Mt. Morris was settled around 1837 by adventurers from the east coast seeking open spaces and a better life. It still offers stunning rural views and a high quality of life for anyone seeking to make My Town, Mt. Morris, their town.

Rooted in Higher Education

Two colleges – Rock River Seminary in the 1800s, and Mount Morris College in the early 1900s – developed the picturesque town square into a campus.

It’s still known as the “campus,” although the last institution closed in 1932. What remains of that history can be seen in preserved buildings and landmarks, including Old Sandstone, the Memorial Fountain, Warren G. Reckmeyer bandshell, and the Kable News building (formerly College Hall).

Take A Tour!

You can take an audio tour of the campus to learn its history by calling 815-261-9186 and entering a number for the tour stop. Each tour stop has a 2-minute history of that building or landmark.

Printing Saves Us from the Great Depression

From its roots in higher education, Mt. Morris grew into a hub for printing, publishing, and circulation. The first printer opened in 1842 to print a village newspaper. But the industry took off when twin 18-year-old Kable brothers took over an abandoned print shop in 1898 and grew that printing business into the largest employer in the Village.

The growth and prosperity of Mt. Morris in the early years came entirely from the development of the printing plant. By the 1930’s, printing was such a core business that Mt. Morris was one of only two communities in the nation relatively unaffected by the great depression. Mt. Morris because Kable Printing Company kept churning out newsletters and periodicals that were easily accessible and affordable to the masses, and Hershey, Pennsylvania, which produced chocolate Hershey Kisses.

Unfortunately, a prolonged worker’s strike in the printing plant in the 1970s and 80s forced many workers to leave town. Subsequent owners were never able to sustain the dominance of earlier years — although, in 1998, the plant printed 1.7 billion catalogs, inserts and magazines a year, totaling $95 million in sales, and shipped throughout North America and the United Kingdom, under ownership by Quebecor World Printing.

A Heritage of Printing and Publishing – and Music

Kable News Company was a circulation and distribution business that purchased College Hall on the campus in 1932. Many of the magazines that were printed by Kable Brothers Printing were distributed by Kable News Company. The business left Mt. Morris in the 2000s, but the impressive red brick building remains as a home to several local businesses.

Historic Kable News building in Mt. Morris, Illinois
Summer performance at the Mt. Morris Band Shell

The Village also has an unusually rich musical history. There has been a band, orchestra, or musical organization in Mt. Morris since 1845, only six years after the Village’s founding. One of the Kable brothers was such a musical benefactor that if you were looking for a job and played an instrument it almost guaranteed you a job in the printing plant. We can point with pride to the current Kable Concert Band which has performed free summer concerts on the campus every year since 1896.

Quick Fact

Mt. Morris is home to the official Freedom Bell of Illinois.

Quick Fact

Old Sandstone opened in 1855 as a men’s dormitory.

Quick Fact

InBronze Studios & Foundry in Mt. Morris cast a new pedestal and Nymph statue for the Price Fountain refurbishment in 2015.

Today

The Mt. Morris campus is on the register of historic places, recognized for a long and remarkable heritage of higher education, musical longevity, and the printing and publishing industry.

And we have turned to the arts as a source of distinction. Led by Encore! Mt. Morris, we are committed to developing Mt. Morris, Illinois, into a unique, thriving rural and cultural arts destination in northwest Illinois.

Take A Tour!

You can take an audio tour of the campus, its buildings and history by calling 815-261-9186.

Historical Highlights

  • Mt. Morris was established in 1839 and incorporated in 1848.
  • The municipal Kable Concert Band has performed every season since 1896 and still performs free weekly summer concerts from the bandshell on the campus.
  • The Freedom Bell, on the campus square, was declared the official Freedom Bell of Illinois by the state legislature in 1971, and is rung every July 4th at 2 p.m. EST, simultaneously with “ringing” (actually, gently tapping) the famous Liberty Bell in Philadelphia.
  • (Then) actor Ronald Reagan was one of the dignitaries who rang the Mt. Morris Freedom Bell when it was dedicated on a cold day in April 1963. Reagan borrowed an overcoat from a local, and the coat is on display in the Mt. Morris Museum.
  • Liberty Walkup, of Mt. Morris, patented the “air-brush” in 1883, a name created by his wife, Phoebe. They founded the Air Brush Manufacturing Company and Illinois Art School, where airbrushing was taught to students from around the world. Among others, the Walkups taught airbrush technique to American Impressionist master Wilson Irvine at the Air Brush School in nearby Rockford, Illinois.
  • As a printing and publishing town, Mt. Morris was little affected during the great depression because the periodicals and newsletters they printed were affordable, readily available around the country, and vital sources of information for people eager for news and distractions.
  • Mt. Morris is home to more than a dozen Lustron homes – mass-produced, ready-to-build houses designed to make post-WWII home ownership easy and affordable. The prefab homes were built on a steel frame, and covered inside and out in porcelain-enameled, square steel panels. The pieces were assembled onsite in a fraction of the time needed for a conventional house. They were promised to be “termite-proof, verminproof, ratproof… fireproof, decayproof, stain-proof, salt-waterproof,” and “almost maintenance-proof.” These rare pieces of Atomic Age architecture are mostly in the north–northwest part of town in distinctive colors of light blue, light gray and light yellow.
  • In the early 1990’s, the Mt. Morris post office was one of the busiest in the state, with the volume of incoming and outgoing mail rivaling cities with populations 50 times larger, thanks to Watt Publishing, Kable News Company, Dawson Subscription Services, and the Quebecor Printing plant.
  • Mt. Morris is the official (and only) host of the National Straw Sculpting Competition.
  • In 2022, the National Trust placed the campus area on the National Register of Historic Places.