Polk Township, one of the twenty-six townships
that make up Macoupin County, is located in the southern central part of the
county. It is bounded on the north by Bird Township, on the east by Brushy Mound
Township, on the south by Hilyard Township, and on the west by Chesterfield
Township. The township comprises the congressional township of 9, range 8, west
of the third Principle Meridian. No information can be found giving the reason
the township was named Polk. Before the county organized township governments in
1872, this area, congressional township 9, range 8, was known as the Polk voting
precinct. It is supposed the township was named after President James K. Polk,
who was President of the United States 1845-1849. Other townships have been
named after a prominent earlier settler living in that township, but nobody by
the name of Polk can be found as having ever lived in this township.
Polk
Township is one of the most scenic townships in the county. The township is
broken by the principle stream, the Macoupin creek, which flows diagonally
through the township. Other tributaries found in the township include the
Hurricane creek, Dry Branch, Kent's Branch, and May's Branch. In early days,
there were also several shallow lakes along the Macoupin, however most have
since been drained for farming purposes after the arrival of the white settlers.
The land surrounding these streams and lakes were mostly timber broken
occasionally by patches of prairie.
The Macoupin creek valley was a major
hunting ground for the Indians. The numerous mounds and bluffs that line the
creek valley were used as camp sites by the Indians. Large Indian gravesites
have been found on the bluffs on the south side of the creek in section 20.
Others have been found on the bluff on the north side of the creek near
Bullard's Lake, the hill northeast of the creek in section 23 and 24, and on the
ridge separating the Hurricane and Macoupin creek.
Wild game consisting
of rabbits, squirrels, ratcoons, prairie chickens, and waterfowl were plentiful.
The wild deer and wild turkeys were numerous. There were many black wolves and
they were a threat to the livestock of the early settlers. At one time buffalo
and elk also roamed in this area, and according to Indian tradition, a severe
snow fell to a great depth about 1760 and the deep snow lay on the earth several
months. The herds of buffalo and elk that roamed this area at that time being
trapped by the deep and lingering snow, eventually starved to death and the
bleached bones of these animals were found in numerous locations when the first
white settlers arrived. This area had primarily been the hunting grounds of the
Peoria and the Cahokia Indians, however, most of the Indians living and hunting
here had been driven out of this area by the time of the arrival of the white
settlement. Settlement of this township started in earnest to take place around
1820. A few Indians still returned and hunted along the Macoupin creek as late
as 1830. However in the winter of 1830-31, snow began falling December 15 and
fell without stopping for five days and reached a level of several feet on the
flat and in some places was a much as fifteen feet deep. It began to melt in
mid-February and took two months to melt off. The snow wiped out the entire wild
turkey population and almost all of the deer population and the Indians never
returned to hunt after that.
That following fall, an exceptional early
freeze in August 1831 nearly ruined the corn crop before it was mature. The
following spring the settlers had to send to southern Illinois and Kentucky for
seed corn, paying for it on delivery $3.00 a bushel.
At one time, ages
ago, several adjoining lakes covered the Long Lake bottom in the Macoupin creek
valley. These marshy lakes reached from Beaver Dam westward several miles and
the area were abound in fish, geese and wild ducks. When the settlers arrived,
there was a small shallow lake at Beaver Dam, another larger lake to be later
called Long Lake west of Beaver Dam, another lake a litter farther west which is
still there and is now called Bullard Lake, and two smaller lakes to the
south-west. With the exception of Bullard Lake, the lakes along the Macoupin
creek have been drained and turned into crop ground.
During the extreme
drought of the early 1930's, Bullard Lake completely dried up. During the summer
of 1934, the landowner planted and grew a crop of corn in the lakebed.
A
few years ago while some bulldozing was being done to clear brush in section 19,
an Indian home site and mound on the bluff overlooking these lakes was unearthed
and this site dated back to a time before the Cahokia Mounds were built
(mid-Mississippi period). An ear of corn, centuries old, buried in the ashes of
a fire pit was also unearthed, but once being exposed to the air, the corn soon
deteriorated. It was also on this same farm that a young man in 1880 while
working on the farm as a hired laborer, found a large stone carved Indian
ceremonial pipe that had been brought to this area from South America. This
newly found pipe, dated back to the Mayan Indian culture of Central America.
