railroad was to pass through the southern part of the township, so Huntley purchased property along the proposed route and earmarked land for businesses, churches, a cemetery, and the town square. When the town was founded in 1851, T. S. Huntley had expanded his land holdings to 880 acres. Soon after, he would construct his new home in the fledgling village.
Finished in 1856, Huntley's new home was a two story wood frame house constructed in the Federal Style. Two double story porches were located on the south side of the house. Huntley moved himself and his family into the new home. T. S. and Eliza had three kids, Harriet F., William, and Charles C. All three kids preceded Thomas in death. His wife Eliza also preceded him. Huntley, however, did remarry. In 1876 at the age of 69, Thomas married Emma Brinkerhoff. They had one child: Thomas. S. Huntley II. Emma passed in 1882, and T. S. Huntley passed in 1894 at the age of 87. This left T. S. Huntley II as the only heir to the house, but due to his young age, the house was willed to T. S. Huntley's brother-in-law, Abram Brinkerhoff. Abram was given the instruction that when T. S. II reached age 30, that the house would be his. The house, however, was showing its age and the notorious Woodstock street termites had taken its toll. This led Abram to have a massive renovation performed to the house.
In 1906, after much damage had been done by termites and age, Abram Brinkerhoff commissioned the old Huntley house to be renovated. This renovation included digging a basement, replacing termite damaged beams, and doubling the size of the house. As was popular at the time, the clapboard siding gave way to stucco, and the two double story porches became single story. A large porch was also added to the Third St. side of the house. To do much of the work, Abram hired local contractor John Kalsow. Kalsow had to endure a lot to meet the Brinkerhoff's vision of perfection. For instance, Abram had Kalsow install the front staircase three times, having to rip it out twice to do it over. Kalsow also had to redo the built in China cabinets for two years before Mrs. Brinkerhoff was satisfied. But even with tough demands, the house was finished and the "Brinkerhoff mansion" became a staple of Woodstock St.
Since the renovation since 1906, the house remained mostly the same, although by time the current owners, Tom and Barbara Conley, purchased the house, there was a lot of work that needed to be done to bring the house back to its former grandeur. Once again, the termites had begun to take their toll, and the house needed a full restoration. And the loving caretakers did just that. The house was returned to its former glory and even placked by the Huntley Historic Preservation Commission and the McHenry County Historical Society. Today, this lovely home and its gardens sit proudly at the top of the hill on Woodstock St. for all passers-by to enjoy.
![]() |
Huntley house after the addition. Circa 1912. |
![]() |
Huntley house today. May 15, 2013. |
Tuesday, April 23, 2013
Then and Now: Schuyler School District #82
Before School District 158, one room schools dominated the countryside. In total, there were 7 one room school houses that would eventually merge with the County's first consolidated school system. One of these schools was the Schuyler school. This one room school house, known as the "Schuyler District" or District #82, was constructed around 1859 on what would become N. Union Road. Positioned on a small hill just east of the Kishwaukee River, this school would service the farm children from the surrounding area for over 40 years. Some of the early teachers for the district include Luella Stevens, Warren Smith, and Mamie Keating. Keating would be forced to teach a short time at the Kishwaukee school because in late April of 1902, lightning from a strong storm struck the Schuyler school, burning it to the ground. It would take some time to rebuild, but in 1903, a larger and more equipped schoolhouse was constructed.
The new school measured approximately 24 feet by 36 feet, and had a six foot hall on one end leading to the main room. An "improved" furnace heated the building, and a well was located in the basement. Every effort was made to make this schoolhouse one of the finest in the county. Some of the teachers in the rebuilt school were Adeline Morris (1908-1909), Sadie Elston (1909-1910), and Frances Rushton (1910-1911). The final teacher at the school was Bernice Rehberg, who taught at the school from 1917-1920.
In 1920, the school consolidated with Huntley School District 158, the first consolidated school district in McHenry County. Afterwards, the school became a home. At some point, the bell was removed and eventually made its way to a nearby farm. In 2005, after decades of neglect, the dilapidated structure was razed. Today, the small hill remains empty, with trees encompassing the spot where the proud school once stood.
