Centennial history of Madison County, Illinois, and its people, 1812 to 1912, Volume I, Part 6

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 6


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Wood River township-First settlers, 607; Wood


River Massacre monument, 609; first schools, 609, Upper Alton, 609; literary, religious and edu- cational, 610; industries and business, 612; Beth- alto, 612; East Alton, 613; Wood River and Benbow City, 614; assassination of Hon. D. B. Gillham, 616 Wood River tragedy, 38 Wood River village, 614


Wood, T., 456


Woods, John R., 275, 456


Worden, John C., 591


Worden Building and Loan Association, 591


Worden Mining Company, 591


Worden village, 591


Wortmann, B. H., 314 Wright, Tolman, 608


Wright, William, 148


Wright, William R., 1203


Wright, W. R .. 268, 272, 475, 612


Wulfemeyer, Herman H., 920


Wurdack, William, 503


Wyckoff, D. A., 451


Wyman, Edward, 125


Wyss, S. H., 451


Yager, Charles M., Jr., 896


Yager, John H., 83, 288, 422, 482, 895


Yager. Levi D .. 437, 439


Yanda, Frank, 974


"Yankee-all-town" (Alton), 468


Yates, J. Albert, 968


Yates, Thomas W., 455


Yates, W. E., 315


Yeakel, Carl F., 924


Yerkes, Titus P., 407, 610, 642


Young, Anthony W., 471


Young, Edwin D., 700


Young, E. B., 796


Young, Henry C., 584 Young, Thomas, 617


Youree, Charles S., 456


Zellermann, August, 1103 Zerges, William, 592 Zika, John, 637 Zimmerman, Jolın, 911 Zimmerman, John. 1031 Zobrist, Edward, 1037 Zoelzer, F. C., 571. 975 Zoller, Christian H., 806


HISTORY OF MADISON COUNTY


CHAPTER I


PRIMEVAL INHABITANTS


SUCCESSORS OF MOUND BUILDERS-THE ILLINI OR ILLINOIS-PONTIAC'S CONSPIRACY-PON- TIAC'S DEATH AVENGED THE IROQUOIS DESCEND ON THE ILLINI-TWILIGHT OF FRENCH OCCUPANCY.


The Indians found upon the American con- tinent when it was first discovered by white men were not the original inhabitants. They supplanted a vanished race or races of a prob- ably higher type of civilization than them- selves. But as to the origin or racial type of these primeval inhabitants nothing is known. Ethnologists have their theories and specula- tions, but theories, however, learned and plaus- ible, do not constitute history. Just as little is known of the history and origin of the In- dians known to white men. There are no ruins of temples, towers, shrines and palaces lying prostrate, overgrown with forests and vegetation, as in Mexico, to tell the tale of vanished splendor and civilization ; no inscrip- tions, as on the ancient tablets dug up from the ruins of Nineveh, Baalbec and the buried cities of Egypt, to unfold the record of a van- ished past,-nothing save the remnants of what appear to be ancient fortifications and the stupendous works of the Mound Builders which contain no record which give any clue as to their origin. All their past is wrapped


in mystery, and the only agreement as to the Mound Builders is a negative one, viz: that they were not the Indians known to white men. But as Madison county seems to have been the main seat of power of the Mound Builders and the locality where their greatest works survive, this question will be treated in a separate chapter.


SUCCESSORS OF MOUND BUILDERS


A new land, and yet, some claim, an older land than Europe, geologically-it is new only in the sense of being new to us and to history. The Indians of the Illinois country were wan- dering tribes coming from where they knew not and caring not whither they drifted, some- times living a communal life in villages and cultivating the soil to a limited extent, but mainly rangers over the forests, plains and prairies, with few fixed places of abode, and yet their wanderings circumscribed within cer- tain territory by the cordon of surrounding hostile tribes. Some writers claim the Amer- ican Indians to be the descendants of the Lost


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HISTORY OF MADISON COUNTY


Ten Tribes of Israel, which were dispersed abroad, and to discover in them traits and types peculiar to the ancient Jews, but this, and many other theories and speculations as to their origin, have no better basis than the author's ingenuity or imagination. The book is still sealed. Of history and records among the Indians the early explorers found none. Neither did those scholars and ethnologists who lived among them for years in order to learn something of their past establish any- thing definite or satisfying. Myths, legends, traditions, bequeathed from one generation to another, they found in plenty. But while weird and strange, the legends were fantastic and incredible to the last degree. After going back two or three generations they were lost in the mists, and fact, if there was any, was lost in fancy.


