Centennial history of Madison County, Illinois, and its people, 1812 to 1912, Volume I, Part 2

Author: Norton, Wilbur T., 1844- , ed; Flagg, Norman Gershom, 1867-, ed; Hoerner, John Simon, 1846- , ed
Publication date: 1912
Publisher: Chicago ; New York : The Lewis Publishing Co.
Number of Pages: 686


USA > Illinois > Madison County > Centennial history of Madison County, Illinois, and its people, 1812 to 1912, Volume I > Part 2


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | Part 43 | Part 44 | Part 45 | Part 46 | Part 47 | Part 48 | Part 49 | Part 50 | Part 51 | Part 52 | Part 53 | Part 54 | Part 55 | Part 56 | Part 57 | Part 58 | Part 59 | Part 60 | Part 61 | Part 62 | Part 63 | Part 64 | Part 65 | Part 66 | Part 67 | Part 68 | Part 69 | Part 70 | Part 71 | Part 72 | Part 73 | Part 74 | Part 75 | Part 76 | Part 77 | Part 78 | Part 79 | Part 80 | Part 81 | Part 82 | Part 83


xvii


CONTENTS


CHAPTER XLI


MUSIC IN MADISON COUNTY


EARLY MUSICAL CENTERS-MONTICELLO SEMINARY-ALTON MUSICIANS-BANDS AND SO- CIETIES-SCHOOLS OF MUSIC-OTHER BANDS, ORGANISTS, ETC .- MUSIC IN HIGHLAND. 313


CHAPTER XLII


PUBLIC MONUMENTS IN THE COUNTY


LOVEJOY MONUMENT MOVEMENT-DESCRIPTION OF MONUMENT-THE WOOD RIVER MONU- MENT-CONFEDERATE MONUMENT AT ALTON-MEMORIAL TO UNION SOLDIERS-THE LOUIS ARRINGTON MONUMENT. 318


CHAPTER XLIII


TO ALTON'S EARLY CREDIT


HER OLD-TIME CHARTER-ITS DONATIONS OF LOTS FOR THE SUPPORT OF THE GOSPEL AND OF PUBLIC SCHOOLS. 325


CHAPTER XLIV


PROGRESS OF EDUCATION


ALTON'S EARLY PRIVATE SCHOOLS-PUBLIC SCHOOLS-ORGANIZED PUBLIC SYSTEM-AL- TON'S LATER PUBLIC SCHOOLS-BOARD OF EDUCATION. 329


CHAPTER XLV


PIONEER CHURCHES OF THE COUNTY


FIRST CAMP MEETING-FIRST PROTESTANT MINISTER-PRESBYTERIAN CHURCHES-UPPER AL- TON METHODISTS-PIONEER M. E. CHURCH OF EDWARDSVILLE-ALTON CHURCHES-WANDA -ST. PAUL'S EPISCOPAL OF ALTON-ALTON GERMAN EVANGELICAL-CHURCH OF THE RE- DEEMER-THE A. M. E. AND UNION BAPTIST - GERMAN METHODISTS - PRESBYTERIAN CHURCHES-EARLY BAPTIST CHURCHES IN COUNTY - UNITARIAN CHURCH OF ALTON - CHURCH OF CHRIST (CHRISTIAN )-PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL CHURCHES-CUMBERLAND PRES- BYTERIAN CHURCHES-LIBERTY PRAIRIE AND OMPHGHENT-THE CATHOLIC CHURCH IN MADISON COUNTY-NUMBER OF CHURCHES IN COUNTY. 336


xviii


CONTENTS


CHAPTER XLVI


A LOOK BACKWARD


GEN. Z. M. PIKE'S NARROW ESCAPE FROM DEATH IN MADISON COUNTY-SOME NOTED EX- PLORERS-GERSHOM FLAGG'S PIONEER LETTERS-THE OLD CABIN-NOT A SUCCESSFUL POL- ITICIAN-REMINISCENCES OF GAIUS PADDOCK FAMILY-MADISON COUNTY'S PIONEER SUR- 352 VEYOR.


