North Aurora: 1834-1940 is a quintessential study of what happened when
settlers arrived in the Midwest in the 1830s. The village's location on
the Fox River provided plentiful trees and waterpower for sawmills. Soon
other mills, smelting works, a packing plant, a door-sash-blind factory,
and a creamery all came to town. The village's railroad enabled its
Boswell Cheese Factory to ship cream cheese to England in 1877. By 1922,
North Aurora had a huge entertainment complex, a popular racetrack, and
a hotel. Today the village is growing rapidly but still maintains its
rural atmosphere.