But that they had once been strangers in a land they claimed as their own is told by the mute relics of a vanished race that evidently preceded their own as lords of the soil, and were, moreover, of a higher racial type. The Cahokia group of mounds, in the southern part of Madison county, stands alone, as the great- est memorial of their existence in the United States. Of the Indians themselves the records above ground are confined to rude pictographs and figures painted on rocks and cliffs, some of them displaying considerable artistic skill, and emblematic of events or incidents in the lives of the tribes, or designed to display some legend or tradition. The most notable of these pictographs in the Mississippi valley was the picture of the Piasa bird portrayed on the cliffs of Alton. The main relics of the race are beneath the ground, in the graves of their warrior chiefs, where have been found vast quantities of arrow heads, battle axes, stone pipes, implements, ornaments, votive offerings, utensils and pottery, some artistically and cu- riously fashioned but all telling of a rude and primitive existence in which the use of metal


tools was unknown, save that of copper among some of the Lake Superior tribes.


THE ILLINI, OR ILLINOIS


The Illini, or Illinois, as the French phrased the word, and from which the state and its greatest river take their name, were an aggre- gation of distinct but kindred tribes,-the Kaskaskias, the Peorias, the Cahokias, the Ta- maroas, the Kickapoos and others. The mean- ing of their name is men, or superior men, but they did not live up to their assumptions and were not the equals in intelligence or ad- vancement of the Mohawks, the Iroquois ot New York, or the Cherokees and Chickasaws of the south. They were proud, vain, boastful in their naked savagery; cruel, treacherous and slothful; yet they possessed many noble traits, a vivid imagery, drawn from nature, and a natural eloquence that was appealing in its richness of expression. The gay-hearted, joyous, adaptable and tactful Frenchman won their confidence and affection ; the Anglo-Sax- ons never did, save in individual and excep- tional cases, but never as a race. The French danced with them, joined with them in the chase, lived in their wigwams and intermarried with them. The English regarded them as their natural enemies and kept them at swords' points.


The general characteristics of the Illinois were those of the tribes the continent over, but they were reputed to be more inert and cow- ardly. Along the Rock and Illinois rivers they dwelt in villages, or towns, sometimes num- bering several thousand inhabitants, as in the case of the Indian town on the Illinois river on the present site of Utica, and that on the island near the mouth of Rock river. About the time of the early French explorations these northern Illinois tribes were driven from their ancient homes by the incursions of the fierce and relentless Sioux and the savage and fiery Iroquois. They became wanderers in the


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HISTORY OF MADISON COUNTY


wilderness of central and southern Illinois, and seemed loath or afraid to resume the com- munal life of the towns, though there were vil- lages of certain tribes in Sangamon and Mc- Lean counties and one of the Kickapoos in central Madison. They raised a little corn, and some beans and squashes, but relied mainly on the chase for their support, the game of the woods and prairies and the fish of the rivers and lakes, with the varied abundance of the wild fruits and products of the forests. They made little provision for the future ; they reveled in summer in nature's prodigality of supplies, and starved in winter through lack of foresight in providing for the future. They likewise made little provision for protecting themselves against the severities of the inclem- ent season either in their habitations or their persons. Such garments as they wore were made of skins and furs of wild animals, which were often fashioned with rare skill by the squaws and richly adorned. They were chil- dren of nature and took nature as it came. They were incessantly at war with neighbor- ing tribes, and later with the encroaching white settlers, and their ferocity is a tale of continuous horrors unspeakable and unwrit- able, but be it said of the white settlers that when at war on the border they showed no more mercy than did their savage foes. All men are accused of being barbarians at bot- tom. It may be said, however, in some ex- tenuation of the war of extermination waged against them by the English that the Indians made no use of the beautiful and fertile lands they occupied, except as a field for the battle and the chase, and if the whites had not exter- minated them the Indians would have exter- minated each other-a work they were busily engaged in when diverted, in some measure therefrom by the incursion of the whites.