CHAPTER XLVII


MURDER OF JACOB BARTH


STORY OF THE CRIME-MOB ATTEMPTS LYNCHING - DISPERSED BY SHERIFF - CRIMINALS TRIED AND PUNISHED-DECLINE OF RESPECT FOR LAW-ORIGIN OF MADISON GUARDS. 362


CHAPTER XLVIII


RESOURCES AND MANUFACTURES


UTILIZATION OF NATURAL RESOURCES-MINING AND MANUFACTURE OF CLAY-STONE IN- DUSTRIES-BASIS OF INDUSTRIAL EXPANSION-VARIED INDUSTRIAL SYSTEM, 366


CHAPTER XLIX


MEDICAL PRACTICE AND PRACTITIONERS


PAST AND PRESENT FACILITIES-THEY SIMPLY "CALLED THE DOCTOR"-PROGRESS OF MEDI- CAL EDUCATION-MEDICAL SOCIETIES-FIRST ACT FOR MEDICAL REGULATION-LATEST REG- ULATING ACT-THE COUNTY'S FIRST PHYSICIAN-EDWARDSVILLE'S FIRST DOCTOR-FIRST PHYSICIAN IN EASTERN MADISON-PIONEER MUSICIAN-A SOUTHERN POLITICIAN-PROMI- NENT IN THE CIVIL WAR-A "THOMSONIAN" CERTIFICATE-M. D. AND D. D .- OF IN- TERNATIONAL FAME-TOO SYMPATHETIC FOR A DOCTOR-TWO "OLD FAMILY DOCTORS"- IN PRACTICE FORTY-ONE YEARS-DR. JOSEPH POGUE-HIGH-GRADE SWISS PHYSICIANS- DR. CHARLES DAVIS-PIONEER IN PUBLIC EDUCATION-THE FATHER OF NEW DOUGLAS. 371


CHAPTER L


BENCH AND BAR OF MADISON COUNTY


THE CIRCUIT BENCH-FORMER LAWYERS WHO PRACTICED AT THIS BAR-PRESENT PRACTI- TIONERS-ALTON COURTS.


412


xix


CONTENTS


CHAPTER LI


BANKING AND FINANCE


EARLY FINANCIAL VENTURES OF ILLINOIS TERRITORY-STATE BANK AND BRANCHES-LOSS TO THE STATE FOR A DECADE-ANOTHER STATE BANK-BUILDING UP OF ALTON-CONSTI- TUTIONAL PROHIBITION AGAINST STATE BANKING-PRESENT BANKING LAW-DEVELOPMENT OF BANKING IN COUNTY-BANKING IN ALTON BY EDWARD P. WADE. 440


CHAPTER LII OFFICIAL CENTENNIAL ROSTER


MILITARY COMMISSIONS-CIVIL APPOINTMENTS-CIRCUIT CLERKS-COUNTY JUDGES-COUNTY CLERKS-SHERIFFS-TREASURERS-CORONERS-STATE'S ATTORNEYS-SCHOOL SUPERINTEND- ENTS-SURVEYORS-RECORDERS-PROBATE JUDGES - PROBATE CLERKS - COUNTY COMMIS- SIONERS-COUNTY COURTS-COUNTY COMMISSIONERS AGAIN-SUPERVISORS. 452


CHAPTER LIII ALHAMBRA TOWNSHIP


EARLY SETTLERS FROM THE SOUTH-ALHAMBRA VILLAGE LAID OUT-BUSINESS AND BANKING -GRAIN AND PRODUCE CENTER-KAUFMANN. 459


CHAPTER LIV ALTON TOWNSHIP


THE FIRST ALTON SETTLEMENT-RUFUS EASTON AND OTHER FOUNDERS-UPPER ALTON LAID OUT (1816)-RALLIED FROM BLOW OF LOVEJOY RIOT-TOWN CHARTERED (1821)- ALTON'S MAYORS FROM 1837 TO 1912-AFTER THE WAR OF 1832-THE FLOOD OF 1844- DANIEL WEBSTER VISITED ALTON-MEXICAN WAR-CHOLERA IN 1849-TWO PRESIDENTS VISITED ALTON-LINCOLN-DOUGLAS DEBATE-OLDEST FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY IN ILLI- NOIS-THE CIVIL WAR-PIONEER MASONS AND ODD FELLOWS-PUBLIC UTILITIES-OLD- TIME CITIZENS AND BUSINESS MEN-INDUSTRIAL NOTES OF TODAY. 467


CHAPTER LV CHOUTEAU TOWNSHIP


NATURAL FEATURES-EARLY SETTLEMENT-EARLY LAND CLAIMS ENTERED-PIONEER HARDSHIPS, PLEASURES AND DANGERS-EDUCATION AND RELIGION-FIRST MILL AND STORE -INDIAN MOUNDS-OLD SALEM CEMETERY-THE OLD GILLHAM ESTATE-MADISON VIL- LAGES-OLD SALEM AND MITCHELL-THE DRIVEN WELL-COUNTY BOARD REPRESENTATION -PROTECTION FROM FLOODS.


