A reflection on the City’s name, the country land
in and around Countryside was originally inhabited by the Potawatamie
Indians and later by early American pioneers in the beginning of the 19th
century. Early settler Joseph Vial and his family were among the first
people to settle in the Countryside area in 1833. The area remained
large expanses of rural farmland until the Great Chicago Fire of 1871,
when the fire sent thousands of City dwellers into what is now the West
Suburban Chicago Region. With land selling for only $2 an acre, areas
such as Countryside offered a respite from the congestion and industry
in Chicago. Some of the earliest families to settle in the area included
the Conrads, Craigmills, Henrys, Murphys, Polks and Winslows.
Despite the settlement of these early Countryside
inhabitants, the area largely remained a quiet farming community until
the post World War II era when suburban areas such as Countryside began
to experience explosive growth. Countryside and many of its Western
Suburban neighbors sustained similar housing booms as City residents
began to construct new homes in the area. These new pioneers came
looking not for farmland this time but rather for affordable homes and
safe places to raise and educate their children. The area’s first
residential subdivision was LaGrange Terrace, built in 1947; it was
later followed by the Don L. Dise and Edgewood Park subdivisions in the
1950’s. Countryside began its transformation into a bedroom community
for workers commuting into Chicago.
Following inquiries from surrounding incorporated
communities, the City of Countryside was officially incorporated in
1960. With a 1960 population of about 2,000, the City has since almost
tripled its original population, primarily through annexation of
surrounding residential areas. Among the first orders of business for
the new city was street construction and building a water works system,
both of which were developed in the 1960’s. The construction of the
Stevenson Expressway in the mid-1960’s, when combined with the heavily
traveled LaGrange Rd., also created a great deal of retail and
industrial growth in and around Countryside through the 1980’s,
including the construction of the landmark 548,000 sq. ft. Countryside
Plaza.