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1896 Atlas Map
Showing grid and major markers. |
In 1829 Maylin Supton moved to the township, making him the first settler. A year later John
Hammett settled here.
Among the other first settlers where:
William Hammett, Hiram McLaughlin, Ashbell Merrill, S.T.McCain and Erastus
Root.
First Sermon: Mr. Hall, a Methodist minister
First School: 1831 Lucia Root was the first school teacher.
First Justice of the Peace: Samuel T. McCain
First Supervisor: Charles S. Strother
According to the 1873 Atlas the above information was obtained
mainly from John HAMMETT
Transcribed by: Candi Horton, from the 1873
Peoria County Atlas. Located at the main Peoria Public Library.
This township is triangular in shape, situated in
the northeast corner of Peoria County, and is composed of the
fractional towns 11 north, 9 east, and 10 north, 9 east. It contains
thirteen whole sections, and seven or eight fractional parts of
sections, Marshall county bounds it on the north, the Illinois river
on the east and south, and Medina and Hallock townships on the west.
The south end of the township, comprising a part of LaSalle prairie,
is but slightly undulating, lies beautifully, has a soil composed of
sand and vegetable loam, and is well adapted to the growth of the
cereals. The north part, which was originally timbered land, is
considerably broken in some portions by the Senachwine creek and its
branches, though there are fine agricultural lands interspersed.
The first white settler in the township was Mahlon Lupton, who
located on section nine, in the Fall of 1829. June 10, 1830 ,John
Hammett and family, came and settled in the same section, were the
next, followed soon after by others. This township contains the
towns of Chillicothe and Rome.
The City of Chillicothe
Beautifully situated on the west bank
of the Illinois river, eighteen miles above Peoria, and on the line
of the Bureau branch of Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific railroad. It
was settled in quite an early day, and was laid out as a town in
July, 1836, by Harrison H. Jameson and Joseph L. Hart, on the
southwest quarter of section twenty-one, and the southeast quarter
of section twenty. The original plat included thirty-eight blocks of
ten lots each, sixty-six feet wide by one hundred and sixty-five
feet deep.
The first cabin erected on the present town site was by Jef
Hickson, a blacksmith, some time before the town was laid out, and
stood on the bank of the river, where he also built a shop and
pursued his trade. The second cabin was built and occupied by Esq.
E. Jones, now of Marshall County, immediately after the town plat
was surveyed. He put a small stock of goods in one room of his
double log cabin, and was the pioneer merchant of the place. Mr.
Jones was also elected the first justice of the peace. He conducted
the store for seven or eight years.
About 1838, Mr. Lehart came to Chillicothe and erected a small frame
house of one room, which his family occupied; and he kept a store in
a cabin on Water Street, for several years, then removed to Indiana.
In 1835, James M. Brown, then a young single man, came from Ross
county, Ohio, and soon after built a story and a half frame house on
First Street, containing four rooms on each floor, and opened a
tavern, to which he gave the euphonious title of "American House." A
part of the old building still stands on the site. It was first kept
by William Dunlap, afterwards Mr. Brown's father-in-law, for about
five years, during which time his house was a stopping point on the
Peoria and Chicago stage line.
The second tavern building was erected by John Hayes, and stood
opposite to Messrs. Mathews & Holman's store. It was a frame
structure containing ten to fifteen rooms, and known as the
"Chillicothe House."
Mr. Hayes kept it for a number of years. It was destroyed by fire in
April, 1873.
The first religious exercises were held by the Baptist people in
1837, who, a year later, organized the first church in the village.
The first school taught in the village was in the Winter of 1838-9,
and occupied a vacant cabin. In 1845, a frame house of one room was
built on the public square, which sufficed for school purposes until
the first part of the present brick structure was erected in 1856.
The prosperity of Chillicothe has been somewhat impeded by several
disastrous fires, which have at various times destroyed some of the
most valuable property of the place. In the Fall of 1864, the grain
elevator at the depot burned; in 1869, Wood & Hosmer's large steam
mill and two large warehouses on the river bank were burned ; and in
1873, a large store and several dwellings on the corner of Elm and
Second Streets, went up in thin air.
From an early period in its history Chillicothe has been prominent
as a grain market. John Alonzo Moffitt, built the first grain
warehouse, in 1847. The old frame still stands on the river banks.
Henry Truitt erected a grain warehouse, at about 1853 at a cost of
some $5,000; and forming a partnership with S. C. Jack, conducted
the first legitimate grain trade of the place. Some years later John
W. Fuller succeeded Mr. Jack in the firm, and about 1867, machinery
and dumps were put into the building. In the Winter of 1873-4, Mr.
Fuller bought Mr. Truitt's interest, and the style of the firm has
since been J. W. Fuller & Co. In 1876, Mr. Fuller re-built and
fitted up the warehouse with the most modern elevator improvements.
It has a storage capacity of 75,000 bushels, and he has additional
storage room for as much more. This firm handles half a million
bushels of grain per year, about half of which finds a market in
Peoria, and half in Chicago.
Soon after the completion of the Bureau Valley railroad now the
branch of the C., R. I. & P.- the railroad company built an elevator
near the depot, which was destroyed by fire in August, 1864; but was
re-built and filled with grain that season. The present building has
a storage capacity of 75,000 bushels with all modern improvements.
Since the Spring of 1866, C. W. Carroll & Co. have controlled the
grain traffic over the road from that point, and handle from 300,000
to 400,000 bushels and 350 cars of live stock, per annum.
