History of Whiteside county, Illinois, from its first settlement to the present time, with numerous Biographical and Family Sketches, Part 28

Author: Bent, Charles, 1844-
Publication date: 1877
Publisher: Morrison, Ill. : [Clinton, Ia., L. P. Allen, printer]
Number of Pages: 554


USA > Illinois > Whiteside County > History of Whiteside county, Illinois, from its first settlement to the present time, with numerous Biographical and Family Sketches > Part 28


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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


CHAPTER X.


HISTORY OF FENTON TOWNSHIP-PRATT-FENTON CENTER-BIOGRAPHICAL.


HISTORY OF FENTON TOWNSHIP.


The township of Fenton comprises all of Congressional township 20 north, range 4 east, north of Rock river, and also so much of seetion 1, township 19, range 4 east, and section 6, township 19 north, range 5 east, as lies north of Rock river. The territory now forming the township, formerly belonged to Lyndon Precinct, and so remained until the Commissioners appointed by the County Commissioners' Court, gave it its name and boundary in 1852. The Commissioners appointed in 1849 to locate and give names to townships, but whose acts proved to be void for illegality, named the town Eden, and for some reason the people clung to that name even up to the township election in 1852, after it had been named Fenton by the Commissioners of 1852, as the follow- ing record of that election in the books of the Town Clerk, shows: "Eden Archives. Township 20 north, range 4 east, and fractional part of township 20 north, range 5 east, being on section 31 and west of the waters of Rock river, and fractional parts of township 19 north of ranges 4 and 5, north of Rock river and east of section 4 in township 19 north of range 4 inclusive. Also that part of township 20 north, range 4 east, lying south of Rock river inclusive. In accordance with the laws of township organization the inhabitants, legal voters of the above named township convened at the house of James M. Pratt, on the 6th of April, 1852, for the purpose of organizing said town, and electing the proper officers in and for said town for the year ensuing, when Joseph Fenton was elected Moderator pro tem of said meeting. The voters then proceeded to ballot for Moderator, when on canvassing the votes Zera M. Emery, was declared elected, and J. D. Odell, Clerk, viva voce, who being duly sworn, the meeting was opened by proclamation, and the electors proceeded to ballot for town officers for the ensuing year." It will be seen by this record that the electors of the town not only adhered to the name of Eden, but gave the boundaries of the township differently from those of the Commissioners of 1852. All this, however, was afterwards duly remedied. The name of Fenton was given to the township in honor of Joseph Fenton, the first settler.


About one-third of the township was originally low, swampy land, but by ditching has been reclaimed, and most of it is now under a high state of culti- vation. One county ditch runs through the town, coming in on section 24 on the east side, and passing out on the north part of section 30 on the west. This ditch empties into Rock creek from the cast, and the part starting on the west side of the creek runs down through Erie and Newton townships, and thence to the Meredocia. There is also a county ditch running into the town from the north, which empties into Lynn creek, a short distance from its con- fluence with Rock creek. These ditches have lateral ones running into them, so that very good drainage is afforded. Among the unbroken parts of this low land, there are about four hundred acres lying in a body, which is used for the purpose of pasturage. This body of land is owned by some heirs living at the East, and they refuse to dispose of it in pareels, preferring to retain it and pay


[24-V.]


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HISTORY OF WHITESIDE COUNTY.


the taxes, unless the whole can be sold together. The price at which it is held, we are also informed, is another bar to its sale. The Cattail, a broad slough originally, runs into the town a short distance at the central part of the north side. The northwest portion of the town is quite rough and hilly, sections seventeen and eighteen particularly so, and for some time after the organization of the town remained unsettled. They are now only sparsely settled. The town is watered by Rock creek, which flows through it from north to south, coming in on section one and passing out on section thirty-three. Upon this stream, on the southeast quarter of section 15. a saw mill was built in the fall of 1844, by Dexter Wood and Alfred Wood, and afterwards sold to Hiram Har- mon, and became known as Harmon's mill, but was abandoned some years ago. Lynn creek comes into the town from the north, and empties into Rock creek, on section three. On the south the town is bounded by Rock river, along whose banks many of the farmers have wood lands. If in fixing the boundaries of the political township those of the Congressional township had been followed, Rock river would have passed through the southeast part of Fenton. Excellent water is also obtained from wells in most parts of the town.


