
Rock Island County Pioneers
John Edgington
Founder of Edgington and Buffalo Prairie Townships
The name of Edgington is a well known one throughout Rock Island county. It is
the name of one of the county's most prosperous little villages, named in honor of one of the founders of that
family, John Edgington, the subject of our sketch, a man who in is long lifetime spent in this county, lived to
see it grow from a waste of prairie and wilderness into a wonderfully fertile farming community, dotted here and
there with busy little villages and cities devoted to manufacture and commercial enterprise.
John Edgington was born July 4, 1809, at Steubenville, O., and died in March,
1896, at the home of his son, James Edgington, of Reynolds, in this county. He received his education in the common
schools of Steubenville, his birthplace, and in his young manhood followed the occupation of trading and merchandising
in Steubenville. In July, 1834, he made a trip on horseback from Steubenville to Rock Island seeking farm land,
and stopping at a point in this county decided to permanently settle here. He took up a farm in what afterwards
became Edgington Precinct, this being named after him. This precinct was afterwards divided into Edgington and
Buffalo Prairie townships, Mr. Edgington's farm being located in the latter townshiip.
On February 17, 1834, previous to settling in Rock island county, Mr. Edgington
was married to Miss Susan Crabbs, a young lady of Steubenville, and to the wilds of what was then an unsettled
frontier, he brought his young wife. Nine children were born of this union, their oldest child, James, being the
first white child born in Rock Island county south of Rock river. Their other children were: Sarah; William, who
died in infancy; Jane, now Mrs. Rufus Walker; Casandra; Margaret, wife of C. E. Dodge; Drusilla, wife of S. H.
Parvin, and Harriet, wife of Fred Titterington. All of the children re now deceased, with the exception of Mrs.
Walker and Mrs. Dodge. To her children Mrs. Edgington often recounted her experience when she came to Rock Island
county a bride. For the first six months after coming here, she never saw another white woman, and she was in constant
fear of the Indians who then roamed over the country. They took a great fancy to her first born son, James, the
first white baby they had ever seen, and the young mother received frequent and urgent offers to trade a papoose
for the white baby. This added to her fears, for she was in constant terror lest the Indiansâ great desire
to possess her offspring might lead them to make a forcible exchange at some time when her husband was absent.
Mrs. Edgington died at the home of Mrs. Rufus Walker, in Reynolds, in October, 1886.
But to return to our account of Mr. Edgington. He cleared and cultivated his farm
in Buffalo Prairie, where he made his home until 1894, when he sold his farm and moved to Reynolds to make his
home with his son, James, where, as has been stated, he lived until his death two years later. He lived the busy
life of a farmer, but found time to take an interest and an active part in all that pertained to the advancement
of the county. He was justice of the peace and school director for more than thirty years. He served as supervisor
from his township for several terms and served as a juror at the first term of court ever held in this county.
He was a hospitable and genial man and there was always a place at table and hearth fire for the strange and wayfaring
man of those times who was seeking a home.
In religious faith Mr. Edgington was a Presbyterian and he helped to build the
first church of that denomination that was built below Rock river in this county. He also helped hew the logs and
erect the first schoolhouse built in the lower end of the county. It was located about an eighth of a mile east
of his evidence. The school was supported for several years by private subscription and if there was any deficit
in the amount necessary to carry on the work of education, Mr. Edgington was always prompt in making up the balance
himself. In politics Mr. Edgington was always a staunch democrat and with his party he was a firm adherent until
the silver question became their paramount issue. Then, not agreeing with the majority of his party upon this question,
he cast his vote for William McKinley, but it cost him a hard struggle to do so. During his lifetime he accumulated
a considerable competence and the farm that he owned became enhanced in value as the years went by until it, in
itself, became worth a very considerable fortune. He was a man of great public spirit, a man beloved and esteemed
by those who knew him, and his long and busy life was crowned with success.
Pgs. 1119 - 1120
Historical Encyclopedia of Illinois and History of Rock Island County
Submitted by Mary Lou Schaechter
©2006, Genealogy Trails
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