484


XX


CONTENTS CHAPTER LVI


COLLINSVILLE TOWNSHIP


FIRST SETTLERS IN THE COUNTY-PROSPEROUS AND HISTORIC - UNIONVILLE, NOW COLLINS- VILLE-THE COLLINS BROTHERS-THE CORPORATION - COAL AND INDUSTRIES - SCHOOLS AND NEWSPAPERS. 491


CHAPTER LVII


EDWARDSVILLE TOWNSHIP


EARLY SETTLEMENTS-TOWN LAID OUT-FAMOUS RESIDENTS-JUDICIARY AND CIVIL GOV- ERNMENT-CHURCHES AND SCHOOLS-SOCIAL AND FRATERNAL-THE POSTOFFICE-FIRST NEWSPAPER-EARLY MILLS-TRANSPORTATION-WATER PROBLEM SOLVED-EDWARDSVILLE AS A CITY-COURT HOUSES-INDUSTRIES-AS A RESIDENTIAL CITY. 497


CHAPTER LVIII


FORT RUSSELL TOWNSHIP


STATISTICAL VIEW - RAILROADS - PRODUCTS, TOWNS AND POSTOFFICES-SCHOOLS AND CHURCHES-EARLY SETTLERS-TOWNSHIP ORGANIZATION. 507


CHAPTER LIX


FOSTERBURG TOWNSHIP


FIRST SETTLERS-TOWNSHIP'S FOSTER FATHER-FOSTERBURG VILLAGE-CHANGES IN POPULA- TION-BUILDERS OF THE TOWNSHIP.


512


CHAPTER LX


GODFREY TOWNSHIP


RESOURCES AND INDUSTRIES-CHURCHES AND SCHOOLS-PUBLIC MEN AND PROMINENT CITI- ZENS-REMINISCENCES OF G. F. LONG-RECOLLECTIONS OF REV. DR. SCARRITT - SOME NOTES OF THE SCARRITT FAMILY-TRANSPORTATION-CHANGES IN POPULATION-A GREAT INDUSTRY. 516


xxi


CONTENTS


CHAPTER LXI


HAMEL TOWNSHIP


THE ORIGINAL PIONEERS-ALSO CAME BEFORE 1820-IN THE TWENTIES-EARLY CENSUS -CENTENARIAN-TOWNSHIP IN 1853-A SCREAMING TORNADO-THE JUDY FAMILY- CARPENTER-PROPERTY VALUATION. 522


CHAPTER LXII


HELVETIA TOWNSHIP


THE PIONEERS-ANIMALS, BIRDS AND INDIANS-SETTLEMENTS IN WESTERN SECTIONS-SEB- ASTOPOL-ST. MORGAN-PROMINENT FARMERS. 525


CHAPTER LXIII


HISTORY OF HIGHLAND


EARLY SETTLEMENT OF HIGHLAND-FOUNDATION OF THE TOWN-INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT AND GENERAL GROWTH-FIRST GENERAL ELECTION-POSTOFFICE ESTABLISHED-GERMAN AND SWISS IMMIGRANTS-HIGHLAND IN 1841-ENTERPRISES OF THE PAST-HIGHLAND MILITIA-SCHOOLS AND CHURCHES-THE PUBLIC SCHOOL-PROMINENT MEN-SOCIETIES AND LODGES-INCORPORATED AS A VILLAGE-ORGANIZE AS A CITY-PRESIDENTS AND MAYORS OF HIGHLAND-INDUSTRIES-BANKS-STORES AND HOTELS-A CITY IN A PARK. 529


CHAPTER LXIV JARVIS TOWNSHIP


PHYSICAL FEATURES-JOHN JARVIS AND OTHER EARLY SETTLERS - FIRST SCHOOLS AND CHURCHES-CITY OF TROY. 552


CHAPTER LXV


LEEF TOWNSHIP


FIRST SETTLER AND LAND OWNER-OTHER EARLY SETTLERS-JACOB LEU, OR LEEF-OTHER GERMAN SETTLERS-DIAMOND MINERAL SPRINGS. 561


xxii


CONTENTS


CHAPTER LXVI


MARINE TOWNSHIP


PIONEER SETTLERS-THE DECADE 1820-1830-THE FOUNDER OF MARINE-FEW DESCEND- ANTS LEFT-PATRIOTISM-MARINE VILLAGE-A MIDNIGHT TRAGEDY-CHURCHES. 563


CHAPTER LXVII


MORO TOWNSHIP


FIRST SETTLER-THE PALMERS AND OTHERS-NATURAL FEATURES AND TOWNS-CHURCHES AND SCHOOL HOUSES-STATISTICS AND GOVERNMENT. 569


CHAPTER LXVIII


NAMEOKI AND VENICE TOWNSHIPS


FLOODS IN NAMEOKI TOWNSHIP-FAMOUS PREHISTORIC MOUNDS-FIRST AMERICAN SETTLERS -MEANING OF NAMEOKI-VENICE TOWNSHIP-VENICE VILLAGE-THE VILLAGE OF MADI- SON-GRANITE CITY (PITTSBURGH OF THE WEST). 572


