Antioch
Township
Transcribed by Anne Kunzen

This town is composed of Township 46, north,
Range 10 east, and that part of Township 46, north Range 9, lying on
the west, belonging to Lake County, being four miles in width, making
the whole length of the Town 10 miles, by 6 in width.
The first permanent claims of Government Lands made
in this Town, were made in the month of December, 1836, by D.B. Gage,
Thomas Q. Gage, and Thomas Warner. The first house built within
the limits of the Town, was built in April, 1837, by D. B. and Thomas
Q. Gage, on the north side of the creek, in the present Village of
Antioch. The second was built by Thomas Warner, near Loon Lake,
in the month of June of the same year. These persons had located
themselves temporarily at Walker's bridge, on the Des Plaines River, in
Cook County. In December 1836, they followed up the river on an
Indian trail, to Mill Creek, from whence they proceeded westward to
Loon Lake, where they made a claim and put up a log cabin, from whence,
after a few days they proceeded on their return, by way of the
Maquonago trail, which was a trail diverging from the great Milwaukee
trail at a point near the mouth of Indian Creek, where formerly had
been an Indian village, and running from thence northwesterly to an
Indian village in Wisconsin, called Maquonago.
Being late in December, the weather had become
severely cold and boisterous. They found the trail much
obstructed by fallen trees, and, being unacquainted with the route,
their progress was slow, in consequence of which they came near
freezing to death, but finally succeeded in reaching the house of
Willard Jones, at Jones' point, about 13 miles from Loon Lake.
The early settlers of this Town were D. B. Gage,
Thomas Warner, Thomas Q. Gage, Henry Rector, William Fagher, Robert
Stalker, E. F. Ingalls, Loami Piersons, E. S. Ingalls, H. P. Nelson, H.
Nichols, Charles O. McClellen, F. F. Munson, Parnell Munson, Leland
Cook and Hiram Butrick.
The first Town meeting held in this Town under
Township organization was held on the first Tuesday in April, 1850, at
the tavern of D. B. Gage, in the Village of Antioch. Dr. L. D.
Gage was chosen Moderator, and Eli S. Derby, Clerk. The following
is a list of the town officers elected at this meeting: Harrison
P. Nelson, Supervisor; Eli Gage, Town Clerk; Thomas Webb, Assessor;
John H. Elliott, Collector; Chas. Webb and Robert K. Colls, Justices of
the Peace; Ira Webb, A. B. Paddock and E. C. Stephens, Commissioners of
Highways; Robert Pollock, Overseer of Poor; John H. Elliott and Albert
Webb, Constables. The number of votes cast at this Town meeting
was 145.
The assessed value of property in this Town for 1850, including both
real and personal was $88,904. The amount of tax on the same for
all purposes was $1,744.51.The total assessed value of property for the year
1877 is $399,484.
The Village of Antioch, in this township, acquires
considerable local notoriety at the beginning, from the numerous
attempts made to adopt a name. In the northern apart of the
township is a small stream flowing from the lakes on the east, westward
into the Fox River. Darius and thomas Gage, as before mentioned,
built their houses near this creek, at the crossing of the Maquonago
trail, and named it Sequoit Creek. They were attracted here on
account of the mill site the stream apparently afforded at this
point. A saw-mill was soon after built here by Hiram Butrick
(1839). this, with other inducements, drew into the vicinity
mechanics of various kinds, the first being Eleazer F. Ingalls,
blacksmith. The first store of goods was opened by F. F.
Munson. the place finally taking rank as a village, an
attempt was made to agree upon a name. It was situated in what
was then called Bristol Precinct. It was therefore proposed to
call the village by that name, but without effect. Among the
first settlers prominent among whom was Wm. F. Shepard- a large
proportion belonged to the sect of Religionists called Christians, or
Disciples, otherwise known as Campbellites, who were generally very
zealous in church matters. Whereupon the wags of the neighborhood
who were not of this church, rather in a spirit of ridicule, suggested
various Scripture names for the place. Among them Jericho and
Joppa. Finally, during a general assembly of the church at that
place, it was agree to take the suggestion of their mischievous
neighbors and adopt a Scripture name, and that it should be Antioch the
place where the Disciples were first called Christians. A general
acquiescence followed, and the place became known by that name.
