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Venetian Village is located in northwestern Lake County at (42.398871, -88.047845), [3] in the southeast part of Lake Villa TownshipIt consists of several neighborhoods adjacent to four lakes: Sand Lake, Slough Lake, Miltmore Lake, and Fourth Lake.
West Miltmore is part of Venetian Village, unincorporated Lake Villa Township, Lake County, Illinois, United States.West Miltmore is located on County Route 18A, from Rt. 83, near the northern border of Round Lake Beach. [2]
Libertyville Township covers an area of 36.5 square miles (94.6 km 2); of this, 1.1 square miles (2.9 km 2) or 3.02 percent is water. [2] Lakes in this township include Big Bear Lake, [3] Butler Lake, [4] Harvey Lake, Liberty Lake, Little Bear Lake, [5] Minear Lake and West Lake.
Lake Villa is a village in Lake County, Illinois United States.Per the 2020 census, the population was 8,741. [3] Lake Villa lies within Lake Villa Township and about 50 miles north of Chicago and is part of the United States Census Bureau's Chicago combined statistical area (CSA).
Venetian Village – 2,761; Fox Lake Hills – 2,684; Round Lake Heights – 2,622; Kenilworth – 2,514; Following the 2020 redistricting, this district will be primarily based in Lake County, bordering the state of Wisconsin, as well as northeast McHenry County and a part of northern Cook County.
Lake Catherine is located in northwestern Lake County at (42.483969, -88.124172 It is bordered to the north by Kenosha County, Wisconsin, to the east by the village of Antioch, and to the west by the community of Channel Lake.
Saint Sava Serbian Orthodox Monastery Church is the former burial site of Peter II of Yugoslavia, who until 2013 was the only European monarch buried on U.S. soil.. The land that is now Libertyville was the property of the Illinois River Potawatomi Indians until August 1829, when economic and resource pressures forced the tribe to sell much of their land in northern Illinois to the U.S ...
Before the Industrial Revolution had made its way to the western Great Lakes, the land remained in the hands of the Potawatomi until the 1833 Treaty of Chicago. [5] Small farm families dotted the land for several decades until 1873, of which a train station was built along the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad in the neighboring village (once an unincorporated area) of Gurnee. [6]