The first settlements were made along Rock river, in the south part of the town, so as to be convenient to both wood and water. The first settler was Joseph Fenton, who came with his family, then consisting of his wife and four children, from Burlington county, New Jersey, in October, 1835. Mr. Fenton first put up a rude cabin in the woods near the bank of Rock river, in Erie township, in which himself and family lived from about the first of October, 1835, until the middle of January, 1836, meanwhile erecting a better one of logs on the road near where the present residence now stands. Mrs. Fenton relates that the first meal partaken of by the family after their arrival at their new home, was prepared in the woods, using a tree that had been blown down for a table, and this primitive way of cooking and eating was followed for some- time. During that fall and winter the family had about forty Winnebago Indians for neighbors, and although they were peaceably inclined, yet caused more or less trouble, and occasionally gave Mrs. Fenton and the children "a heap big seare." They were on a hunting expedition, as Rock river in that vicinity was then a favorite resort for deer, and other wild game, and its waters were stocked with fish. They remained all winter, and were followed afterwards for several years by similar parties of the Winnebago and other tribes. Some of the deer paths in that neighborhood, leading from the prairie to the river, re- mained visible for a long time. It was not an infrequent occurrence at that period for deer to pass up and down these paths every hour during the day. The other early settlers were Lyman Bennett, who came in 1836, and is now a resident of Albany; Charles Clark, John R. Clark, and Wm. L. Clark, in 1837, the latter of whom died in 1855. Joseph James, 1837; Earnest Warner, 1837; Theron Crook, 1838; Robert G. Clendenin, 1838; Reuben Thompson, R. M. Thompson, Samuel A. Thompson, F. H. Thompson, James Hamilton, and G. H. Peters and others, in 1841.


Alfred W. Fenton, son of Joseph and Elizabeth Fenton, was the first white child born in what is now known as Fenton township, his birth occurring on the 13th of May, 1837. Robert S. Fenton, by reason of having been a constant resident of the township from 1835 to the present time, claims that he is the oldest Fentonian of the male persuasion living in the town, and the palm has been gracefully awarded to him by the citizens. The first parties to enter into matrimony were Robert G. Clendenin and Miss Hannah Clark, the happy event taking place October 3, 1839, and the ceremony performed by Rev. E. H. Hazard, Mr. Clendenin was the father of Frank Clendenin, Esq., Postmaster


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HISTORY OF FENTON TOWNSHIP.


at Morrison, who was born in Fenton in 1840. The first death is thonght to be that of Miss Esther Peters, and took place in 1841.


The first road travelled was the one known as the Dixon and Roek Island- stage road, and ran through the south part of the town. The celebrated Frink & Walker stages used to run upon this road, and in its day it was probably the best known highway in this part of the State. The proprietors of the Frink & Walker line of stages were energetic and broad minded business men, and de- termined to please the publie. Their horses and vehicles were the best that could be procured, and their time table lived up to as near as horse flesh and capable driving would allow. Before the era of railroads these stages carried the mails and passengers from Chicago to different points west, and were eon- sidered prodigies of speed and comfort. This old stage route is now known in our southern townships as the Lyndon and Erie road, and passes by the farms of Solon Stevens, M. M. Potter, J. M. Pratt, Samuel A. Thompson, and those of the Fenton and Peters' estates in the township of Fenton. This road was also the first legally laid out one after the township organization.


The first school was taught by Miss Arminta Lathe in a log house owned by Mr. James M. Pratt, and situated near his present residence. This was in the fall of 1848. The house had been put up some years before by Mr. Pratt, and occupied by him as a residence. It was a double structure, and when Miss Lathe taught school in it she occupied one part, and a Mr. Hendee and his family the other. It did not furnish the kind of school accommodations Fen- ton has to-day, but the children who attended there look baek with considerable pride to the period when they mastered the rudiments of the English branches in the old log house. The first publie school house was built in District No. 1, in 1857, and is known as the Pratt school house. It is a frame structure, and Miss Mary Johnson had the honor of teaching young ideas how to shoot therein, as soon as its doors were opened. Fenton has now eight sehool distriets, and each distriet has a commodious frame school building.