![]() |
The second Schuyler School, circa 1908 from a postcard sent by the teacher Adeline Morris |
Site of Schuyler School. 04/22/2013. |
Slab from a small outbuilding on the site. Most likely the small stable. 04/22/2013. |
Tuesday, November 13, 2012
D. K. Products/ Fox Valley Grease History
Every town has its own special history; some towns more than others. Huntley is no exception. Among the more interesting and lesser known properties in town, one stands out, although it is fairly well hidden. To many residents, it is known as the “grease factory.” A large cinderblock structure that has stood for over 60 years, it has been a couple interesting businesses and more recently an attraction to urban explorers. Very little has been written on its history, and what has been recorded has been scattered throughout multiple articles. The history of the structure is a fascinating, yet somewhat gruesome one, but the two businesses that operated at that site should be remembered as playing a crucial part of the town’s important growing period.
During WWII, Huntley had a claim to fame with the Wm. Fencil fuze plant. The fuze plant was owned and operated by Wm. Fencil Gasket Company, a manufacturer of gaskets for products like refrigerators. After the war, the site, known as Powder Park, was sold to multiple different business owners. One area, south of a branch of the Kishwaukee river, was the site of multiple fuze storage structures. It was in this area that a large cinderblock structure was constructed, although whether it was around during the fuze production or after is not entirely known. What is known is that in 1947, the structure was D. K. Products Company, owned by Roy Anderson and Peter McKeone. There were two phases to this business. The first phase was its early history. Originally, it was a rendering plant. Horses were butchered for their meat and the meat was processed and canned for dog and fur food. The main issue was that D. K. Products kept live horses at the site in a fenced in pasture, and slaughtered those horses for the process. This was not common knowledge to the residents, as the site was quite remote at the time. Another possible reason why residents knew little of the operations may have been linked to the horse meat scandal of 1952. It was found that some Chicago meat producers were using horse meat in their “100% beef.” This caused a major uproar in Chicago. D. K. Products was never linked to this, but some feel that they may have been involved, due to how many horses were brought to the site and how, not too long after the scandal, D. K. Products stopped dealing with live horses. That brought in the second phase. After they stopped dealing with live horses, the company became strictly a grease refinery. It is unsure how long this business continued. After D. K. Products left the site, the property most likely remained abandoned for a long period, although it was still owned by Roy Anderson. In 1963, Lester C. Lightbody moved his rendering business, Illinois Reduction Inc., into the old structure. It is unknown how long he remained at the site before leaving. Anderson later sold the property to a new owner, who would become the most recognizable business at the site: Fox Valley Grease Company.
A business that originated in Elgin over two decades prior, half operations began at this site in Huntley in December of 1970. The business was originally opened by Glen M. Anderson in Elgin in 1947. The site, which was located at 1001 Raymond St. in South Elgin, had an environmental lawsuit brought against the company just a few months prior to the Huntley facility’s opening. To settle the suit, the owner agreed to close the Elgin facility and clean up the site. Afterwards, full operation at the Huntley plant began around June 15, 1971. The owners and operators of the Huntley site were brothers Mike and Mel Hopkins and their mother, Tony (Anderson) Geister. Having returned from the Vietnam War, the Hopkins brothers began working in the family business, and took over operations when their father passed away in 1970. They were pioneers in grease recycling. Fox Valley Grease company (FVG) in Huntley was made up of the large cinderblock structure, two trailers (the main office and the drivers trailer), and eventually a large orange pole barn. The facility in Huntley was used for grease recycling and rendering, although they did not keep live animals at the site like D. K. Products did. One thing that was similar to D. K., though, was the horrid smell that occurred when the rendering process was in full swing. For rendering, dead animals were skinned, cooked, and ground up for tallow and animal feeds. At the height of production, FVG had about 25 trucks, about 40 employees, and 3 or 4 full time mechanics. Along with the grease factory, Mike and Mel ran A & B Boiler Repair from around 1978 until 1982. Mel was the president and Mike was vice-president, and they performed repairs and kept a couple trucks at the plant.
