1896 Atlas Map
Showing grid and major markers. |
HALLOCK TOWNSHIP The geographical designation of this
township is "township 11, N. range,8E," and is one of the tier of
townships bordering upon Marshall county. It forms a part of the
northern half of LaSalle prairie.
The township contains a great extent of bluff and timber lands, a belt
of which runs through its center from north to south, varying in width
from nearly four miles in the north, to a little over one mile at its
southern boundary. The twelve western sections are almost free of
timber, and contain a most excellent body of land. The southeast corner
is also clear and splendid farming land.
Early Settler-
The first settler in this township was without doubt Lewis
Hallock, who came to it about the year 1820, and after some months
roving about among the Indians, took up some land and built a cabin in
what is now called Hallock's Hollow, near Union. He was a native of Long
Island, N. Y., had left home when a young man, wandered westward, and
had for many years previous to his appearance in Peoria county, lived
among the Indians in Wisconsin and elsewhere, gaining a livelihood by
hunting and trapping. At the time of his settlement he was a single man,
and about 1825, lived for some time with a Frenchman called Osier, who
was the government interpreter to the Pottawattomie Indians, and had
married into the tribe.
In the Winter of 1829, he married a Mrs. Wright, a daughter of Hiram
Cleveland, and brought her to his cabin in the hollow. By her he had one
child, a girl called Clarissa, who afterwards married Henry Robinson.
Hallock died April 1, 1857, on his old farm, at the age of sixty-one
years. He was a man of sterling character, upright and honest in all his
dealings.
About 1825, settlers from the East began to drop into the
district, Simon and Aaron Reed came from Jackson county, Ohio, in
November of that year, and they were closely followed by Moses and
Samuel Clifton, Francis Thomas, Joseph Meredith, Cornelius Doty, Resolve
and Hiram Cleveland, Gerchom Silliman and family, and William Wright. In
1830, Joel Hicks and family, and Jeriel Root, with his sons Erastus C.
and Lucas Root came. The greater part of these settled near the north
end of LaSalle prairie. In 1830, Joseph Meredith settled on Sec. 12, and
kept a small tavern, for the accommodation of the stage-drivers and
travelers on the main road between Galena and Springfield.
In the last days of June, 1836, Roswell Nurs with his son Isaiah
Nurs, and Ebenezer S to well, came to the township on a prospecting
tour. They started from Chenango County, N. Y., walking to Buffalo and
coming from thence to Toledo by water, again took the road and traveled
to Hallock township on foot, with rifle on shoulder and all their
impedimenta in one knapsack. Taking due note of the fine land yet lying
unclaimed in the township, they pursued a zigzag course toward Quincy,
still prospecting, but found no lands more inviting, and on arriving
forthwith entered their land in the Government Land Office at Quincy,
and returned to take possession. They found at this time no one living
north of Northampton, but in the Fall of the same year (1836) Erastus
Root moved to his present location on Sec. 3.
The Winter of 1831-
was an exceptionally severe one all over the West. During the
Winter, two men, strangers to the settlers, named Dr. Franklin and
McMillian, with six yoke of oxen and two sleds, loaded with goods and
bound for Prairie du Chien, stopped at Simon Reed's and after a stay of
about a week, during which they built another sled, and hired a man by
name of Cooper to go with them, started some time in the month of
January, and were soon after caught in a terrible northeast snow storm
which filled up the track, and caused them to lose their way. Night
overtook them when out on the prairie near Boyd's Grove, and they turned
the oxen loose and tried to reach Boyd's on foot. Two of them perished,
and the third - McMillian - got there next morning badly frozen. Eleven
of the oxen were frozen to death, and one came to Meredith's.
The deepest snow ever known in the township fell during this Winter. It
was three feet deep on the level, and the drifts were in some places
fifteen to twenty feet deep. The cold was steady and intense. The deer
and wild hogs died in great numbers, and the prairie chickens, quails,
etc., were almost entirely destroyed.
The Black Hawk war in 1832, -
found the settlers in this district not only prepared for self defense,
but to take the field against their treacherous foe. In April, of that
year, Thomas Reed, Edwin S. Jones, Lucas Root, James Doty, Elias Love,
and Simon Reed, volunteered, and their services ware accepted. Simon
Reed was detailed to act as teamster, and served until the close of the
war. The others named were at the front for thirty days, and afterwards
served as rangers on the frontier between Peoria and Rock river, until
they received their discharge at the close of the war. Previous to this
outbreak the Indians were quite numerous and very friendly. The
Pottawattomies had three towns in or near the township - one on the land
now occupied by Emory Silliman in Medina township, one at Smith's
Springs, and one on the Senachwine creek, not far from the bridge.
First Mills-
The first mill built in the township that the settlers in the
northern part of it could easily reach, was that built on Senachwine by
William Moffatt, one and a half miles east of Northampton, about the
year 1834.
The first saw mill built in the township, and the only one that ever did
any amount of work, was erected in the year 1838 by Thomas Ford, in the
N. E. of sec. 13.
LaSalle Precinct-
This settlement (first saw mill) formed part of LaSalle precinct.