Besides the elevator room the firm have crib storage room for 50,000
bushels of ear corn.
The Farmers' Mill erected by Adam Petry and A. C. Thomas, in 1868,
at a cost of $5,000, containing three run of burrs, and a capacity
for manufacturing fifty barrels of flour per day, consumes a
considerable quantity of the grain grown in the vicinity.
In 1873 Chillicothe adopted a city form of government, previous to
which its municipal affairs had been controlled by a board of five
trustees. In April of that year the first Mayor and Board of
Alderman were elected, consisting of the following gentlemen: Mayor,
Henry Hosmer; aldermen, William McLean, Levi Booth, Joseph Bailey,
William H. Barbour and Richard Hughes. Wm. H. Barbour was elected
mayor in 1875, Henry Truitt in 1877, and in 1879 Mr. Barbour was
re-elected and now holds the office. It is now a place of about
1,200 inhabitants, and in size and commercial importance is the
third town in the county.
It contains a bank, two dry goods houses, seven groceries, two fine
drug stores, one farm machinery house, two hardware and stove
stores, two furniture stores, two large grain elevators, a lumber
yard, a fine flouring mill, a saw and planning mill, two jewelry
stores, a millinery store, a confectionery and bakery, a real estate
office, two barber and two butcher shops, three carriage and wagon
shops, three blacksmith shops, one tailor shop, a livery stable, a
bowling alley, two hotels, the Woods Hotel, C. Marble, containing
about thirty rooms and well conducted, and the Will House about
twenty rooms.
Doctors A. Wilmot, J. O. Tomlinson, J. F. Thomas, C. C. Allen, Mrs.
E. Moffitt and O. F. Thomas are active in the medical profession.
Societies of the place are A. F. & A. M., I. O. O. F., and
Temperance Reform Clubs. The bank does a heavy business, and the dry
goods house of Mathews & Holman is the most extensive in the county
outside of Peoria; some of the grocery houses would be a credit to a
city of 5,000.
The public square, occupying a block near the center of the city,
has recently been nicely improved, planted to deciduous and
evergreen trees, and will in a few years be an attractive ornament
to the place.
Fire Department
In 1876 the first organization for the protection against fire was
effected. The company consisting of ten members was formed and named
the Champion, with G. P. Lester as Fire Marshall. It only existed a
few months and there was no further effort made until the Fall of
1878, when another company called the Rocket, was organized. With
James Kenlock as Capt., G. B. Temple, Lieut., Wm. Story, Foreman and
twenty members. G. P. Lester being appointed Fire Marshall by the
City. During the existence of the Champion company a large,
two-cylinder chemical engine was purchased at a cost of $2,000.; but
finding it too heavy and unwieldy, it was exchanged for two single
cylinder engines of 100 gallons and 70 gallon capacity. the Rocket
Company is still in flourishing condition. In September, 1879, it
competed at the State tournament, in Peoria, and won the first
prize; but from a hitch in the distribution of the premiums, the
company failed to receive its award.
The Press
Like Most country towns, Chillicothe has had a newspaper
experience neither flattering nor profitable to the town nor the
journalistic aspirants. Several papers have been started in the
place and continued for a longer or shorter period and died from
lack of sustenance.
The Review, it's present representative in
the newspaper world, was started in the Fall of 1879, by George
Holton, a practical printer and still lives. It is issued weekly,
and have of the paper printed in the home office is entirely devoted
to local matters.
Village of Rome
The village of Rome was laid out by Jefferson Taliaferro and the
plat filed for record December 24, 1832.
The original plat contained 24 blocks of 8 lots, 5x8 perches in
size, situated on section 5 town 10 north, 9 east.
The town site is a beautiful one on the right bank of the Illinois
River, fifteen miles above Peoria and for several years it held
quite a rapid growth. In 1835 it contained a tavern of 8 or 10rooms
kept by N. Sirlott and several stores and groceries some of them
carrying large stocks of goods. Wm. A. Ogle, Hiram Cleveland, Mr.
Bingham, J. B. Adams and Joseph Blish were among the first
merchants. Hezekiah Rose was an early settler in the place. In 1835
steamboats landed regularly, the town contained about 300
inhabitants and was the most important point on the river for many
miles.
The first school was taught by a one-armed soldier, named James
Pierce, who died some years ago in this County. The upper story of a
store was used for school purposes until the present neat frame
structure was erected in 1858 at a cost of $1,000.. The district,
which is an independent one, maintains school nine months in the
year, with about fifty scholars in attendance.
Rome has had a post office since 1835, save the decade from 1843 to
1854. Mr. L Adams is now postmaster. There is no church building in
the place but the Methodists have a class, hold services in the
school house. The only mercantile establishment in the village is a
small grocery kept by Thomas P. Nicholson.
In 1837, Isaac Underhill, of Peoria purchased 2,200 acres of land,
including the town site and planted 500 acres to orchard in the
immediate vicinity, some of which trees still stand. the financial
crash of 1837 proved a fatal blow to Rome, from which time it
steadily declined. It is a way station on the Bureau branch of the
C. R. I. & P. railroad, and ships considerable fruit and produce.
Mr. H.S. Rose, who carries on blacksmithing, is the oldest resident
living in the village and has resided there over forty-four years.
Source: The History of Peoria County, Illinois,
Johnson & Company, Chicago, 1880.
Transcribed by: Candi Horton ©2006 |