In the late ‘70s, construction began on a new, brick office north-west of the site on Powder Park Rd., but this vision never became complete. One of the workers, a monitor named Greg Gecis, was well known in Huntley. He was fond of going to the bars and after leaving the house that he was staying in at the north-west corner of Main and Lincoln Sts. he began to work at the grease factory and lived in the driver’s trailer. It was believed that Greg started the fire in February of 1979, although no one is positively sure why. The fire started in the cooker room and spread to the grease storage room. The fire department was delayed getting to the fire due to a train coming through town and also possibly one of the trucks tipping over. The building sustained a fair amount of damage and the grease storage room was completely gutted. This marked the beginning of the end of the business at that site. Mike and Mel rebuilt what they could, but the structure never reached full operation, and around 1982, the site closed. Mike and Mel went in front of the village board to try to get help for rebuilding and for a waste bid. The village turned them down and the idea of reopening around the mid ‘80s would never come to be. Mel went on to work for the state. Mike continued the business in 1987 as Fox Service with himself and one truck, but not at the old location in Huntley, although he did maintain the Huntley P.O. box for a period. The large building was rented out for storage, but arsons caused another fire in 1985. The site was abandoned, and has remained so for nearly 30 years. The brick office that was under construction was eventually finished by another owner and is currently Abitua plumbing (The FVG can still be seen in the bricks on the side of the structure that faces Powder Park Rd.). Mike ran his business up to his death in 1996, and Mel passed away in November of 2010. After Mike’s passing, his sons, Mike and Tim, took over the business, calling it M. W. Hopkins and sons in their father’s honor. The business is still owned by them, and is Hopkins Grease in Lake in the Hills.
Since its opening, the large cinderblock structure known as the “grease factory” has intrigued many area residents. Whether it was due to the operations that occurred when it was D. K. Products, the historical span and fire when it was Fox Valley Grease, or now as it is abandoned, it has always remained in the mind of the public. This landlocked piece of property will continue to fascinate the public, even if the structure’s gone and only its history remains. In the end, this interesting footnote in Huntley’s history is an important piece to remember and should be reminisced about for decades to come.
By Jake A. Marino
Mike H. remembered many details about the site when it was Fox Valley Grease Company. When it came to rendering dead animals, Mike could remember the sight and smells, but one interesting detail he remembered was that when his father and he would drive up to the facility on Saturdays, there would be times that farmers would leave their dead, bloated cows at the gate for FVG to recycle.
He also reminisced about the dogs that were always at the site. FVG Company was known for the wild dogs that would constantly be around the site, due to the dead animals and the grease. These dogs were mean, scruffy, and sometimes three legged (some had been hit by the trucks or other vehicles in the area). The dogs that prowled the site were also known to wreak havoc in town, impregnating local dogs, and other mischief.
Another thing he fondly remembered was how his father and uncle always liked to give away little pieces of advertisement; anything from money clips, key chains, decks of cards, pens, and more. They also loved putting advertisement stickers wherever they could, commonly on the back doors of the restaurants they serviced.
The brothers were kind people. They were always willing to give others a chance. Not only did they give Greg a job when he needed it, but they also hired people who had troubles with other jobs, and some who could not perform any other job. This helped them reach their height of around 40 employees. Personality wise, these people often fit in with the business too. The brothers and the employees were fondly remembered by many in town as having been quite the characters, thus earning the nickname the “Fox Valley Boys.”
Among the many memories he had of his father and uncle, one stood out. They often showed their Italian heritage, sometimes in manner and actions. For instance, they had the mentality that no one can tell them what they could and could not do. When one of the other grease recyclers in lower Illinois told them that they would not be able to open a facility down there, the Hopkins brothers proved him wrong! They set up a facility in Hamel Illinois, and when looking back, Mike’s father did believe that, in the end, the Hamel facility was a bad idea.
Local resident Tom D. had a few memories of the area. He remembered swimming in one of the little ponds/swamps located near the cinderblock building before it became Fox Valley Grease.
He also remembered that FVG used to load and unload grease on a separate rail track behind the old Catty Corp. building (northwest corner of Church and Mill Sts.). This would often cause the area around the Mill St. railroad crossing to smell.
Tom C. remembered both D. K. and FVG. The thing he remembered most about the companies, though (and not surprisingly, as this was a common memory among residents), was the terrible odor emitted from the site. He would often exclaim, “Oh God, the smell” as a consistent way of remembering the scent when the wind was blowing into town the wrong way.
