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Otto: Looking to unlock the secrets of the Monkey House

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The Hickory Knolls Natural Area does, tucked around a bend in a trail, have the remains of a concrete-block building that for as long as anyone can remember has been referred to as the Monkey House. (Photo provided)

The Hickory Knolls Natural Area contains some of the most ecologically diverse terrain within the St. Charles Park District. Woodlands, wetlands, prairies – including a rare hill prairie – make up these 130 acres just west of the Discovery Center and are home to more plant and animal species than you can shake a lichen-crusted oaken stick at.

Plants too rare to name flourish alongside more common but equally remarkable species such as marsh marigold and bloodroot, leadplant and the silphium quadruplets, compass plant, prairie dock, rosinweed and cup plant.

Such floral diversity brings equally wide-ranging faunal associations – spring peepers, eastern screech owls, red fox, 13-lined ground squirrels, robust populations of tree swallows and eastern bluebirds and maybe, at one time ... monkeys.

No, we don’t have a jungle of trees or the balmy climate we think of monkeys as preferring. But we do, tucked around a bend in a trail, have the remains of a concrete-block building that for as long as anyone can remember has been referred to as the Monkey House.

Its roof and windows are long gone, as are its doors – the openings for which are shorter and narrower than average. Its floor, buried under years of leaf litter and other forest debris, has given rise to two buckthorn trees. Beverage cans and other assorted rubble are strewn about, and one hollow nook recently housed a colony of yellow jackets. Ow. 

But the building’s walls still stand strong. If only they could talk.

Since they insist on maintaining their stony silence, I’ve instead opted for chatting with several people over the past few years, hoping one or another could shed light on this building’s unusual name. Although some have memories of playing in it as kids or working for the Illinois Youth Corrections facility next door, no one had any recollection of seeing the building in use. 

So I decided to do a little digging, although not in the building itself. (Again, those yellow jackets. Inactive though they may be, I’d prefer to avoid another encounter.)

Instead, I visited the online Illinois Digital Archives (idaillinois.org), a treasure trove of historical documents relating all sorts of tales about our great state. Because much of what is now the Natural Area once belonged to the IYC, or “boys’ home,” as it is still often referred to today, I focused my search by using the facility’s former formal name, the St. Charles School for Boys.

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