CHAPTER LXIX


NEW DOUGLAS TOWNSHIP


THE PIONEERS-THE TORNADO OF 1876-NEW DOUGLAS VILLAGE-OLD SETTLERS' ASSOCIA- TION-A STOCK RAISING AND DAIRYING COUNTRY-NOTED NATIVES. 583


CHAPTER LXX


OLIVE TOWNSHIP


SOME OF THE EARLY SETTLERS-MINING DEVELOPMENT-LIVINGSTON-WILLIAMSON. 587


CHAPTER LXXI


OMPH-GHENT TOWNSHIP


FIRST EVENTS AND SETTLERS-WORDEN VILLAGE-COAL MINING INTERESTS-PRAIRIE CITY- GENERAL TOWNSHIP MATTERS. 590


xxiii


CONTENTS CHAPTER LXXII PIN OAK TOWNSHIP.


PIONEER CITIZENS-NOTABLE SETTLEMENT OF FREED SLAVES-GENERAL ITEMS. 594


CHAPTER LXXIII


ST. JACOB TOWNSHIP.


FIRST SETTLERS-FIRST BIRTH WITHIN THE FORT-DR. GERKE, PIONEER GERMAN-THE TOWN OF ST. JACOB-AS A VILLAGE. 597


CHAPTER LXXIV SALINE TOWNSHIP


FIRST TRACES OF SETTLEMENT-THE MCALLILY FAMILY-MILITARY AND POLITICAL CHAR- ACTER-JAMES REYNOLDS-NEW SWITZERLAND-INDUSTRIES-EDUCATIONAL AND POLITICAL -TOWN OF SALINE (GRANTFORK P. O.)-PIERRON. 601


CHAPTER LXXV


WOOD RIVER TOWNSHIP


FIRST SETTLERS-WOOD RIVER MASSACRE MONUMENT-FIRST SCHOOLS-UPPER ALTON- LITERARY, RELIGIOUS AND EDUCATIONAL-INDUSTRIES AND BUSINESS-BETHALTO-EAST AL- TON-WOOD RIVER AND BENBOW CITY-THE ASSASSINATION OF HON. D. B. GILLHAM 607


ADDENDUM


MINING VILLAGES NOT OTHERWISE MENTIONED. 618


INDEX


Abendroth, Julius, 1190 Abbott, Jeremiah, 49, 103 Abbott, Levi A., 897 Abbott, William J., 794 Adams, Emil, 273


Adams, John, 157, 455, 502


Adams (John), Journal-John Adams, 157; down the Ohio to Illinois, 157; building the Edwardsville mill, 158; prepares for the clothing business, 159; manufactures castor oil, 159; fails to make beet sugar, 160; business and piety, 160 Adams, O. M., 471, 472 Adams, (Mrs.) W. R., 276 Adler, Leonard W., 1050 Advanced School, Alton, 331 "Advocate," 104


African Methodist church, Alton, 343


Agriculture-First improved farm, 161; from 1818 to 1836, 162; early advances in agriculture, 163; County Agricultural Association, 163; fourth an- nual state fair, 164; agricultural progress, 167; acrcage and crops, 168; dairy and live-stock in- terests, 168; population distinctively German, 170 Ahrens, Christian, 909 Ahrens, Louis, 1167 Albro, S. A., 612


Alden, Emily G., 257 Aldous, James H., 726 Aldrich, Anson, 524 . Aldrich, Robert, 522, 523, 524


Alhambra, 175 Alhambra school house (illustration), 463


Alhambra township-Early settlers from the south, 459; Alhambra village laid out, 461; business and banking, 462; grain and produce center, 464; Kaufmann, 464 Alhambra village, 461


Allen, Abram, 585 Allen, George C., 564, 577 Allen, George Townsend, 84, 388, 564, 565 Allen, Rowland P., 175, 564, 565, 577 Allison, Jesse, 562


Allison, Thomas, 562 Allouez, 9 Alsop, Robert, 584


Alton, Menton, 132, 134, 177; a spectator of 1837, 192; some business men and farmers of 1822, 194; her old-time charter, 325; early private schools, 329; public schools, 330; organized pub- lic system, 331; later public schools, 332; board of education, 334