About the time Mr. Fenton and Mr. John Freek, until lately a resident of Erie, made their elaims on seetion thirty-three, a few persons at Lyndon, purporting to be pioneers of a colony soon to emigrate from the Eastern States, elaimed, in the name of the colony, a right to all the land which could be discovered from the tops of the tallest trees in the groves in and around Lyndon, and also the right to determine the quantity which each man should possess. These pioneer gentlemen made Messrs. Fenton and Freek an official visit, addressed them in an official manner, and gave them lines and boundaries, limiting them to eighty aeres each, and foreibly implied that a strict compliance with these regulations would be required, or a removal outside the Lyndonian claim would follow in case of refusal. Mr. Freek yielded to these imperative demands, and removed west of Rock creek into the township of Erie, built him a house at the head of Lake Erie, where he lived a peaceful, honest, happy, and enviable life, with his latch-string always out, and the poor never turned away empty. But Mr. Fen- ton, planting himself firmly on the common law of squatter sovereignty, repu- diated stoutly this agrarian law, which repudiation was couched in the pointed and foreible language then in use on the frontier, and not yet obsolete, though not sanetioned by Webster's Dietionary nor Dwight's Theology. It had, how- ever, the desired effect of repelling the Lyndonian invaders, and leaving Mr. Fenton " alone in his glory " and the peaceable possession of his two hundred and fifteen acres, for which the Government afterwards received its proper due of $1.25 per aere. Soon after these Lyndonian-Fentonian troubles, a report obtained East that the Indians had murdered and scalped all the inhabitants in these parts, and consequently the settlement of the township, as well as of the


196


HISTORY OF WHITESIDE COUNTY.


country around, was seriously retarded for several years. This report was evi- dently started for ulterior purposes, as there was no foundation for it, the In- dians then being peaceably inclined.


In 1836 Lyman Bennett, now a resident of Albany, made a claim north of Portland ferry, and in 1837 Thomas Gould settled east of Rock creek, on land now owned by James M. Pratt. In 1837 William Clark and in 1838 Robert G. Clendenin settled in the township, the former on the farm now owned by R. M. Thompson, and the latter on the farm now owned by M. M. Potter, Esq. Mr. Clark was the father of Capt. Alpheus Clark, who was so highly esteemed in this county, and who was mortally wounded June 9, 1863, at Beverly Ford, Virginia, and died in the hospital at Georgetown, D. C., July 5, 1863. Mr. Clendenin was a native of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, and remained in Fenton until 1844, when he removed to Lyndon. A full biographical sketch of Mr. Clendenin will be found in the history of Lyndon township. In 1840 J. B. Peters, now deceased, settled on the east bank of Rock creek, near Mr. Fenton's place, and in 1841 his brother, George H. Peters, also now deceased, arrived from Adams, Massachusetts, purchased a claim of one hundred and forty acres from Theron Crook, and paid the Government price ($175), earning the amount by laboring at the rate of fifty cents per day. Mrs. Peters states that in those early days her husband used to sell his wheat in Chicago and his pork in Ga- lena, receiving for his wheat thirty cents per bushel, and for his pork, after de- ducting expenses for marketing, seventy-five cents per hundred weight.


As near as can be ascertained, the first export from Fenton was two thousand pounds of beef, by Mr. Fenton, to Galena, in 1836, for which he received two and a half cents per pound. He next exported to Sterling, then a Western city of a few dwellings and a store, a load of pork, which he sold to the firm of Barnett & Mason for six dollars per hundred. The reason assigned for the high price then obtained was that the people of Sterling had been without meat for some time, were " hungry for pork," and would have it at any price. Many of the citizens followed his wagon as he drove to the store, earnestly request- ing him to let them have a piece, but he had sold it all to the storekeepers, and to them they were compelled to go for the coveted morsel.


As a further illustration of the hardships the pioneers and their families had to endure, it is related by Mrs. Fenton that when the family first came to Rock creek they were compelled to live for several months in a little, cold hut, part of the time with and part of the time without food ; getting their potatoes from Rock Island, their corn meal from Henderson Grove, their venison and wild turkey from the Indians (when they had meal to give in exchange) ; going to bed without supper when no meal was on hand, the potatoes all gone, and no kind Indian at hand to hold up his turkey and say " swap," or if one was at hand the meal sack would be empty, and he would go away mealless and spirit- less, and Mrs. Fenton and the children retire with the setting sun to sleep the sleep of the supperless. The want of money was felt in more ways than one, not the least of which was the wherewith to pay postage upon letters received from loved ones at home. Cheap postage did not then obtain, which added another hardship to the settler. A letter now costing only three cents for mail transportation, then cost twenty-five cents. As an instance of the difficulty of getting letters out of the postoffice in early times, we give the one told to Prof. M. R. Kelly, of Morrison, by the late George H. Peters, of Fenton. The instance will answer for hundreds of others. Some time after the settlement of Mr. Peters on the Fenton flats, it was reported that a letter had arrived for him from the East, and was at the Lyndon Postoffice, awaiting his call. He hastened to the office and called for it, when, to his surprise and disappoint-


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HISTORY OF FENTON TOWNSHIP.


ment, he was told by the obdurate Postmaster that before receiving it he must pay the postage. "How much is it ?" tremblingly inquired Mr. Peters. " Twenty-five cents," was the short reply. "Haven't got it," was the melan- choly response. Hastily departing, Mr. Peters sought work, found it, earned the twenty-five cents, and with that amount of the coin of the realm released the fond missive from the official bondage which held it from his embrace.