In 1846, a Post Office was established here, called
Antioch, and Doctor Leroy D. Gage appointed Postmaster.
When the present town was laid off for township
organization, in January, 1850, the inhabitants were called upon by the
Commissioners to express their wishes as to the name. At a
meeting for that purpose, Antioch and Windsor were proposed. The
former received a majority of the votes cast, and the town was so named.
The villages in this township are Antioch and
Millburn.
The village of Antioch is not incorporated, and
therefore has no fixed boundaries. The population of what is
properly considered the village is about two hundred.
Millburn is situated in the southeast part of the
township, near the north branch of Mill Creek, on the line between
Antioch and Newport, a portion of the village lying in Newport.
The country about here was known in early days as the Mill Creek
Settlement. The place where Millburn now is was known as Strang's
neighborhood. A Post Office was established here in February,
1848, and Robert Strang appointed Postmaster. It was called
Millburn, as the Scotch word, it is said, for Mill Creek, Mr. Strang
and most of his neighbors-by whom the name was suggested-being of that
nationality
The first school taught in Antioch was by Welcome
Jilson, in 1843. It was in a room over the store of F. F.
Munson, at Antioch Village.
Antioch, like most other towns of the county, has
had its marked characters who are remembered for the part they have
borne or places they filled in its early history. Daniel Head, who
settled in Antioch and opened a store of goods there about the year
1843, was of this class. He continued to increase his stock from
year to year, and soon built up a large and profitable business.
He made the place the center of trade for the country around for a
distance of ten to fifteen miles. Everybody knew Dan Head, as he
was generally called. Everybody traded at his store.
Indeed, there was no reason why they should not, for he gave credit to
every one who applied, almost without distinction or reference to their
pecuniary standing. He sold his goods at a large profit, and
generally obtained his pay in the end. The result was he made
money, and became rich. He was a man of generous impulses, and
never oppressed his debtors. He afterward removed to Kenosha to
engage in wider fields of operation, where he still resides as one of
the wealthy and substantial men of the place.
John T. Clark was another marked character of this
town in early days, but whose name has, at this time, been nearly
forgotten. He was a lawyer by profession, and settled in Antioch
Village about the year 1844. He first came into notice as a
lawyer, in that vicinity, in the trial of a suit before a Justice of
the Peace, just over the State line, in Wisconsin, a short time
previous to settling in Antioch. At the time of this occurrence,
as the story goes, he was working in the harvest field as a common
hand, coarsely clad, and a stranger in the neighborhood. On
hearing that a contested law-suit was about to take place in the
vicinity, he was heard to remark that he was a lawyer himself, stating
that he studied law in the office of Judge Flandreau, who was an
eminent lawyer of Utica, N. Y. The result was that he became
employed by the defendant to attend to the case on his behalf. He
managed the suit with so much vigor and earnestness, and assumed such
great knowledge of the law, there being no one present able to dispute
his assertions, that he gained a decision of the case in favor of his
client. Thereupon his fame spread over the country to a great
distance around as a "very smart lawyer" just from the East. who had
studied law with Judge Flandreau. He was invited by Daniel Head,
G. Ruby
and others to come and settle in Antioch and devote himself to his
profession, which he did, it being the only village or center of trade
in that part of the country.