Alton Artillery Company, 288


Alton & St. Louis Railroad, 96


Alton & Sangamon Railroad, 96, 449, 473


Alton & Terre Haute Railroad, 473


Alton Bank, 449


Alton Banking & Trust Company, 451 "Alton Banner," 108


Alton Boxboard and Paper Company, 483, 615


Alton Brick Company, 483, 521


Alton Building and Savings Institution, 449 Alton City Court, 412


Alton City Guards, 288


Alton City Hall (illustration), 236, 466


Alton College of Illinois, 119


Alton Conservatory of Music, 315 Alton colored school, 331


"Alton Courier," 104, 473 "Alton Daily Courier," 107


"Alton Daily Republican," 108 "Alton Daily Sentinel-Democrat, 108


"Alton Daily Telegraph," 108


"Alton Daily Times," 108, 109


"Alton Democrat," 108


Alton's first brick house, 470


Alton's first lawyer, 471


Alton's first railroad, 473


Alton German Evangelical church, 342


Alton, Granite & St. Louis Railroad, 99 Alton high school, 334


Alton Horticultural Society, 165


Alton, Jacksonville & Peoria Railroad, 99


Alton Jaeger Guards, 288


"Alton Journal," 109


Alton Manufacturing Company, 367


Alton Marine & Fire Insurance Co., 449 "Alton Monitor," 106


"Alton Morning News," 108 Alton Mutual & Savings Bank, 449


Alton Mutual Insurance and Savings Company, 310


Alton National Bank, 309, 310, 444, 450, 451


"Alton National Democrat," 107


Alton Naval Reserves, 290


"Alton Observer," 105, 473 Alton postmasters, 480 Alton postoffice, 479 Alton postoffice (illustration) 481


Alton Printing Company, 105


Alton, St. Louis' rival, 92 Alton Savings Bank, 450


Alton school case-Colored children refused admit-


tance to lower grades of public schools, 301; mandates of Supreme Court ignored, 302


XXV


xxvi


INDEX


Alton Seminary, 119


"Alton Spectator," 104, 472 Alton State Bank, 448 "Alton Telegraplı," 472 "Alton Telegraph and Democratie Review," 105


"Alton Telegraph and Madison County Record," 105 Alton township-The first Alton settlement, 468;


Rufus Easton and other founders, 468; Upper Alton laid out (1816), 468; town chartered (1812), 470; Alton's mayors from 1837 to 1912, 471; after the war of 1832, 472; rallied from blow of Lovejoy riot, 473; flood of 1844, 474; Daniel Webster visited Alton, 475; Mexican war, 475; cholera in 1849, 475; two presidents visited Al- ton, 476; Lincoln-Douglas debate, 476; oldest fire insurance company in Illinois, 476; The Civil war, 478; pioncer Masons and Odd Fellows, 479; pub- lic utilities, 479; old-time citizens and business men, 481; industrial notes of today, 482 "Alton Trials," 69, 70, 72


Alton Volunteer Guards, 266 "Altone," 93, 414


Ambrosius, Conrad A., 926


Ambuehl, Edward N., 1077


Ambuehl, John, 562, 1142


Ambuehl, Nicholas, 562


"American," 104


American Coal Washer Company, 483 American (Know Nothing) party, 233


American occupation-Patrick Henry, first Illinois governor, 19; British-Indian attack on St. Louis, 20; government of the northwest territory, 21; territory of Indiana, 21; county of Madison (1812), 21; rivers as civilizing agents, 23; French and Anglo-Saxon colonists, 23; about land sur- veys, 25


American pioneers in county, 172


American Steel Foundries Company, 581


Ammann, J. Fred, 829


Ammann, Joseph, 311


Ammann, Joseph C., 542, 544, 547


Anderson, Gilmore, 597


Anderson, James G., 597


Anderson, John P., 1070


Angevine, Jonathan, 104


Angier, A. W., 109 Anson, Augustus, 493 Antenen, Alexander, 890


Anthony, John, 575 Anti-slavery in Illinois, 46, 47, 51, 52, 208 Anti-slavery in Madison county, 53, 207 Appel, Louis, 544


Appel, Louis J., 545


Archaeology of the county-The Cahokia distriet, 245; Monks' Mound, 247; Sugar Loaf Mound, 247; The Temple of the Sun, 248; probably antedated the buffalo, 249; from agriculturists to nomads, 250; the Trappists, 251 Area of the county, 25 Arkabauer, John M., 588


Armbruster, A. Charles, 951 Armstrong, John Maclay, 409


Armstrong, William D., 313, 315, 640 Arnold, Aaron, 502 Arrington, Louis, 323


Arrington (Louis) Monument, 323 Arrington, William P., 700 Arthur, Hiram, 453


Ash, Jared P., 273 Ash, William M., 746 Ashley, Chester, 417


Assassination of Hon. D. B. Gillham, 616


Atkins, Amos, 489


Atkins, Henry, 1125


Atkins, John, 575


Atwater, Caleb, 470


Atwater, Joshua, 501, 574


Atwood, Moses G., 329, 331, 332, 476


Aufderheide, Fred W., 1201


Austin, Garritson R., 392


Austin, Ira E., 701


Authors (Sec literature)


