The Illinois
State Park system grew slowly at first.
Fort Massac was the state's first park, in 1903. After that, additions were sporadic.
Starved Rock State Park was added in 1911 and remained, by far, the largest of Illinois' State Parks until the 1930s. In 1917
Illinois Governor
Frank Lowden instituted major reforms in government which gave the governor direct control of state departments through a director who sat on a
cabinet. Though many of the 1917 reforms, including one that authorized a governor-appointed Board of State Park Advisors, were not instituted until later a 1925 state law helped the State Park system grow. The 1925 state law, which was later amended in 1931, gave the director of the
Illinois Department of Public Works jurisdiction over the state parks. The Public Works position was one of Lowden's 1917 reforms that had already gone into effect. The law also mandated a system of state parks, Per the 1925 mandate three of the parks included in the
Multiple Property Submission became state parks in 1927,
Black Hawk State Historic Site,
Giant City State Park and
White Pines Forest State Park. White Pines nearly became a state park in 1903, along with Fort Massac, but the $30,000 appropriation for its purchase was subject to a veto by Governor
Richard Yates.
Pere Marquette State Park was not acquired until May 1932. Known then as Piasa Bluff State Park, the park was the largest in Illinois at the time. In 1933 the state park system's development picked up. Under the governorship of
Henry Horner the lodge projects at the state parks began. This was thanks in large part to the increase in federal funds thanks to the
New Deal and the appointment of Robert Kingery as director of the Public Works Department. Kingery had guided the State Park Board of Advisors through the development of a preservation beginning in 1930. The need for the lodges had been set forth in that 1932 plan that Kingery had helped adopt. ==Notes==