Illinois"The capital of Illinois is Springfield, which is located in the central part of the state. Although today Illinois´s largest population center is in its northeast, the state´s European population grew first in the west as the French settled lands near the Mississippi River, when the region was known as Illinois Country and was part of New France. Following the American Revolutionary War, American settlers began arriving from Kentucky in the 1780s via the Ohio River, and the population grew from south to north. In 1818, Illinois achieved statehood. Following increased commercial activity in the Great Lakes after the construction of the Erie Canal, Chicago was founded in the 1830s on the banks of the Chicago River at one of the few natural harbors on the southern section of Lake Michigan. John Deere´s invention of the self-scouring steel plow turned Illinois´s rich prairie into some of the world´s most productive and valuable farmland, attracting immigrant farmers from Germany and Sweden. The Illinois and Michigan Canal (1848) made transportation between the Great Lakes and the Mississippi River valley faster and cheaper, and new railroads carried immigrants to new homes in the country´s west and shipped commodity crops to the nation´s east. The state became a transportation hub for the nation." - (en.wikipedia.org 07.04.2020) United States Abbott Park Chicago Cook County Evanston, Illinois Moline, Illinois Peoria, Illinois Rock Island, Illinois Sangamon County, Illinois Schaumburg Sparta (Illinois) Winnebago County, Illinois Woodstock, Illinois