Aylward, D. E., 589


Aylward, P. J., 589


Aylward (D. E.) & Company, 589


Badgley, David, 161, 344


Baer, C., 539


Baer, (Rudolplı) & Sons, 600


Bailey, Alvin, 341


Bailey, H. J., 456


Bailey, James, 940


Bailey, Samuel G., 74, 418, 471


Bailhache, John, 104, 113


Baker, David J., 88, 418, 967


Baker, David J., Jr., 89


Baker Family, 967


Baker, Henry S., 83, 89, 98, 421, 435, 439, 967


Baker, Jas. W., 267, 268, 475


Baldwin, Amos, 342


Baldwin, Theron, 123, 344, 516


Ballard, Washington C., 500


Ballinger, Mary J., 712


Ballinger, William, 712


Balsiger, John, 542


Baltes, Peter J., 128, 349


Bandelier, A. E., 534, 539, 542


Bandelier, Adolph F., 256, 540


Bandy, James, 1186


Bandy, J. M., 434


Banking and finance (see also financiers and capi- talists),-Financing navigation scheme, 441; State bank and branches, 441; loss to the state for a decade, 442; another state bank, 443; building up of Alton, 443; constitution prohibits state . banking, 444; present banking law, 444; develop- ment of banking in county, 444; Banking in Ed- wardsville, 446; Leclairc, a profit sharing commu- nity, 447; banking in Alton, 448


Bank of Edwardsville, 446


Bank of Livingston, 589


Bank of Marine, 567


Banks, John, 1085


Banner Clay. Works, 506


Baptist church of Troy, 344


Barber, James, 388


Barber, John, Sr., 347


Barber, John, Jr., 347


Bardill, John, 605


Bardill, Josias G., 84, 544, 549, 1014


Bardin, W. T., 545


Bardsley, Edmund C., 941


Bargaetzi, Simon, 601 Bargetze, Simon, 1089


Barnett, Edward, 594, 741


Barnett, Joseph A., 454, 594, 1116


Barnett, K. T., 595 Barnett, Thomas, 594 Barnsback, George, 312 Barnsback, H. C., 106 Barnsback, Julius A., 559 Barnsback, J., 455 Barnsback, J. J., 163 Barnsback, Roy S., 834 Barr, A. C., 647 Barraclough, George, 505 Barry, A. S., 166 Barry, (Mrs.) A. S., 298 Barth, George F., 618 Barth, Jacob, 362 Bartlett, Joseph, 176, 455, 594


Bassett, Hector, G., 790 Battle of Bad Axe, 265 Bauer, W. H., 105 Bayle, Hugh E., 455, 456 Beaird, Joseph A., 442 Beall, A. M., 483, 615


Beall, Charles L., 483, 616 Beall, Edmond, 83, 84, 472, 616, 852


Beall, E. H., 483, 616


Beall, J. W., 335, 483, 615 Beall (Bros.) Company, 483, 615 Beck, Anton, 605 Beck, Paul, 594 Beck, Theodore, 1123 Becker, John, 495 Becker, William C., 1027 Belk, Thomas W. L., 880


Belleville, 325 Benbow, Amos E., 891 Benbow, A. E., 608, 615 Benbow City, 615


Bench and bar of Madison county-The Circuit bench, 413; former lawyers who practiced at this bar, 416; present practitioners, 426; Alton courts, 438 Bender, Edward J., 721 Bender, Gustave, 1167 Benedict, Florence, 296 Benen's fort, 608 Benson, Mary E. (Gary), 256


Benton, Thomas H., 150 Bernays, Carl Ludwig, 539 Bernays, F. B., 540 Bernays, F. Jacob, 395, 539 Bernays, George, 395, 539 Bernhardt, Fred, 955 Bernhardt, Henry, 989 Bernhardt, John, 1054 Bernhardt, Peter, 836 Berry, Ben D., 455 Berry, M. E., 591 Best, James, 590 Beste, Herman P., 1049 Bethalto, 508, 612 Bethalto Cornet Band, 315 Bethalto Custom and Merchants Mill, 613 Bethel Methodist church, 338, 500 Bethlehem United Baptist church, 345 Bettmann, August C., 641 Betz, A. F., 458 Bickelhaupt, Emma, 296 Biel, W. J., 581 "Big Four Cut-Off," 588


INDEX


xxvii


Billed, George, 455


Billings, Henry W., 81, 89, 311, 418, 438, 471 Binney, Harry, 968 Binney, Robert W., 857 Birbeck, Morris, 49, 565


Birds, 185 Birge, William, 346 Bischoff, Christian, 1113 Bishop, D. M., 226, 456 Bissell, William H., 88 Black, H. L., 451, 483