On one occasion, Clark was employed to go down and
attend a law-suit before Levi Marble, a Justice of the Peace at Fort
Hill, where his fame had preceded him. His library consisted of
the Statutes of Illinois, Cowen's Treatise, and a copy of Gilman's
Digest of the Reports of Indiana and Illinois. These he carried
with him tied up in a piece of common white cotton cloth, making a
package of convenient size to carry in his hand, by taking hold of the
knot where the ends were tied. In those days, the country being
sparsely settled, the roads were not very plainly marked, whereby
Clark, when near Squaw Creek, lost his way. The hour for the
trial of his cause was approaching and he was in much trouble. He
hastened to a house in sight, being that of Elisha Andrews, to inquire
the way. He knocked at the door hastily, which was answered
by the voice of Mrs. Andrews, "come in." He opened the door
hurriedly and in a breathless manner proceeded, "Madam, can you
tell me the way to 'Squire Marble's?" Mrs. Andrews, who was
an honest-hearted and rather unsophisticated woman, noticing the
peculiar package which he carried in his hand, mistook him for a
peddler, and without answering his inquiry, responded, "I am so
glad to see a peddler coming; I have been out of thread for this two
weeks." Without apparently noticing her remark, Clark in an
impatient tone repeated his enquiry. But Mrs. Andrews, who
had suffered inconvenience so long for want of thread, and not wishing
to lose an opportunity of supplying herself, without heeding
Clark's enquiry, rejoined, "Have you got any spool thread,
number sixty?" Clark saw, much to his chagrin, that the
woman's impression as to his calling was fixed, and that he had no way
out of it but to frankly inform her of her mistake; says he,
"Madam, I am not a peddler; I am a lawyer from Antioch; I am
going to Esquire Marble's to attend to a law-suit; I am behind
time and want to get there as soon as possible; can you tell me
the way?" Mrs. Andrews, after expressing her regret that he
was not a peddler, stepped to the door and pointed out the way.
With all his self-assurance in conducting a
law-suit, Clark was a man of a sensitive nature. He was
sedate and candid in his demeanor and could never enjoy nor indulge in
a joke, especially at his own expense. This occurrence-mistaking
him for a peddler-becoming generally known, gave him much annoyance,
the more so for occurring, as it did, in a neighborhood where his fame
had reached as a "smart lawyer."
The first religious meeting in the town was in the
summer of 1839, in the newly finished barn of Darius B. Gage, in the
village of Antioch, being then the only building in that part of the
country of capacity sufficient for a public meeting. I t was conducted
by two Elders of the Christian Church, named Young and Davenport, from
Kentucky. At this meeting, a church organization was formed,
consisting of about fifty members.
A Baptist Church was organized in the village about
the year 1862, with about twenty-five members, Rev. Mr. Stimpson,
Pastor. A house of worship was built during this year.
A house of worship was built by the Christian Church
organization, in 1863. This church has now about one hundred
members. Elder T. Johnson is the present preacher.
In Antioch Township, aside the village, are now the
following churches and church organizations:
The First Congregational Church, of Millburn,
organized in September, 1841, by Rev. Flavel Bascom, acting at the time
as agent of the American Home Missionary Society.
The following persons constituted the original
members: William Abbott, Mark Pitman, Jr., Merrill Pearson, Robert
Pollock, George Trotter, Samuel M. Dowst, Alexander Kennedy, Eliza F.
B. Abbott, Harriet Pitman, Lydia Pearson, Elizabeth Pollock, Jane
Trotter, Mary Thayer, Abigail Perry. Samuel M. Dowst was
chosen Deacon and Clerk. Rev. E. G. Howe supplied the
congregation as Pastor, a part of the time, for two years from that
date. He was succeeded by Rev. Lucius Parker, who supplied the
congregation until July, 1844. At that time, Rev. William B.
Dodge commenced to supply, and, at the close of a year, received a call
to become their pastor, which he accepted on condition that a house of
worship should be built before he was installed, which was accordingly
done. On the first of June, 1847, the house was dedicated, and
Mr. Dodge was installed as Pastor. He continued in that relation
until December, 1862, when, at his own request, he was
relieved. Rev. Calvin Selden supplied from January, 1863,
until May, 1864, when he was succeeded by Rev. H. Bross as Pastor. He
has recently been succeeded by Rev. Mr. Bingham, who is the present
Pastor.
Under the ministry of their Pastor, Rev. Wm. B.
Dodge, the membership of the church was increased from sixteen to
seventy-two, and now numbers about one hundred members.
The first church building or house of worship was
built in what is now the village of Millburn, in the Township of
Antioch, but near the line of Newport; the members residing in the four
towns of Antioch, Newport, Warren and Avon. The present house of
worship was built in 1866, and opened for public worship on the first
Sabbath in 1877. Rev. W. B. Dodge, generally known as
"Father Dodge," was one of the landmarks in the history of the
Protestant Church in Lake County. He was also active in the
Anti-Slavery movement, and noted for his zeal in the Anti-Slavery
cause. He died a few years since, at his home in Millburn, respected by
all who knew him.
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