| The far west end of 3rd Street in the not-so-small town of Sterling, Illinois, is home to one of the more startling concentrations of Victorian mansions I have come across. Nine of the ten houses featured in this gallery are within about three blocks of each other, all on the same street. Normally, it is only individual homes which survive the ravages of the 20 th century; it is most unusual to find an entire Victorian street still extant. So, I have given 3rd Street its own small gallery. Sterling is an old one-industry town which, once upon a time, had a patriarch. Washington Dillon founded a steel works there in the 1850's, and over the next half-century both the steel works and the town of Sterling grew steadily, along with the Dillon family fortune. In due course, various members of the Dillon family built imposing Victorian mansions along the same stretch of 3rd Street – directly opposite the steel mill – and one can only imagine the sight this must have presented in 1910. {Sweeping, cinematic, black-and-white image from an Orson Wells movie: long shot of tall brick chimneys and black smoke. Workers in overalls are filing into the steel works as a small girl dressed in an expensive frock, and watched over by a uniformed nanny, plays with a ball in front of a Victorian mansion. The mansion is one in a line that commandingly set almost beside the steel works, just beyond a railway cut, so close that the little girl can hear the distant roaring of the furnaces. She picks up her ball, and runs back to her nanny.} OK, that's just a romantic notion on my part, but you get the general idea. The steel works are still there, surprisingly, and they did a booming business until the late 1990's. Most of the plant is idle these days, though I gather there is hope that some of it might be reopened someday. But in any case the mill has corporate ownership now, and the Dillon family no longer owns any of the houses pictured here. One (the oldest) is now a museum, one is a nightclub, one is a wedding boutique, two still have private owners, and the remaining five are vacant wrecks. I should probably mention that the modern town of Sterling also has its fair share of well-maintained (modern) houses; but these faded beauties on her once-millionaire's row are the ones that excite me.
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