Des Plaines
Illinois
replica of Ray Kroc's first McDonald's restaurant
Des Plaines, city, Cook county, northeastern Illinois, U.S. Lying on the Des Plaines River, it is a suburb of Chicago, 17 miles (27 km) northwest of downtown. The area was originally inhabited by Potawatomi, Ottawa, and Ojibwa peoples. Settled in 1835 by Socrates Rand of Massachusetts, for whom the community was named in 1857, it was renamed for the river (French: “Of the Plains”) in 1869. German immigrants began arriving in the 1840s and have left their imprint on the city. It was laid out in the 1850s, when the railroad connected the city with Chicago. Des Plaines annexed the village of Riverview in 1925 and Orchard Place in 1956.
The local economy was based largely on a gristmill and agriculture. The community was primarily residential until the development in the 1950s of O’Hare International Airport to its south stimulated its industrial growth. Today manufactures include fuses, plumbing fixtures, and contact lenses. The main campus of Oakton Community College was moved to the city in 1980. Ray Kroc opened his first McDonald’s restaurant in Des Plaines in 1955; it has been rebuilt as a museum. There is also a local history museum. Inc. village, 1869; reinc. 1873; city, 1925. Pop. (2000) 58,720; (2010) 58,364.
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