Among the reminiscences of the town is one related of an early settler who resided near Rock river. At that period the lands thereabouts were liable to overflow in times of high water, and the settler to guard his house from inun- dation built a sod fence around it, leaving only a space sufficient to drive in with his team. This space was protected by bars. A heavy freshet came in due time, and the settler was almost drowned out. When asked how it came that his sod fence did not prevent the water from nearly carrying away his house and family, the reason seemed so strike him at once, and he replied, "I declare, I forgot to put up my bars !" The first constable in Fenton made out his bond in the following form, with the exception of the name which is a fictitious one : "I John Smith, do solemnly swear that I will perform my duties as constable to the best of my ability, so help me God." The Supervisor to whom this unique bond was sent, returned it to the newly elected conservator of the peace with the re- mark, that while it might do well enough for an oath, it was hardly the square thing for a bond. The constable went away pondering what new fangled notions people would get up next as to officer's bonds and "other fixins." At the an- nual town meeting held in April, 1866, it was voted to make "every elector on the poll list a pound master, clothed with the authority to impound all stock, hogs, horses, mules and asses unlawfully running at large, and to advertise and sell the same." This high honor was not very highly appreciated by many of the voters, and the next year the vote was reconsidered, and a smaller and more select number of pound masters appointed.


The following have been the Supervisors, Town Clerks, Assessors, Collec- tors, and Justices of the Peace, from the organization of the town until the present time :


Supervisors :- 1852-'55, James M. Pratt; 1856-'57, Alfred Freeman; 1858, Hiram Harmon; 1859-'60, Alfred Freeman; 1861-'62, Joseph R. Paul; 1863- '64, Reuben M. Thompson; 1865, Arthur McLane; 1866-70, James M. Pratt; 1871-'72, Arthur McLane; 1873, Reuben M. Thompson; 1874-'76, James M. Pratt; 1877, M. O. Hurless.


Town Clerks :- 1852, J. D. Odell; 1853-'54, H. M. Baker; 1855, Thomas J. Olds; 1856-'60, James Wood; 1861, Thomas J. Olds; 1862- 63, James Wood; 1864, Thomas J. Olds; 1865, A. S. Pratt; 1866-'72, George W. Wood; 1873, H. L. Ewing; 1874-'77, Joseph Pinkley.


Assessors :- 1852, Thomas W. Havens; 1853, H. W. Cushman; 1854, Thomas W. Havens; 1855, Thomas J. Olds; 1856-'60, Joseph R. Paul; 1861, Thomas J. Olds; 1862, James N. Bull; 1863, John D. Fenton; 1864, L. J. Robinson; 1865, J. L. Showalter; 1866, L. J. Robinson; 1867, A. S. Round; 1868-70, Arthur McLane; 1871, A. B. Mahany; 1872-'73, Henry Likes; 1874 -'76, A. B. Mahany; 1877, L. J. Robinson.


Collectors :- 1852-'53, Reuben M. Thompson; 1854-55, Morrill P. Carr; 1856, Henry Francis; 1857, C. D. Finney; 1858, C. E. Coburn; 1859, L. J. Robinson; 1860-'63, Leonard Cady; 1864-66, A. B. Mahany; 1867, Jacob Mil- ler; 1868-69, Thomas J. Olds; 1870-'77, John L. Showalter.


Justices of the Peace :- 1852-'57, Hiram Harmon, Martin M. Potter; 1858 -'59, Martin M. Potter, Joseph R. Paul; 1860, Joseph R. Paul, George MI. Cole; 1862, Martin M. Potter; 1864, Martin M. Potter, Joseph R. Paul; 1865, J. C.


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HISTORY OF WHITESIDE COUNTY


Train; 1868, Joseph Pinkley, Reuben M. Thompson; 1869, Martin M. Potter; 1872-777, Martin M. Potter, Joseph Pinkley.