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PONTIAC'S CONSPIRACY


There was no national organization among them ; they were divided into scores of differ-


ent tribes, speaking different languages or dia- lects, with each tribe looking upon its neigh- bor as its natural prey. At the way Indian wars were raging at the time of the French occupation of the Illinois country, it would only have been a short time until the rival tribes would have extirpated each other and left the wilderness tenantless. Their nearest approach to racial or national unity, in the Mississippi valley, was after the session of the country by France to England in 1763, when the great chieftain Pontiac, foreseeing the doom of his people in the encroachments of the colonists, organized the great conspiracy extending over the territory from Canada to the Gulf and from the Alleghanies to the Mis- sissippi, and uniting all the tribes therein in a concerted attack on all the English forts, set- tlements and outposts along the frontier ; and then followed the two bloodiest years ever known to the pioneers on the border. The whole valley was aflame with burning villages and isolated cabins, forts were captured, old and young were slaughtered, cruelty demoniac and horrors infinite reigned supreme. But the French settlements along the Mississippi suf- fered little from the widespread conflict. It was the English against whom the conspiracy was organized by Pontiac, in a confident but vain hope of help from the French govern- ment in regaining the land of his fathers. It was in our neighboring town of Cahokia, in 1767, after the collapse of the conspiracy, that the mighty chieftain met his death at the hands of an Illinois renegade Indian, hired by a trader to assassinate him.


PONTIAC'S DEATH AVENGED


A fearful retribution was exacted from the Illinois Indians for this murder for which the tribe was made responsible. In revenge there- for the Pottawattomies made war upon them. The Illini being defeated, so runs the legend, fled for refuge to the tall cliff on the Illinois river, in what is now La Salle county, which


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HISTORY OF MADISON COUNTY


was inaccessible from three sides and from the fourth was approachable only by a nar- row causeway, easily defended, and where they repulsed their pursuers. But the pursu- ers then changed their tactics, cut off all sup- plies of food and water, and literally starved the whole tribe to death, only one woman sur- viving when the foes gained possession of the mount. Thus was the death of Pontiac avenged at Starved Rock.


THE IROQUOIS DESCEND ON THE ILLINI


Among the Indian myths and traditions that have come down to us is that of the Piasa Bird, the scene of which is laid in Madison county, and is founded on the famous Indian painting on the cliffs at Alton. The legend, as related by John Russell, appears elsewhere in this volume. As far as the present territory of Madison is concerned, the ninety years follow- ing its discovery by Marquette and Joliet is a twilight period marked by few recorded in- cidents connected with the Indians. La Salle, however, records a nearby illustration of sav- age ferocity that he came upon near the mouth of the Illinois soon after its occurrence. On his voyage down the Illinois, in 1680, he fol- lowed in the wake of the destroying hosts of the Iroquois who had driven the local tribes from their villages and pursued them south- ward. The invaders not only destroyed the villages of the unhappy Illini, and put to death every living thing, but they even tore opened the graves, mutilated the bodies and strewed them over the plain. Near the mouth of the river, on the east side, apparently, the explorers came upon the spot where the pur- suers had overtaken the helpless women and children of the tribe, their warriors having abandoned them and fled. The attention of the Frenchmen was first attracted by seeing in the distance numerous forms of human beings. upright but motionless. They landed and made an examination, finding the forms to be those of squaws who had been captured and


burned at the stake, their charred remains standing as mute evidences of savage brutality. Tradition says the victims numbered seven hundred. But we must not forget that prior to this period and later, in England, France and Spain, among alleged civilized people, the souls of saints and martyrs were ascending to Heaven in columns of smoke and flame, a sac- rifice to the malevolence of religious bigots, and that in the same countries alleged witches were burned to death. Burning their enemies at the stake seems a savage instinct that civil- ization has never yet eradicated from the na- ture of men, and is even now frequently chronicled in our newspapers as the form of punishment or revenge most favored by howl- ing mobs for those charged with revolting crimes. In this respect the enlightened Cau- casian can assume no airs of superiority, as a race, over the ·primeval denizens of the forest.


