Lexington Flower Delivery

Lexington, Illinois Flower Delivery

Send same-day hand delivered flower arrangements to Lexington, IL and surrounding areas.

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La Tulipe flowers

WE LOVE WHAT WE DO AND IT SHOWS!

Send fresh flowers to Lexington, IL. Same day flower deliveries available to Lexington, Illinois. La Tulipe flowers is family owned and operated for over 24 years. We offer our beautiful flower designs that are all hand-arranged and hand-delivered to Lexington, Illinois. Our network of local florists will arrange and hand deliver one of our finest flower arrangements backed by service that is friendly and prompt to just about anywhere in Lexington, IL. Just place your order online and we’ll do all the work for you. We make it easy for you to send beautiful flowers and plants online from your desktop, tablet, or phone to almost any location nationwide.

Lexington Flower Delivery Service

Sending a beautiful flower arrangement to Lexington, IL

Brighten someone’s day with our Lexington, IL local florist flower delivery service. Easily send flower arrangements for birthdays, get well, anniversary, just because, funeral, sympathy or a custom arrangement for just about any occasion to Lexington, IL. Need a last-minute floral arrangement? We offer same-day flower deliveries on most flower bouquets Monday thru Saturday to Lexington, IL. Just place your order before 12:00 PM Monday thru Saturday in the recipient’s time zone and one of the best local florists in our network will design and deliver the arrangement that same day.*

Nearby Cities:

Lexington Zip Codes:

61753

Lexington: latitude 40.6469 – longitude -88.7847

Lexington is a city in McLean County, Illinois, United States. The population was 2,090 at the 2020 census. There are two theories roughly the etymology of the city name. One says it was named for the Battle of Lexington, where General Gridley’s father fought. and the additional that it was named for the home town of James Brown, the town’s co-founder.

Lexington was laid out on 4 January 1836 by Asahel Gridley (1810–1881) and James Brown (c. 1802- ?). Gridley was a lawyer and banker from Bloomington who would eventually become the richest man in McLean County; Brown was born in Lexington, Kentucky, and Lexington, Illinois, seems to have been his only try at founding a town. Its founding was portion of a great genuine estate boom that swept across the nation. Within a few months of the founding of the town seven other extra towns were laid out in McLean County: Concord (now Danvers), Hudson, Le Roy, Livingston, Lytleville, Mt. Hope and Wilksborough. In common with further towns founded during the 1836 boom, and unlike many well ahead towns, Lexington was designed in this area a central public square with streets running valid north-south and east-west. In the court case of Lexington, the original town consisted of 36 blocks, each containing six lots. Like most of the towns of the 1836 era the town was built along the origin that divided woodland from prairie; the southeast corner of the town was just within the limits of timber. Like most Mackinaw River towns, Lexington was laid out on higher ground some turn your back on from the river itself.

Gridley and Brown first offered lots in the town for sale at a public auction on 30 April 1836 at 10:00 in the morning. They began their printed public notice for the sale by telling readers that the town was upon the main road from Springfield, via Bloomington, to Chicago and that their additional town was a mile from the Mackinaw River. They wrote that Lexington “is located upon the margin of a Good rolling prairie, near a large and inexhaustible body of the best timber the country affords, sufficient to justify the immense settlement already inborn made.” They told potential buyers that there were two proverb mills and a fulling mill nearby. Moreover, they added, building had already begun. For those with good security, one twelve months description was available.

Between 1837 and 1854 the survival of Lexington was in doubt. The great land rush that peaked in 1836 gave exaggeration to a severe outstretched national depression. True to their word, Gridley and Brown had begun some construction. Their first structure was used as a store, but in less than a year the thing had unsuccessful and the building was hauled away to Bloomington. The first home was briefly occupied, but it was soon moved to the rival town of Clarksville, which was located a few miles downstream. No one was Definite exactly what route the Springfield-to-Chicago road would take. Clarksville tried to attract the road by building a bridge across the Mackinaw River and the 1840 town of Pleasant Hill, which had been traditional just upstream from Lexington, was feign its best to attract traffic. The county began to request taxes upon the large number of unsold lots in the town; by the before 1850s on peak of 300 Lexington lots were offered for sale to satisfy unpaid taxes. The town square was used for grazing cattle. Yet some continued to consent in the other town. Jacob Spawr (1802–1902) had moved into Lexington a year after the heap had departed. He built a home of a type known as a double log pen, a dog trot, or sometimes two-pens-and-a-passage: essentially it was nothing exceeding two log cabins facing each supplementary with a common roof. This building served as dwelling, post office and tavern. Because Lexington was halfway together with the county seats of Pontiac and Bloomington, Spawr’s home provided a convenient stopping place: Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas were frequent guests. In the 1850 United States Census Spawr’s commotion is listed as “landlord”. By 1854 it was estimated that there were only very nearly a dozen families in Lexington.

Nearby Funeral Homes

Carmody Flynn Williamsburg Funeral Home
+13096631968
1800 Eastland Dr, Bloomington, IL 61704
Duffy-Pils Memorial Homes
+18156922531
100 W Maple St, Fairbury, IL 61739
Calvert & Metzler Memorial Homes
+13094528348
200 W College Ave, Normal, IL 61761
Beck Memorial Home
+13098272325
209 E Grove St, Bloomington, IL 61701
Evergreen Memorial Cemetery
+13098276950
302 E Miller St, Bloomington, IL 61701
Hitzeman Funeral Home & Cremation Services
+17084852000
9445 W 31st St, Brookfield, IL 60513

Nearby Hospitals

Carle BroMenn Medical Center
+13094541400
1304 Franklin Ave, Normal, IL 61761
OSF St Joseph Medical Center
+13096623311
2200 E Washington St, Bloomington, IL 61701
OSF Medical Group
+13096635050
2200 E Washington St, Bloomington, IL 61701
Advocate Medical Group Empire Immediate Care Center
+13095567556
3024 E Empire St, First Floor, Bloomington, IL 61704
OSF St Joseph Medical Center: Emergency Room
+13096623311
2200 E Washington St, Bloomington, IL 61701
OSF PromptCare-Fort Jesse
+13096616280
2200 Fort Jesse Rd, Normal, IL 61761

Nearby Schools & Colleges

Illinois State University
+13094382111
100 N University St, Normal, IL 61790
Illinois Wesleyan University
+13095561000
1312 Park St, Bloomington, IL 61701
Reeder Transportation Training Center
+13098270022
1242 E Empire St, Bloomington, IL 61701
Illinois State University
+13094382111
201 S School St, Normal, IL 61761
Jump Spot
+13096627768
1 Yount Dr, Bloomington, IL 61704
Campus Town Supply
+13094521360
121 W North St, Normal, IL 61761

Nearby Assisted Living

The Villas of Holly Brook – Bloomington
+13098084027
2016 Fox Creek Rd, Bloomington, IL 61701
Evenglow Senior Living
+18158446131
215 E Washington St, Pontiac, IL 61764
Amys Country Manor
+13093534590
2949 S 14th St, Pekin, IL 61554

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