Black, William, 1161


Black Hawk war-Causes for, 263; General Henry, the hero, 265; other commissioned officers, 265; Alton's part in it, 472 Blackwell, David, 49


Blair, Henry, 595


Blair, John L., 334


Blakeman, Curtis, 49, 54, 82, 162, 163, 494, 564, 577


Blakeman, Curtis, Jr., 566


Blattner, John 540


Blattner, J. Rudolph, 533, 534


Blattner, Louis, 547


Blase, William, 664


Blinn, 614 Bliss, W. F., 359


Bloemker, Ernest, 831


Blood, Charles E., 495 Bluff Line Station at Alton (flood of 1903) (illus- tration), 220


Boals, Manuel H., 613, 715


Boards of supervisors, 28


Boernstein, Heinrick, 396, 539


Boeschenstein, Charles, 106, 110, 115, 296, 440, 446, 497, 502, 638 Bode, W. A., 109


Bodine, J. E., 537 Bohm, Emma S., 783


Bohm, William H., 782


Boilvin, Nicholas, 452


Bond, Shadrach, 448


Bonner, Stith O., 456, 788


Boone, Levi D., 381


Boosinger, Jesse, 1091


Borough, Joseph, 89


Bosshard, Heinrich, 540


Bostwick, John H., 611


Bostwick, (Mrs.) John, 611


Bouse, Joseph, 973 Bowers, Joseph, 379


Bowman, Edward M., 651


Bowman Family, 678


Bowman, Horatio B., 678


Bowman, H. J., 614


Boynton, William P., 431, 439, 943


Brackett, James Lord, 385 Bradley, Joshua, 119


Bradsbury, James, 224


Bradshaw, Fielding, 207


Bradshaw, William P., 424


Braley, Philander, 495


Brammel, (Mrs.) Alice, 981


Brammell, J. A., 576


Brandes, August, 912 Brandes, Louis, 1068 Branding, Henry, 1182 Brandt, Ernst, 703 Braner, Fred W., 1007


xxviii


Brard, Frances, 295 Bratvogel, Gottlieb, 1140 Braznell, Daniel, 686 Breath, Abraham, 566, 567 Breath, Adams, 104


Breath, Edward, 104, 105, 472 Breath, James, 564 Breckinridge, William L., 271 Breese, Sidney, 414


Brenholt, John J., 83, 301, 302, 427, 439, 471, 567, 663


Brensing, Henry, 957 Bridges, William, 553 Briggs, William, 602 Bringhurst, John, 285 Bringhurst, R. P., 318


Brisbois, Michel, 452 Britselı, Charles, 605


Broekmann, John, 1105


Brooks, Roswell, 568


Brooks, S. S., 103, 105


Brookside (Troy), 560


Brown, Ansel L., 107, 115, 502, 596, 610


Brown, C. C., 515 Brown, David E., 166 Brown, Edward, 455


Brown, Erastus, 380, 610


Brown, Frances S., 816


Brown, George T., 87, 89, 107, 113, 216, 471, 472 Brown, James R., 106


Brown, John, 255


Brown, Joseph, 232, 309, 471, 472, 474, 476


Brown, J. W., 115


Brown, Michael, 225


Brown, Nathaniel, 610 Brown, Oliver, 610 Brown, R. J., 456 Brown, Shad, 610


Brown, William T., 163, 454, 455, 457 Browne, J. S., 166 Bruckner, Theophilus, 395


Brueggemann, Henry, 471, 472, 480 Bruene, Henry, 1139 Bruiding, Josephine, 127, 129


Bruner, Jaeob C., 241, 456, 480


Bruner, John A., 92, 474


Brunnworth, F. W., 836


Buchanan, J. S., 104 Buehta, M. M., 595


Buehter, John, 534, 544 Buek Inn, 618


Buekley, Leland Hamilton, 435 Bueknell, S. E., 464


Buekmaster Guards, 288


Buekmaster, John, 480


Buekmaster, Julia, 480


Buekmaster, Nathaniel, 82, 241, 265, 455, 480


Buckmaster, Samuel A., 79, 81, 89, 241, 270, 471, 478 Buchlmann, F. J., 600 Buenger, Louis, 1102 Buente, E. H., 1013 Buhrman, J. H., 465, 894 Building stone, 369 Bullock, J. Russell, 417 Bunn, E. W., 585