Nancy S. vividly remembered D. K. Products, as she lived nearby when she was young. The trucks that hauled the horses to D. K. Products often passed her house. When this occurred, she would tell her dad about the new shipment. Her dad had come from Switzerland, where he was a blacksmith, so he was fond of horses, as was his daughter. So they would go out at night to the site and take some of the better horses from D. K.’s pasture. Nancy and her father would move these horses to a different pasture or even take them back to their house! The following day, her father would call Roy Anderson and offer to buy the horses from their previous night’s mission for $25 to $35 each. The fact that her and her father did this on multiple occasions shows just how many horses D. K. Products received; and the fact that they did not get in trouble definitely shows the difference from yesterday and today.
She also remembered one horse they took. The horse was blind, but still a good horse. She road that horse in the centennial parade. Out of all the horses they had taken from D. K. Products, she remembered that their family had that horse the longest, as a blind horse was of little use to a farmer. They did love that horse dearly.
Lonni O. had her own attachment to D. K. Products. One day, her father went to the company and purchased a leisure horse for the farm. Its hooves were a little too big, but it was well loved by the family and even gave birth three times. The babies were also used as leisure horses when they had grown, never as work horses for the farm.
For many years, Mary M. would bring one of the residents on Grove St. her mail. She remembered being in the resident’s house and listening to the FVG trucks rumble down the street, their cans banging around in the bed of the trucks.
Many residents remembered Greg Gecis, the watchman at FVG. They remembered seeing him in town at the bars, which he was fond of. One resident who often visited the area of the grease factory remembered seeing him washing his clothes in the creek near the factory. On September 24, 1989, Greg was struck and killed by the train when he was walking at the Grove St. crossing. He was 49 years old.
Bob V. remembers one Huntley resident, Ernie Beu, once worked at the facility when it was D. K. Products. Sometimes, during his lunch break, the only place to sit and eat his lunch was on a dead horse, which he often did.
Bill I. recalled his time on the village board in the 1970s. Call it bribery or call it goodwill, but during some controversies with Fox Valley Grease, the company sent free turkeys to the village board members for Christmas. The board members promptly donated the turkeys to the local food pantry.
Chuck Y. was a member of the Huntley Fire Department starting in the 1970s. He remembers fighting the fire at the grease factory in 1979. The owners lived in Elgin and by time they had made it to the facility, the fire was already heavily involved. The firefighters had issues getting into one of the main rooms because the garage doors were locked. Not wanting to lose any more time, the brothers opted to ram the garage doors down with the back of their trucks instead of search for the correct key amongst their large key ring. The hoses got covered and filled with grease from the site from the fire and had to be thoroughly cleaned after the fact.
Gathered by Jake A. Marino
During WWII, Huntley had a claim to fame with the Wm. Fencil fuze plant. The fuze plant was owned and operated by Wm. Fencil Gasket Company, a manufacturer of gaskets for products like refrigerators. After the war, the site, known as Powder Park, was sold to multiple different business owners. One area, south of a branch of the Kishwaukee river, was the site of multiple fuze storage structures. It was in this area that a large cinderblock structure was constructed, although whether it was around during the fuze production or after is not entirely known. What is known is that in 1947, the structure was D. K. Products Company, owned by Roy Anderson and Peter McKeone. There were two phases to this business. The first phase was its early history. Originally, it was a rendering plant. Horses were butchered for their meat and the meat was processed and canned for dog and fur food. The main issue was that D. K. Products kept live horses at the site in a fenced in pasture, and slaughtered those horses for the process. This was not common knowledge to the residents, as the site was quite remote at the time. Another possible reason why residents knew little of the operations may have been linked to the horse meat scandal of 1952. It was found that some Chicago meat producers were using horse meat in their “100% beef.” This caused a major uproar in Chicago. D. K. Products was never linked to this, but some feel that they may have been involved, due to how many horses were brought to the site and how, not too long after the scandal, D. K. Products stopped dealing with live horses. That brought in the second phase. After they stopped dealing with live horses, the company became strictly a grease refinery. It is unsure how long this business continued. After D. K. Products left the site, the property most likely remained abandoned for a long period, although it was still owned by Roy Anderson. In 1963, Lester C. Lightbody moved his rendering business, Illinois Reduction Inc., into the old structure. It is unknown how long he remained at the site before leaving. Anderson later sold the property to a new owner, who would become the most recognizable business at the site: Fox Valley Grease Company.
