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Randolph Hall
Biography |
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Portrait and Biographical Album of Fulton County,
Illinois: containing full page portraits and biographical sketches of
prominent and representative citizens of the county: together with
portraits and biographies of all the presidents of the United States,
and governors of the state; Biographical Pub. Co., Chicago, IL; 1890;
page 307-308; Transcribed by Margaret Rose Whitehurst
Randolph Hall. In recalling the labors which have made of
this county a region noted for its agricultural resources, we feel a
glow of admiration for all who bore a part in the scenes of the early
days, and take great pleasure in noting prominent incidents in their
lives. One of the early settlers of Farmers Township is the
worthy gentleman above name, who has abundantly shown his industry and
good judgment by the accumulation of an excellent estate, well supplied
with the improvements which make life in the country enjoyable, and add
to the value of property. He possesses the hospitable spirit and
cordial manners which belong to all natives of the Blue Grass State,
and which are also distinguishing characteristics of the pioneers in
any sections of the country. Honorable in his dealing,
well-informed regarding topics of general interest, and able to relate
many an interesting event in connection with the early settlement of
the township, his companionship is desirable and his reputation
excellent.
The birth of Mr. Hall took place in Washington County, Ky.,
September 4, 1823, and his residence in Illinois began when he was a
youth of fifteen years. At that period in his life he accompanied
his parents, Joel and Mary (Clark) Hall, to McDonough County, their
home for a few years being in the vicinity of Macomb. In 1843
they removed to Pennington’s Point. Three years later our subject
was united in marriage with Miss Almeda L. Woods, a capable and
efficient woman who has nobly borne her part in building up the
prosperity of the family and fitting its younger members for usefulness
and honor. The happy union has been blessed by the birth of five
children.
The eldest son, Platte, was stricken down within a few days of
his majority, and the bright promise of his future swallowed up by
death. The older daughter, Mary Cornelia, is the wife of Josiah
Hammer, of McDonough County; she has one daughter, Della, who married
Frank Harlan, and also has one child. As the mother of Mrs. Hall
is yet living, baby Mabel is the fifty generation of females in the
family now living. Three of these were born in McDonough County,
Mrs. Hall in Erie County, Pa., and Mrs. Woods in the Empire
State. A picture representing the five – Mrs. Cornelia Woods,
Mrs. Almeda Hall, Mrs. Mary Hammer, Mrs. Della Harlan and little Mabel
– is of great interest, not only to the family but to all visitors whom
they receive. The second son of our subject and his good wife is
Millard DeWitt, who with his wife, son and daughter, resides in Table
Grove. In McDonough County lives the youngest son, Leonard Grow,
with his wife and one child. The second daughter and fourth child
of Mr. and Mrs. Hall is Genevra, wife of Frank Ward, of Table Grove,
their family including several children.
Our subject bought the first improved farm of eighty acres in
McDonough County. His house was built by himself, he hewing the
logs and splitting the shingles, which were of black walnut from his
own land, forty acres of which was timber. The house was 16x22
feet in dimensions. A few years after it was constructed Mr. Hall
covered it with boards, which were sawed by his brother-in-law in a
portable mill on the place. To the original eight acres he added
until his estate amounted to two hundred acres, all of which had been
reclaimed by himself from its primitive condition, except about thirty
acres which was plowed when he purchased it. He resided upon the
farm until 1882, when he left it to take possession of a comfortable
home in Table Grove. In the early days Mr. Hall hauled wheat to
Beardstown, about twenty-five miles distant, and thought himself
fortunate when he could get fifty cents per bushel, nearly half of
which was consume by the expenses of remaining overnight. The
first hogs driven to that place sold for $2 per hundred, which was
considered a high price, good dressed pork having previously been
disposed of in Macomb for $1.25 per hundred.
The early settlers generally owed all they raised to the
neighboring storekeeper, their sole trouble being to turn the products
of their farms over to their creditor, the 1st of January being the
usual time of settlement. By a special arrangement they sometimes
obtained a little money with which to pay taxes. All grain was
cut with a cradle, and it was generally tramped out with horses.
Mrs. Hall vividly remembers seeing the wheat thrown in a pile, and
horses driven around it until the threshing was completed. The
first chimneys were of sod built on the outside of the log houses, and
all cooking was done at an open fire, except in rare instances.
Mr. Hall is one of four sons and seven daughters born to his
parents, all of whom are now living in this section of the State in
convenient visiting distance. He is the only Republican in his
father’s family, but his own sons and sons-in-law belong to the same
party as himself.
Salem Woods, the father of Mrs. Hall, emigrated from the
Keystone State to McDonough County in 1831, prior to the Black Hawk War,
in which father Hall took part. Mr. Woods was a harness-maker in
Erie, Pa., and having traded for a piece of land somewhere in the West,
started on foot to look up his new estate. He made his way over
the mountains and through the wilderness to the vicinity in which he
supposed his land to be, but was then at a loss to locate it. He
heard a rooster crow, and going whence the sound came, found the home
of Stewart Pennington, who helped him to locate the land, of which he
had a plat and description. He then returned to the East and
brought his wife and family, the journey being made in a wagon.
The boards from the roof of his wagon were used as a door to the first
house he built on his farm. This home was of logs, notched and
fastened to the sleepers with wooden pins, no nails being used in its
construction. The floor was of split logs. Mr. Woods has
the first cook stove in the county, it being shipped from the East to
Chicago, whither it was brought in a wagon by the owner and Harvey
Harris. An old fashioned chest with a lid, which was made to ship
goods in, is still preserved in the family.
Mrs. Hall is the only daughter of her parents, but they have
likewise four sons. One of these, Edward, was born in this State,
and still lives on the farm on which he first saw the light. Mr.
Woods was an Abolitionist of the deepest dye, and he and his children
naturally became Republicans. They are of the Universalist faith.
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