TWILIGHT OF FRENCH OCCUPANCY


During this twilight period of French occu- pancy the settlers on the American Bottom lived mainly at peace with the Indians and the devoted priests won many followers among the savages to whom they brought the story of the Cross. The five settlements, of which Cahokia was the oldest, increased slowly by emigration from Canada, and later on from France by way of New Orleans, but their progress is not a part of this narrative. The migration from Canada passed by the present bounds of this county and located in the col- onies further south. No mission seems to have been established within the present lim- its of the county, but as Cahokia mission was located only six miles south, there is no doubt that the missionaries of the Jesuits were con- stantly traversing the soil of this county on their self-denying labor of winning souls to the Christian faith. It is claimed, however, that a French settlement once existed on Chouteau island, whether a mission or not is unknown. The proof of this settlement seems to rest on


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HISTORY OF MADISON COUNTY


the finding, by the early English settlers, about 1802, of the remnants of pear and apple or- chards on the island, the trees being evidently of great age, indicating, of course, prior oc-


it was, at one time, prior to recorded history, the home of a teeming aboriginal population is attested by the vast quantities of relics and implements, of which we have spoken, found cupancy by white men. Undoubtedly all the ' in the graves along the bluffs and in the territory of Madison was well known to the mounds of the American Bottom. Calhoun, the peninsula county, lying between the Illi- nois and the Mississippi rivers and twelve miles beyond the north line of Madison, is richer in Indian remains than any other county in the state and is a favorite field of research by archaeologists. traders and trappers of Cahokia and that the county was threaded with their trails. It was also constantly traversed by wandering tribes of Indians, but no villages except that of the Kickapoos on Indian creek seem to have been permanently located in the county during the ninety years of French domination. But that


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HISTORY OF MADISON COUNTY


DISCOVERERS OF MADISON COUNTY (MARQUETTE AND JOLIET )


CHAPTER II


UNDER THE FLEUR DE LIS


ORIGINAL COUNTY BOUNDARIES-SOLDIERS OF THE CROSS-AN ILLUSTRIOUS TRIUMVIRATE- THE "FRIGHTFUL (CASTLEATED) ROCKS"-THE GREAT FRENCH DISCOVERERS-ANCIENT MADISON COUNTY.


"Come, my friends,


'Tis not too late to seek a newer world. Push off ! and sitting well in order smite The sounding furrows; for my purpose holds To sail beyond the sunset, and the baths Of all the western stars, until I die- It may be that the gulfs will wash us down; It may be we shall gain the Happy Isles. One equal temper of heroic hearts, Made wreck of time and fate, but strong in will To strive, to seek, to find and not to yield." -Tennyson's "Ulysses."


ORIGINAL COUNTY BOUNDARIES (1812)


To the present generation of Madison county residents, the successors of vanished races occupying a great county in the third greatest state of the Union, it seems strange to reflect that their home was once a part of the French empire on this continent, and not a small section of it, either; for when the county was first constituted by Governor Ed- wards, in 1812, its boundaries were as follows : "To begin on the Mississippi, to run with the second township line above Cahokia east until it strikes the dividing line between Illinois and Indiana territories; thence with said .dividing line north of the line of Upper Canada, thence west with said line to the Mississippi river, and thence down the Mississippi to the be- ginning."


These were generous boundaries, but on the northwest were defective, for the reason that


the line of Upper Canada would not strike the Mississippi, but range north of it. This fact ought to have been known to the Governor, for the reason that Capt. Zebulon Pike, in 1805, with a government expedition, had de- termined the source of the Mississippi and its course in Minnesota south of the Canadian line, but it is true that the Canadian boundary line was not at that time clearly defined. In addition to all of Illinois north of the south line of Madison this county thus included the State of Wisconsin, part of the upper penin- sula of Michigan, part of Lake Superior and a large slice of Minnesota east of the Missis- sippi.


This vast domain of Madison county com- prised some one hundred and sixty thousand square miles of territory, and its population to- day is approximately ten millions. In 1812, when organized, it contained the following military posts, its cordon of defense against the British and Indians in the war of 1812, viz: Prairie du Chien, Green Bay, Fort Dear- born (Chicago), Fort Clark (Peoria), Rock Island, Monterey, on the Illinois river; Fort Russell, a fort at mouth of the Illinois and a station four miles below Alton opposite the mouth of the Missouri. With the exception of the scattered settlements of hardy pioneers all else was a beautiful wilderness over which ranged herds of deer and numerous beasts of prey. The early French explorers also spoke


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HISTORY OF MADISON COUNTY


of vast droves of buffalo and elk, and recorded the slaying of wild goats, but buffalo, elk and goats were extinct at the time of the organiza- tion of the county. Within its boundaries were waged all the battles and skirmishes with the British and Indians in the war of 1812- that is, all that occurred within the present boundaries of Illinois.