A business that originated in Elgin over two decades prior, half operations began at this site in Huntley in December of 1970. The business was originally opened by Glen M. Anderson in Elgin in 1947. The site, which was located at 1001 Raymond St. in South Elgin, had an environmental lawsuit brought against the company just a few months prior to the Huntley facility’s opening. To settle the suit, the owner agreed to close the Elgin facility and clean up the site. Afterwards, full operation at the Huntley plant began around June 15, 1971. The owners and operators of the Huntley site were brothers Mike and Mel Hopkins and their mother, Tony (Anderson) Geister. Having returned from the Vietnam War, the Hopkins brothers began working in the family business, and took over operations when their father passed away in 1970. They were pioneers in grease recycling. Fox Valley Grease company (FVG) in Huntley was made up of the large cinderblock structure, two trailers (the main office and the drivers trailer), and eventually a large orange pole barn. The facility in Huntley was used for grease recycling and rendering, although they did not keep live animals at the site like D. K. Products did. One thing that was similar to D. K., though, was the horrid smell that occurred when the rendering process was in full swing. For rendering, dead animals were skinned, cooked, and ground up for tallow and animal feeds. At the height of production, FVG had about 25 trucks, about 40 employees, and 3 or 4 full time mechanics. Along with the grease factory, Mike and Mel ran A & B Boiler Repair from around 1978 until 1982. Mel was the president and Mike was vice-president, and they performed repairs and kept a couple trucks at the plant.
In the late ‘70s, construction began on a new, brick office north-west of the site on Powder Park Rd., but this vision never became complete. One of the workers, a monitor named Greg Gecis, was well known in Huntley. He was fond of going to the bars and after leaving the house that he was staying in at the north-west corner of Main and Lincoln Sts. he began to work at the grease factory and lived in the driver’s trailer. It was believed that Greg started the fire in February of 1979, although no one is positively sure why. The fire started in the cooker room and spread to the grease storage room. The fire department was delayed getting to the fire due to a train coming through town and also possibly one of the trucks tipping over. The building sustained a fair amount of damage and the grease storage room was completely gutted. This marked the beginning of the end of the business at that site. Mike and Mel rebuilt what they could, but the structure never reached full operation, and around 1982, the site closed. Mike and Mel went in front of the village board to try to get help for rebuilding and for a waste bid. The village turned them down and the idea of reopening around the mid ‘80s would never come to be. Mel went on to work for the state. Mike continued the business in 1987 as Fox Service with himself and one truck, but not at the old location in Huntley, although he did maintain the Huntley P.O. box for a period. The large building was rented out for storage, but arsons caused another fire in 1985. The site was abandoned, and has remained so for nearly 30 years. The brick office that was under construction was eventually finished by another owner and is currently Abitua plumbing (The FVG can still be seen in the bricks on the side of the structure that faces Powder Park Rd.). Mike ran his business up to his death in 1996, and Mel passed away in November of 2010. After Mike’s passing, his sons, Mike and Tim, took over the business, calling it M. W. Hopkins and sons in their father’s honor. The business is still owned by them, and is Hopkins Grease in Lake in the Hills.
Since its opening, the large cinderblock structure known as the “grease factory” has intrigued many area residents. Whether it was due to the operations that occurred when it was D. K. Products, the historical span and fire when it was Fox Valley Grease, or now as it is abandoned, it has always remained in the mind of the public. This landlocked piece of property will continue to fascinate the public, even if the structure’s gone and only its history remains. In the end, this interesting footnote in Huntley’s history is an important piece to remember and should be reminisced about for decades to come.
By Jake A. Marino
Memories at D. K. Products/ Fox Valley Grease History
Mike H. remembered many details about the site when it was Fox Valley Grease Company. When it came to rendering dead animals, Mike could remember the sight and smells, but one interesting detail he remembered was that when his father and he would drive up to the facility on Saturdays, there would be times that farmers would leave their dead, bloated cows at the gate for FVG to recycle.
He also reminisced about the dogs that were always at the site. FVG Company was known for the wild dogs that would constantly be around the site, due to the dead animals and the grease. These dogs were mean, scruffy, and sometimes three legged (some had been hit by the trucks or other vehicles in the area). The dogs that prowled the site were also known to wreak havoc in town, impregnating local dogs, and other mischief.