A church edifice was erected on the northeast corner of section 17, in the summer and fall of 1870, known as the New Lebanon church, and is owned by the United Brethren Society. It was built under the superintendence of Rev. Mr. Rogers, a minister of the United Brethren denomination, although persons of all denominations residing in the neighborhood contributed to its construc- tion. The United Brethren Society had been organized, and held meetings in Lynn creek schoolhouse sometime previous to the building of the church. Be- sides this Society, the Brethren in Christ hold monthly meetings in the edifice, having Rev. A. Good, as their pastor, and also the Methodist Episcopal Society whenever they have a pastor. At present the latter are without stated supply. The building is situated on high ground, and commands a fine view of the sur- rounding country. The Dunkards hold monthly meetings in the Sand Ridge schoolhouse. The members of other denominations residing in town attend church either at Morrison, Erie, Garden Plain or Newton.


The Rockford, Rock Island & St Louis Railroad, now under control of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railway Company, and the Mendota branch of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railway, pass through the south part, the latter almost diagonally from southeast to northwest. There are three depots upon these roads within the town limits, one at Pratt on the R. R. I. & St Louis road; one at Fenton Center on the C. B. & Q., road, and another on the same road where the R., R. I. & St Lonis, and C. B. & Q. roads cross each other, a short distance above Pratt. The latter depot is used principally for transfer of freight from one road to the other. Since the R., R. I. & St Louis road has come into the hands of the C. B. & Q. Company, freight coming from the south and destined for Chicago is taken off at this depot, and transferred to the cars on the other road, and when it comes down from Chicago or points east for Rock Island and other points south and west, it is taken from the cars of the C. B. & Q. road and placed upon those of the R., R. I. & St Louis road. By this means freight gathered along the line of the latter road can be taken directly to Chi- cago by the C. B. & Q. road.


Fenton township contains 11,475 acres of improved land, and 10,715 of unimproved. The Assessor's book for 1877 shows the number of horses in the township to be 443; the number of cattle, 1,483; of mules and asses, 40; of sheep, 109; of hogs, 1,888; carriages and wagons, 149; sewing and knitting ma- chines, 79; watches and clocks, 99; pianofortes, 2; melodeons and organs, 13. Total value of lands, lots and personal property, $328,192; value of railroad property, $34,039. Total value of all property in 1877, $362,150.


The population of the township in 1870, as appears by the United States census reports of that year, was 758, of which 654 were of native birth, and 104 of foreign. The population in 1860 was 639. The estimated population in 1877, is 1,000.


The elevation of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad track in Fen- ton township is 24 and 60-100ths feet above low water in Lake Michigan, and 607 and 60-100ths feet above the level of the sea.


PRATT.


Soon after the completion of the Rockford, Rock Island & St. Louis Rail- road from Sterling to Rock Island, a station was established on the farm of James M. Pratt, and Mr. Pratt appointed Station Agent. In November, 1869, a Postoffice was also established at this place, and named Pratt by the Govern- ment, and James M. Pratt appointed Postmaster, which position he has since


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BIOGRAPHICAL.


continued to fill. In 1870 the citizens in the vicinity built a new freight and passenger depot, in which the Postoffice is kept. The place was platted a few years ago, and is called the village of Pratt.


FENTON CENTER.


The village of Fenton Center was platted in 1872, by James Usom, who owned the forty acres upon which it stands, immediately upon the construction of the Mendota branch of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad through the township. The railroad runs diagonally through the village, the land upon which the track ties and the depot and water tank are built, ten acres in all, be- ing deeded to the railroad company by Usom. Before the railroad run through it, the place was mostly covered with scrub timber, and the balance not even broken up. The largest part of the plat covers quite a bluff, and upon this bluff the buildings at present are nearly all situated. The business places are a general merchandise store, a drug store, blacksmith shop, shoe shop, and har- ness shop, and one elevator, which, together with the dwellings and the railroad depot, make sixteen building in the village. It has also a physician, Dr. M. D. Allen. The elevator was built in 1872 and '73 by Geo. W. Wood, who com- menced buying grain in the spring of the latter year, and continued to do so un- til the fall, when he sold the building to Reuben M. Thompson, the present owner. After his purchase Mr. Thompson leased the elevator to Mr. Brewer. Abner and M. O. Hurless succeeded Mr. Brewer as lessees, and at present M. (). Hurless is the sole lessee. Mr. Hurless buys considerable grain, frequently having the elevator full. It is said that the village acquired its name in this manner: One morning soon after the elevator was erected, a board was found nailed to the building, the work of some one during the night, upon which was printed in bold letters, the words "Fenton Center," and as the name was so ap- propriate, the village being situated nearly in the center of the township, it was determined then and there to adopt the name.




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