An early account of local history tell us that at one time a ruling chief of
an Indian tribe that lived on this same bluff died and the Indians carried rock
from a quarry some distance away and built a tomb to in-tomb the chief. One of
the early settlers while residing on the farm there, dug a well and used the
stone from this tomb to rock the well and had enough rock left over from the
tomb to use in other building purposes.
The first known pioneer
settlement was made in Polk township when Elisha Kelly, an eighteen year old
bachelor, came from North Carolina in 1817 and built a crude cabin besides a
spring near the Macoupin creek somewhere north of Plainview in section 28. He
was a hunter, explorer, and trapper, and roamed great distances over unsettled
country.
A year later, a brother John Kelly and his father arrived and
Elisha Kelly moved on to a valley he had discovered in Sangamon County while
roaming the countryside and founded where Springfield now stands. A year later
John along with their father joined Elisha at the new home site in Sangamon.
The next settlement was made in 1825 when the families of Daniel Deadrick,
Irvin Smith , Shadrich Redich, and Abraham Smith located on a ridge along
Macoupin creek in section 26 and 27 near the junction where the Dry Fork enters
the Macoupin creek. This area is where the railroad now crosses the Macoupin
creek about a mile south of Macoupin Station. They lived here only a few short
years before moving on elsewhere in the county.
Shortly after arrival at
this site in 1825, a son William Deadrick, was born to the Deadrick family and
had the distinction of being the first birth in the township.
The next
year in 1826, the James Hall family settled just east of where Macoupin Station
is now. They settled on the east side of the creek at a place called Hall's
Spring.
Peter Wagoner and William Rhodes came from Madison County in 1829
and selected sites on the north side of the prairie south of the Macoupin Creek
in section 28 and built cabins to shelter their families. They returned the
following spring in1830 with their families and settled here permanently. Peter
Wagoner was a veteran of the Indian War in 1812 when the Indians had been driven
from this part of Illinois.
Other early settlers who located in the
township were the Raffurty family who came in 1833, Donald Elliot in 1831, Elias
Dorman in1834, George Rhodes in1833, S. F. Rhodes and Daniel Hayward in1838, S.
A. Pepperdine in1830, Matthew Gillespie in1834, and D. R. Johnston in 1836.
Between 1842 and 1857, other who settled here included Ed Duckles, E. B. Eldred,
Isaish Rhoads, Edmund Rhoads, John Housley, Cant Candler, James Witt, and John
Yowell. There were many others who settled here and entered land from the
Government during this period of time.
The first earlier settlers that
came into the township were coming from Madison County settlements and from
Kentucky, Tennessee, and from other southeastern Appalachia States. These
emigrants were native to living in areas of forest and woodland typical of
previous homes in Appalachia and settled along creeks with a water supply and
forest to furnish wood for building, fences and heating. Much of their food
subsisted from hunting and fishing. With little market for crops or livestock
they only famed small patches of cleared land to raise enough wheat, corn, and
oats for family consumption of flour and corn meal and to feed a milk cow or
oxen and to fatten a few hogs used for family use. Livestock were usually
allowed to roam free to forage as much as possible in the wild.
Around
1840 a new influx of settlers were coming into the area from the northeastern
states of Massachusetts, New York, and New Jersey. The rich prairie lands of
Illinois were preferred by these settlers as the soil here was not rocky as was
in the states they left. The always-consuming task of picking up rocks from the
fields was not necessary here. These people tended to be better educated and
were more business inclined and were willing to work more industrious than the
more easy going southern settlers. At times each group of people ridiculed the
other but in time all eventually learned to live and work together.
Intermarriage between the two groups soon ended strife. The southerners referred
to the new comers as Yankees and considered them as snobs. The Yankees in turn
considered the Appalachia people as uneducated, brawling, crude and lazy.
The original land entered from the government was purchased at a price of
$1.25 an acre. The land was purchased in tracts of 40, 80, and 160 acre plats.
The land could be bought on a contract paying one-fourth down and one-fourth
each remaining year of the contract. Thus a man could pay as he progressed at
improving the property and realizing income from the property. No interest was
charged.
The first land entries in Polk Township were made by James Mason
who entered 80 acres in section 6 on November 9, 1831. The next entries made by
families that had moved here earlier were made by Robert Halliday who entered 40
acres in section 20 on February 28, 1834, and Peter Wagoner who entered 160
acres in the N.E. quarter of section 33 on February 28,1834.
Other land
entered with the government between 1833 and 1840 included: Harris Alexander, in
sec. 34, 1836; Steith Otwell, in sec. 1, 1835; Thomas Barnett, in sec. 11, 1837;
Nathanial Burnham, in sec.25, 1839; Orson Caswell, in sec.1, 1839; Wm.