Another thing he fondly remembered was how his father and uncle always liked to give away little pieces of advertisement; anything from money clips, key chains, decks of cards, pens, and more. They also loved putting advertisement stickers wherever they could, commonly on the back doors of the restaurants they serviced.
The brothers were kind people. They were always willing to give others a chance. Not only did they give Greg a job when he needed it, but they also hired people who had troubles with other jobs, and some who could not perform any other job. This helped them reach their height of around 40 employees. Personality wise, these people often fit in with the business too. The brothers and the employees were fondly remembered by many in town as having been quite the characters, thus earning the nickname the “Fox Valley Boys.”
Among the many memories he had of his father and uncle, one stood out. They often showed their Italian heritage, sometimes in manner and actions. For instance, they had the mentality that no one can tell them what they could and could not do. When one of the other grease recyclers in lower Illinois told them that they would not be able to open a facility down there, the Hopkins brothers proved him wrong! They set up a facility in Hamel Illinois, and when looking back, Mike’s father did believe that, in the end, the Hamel facility was a bad idea.
Local resident Tom D. had a few memories of the area. He remembered swimming in one of the little ponds/swamps located near the cinderblock building before it became Fox Valley Grease.
He also remembered that FVG used to load and unload grease on a separate rail track behind the old Catty Corp. building (northwest corner of Church and Mill Sts.). This would often cause the area around the Mill St. railroad crossing to smell.
Tom C. remembered both D. K. and FVG. The thing he remembered most about the companies, though (and not surprisingly, as this was a common memory among residents), was the terrible odor emitted from the site. He would often exclaim, “Oh God, the smell” as a consistent way of remembering the scent when the wind was blowing into town the wrong way.
Nancy S. vividly remembered D. K. Products, as she lived nearby when she was young. The trucks that hauled the horses to D. K. Products often passed her house. When this occurred, she would tell her dad about the new shipment. Her dad had come from Switzerland, where he was a blacksmith, so he was fond of horses, as was his daughter. So they would go out at night to the site and take some of the better horses from D. K.’s pasture. Nancy and her father would move these horses to a different pasture or even take them back to their house! The following day, her father would call Roy Anderson and offer to buy the horses from their previous night’s mission for $25 to $35 each. The fact that her and her father did this on multiple occasions shows just how many horses D. K. Products received; and the fact that they did not get in trouble definitely shows the difference from yesterday and today.
She also remembered one horse they took. The horse was blind, but still a good horse. She road that horse in the centennial parade. Out of all the horses they had taken from D. K. Products, she remembered that their family had that horse the longest, as a blind horse was of little use to a farmer. They did love that horse dearly.
Lonni O. had her own attachment to D. K. Products. One day, her father went to the company and purchased a leisure horse for the farm. Its hooves were a little too big, but it was well loved by the family and even gave birth three times. The babies were also used as leisure horses when they had grown, never as work horses for the farm.
For many years, Mary M. would bring one of the residents on Grove St. her mail. She remembered being in the resident’s house and listening to the FVG trucks rumble down the street, their cans banging around in the bed of the trucks.
Many residents remembered Greg Gecis, the watchman at FVG. They remembered seeing him in town at the bars, which he was fond of. One resident who often visited the area of the grease factory remembered seeing him washing his clothes in the creek near the factory. On September 24, 1989, Greg was struck and killed by the train when he was walking at the Grove St. crossing. He was 49 years old.
Bob V. remembers one Huntley resident, Ernie Beu, once worked at the facility when it was D. K. Products. Sometimes, during his lunch break, the only place to sit and eat his lunch was on a dead horse, which he often did.
Bill I. recalled his time on the village board in the 1970s. Call it bribery or call it goodwill, but during some controversies with Fox Valley Grease, the company sent free turkeys to the village board members for Christmas. The board members promptly donated the turkeys to the local food pantry.
Chuck Y. was a member of the Huntley Fire Department starting in the 1970s. He remembers fighting the fire at the grease factory in 1979. The owners lived in Elgin and by time they had made it to the facility, the fire was already heavily involved. The firefighters had issues getting into one of the main rooms because the garage doors were locked. Not wanting to lose any more time, the brothers opted to ram the garage doors down with the back of their trucks instead of search for the correct key amongst their large key ring. The hoses got covered and filled with grease from the site from the fire and had to be thoroughly cleaned after the fact.
Gathered by Jake A. Marino
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)