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Acknowledgements
The Downtown St. Charles Strategy
Plan is the product of St. Charles residents, business
people, elected officials and civic leaders. The strategies
outlined in this plan are rooted in the ideas and
desires expressed by downtown St. Charles enthusiasts.
Citizens of St. Charles
City of St. Charles
Susan Klinkhamer, Mayor
City Council
| Donald DeWitte | | Peter Grathoff |
| Donald Haines | | Jo Krieger |
| Arthur Lemke | | Jim Martin |
| Don Nippert | | Betsy Penny |
| Ron Silkaitis | | Daniel Stellato |
Department Heads
Ellen Divita, Director of Economic
Dev.
Rita Tungare, Director of Community Dev.
Mark Koenen, Director of Public Works
Brian Townsend, City Administrator
Downtown St. Charles Partnership,
Inc.
Board of Directors
Craig Frank, President
Lou Sehring, Vice President
Mark Nickel, Secretary
Jim Breen, Treasurer
| David Clarke | | Dave English |
| Steve Fabiani | | Jo Krieger |
| Brian Townsend |
| Jim Martin |
| Sue McDowell | | Kaye Siblik |
| Doug Summers | |
Sean Williams |
Student Advisors
Melissa San Julian
Josh Malarsky
Staff
Marty Lucas, Executive Director
Deborah Treutler, Administrative Asst.
Downtown St. Charles Strategy Plan
Task Force
Craig Frank, Co-chair
Bob Hupp, Co-chair
| Tom Anderson | | Mark Armstrong |
| Jim Breen | | Michael Calomese |
| Ellen Divita | | Sharon Dixon |
| Steve Fabianiz | | Dick Hillier |
| Neil Johnson | | Nick Kalogeresis |
| Susan Klinkhamer | | Jo Krieger |
| Marty Lucas  | | Tom Mahaffey |
| Josh Malarsky | |
Brian Townsend |
| Sue McDowell | | Fred Norris, Jr. |
| Melissa San Julian | | Neal Smith |
| Jim Spear | | Dan Stellato |
| Doug Summers | | Sean Williams |
Downtown Professionals Network
Dale Helmich, CMSM
Jay Schlinsog, CMSM
Michael Schroeder, RLA
Original Page Layout & Design
by Patty Thayer, IMPRESSIONS
Transfered to the web by The
Point Group
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Legend
of the Four Sons
of Charlemagne (continued)
"These men will first build their
homes on the hills overlooking this
river. Land will be cleared so they
can plant their crops in the spring.
They will bring livestock to furnish
them food. Then they will build a
millwheel on the river to grind their
grain, then a bridge. Homes will be
built on the western bank. Stores
will open. Industry will come. Schools
will be built, and soon church spires
will rise up in the community. This
is the pattern of settlement of the
white man.
"Now, I am old, and it will be hard
for me to adjust to these changes.
I have tried to be a good father to
you. I have taught you all the tricks
and the cunning of our kind. You are
now able to take care of yourselves,
and you can adjust your lives to these
white men. As for myself, I have only
a few more years to live. Tonight
I shall leave you and go west to be
with my Indian friends. This is as
it should be. Your needs for me are
no more.
"I have never given you names, preferring
that you be known only as the four
sons of Charlemagne, so that there
shall always be unity among you for
the great tasks ahead.
This has been our happy home. It is
important that the settlement which
arises on the banks of this river
will develop a character unique among
other communities to be settled by
the white man. I would like you, my
four sons, to be the guardians of
this growing community in which men
can live, can work, can be educated,
can worship and can play.
“You, my firstborn, are to be the
guardian of the civic, the business,
the industrial life of this community.
“Education will become important,
and you, my second son, are to be
the guardian of this educational and
cultural expression.
“Soon, men will band together to worship,
and you, my third son, are to be entrusted
with the guardianship of this religious
expression.
“Amid this beautiful setting, it is
only natural that recreation will
flourish, and you, my last born, shall
be the guardian of this natural recreation
expression of man living in these
surroundings.”
Finishing his talk, Charlemagne bade
farewell to his sons and walked into
the night and westward.
These four sons of Charlemagne are
now represented on the Main Street
Bridge, monumental guardians of this
community.
Today, St. Charles is a truly great
community - The Pride of the Fox -
located in the “Beauty Spot” of the
Fox River Valley. It is a community
where men can live, work, worship,
play and be educated.
Written in 1970 by C.V. Amenoff,
Mayor of St. Charles, 1969-1973
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