Kickapoo Township History

Residence and Farm Premises of Francis P.
Kingsley Esq.
Section 26, Kickapoo Township
Atlas Map of Peoria County, Illinois, 1873,
page 128
KICKAPOO TOWNSHIP
Town 9 north, range 8 east, took its name from the
creek which flows through it. Kickapoo is an Indian term and signifies red bud.
The stream was so named from the abundance of that shrub that grew along its
banks. The township dates its settlement from 1834. John L. Wakefield, now of
Radnor, claims to have been the first settler, in that year. Francis Pond,
George O. Kingsley, came to the township in the Fall of 1834, and kept bach.,
and shook with the ague in a cabin on the farm where Mrs. Mary Kingsley now
lives. John Coyle and Israel Pinckney came the same Fall. The former settled on
the farm now owned by Joseph Voorhees, and was afterwards one of the proprietors
of Kickapoo village. Mr. Pinckney built his cabin on S. E. of Sec. 12. He came
from New York city. The Kingsleys were natives of Vermont. They both married and
reared families, and died in the township, George in 1869, and Francis in 1873.
Others soon followed these first pioneers. Samuel
Dinnon came from Connecticut in 1838 and located on Sec. 10, where he still
resides. Gideon Thomas, father of John A., came to the township in 1844 and
settled where J. A. Thomas now lives.
Hole's Mill. — In 1834 William Hale, then sheriff of
Oswego county, N. Y., being West on official duty, visited the Kickapoo valley
and selected a mill site at what is now the upper end of Pottstown. He returned
home, resigned his office, and in the Spring of 1835 came back accompanied with
George Greenwood, John Easton, and Waldo Holmes, and erected a saw mill on the
site that year. The following Winter material was prepared, and in the Spring of
1836 a flouring mill was raised. He brought the necessary machinery and his
family by wagon from Albany, N. Y., that Summer, and the mill was completed and
set to running in the Spring of 1837. It was visited by settlers for a radius of
thirty miles, and was crowded with business. The water supply giving out in
1848, steam was substituted, and Mr. Hale controlled the property until his
death, in 1859. The mill was converted into a distillery, which was destroyed by
fire in 1867.
Mr. Hale donated a tract of land for burial, religious,
and school purposes, and erected a small house thereon. A Rev. Mr. Beggs was one
of the first preachers to visit the Hale's Mill settlement. He held services
there and organized a Methodist society, which flourished a number of years, and
at one time contained one hundred and fifty members, but is now extinct.
KICKAPOO VILLAGE
The village plat was laid off in July, 1836. The plat
was entered for record in the name of John Coyle. The town site is in the
southwest quarter of Sec. 6. About one-half of this quarter section was laid off
in town lots with a public square in the center. The first house on the village
site was erected by Mr. Jenkins on the site now occupied by Valentine Schlenk's
hotel property, long known as the Kickapoo House. The original building is
included in the hotel building. It was designed for a storeroom, and was used
for that purpose for a short time by Mr. Jenkins, when additions were made for
hotel purposes.
The honor of opening the first store is generally
accredited to Richard F. Seabury, now of Peoria.
At one time, until the railroads surrounded it, there was a good trade at this
ancient village.
EDWARDS STATION
This is a mining and railway station on the Peoria and
Galesburg division of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad, and is located
on section nineteen. By rail it is fourteen miles, and by wagon road, ten miles,
west from Peoria. It is not a regularly laid out town, but more of a mining
hamlet. The houses are built with but little regard to the points of the
compass. The first man to settle here was Isaac Jones, who built a cabin on the
side of the hill, very nearly where Wilkinson & Wantling's coal shaft is
operated. He died in 1840.
The next house on the ground covered by the Station was
built by Conrad Beck, in 1851. The school-house was built in 1865.
E. D. Edwards opened the first store, in 1851. He died
in 1857. In 1876, Wilkinson & Edwards opened a general store which still
continues.
In 1853, two years after he commenced business at the
Station, E. D. Edwards built a steam flouring mill here, which was successfully
conducted until 1866 or '67, when it was destroyed by fire. It has never been
rebuilt.
Coal Mining.—In 1860, Dr. Wilkinson commenced buying
coal bearing lands in the vicinity of the Station. He bought from time to time,
as such lands were offered, until he now owns nearly 1,000 acres of coal bearing
land adjacent to the Station.
In December, 1876, Dr. Wilkinson had completed
arrangements for a thorough development of his mining interests, and associated
Isaac Wantling, an experienced miner, with him in their management. Active
operations were commenced in January, 1877, and successfully prosecuted; they
possess a capacity for supplying twenty car-loads of coal per day, which can be
indefinitely increased. There are two drift veins of four and five feet in
thickness that are easily accessible, on the Wilkinson lands, the extent of
which is unknown. Each one of these drifts, as far as worked, will yield 1,000
bushels of coal to each square rod, or 40,000 tons to the acre.
POTTSTOWN
has been chiefly quilt up by Mr. Potts for the use of his operatives and their
families, since 1869. In 1875 Mr. Potts began the manufacture of brick, which
has since been quite an important business in the hamlet. William H. McLaughlin
opened the first store in the place in March, 1872. Having changed hands several
times, the business is now conducted by Joseph Middleton.
The Red Ribbon Club. — The temperance reform movement
reached Pottstown in August, 1878. It met with a hearty encouragement by nearly
all the most influential citizens; a club was organized and is in a healthy
condition.
The Patrons of Husbandry have two quite flourishing
lodges in Kickapoo. No. 446 was chartered May 16, 1873, and was organized with
thirty members. In the Fall of 1879 the membership was thirty-five and the lodge
in active working order. It holds stock in the Peoria grange store.
Orange Grange, No. 843. — This grange was organized,
with about forty members, January 10, 1874. It now numbers over fifty. The lodge
owns a hall in school district
No. 1. Meetings are held weekly — Saturday — in the Summer, and semi-monthly in
Winter.
The Big Hollow Butter and Cheese Factory Company was
organized in 1878, with a capital stock of $15,000, and erected a building 30 by
60 feet. It began operations in May, 1878, and has a capacity of 10,000 pounds
of milk, or 1,000 pounds of cheese per day. (The
History of Peoria County, Illinois, 1880, page 598-602, submitted by Janine
Crandell)
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Updated December 8, 2004