• Margherita pizza
  • Roasted prime rib
  • Serious bacon cheeseburger

Half Day Brewing

History

Perhaps most intriguing about Half Day is its name, which provokes more interest and debate than any other place name in the northwest suburbs of Chicago.

Contrary to popular theory, the town of Half Day was not named because it was a half-day's journey from Chicago. The town's true name was Halfday in honor of a friendly chief.

Chief Aptakisic (Aphis), of the Potawatomie tribe was a Native American leader of great standing in this area in the early 1800's. The friendly tribes of Potawatomi Indians were the first settlers to arrive in 1730 in what is now known as Lincolnshire.

The Chief was instrumental in negotiating the Treaty of Chicago in 1833, and in 1832, during the Black Hawk War; Aptakisic protected the settlers in Downer's Grove from an impending attack.

When the first non-native American settlers began to move into the area, Chief Aptakisic and his tribe helped Daniel Wright construct a log cabin along the Des Plaines River - the first home built in Lake County.

The name Aptakisic also spelled Optageshic or Aptegizhek - translated as means:

Center of sky

Sun at its meridian

half day

Both Daniel Wright and Henry Blodgett who knew Aptakisic, documented that he was "known as Half Day." Wright went on to say that the village took its name from Chief Aptakisic.

An early cartographer spelled it Half Day, adding the "y" to Chief Half Da when writing about him - and so it remained.

The historic town of Half Day claims many firsts in the annals of Lake County history - the first post office (1836), the first school (1836), and the county's first non-native settler.

In 1955 a subdivision called Lincolnshire was recorded in Waukegan, the County seat for Lake County. It marked the beginning of the Village of Lincolnshire. Both the village of Lincolnshire and Vernon Hills later claimed the land known as unincorporated Half Day.