Simon Reed was the first justice of the peace, and was appointed to the
office prior to 1828, and Cornelius Doty was elected justice in the Fall
of 1831. This election took place at the only polling place in LaSalle
precinct, covering nearly one-half of the northern part of Peoria
county, on sec. three of Medina Township.
Township Organization -
In 1850 the township organization was adopted, and the township received
its name, out of compliment to its oldest settler, Lewis Hallock, by a
vote of the citizens. The first supervisor of the township was Walter S.
Evans.
The present officers of Hallock Township (1879) are, supervisor, S. P.
Perkins; town clerk, C. C. Lock Well;
assessor, Alonzo Root; collector, R. J. Nurse; road commissioners, John
Spicer, Hiram Rankin, and Justice Stewart;
justices of the peace, W. E. Smith and Samuel Merril.
Northhampton-
The only village situated entirely within the township is that of
Northampton, on Sec. 13, which was laid off by Reuben Hamlin and Mr.
Freeman in July, 1886.
The first house therein was also the first erected in the township as
a tavern.
It was built in the Winter of 1835-6 by Reuben Hamlin, and was kept as a
public house by him for many years.
He came from near Northampton, Mass., and he named the village, of which
he was the founder, after it. Aaron Reed was the first settler near the
site of the village, and his old log cabin was replaced by the house
which stands beside the bridge, near the south end of the village.
Nathaniel Chapin, a native of Massachusetts, was quite a prominent
resident of the village about 1840.
He held the office of justice of the peace.
The population of the village is at present but little over 100, and it
contains one good general store, kept by Mr. C. O. Phillips, who is also
postmaster.
Lawn Ridge-
The village of Lawn Ridge stands upon the boundary line dividing Peoria
and Marshall Counties, and has a population of about 500. It has been
partially platted for some years by individual enterprise, but has never
been formally laid out. Nathaniel Smith, now a resident of New York
State, was one of the earliest settlers in it.
It has two churches - a Methodist Episcopal, and a Congregational -
whose congregations are drawn about equally from the two counties.
Lawn Ridge Lodge, No. 415, A. F. & A. M., - was organized
under dispensation May 18, 1864, and was chartered by Grand Lodge of
Illinois October 5, 1864, with ten original members.
Its first officers were W. M., Henry A. Raney ; S. W., Amos F. Leigh ;
J. W., John B. Phillips ; Secretary, W. H. Wilmot; Treasurer, E.
Sickles. Those now in office are, W. M., John B. Phillips; S. W., Elijah
Stowell; J. W., N. P. Green; Secretary, John Morris; Treasurer, Stephen
Cornell.
The lodge has about thirty members, and the regular meetings are held on
the Wednesday nights on or before full moon, in a nicely furnished and
well appointed little hall, devoted to its sole use.
The village contains two good general stores, two hotels, a post office
attended to by Mr. Stephen Cornell, and a good public hall, built by a
stock company, capable of seating 500 people, and situated above the
public school.
West Hallock-
The hamlet of West Hallock is almost entirely in Akron township,
opposite section 19 of Hallock Township.
It contains a cheese factory, which has been in operation for some
years, mentioned in the history of the township in which it is located.
It also has a good general store and post office, under the care of Mr.
Potter.
Schools -
The first school ever taught within the present bounds of the township
was located on the present site of Harrison Reed's house, and was taught
during the Winters of 1829 and 1830, by Lucia Root, daughter of Jeriah
Root. The first school-house built in the district, stood near Joel
Hick's place on sec. 32. It was erected in the Fall of 1836, and was
removed about eight years afterwards to the Hallock farm. In the
northern part of the township a little school was taught during the
Summers of 1839 and 1810, in a log cabin where the house of Isaiah Nurs
now stands. Fiducia Bliss was the teacher. In 1841 the first
school-house in what is now School District No. 1, was erected it was 18
ft. square and was built of brick. Sarah Fosdick was among the earliest
of the teachers. The present school-house in that district was built in
1856, and stands near the S. E. cor. of the S. W. 1/4 of sec. 3. It is
well fitted up and can accommodate sixty children. In School District
No. 5, the first school was taught in an old log cabin which stood a
little south and east from where O. M. Miller's dwelling now stands, and
was used for that purpose about the year 1851. Joseph Gallup was then
its teacher. In 1856 the present school-house was built. School District
No. 6, was originally composed of portions of Peoria, Stark, and
Marshall Counties, and was reconstructed in its present limits in 1860.
It was the last school district to be organized in the township. The
first public school was built about 1857 at a cost of $800, and in 1866
to accommodate the growing wants of the district; the present school was
erected at a cost of about $1,400.
In the West Hallock district the structure now occupied as a public
school was erected in the Fall of 1856 as an academy, and was occupied'
as such for about five years, when it fell into the hands of the school
trustees, and has since been conducted as a public school. The
school in District No. 4 was erected about ten years ago and stands on
sec. 32. It was the first school in that section.
Source: The History of Peoria County, Illinois, Johnson &
Company, Chicago, 1880.
Transcribed by: Candi Horton
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