In 1950, the Chamber of Commerce held a contest to choose a slogan that best described Mount Prospect. The winner, Elmer Bussert, won the contest with his slogan, “Where Town and Country Meet.” This slogan for Mount Prospect was used until 1965 when the Chamber felt it no longer applied due to the expansion of the town. A new contest was held and “Where Friendliness is a Way of Life,” submitted by Delores Wells, was chosen to represent Mount Prospect. It remains our town’s motto to this day.
Mount Prospect Train Derailment


Hapsburg Inn
Does MPHS have photographs: Yes
Address: 600 River Road
Is building standing: No
When was it built: Unknown
What is at site: Townhomes
When was business founded: 1934
Is business still operating: No
If no, when did it close: 1984
Who owned business: Original owner was William Bahnmaier and his daughter, Rosemary Scala, took over in the mid-1970s
Interesting stories, facts, history:

Hearth & Home


Century Tile

The Mount Prospect Century Tile store closed in mid-2021.
Mount Prospect Village Hall



Randhurst Twin Ice Arena
Does MPHS have photographs: Yes
Address: On Kensington Road at the southeast corner of Randhurst Shopping Center
Is building standing: No
What is at site: Home Depot
When was business founded: Early 1970s
Is business still operating: No
If no, when did it close: Mid 1980s
Interesting stories, facts, history:

Golden Isle Restaurant

Does MPHS have photographs: No
Address: 302 W. Northwest Highway
Is building standing: Yes
When was it built: 1949
What is at site: Trezeros Kitchen + Tap
When was business founded: 1962
Is business still operating: No
If no, when did it close: 1965
Who owned business: William Golden
Interesting stories, facts, history:
William Golden purchased 302 W. Northwest Highway from the previous owners of Mell and Paul’s Drive-In (Paul and Carmella Caltagirone). Golden Isle specialized in pizza, full course meals, and snacks, and also offered catering service. A cocktail lounge, referred to as “Mr. G’s Room,” was also part of the restaurant.
Golden Isle closed in early 1965 when Jake’s Pizza took over the space.
