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1896 Atlas
Map
Showing grid and major markers. |
Medina Township is 10N and Range 8. E. of 4th. P.M.
The township has some fine land. The east and western portion have some excellent farms.
The centre is somewhat broken but is great for timber and grazing purposes.
The first settlement in the township was commenced where Mossville now (1873) stands.
1825 George LOVE built the first house.
John LOVE, his son, is now (1873) the oldest settler in the township, from whom they obtained
the information for this History. Among the older Settlers where John RIDEWAY, Abner COOPER,
Samuel CLIFTON, Edmund WEED and Linus SCOVILL.
First Marriage 1826 ~ Abner COOPER to Miss Sally SHELDON
First Sermon 1826~ Rev. John Thomas, a Baptist minister preached the first sermon.
First School abt. 1830 ~ The first school was taught by Moses CLIFTON.
First Justice of the Peace: Hiram M. CURRY
First Supervisor: John JACOBS
Transcribed by Candi Horton from
the 1873 Peoria County City Atlas located at the main Peoria Public Library.
MEDINA TOWNSHIP
The first settler within the limits now comprised in this township was
undoubtedly George Love, who came with his family from Park Co.,
Indiana, and settled November 10, 1824, near the spot now occupied by
the village of Mossville. He had at that time no nearer neighbor than
Fort Clark in one direction, and the Fox river in the other. In course
of the succeeding year some five or six families settled near them. John
Ridge-way was the first to follow and he helped the Loves to build their
house. Edmund Weed Briarley, Abner Cooper, Henry Thomas and Samuel
Clifton came next. The latter on coming bought out Weed's claim. Several
other families whose names can not now be learned settled within a mile
or so of Love's cabin, but staying only a short time sold their claims
and moved on towards the setting sun. This was at that time the most
thickly settled portion of the northern half of Peoria county. No saw or
grist mill was erected in the township till about the year 1859, except
some circle saw-mills which were put up about 1853. The Indians at that
time were very numerous. The Pottawattomies were native to the county,
and numerous other roving bands of Sacs, Foxes and Wiimebagoes with a
few Chippeways and Delawares were encamped and hunted all over it.
In 1825 a small colony sprung up near the northern boundary of the
township, and among those forming it were the Averys, Stephen French,
Stephen Carl, and Resolve Cleveland with their families and they
occupied at first the abandoned bark houses of an Indian town on Sec. 4.
In the Spring of 1881, Mr. Linas Scovill with his family came from
Vermillion county, Ind., and settled on a claim which he had previously
bought from one of the Love family. The claim then entered upon is still
owned by Mr. Scovill's son, who bears his father's name. The settlement
at Mossville was directly in the track of the emigration going on
between the years 1828 to 1835, to Galena, and the numbers passing
through afforded a ready market for all surplus grain, garden products,
etc. Much was also disposed of to voyagers upon the river. Between 1831
and 1840 the district was settled up rapidly, and good claims advanced
greatly in price. Among those coming between these years may be
mentioned, Gershom Silliman and family who set-on Sec. 2 in 1831. John
E. Bristol and Nicholas Sturm in 1832, Thos. Mooney and his sons James
and William in 1835, J. H. and I. W. Case in 1836, William Robinson in
1837, and John P. Neal and Jonathan W. Rice in 1838. Simon Reed and
Hiram M. Gurry were the first justices of the peace, and held office in
1829. The first marriage was that of Abner Cooper to Sally Sheldon in
February, 1826, near Mossville. They were married by Rev. Mr. Cormack, a
Baptist preacher. Rev. John Thomas also a Baptist, preached the first
sermon.
In April, 1850, the township in common with the others forming Peoria
county, was constituted and its present name adopted. The origin of the
name is very uncertain. The committee on names wrestled with the problem
for some weeks before they fixed upon Medina, which is certainly
unobjectionable, both as regards its euphony and its singularity. The
township consists of twenty-nine perfect sections and several fractional
sections. It forms the southern part of LaSalle prairie and contains
some excellent land. Running north and south through the middle is a
belt of bluff land, two miles in width, covered with timber, but on each
side and especially to the eastward a level prairie stretches out,
dotted with as fine and productive farms as can be found anywhere.
Railroads-
Two railroads traverse the township - the Chicago, Rock Island
and Pacific, and the Peoria and Rock Island.
The former having a depot at Mossville, and the latter at Alta.
The township contains two villages, Mossville on Sec. 27 and Alta on
Sec. 31. The former has a population of about two hundred, and is
situated near the first land taken up in the township. It is on the line
of the Bureau branch of the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad,
which was opened in 1854, and the village was laid off about the same
time. It was named after Wm. S. Moss, who owned, in company with Isaac
Underbill, the quarter section on which the village stands at the time
the railroad was laid through it. Few villages of its population possess
better church or school edifices. Mr. A. Marberry, the postmaster, is
proprietor of the only store in it, and the Mossville House, conducted
for many years by Mr. John Crawl, offers excellent accommodation for the
weary stranger.
Alta is a railway station and post office on the Peoria and Rock Island
Railroad, and was laid off for Imri Case, Thos. Hanson and Loren Wilder
in March, 1873, and gained its name from its elevated position, being
the highest point between Peoria and Rock Island. On account of the
increased postal facilities gained from the establishment of a depot
there, the village has been a great convenience to the inhabitants of
that portion of the township. It contains a general store kept by
Clarence Case, who is also postmaster, a grocery kept by Alden Hawley,
the Potter Brothers1 cheese factory, capable of handling several
thousand pounds of milk per day, and a blacksmith and wagon shop. A
prominent feature of the place is the public school. The building is one
of the best in the township.
A lodge of the A. F. & A. M., and a temperance reform club are
prosperously conducted in the village.
Source: The History of Peoria County,
Illinois, Johnson & Company, Chicago, 1880.
Transcribed by: Candi Horton
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