Welcome
Westville
is a small rural farming town. Like many small towns in the midwest,
people here enjoy the quiet slower pace of life. There are a few
large employers in the area, but the vast majority of residents
are someway involved in the growing of corn or soybeans.
Westville
is about 10 minutes south of Michigan City on Hwy 421 and 15 minutes
east of Valparaiso on Hwy 6, with both of these Highways intersecting
just south of the downtown area.
For entertainment,
families might take up a softball game at the baseball diamond
at the park and stop by the Dairy Queen after. Not alot for sure,
but Westvillians don't ever want to brag about their nightlife,
they'd rather leave that up to the big cities.
Snap
Shots
Click
on the images to see a larger version.
A
Brief History
In February,
1829, Henly Clyburn left Ottawa, Ill., with his wife, Sarah, and
her family to settle in what is now LaPorte County.
Sarah's father,
Stephen Benedict, had died the year before, and according to custom,
her brothers were to be "bound out," given homes with
friends and relatives in return for the work they could do. Faced
with family disintegration, Sarah's mother sought a new home elsewhere.
Clyburn recommended the area of "La Porte," the door,
a natural opening through the timber from one beautiful prairie
to another. He had passed and passed again through the door on
trips to visit relatives in Niles, Michigan.
The journey
of Clyburn and the Benedict family was a severe undertaking. It
was a bitterly cold February, and the travelers encountered blinding
snowstorms almost daily as they plodded their way with ox teams.
The cold froze the pioneers' faces. Some days, sleet and snow
filled the lead oxen's eyes and it could not see. The leaders
were placed behind until the new leaders could no longer see.
Sometimes the wagon broke through the crust of snow, and the travelers
extricated it by prying the wheels out with their bedrails. When
they arrived here, 15 inches of snow covered the ground.
It was March
15, and the family established a camp, feeding trees branches
and whatever prairie grass they could find of their cattle. Henly
Clyburn, with the help of the Benedict boys, set out to build
a cabin. By most accounts, it was the first white settlement in
LaPorte County. It was also the beginning of Westville.
Those settlers
helped make Westville's New Durham Township, one of the county's
original three, along with Kankakee and Scipio. The widow Benedict
was given the honor of naming the new territory and she choose
the name New Durham in honor of her birthplace, Durham, New York.
In July of
that first year, Elizabeth Miriam Clyburn was born to Henly and
Sarah. She was the first white child born in the county.
News spread
of the pleasant country and its good land and more settlers were
drawn. The first were William Eahart and Samuel Johnson from Niles,
where Henly had taken his grain to be milled. Jacod Inglewright
also came here from near Niles during the first year.
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