EARLIEST FORTS, MISSIONS AND STATIONS


But over all this vast domain of Madison county once floated the white lilies of France. Here were located the earliest forts, missions and stations of the first French explorers, Marquette, Joliet, the peerless La Salle, Tonty, Hennepin and many heroic Fathers whose deeds and discoveries are recorded in the "Re- lations of the Jesuits." Between the years 1673 and 1812 three flags had floated over its soil. France, England and the United States had here successively unfurled their banners and claimed dominion and sovereignty while across the Mississippi waved the bold ensign of Spain, destined, like those of France and England, to be furled and disappear before the power of the great republic. While still a part of the French empire, Madison county was the highway between the two seats of French power in the new world, Quebec and New Orleans; one at the mouth of the St. Lawrence the other near the mouth of the Mississippi. First, the early French explorers from their farthest western post at Mackinac, crossed to Green Bay; thence made the port- age from the Fox to the Wisconsin river; thence down that stream to the Mississippi. A little later the portage from the Chicago river to the DesPlaines and to the Illinois was discovered, and still later the crossing from the foot of Lake Michigan to the Kankakee and the Illinois.


SOLDIERS OF THE CROSS


Over these several routes, the explorers, missionaries, couriers du bois, traders and


trappers, passed on their long and lonely voyages from Quebec and Montreal to the Mississippi. These expeditions, by the water route, were fraught with every peril known to life in the wilderness-skulking savages lurked in ambush at every exposed point, as they hoisted their sail to the breeze or paddled their light canoes on their weary way. Raven- ous beasts threatened them when they camped on land by night. They braved tempest and storm. They were scorched by the summer's sun and benumbed by the winter's cold. Their frail barks were tossed by adverse winds and often swallowed up by engulfing waves. Ceaseless vigilance was the price of safety, and they knew neither rest nor chance for recuper- ation. They suffered from hunger and naked- ness, and were strangers to all the comforts and endearments of life. But as the advance guard of civilization they endured hardship as good soldiers bearing into an unknown land the standard of the cross and the oriflamme of France.


Nothing in the history of missionary zeal since the great command was given by our Lord, "Go ye forth and teach all nations," sur- passes in devotion and sacrifice that of the Catholic Fathers who went forth in His name to this service. They knew not fear nor shadow of turning; content for all their sacri- fice if they might make but a single convert from among the denizens of the forest. They gathered the youth and maidens into mission schools under the shadow of the Cross. They preached to painted warriors the gospel of peace and good will, and mediated between warring tribes. Ofttimes their gentle plead- ings were in vain, their lofty courage no shield of defense, and they went to the stake with a smile on their lips and a blessing for their persecutors. They confronted danger with joyous insouciance, and welcomed death as the portal to their Father's house. And these missionaries were not alone messengers of the great salvation, but they were practical pio-


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HISTORY OF MADISON COUNTY


neers, loyal to their king and country, zealous in extending the dominion of their home-land beyond the seas. They were ofttimes men of gentle, or noble birth; scholars and scientists who could give a material turn to the results of their explorations. They were skilled in the crafts and arts of peace, and yet, on occa- sion, could handle the weapons of war.


More adventurous than the English settlers of Plymouth and Jamestown, who hung for a century on the fringe of the continent know- ing nothing of the wilderness beyond, the French explorers and colonists penetrated to the heart of the continent ( for that is what the Mississippi valley is and will ever remain). Leaving Quebec and Montreal behind them, they followed nature's highways towards the setting sun. Philadelphia was founded in 1681, but a year earlier than that LaSalle had established a colony on the Illinois, in terri- tory which, in 1812, was within the bounds of Madison county. The explorers paddled their canoes up the turbulent St. Lawrence, de- bouched on the vast expanse of Lake Ontario, made a portage at Niagara, followed Lake Erie to Detroit; thence through the straits of Mackinac to Lake Michigan, and still west- ward. They sought a passage to the Pacific and ever in the sunset sky they saw a shadowy hand beckoning them onward.


As early as 1659 French traders, accom- panying friendly Indians, penetrated to Green Bay and the southern shore of Lake Superior, which lies within the territory included in the original domain of Madison county. Their re- port on their return to Quebec of the wonders and capabilities of the countries they had visited, fired the missionary zeal of Bishop Francis de Laval (a divinity school in Mon- treal now bears his name) and a missionary was selected by lot to visit Green Bay and es- tablish a mission. The lot fell upon an aged priest, Rene Musuard, who departed alone, with little preparation, "trusting," he wrote, "in the Providence that feeds the little birds in




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