Putnam County was formed from Fulton County in 1825. Putnam county covered a large area from Illinois' northern and eastern borders even including areas south of present-day Putnam county. By 1839, Putnam county shrank to its current size. Putnam County is now the smallest county in the state of Illinois, encompassing only 166 square miles. The lands, or portions of the lands, in the following present-day counties were, for a brief time, a part of Putnam county: Stephenson, Winnebago, Boone, McHenry, Lake, Carroll, Ogle, Dekalb, Kane, DuPage, Cook, Bureau, LaSalle, Kendall, Will, Stark, Marshall, Lee, Henry, Kankakee, Whiteside, JoDaviess, and Grundy.
Putnam
County was named in honor of Israel Putnam [1718-1790]. During the French and Indian War,
he served with Rogers’
Rangers. Later he was captured by Indians but was spared from being burned
at the stake by the last-minute intervention of a French officer.
In 1759, Putnam participated in the attack on Fort Ticonderoga and later at
Montreal. In 1762, he survived a shipwreck during a campaign against the
Spanish in Havana and later served at Detroit during Pontiac's Rebellion. In June 1775,
as a major general in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War,
Putnam offered distinguished service at the Battle of Bunker Hill, planned
the fortifications for Breed’s Hill and later fought in the battle itself.
Bureau | LaSalle | |
Marshall |