Burbank, Sydney, 242


Burke, E. A., 455 Burley, David, 591


INDEX


Burley, William, 591


Burnett, Frank W., 421


Burnett, George B., 106, 422


Burns, James J., 505


Burrough, Joseph, 454


Burroughs, Benjamin R., 416


Burroughs, Dent E., 702


Burroughs, George D., 434, 877


Burroughs, John C., 168, 510


Burroughs, Mallory L., 434, 818


Burroughs, William G., 434


Burton, Charles H., 430


Burton, John, 567


Butler, Aaron, 480


Butler, William, 209, 211


Cabaret island (French Tavern), 575 Cable flour mill, 566


Cadwell, George, 27, 53, 82, 181, 374, 378, 453, 454, 574, 575


Cahokia, 4


Cahokia creek, 292, 507


Cahokia diversion eanal, 291, 489


Cahokia mound, 492, 572


Caldwell, C. A., 98, 309, 449, 450, 471, 667


Calhoun county, 5


Calla Lily farm, 169


Cameron, John G., 419


Camp, John, 109, 458, 586


Campbell, Cornelius, 576, 577


Campbell, Edward E., 109, 437, 439


Canedy, Harry A., 1013


Canel, John B. E., 454


Canisius, Theodore, 397


Cannole, A., 111


Cantine (Tuentine), 574


Cardinal, J. Baptiste, 468


Cardinal, John Marie, 452


Carlin, Thomas, 34, 442


Carloek, Abram, 175


Carmi, 325


Carnegie Library at Shurtleff College, 299


Carey, W. M., 614


Carlin, Thomas, 137, 499


Carlin, W. E., 166


Carpenter, James, 605


Carpenter, Nathan, 574


Carr, George W., 557


Carr, H. M., 334 Carroll, Michael, 348


Carroll, Thomas J., 1178


Carter, Henry T., 570


Cartledge, Riehard, 200


Cartwright, Peter, 337


Cary, Joseph W., 842


Case, C. D., 109 Casey, S. K., 241


Cassens, Dietrich, 658 Cassens, Theodorc, 659 Cassidy, J. W., 111, 579, 582


Castle, L. M., 120


Castleated (pietured) rocks, 11


Castor oil pioneer, 159


Casualties in the county-Tornado of June, 1860, 218; tornado and cyelone of the seventies, 219; destructive wind storm of 1896, 219; great river floods, 219; earthquake shocks, 222; explosion of powder magazine, 222


xxix


INDEX


Caswell, H. C., 456 Caswell, Josiah, 560 Catholic church in Madison county, 348. "Catholic progress in Madison," 349 Catlin, George, 352, 353, 607


Caton, John, 415


Cauger, Frank M., 901


Centennial county roster-Military commissions, 452; civil appointments, 453; circuit clerks, 454; county judges, 454; county clerks, 455; sheriffs, 455; treasurers, 455; coroners, 456; state's attor- neys, 456; school superintendents, 456; survey- ors, 456; recorders, 457; probate judge, 457; pro- bate clerks, 457; county commissioners, 457 Centennial monument, 324


Chambers, J. B., 448


Chandler, Martin, 514


Chandler, Ransom, 513


Chandler, S. B., 95


Chapin, W. A., 272 Chapman, Joseph, 389, 455, 480, 505 Chavers, Alfred, 213, 217


Cherry Street Baptist church, Alton, 341


Chicago & Alton Railroad, 96


Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad, 98, 201


Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad, 96


Chicago, Peoria & St. Louis Railroad, 98


"Chicago Western Citizen," 106


Chickering, John W., 74, 418 Chief of the Illini, 188 Childs, George M., 913


Chilton, Augustus, 597


Chilton, Cyrus, 597 Chilton, Thomas, 597, 601


Chilton, William, 597


Chippewa, 607


Chipron, Emile, 1002


Cholera in Alton (1849), 475 Chouteau, 176


Chouteau island, 484


Chouteau township-Early settlement, 485; early land claims entered, 485; pioneer hardships, pleasures and dangers, 485; education and reli- gion, 486; first mill and store, 487; Indian mounds, 487; Old Salem cemetery, 487; the old Gillham estate, 488; Madison villages, 488; Old Salem and Mitchell, 488; the driven well, 489; county board representation, 489


Christ church, Collinsville, 346 "Christian News," 108


Church of Christ, Monticello, 344


Church of the Redeemer (Congregational), 343 Churches of the county-Early, 144; First camp meeting, 336; first Protestant minister, 337; Presbyterian churches, 337; Upper Alton Metho- dists, 338; Troy, 338; Alton churches, 339; Wanda, 342; St. Paul's Episcopal of Alton, 342; Alton German Evangelical, 342; Church of the Redeemer, 343; the A. M. E. and Union Baptist, 343; German Methodists, 343; Presbyterian churches, 344; Unitarian church of Alton, 345; Church of Christ (Christian), 346; Marine, 346; Protestant Episcopal churches, 346; Cumberland Presbyterian church, 347; Liberty Prairie and Omph Ghent, 348; number of churches in county, 349


Churchill, George, 49, 54, 82, 102, 163, 181, 553, 558 Citizens National Bank, 450




Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.