Challacomb, in sec I, 1840; Enoch Chapman, in sec.32, 1834; Winston Cheatman, in
sec. 26, 1836; James Chesnut, in sec. 1, 1834; John Clark in sec. 13, 1834; John
Daniel, in sec. 10, 1834; Johnathon Davis, in sec. 11, 1836; Harvey Dranner, in
sec. 28, 1835; Charles Drennan, in sec. 28, 1835; Norman Gates, in sec. 2, 1834;
Wm. Gillespie, in sec. 19 and 24, 1835; Mary Gilmore, in sec. 20, 1836; James
Hall, in sec. 23, 1833; Zach Harris, in sec. 25, 1840; John Henry, in sec. 26
and 27, 1835; Thomas Kendall, in sec. 10, 1834; Bennett Knowland, in sec. 10,
1836; Washington Laxton, in sec. 1832; John Mahurin, in sec. 13 and 29, 1835;
Samuel Mahurin, in sec. 20, 1835; Stephen Mahurin, in sec. 7, 1836; Robert
Pervance, in sec. 2 and11, 1836; Zach Piggott, in sec. 19, 1838; James Price, in
sec. 35, 1835; Alexander Pruitt, in sec. 35, 1834; Soloman Pruitt, in sec. 34,
1835; Wm. Pruitt, in sec. 34, 1835; Jesse Rhoads, in sec. 28, 1833; Wm. Rhoads,
in sec. 28 and 33, 1834; Barnabas Rhodes, in sec. 28, 30, 32, 1835; Wm. R.
Rhodes, in sec. 33, 1834; George Sanford, in sec. 35, 1836; John Sappington, in
sec, 21, 1835; Preston Sappington, in sec. 21, 1835; Friscel Starkweather, in
sec. 22 and 23, 1837; John Staton, in sec. 29 and 32, 1834; Thomas Wood, in sec.
32 and 35, 1834; Not everybody who entered land at this time moved here to live.
Some entered the land as speculation to be sold later.
Peter Wagoner
built the first house on the prairie, and from this settlement originated the
name "Wagoner's Prairie", which the prairie surrounding the Plainview locality
came to be called. This area south of the Macoupin creek in early days was also
known as North Bend because of the fact the prairie bent to the north in this
area.
In 1835, William Rhodes entered 80 acres in section 33 and built
the next house on the prairie in this area. By now numerous families were
arriving and taking residence in the township. Many were to live here several
years before taking the endeavor to enter the land they were living on. By the
late 1830's, a steel plow had been developed that could break and plow clean the
tough prairie sod and soon settlement of the prairie was in preference to the
woodland.
The early settlers were limited in marketing any crops,
livestock, or products derived from the operation of their farms. Before the
arrival of the railroad, Alton was the nearest market. It took nearly three days
to haul by ox driven wagon a load of grain to be marketed. A load of corn would
not pay for a barrel of salt. To take a load to St. Louis took a week. Dressed
Pork would bring $1.35 to $1.40 per hundred weight and a load of dressed pork
would bring about $14.00. Often herds of cattle, hogs or groves of turkeys were
driven overland on foot to Alton to be sold, the journey taking several days to
accomplish.
The first sermon preached in Polk Township was by William
Jones, who preached at the home of Daniel Deadrick in 1826. Reverend Jones was a
Baptist minister and came to preach from near Upper Alton. The first person
baptized was Racheal Smith, at a place where the Dry Fork unites with the
Macoupin close to the Deadrich, Smith, and Redich settlement. This took place
also in 1826.
P. C. Rafferty was the first resident minister. He was a
clergyman of the Baptist denomination and began preaching in the township about
1852.
The United Baptist erected the first church building in Polk
Township in section 35 in 1871. The membership had organized around 1830 and met
in individual homes until they erected a church across the township line in
section 1 in Hilyard Township. Then in 1871 they erected a new church in section
35 in Polk Township at a cost of $2000. In 1870 this church listed a membership
of seventy-five members. In 1917 after a fire destroyed the church, the
membership in disagreement split when a new church called East Liberty Union
Baptist Church was erected in section 25. A part of the membership in dispute
then transferred to the Plainview Baptist Church Association and attended church
in Plainview. About 1926, a tornado demolished the new East Liberty Baptist
Church. The church was not rebuilt and the congregation disbanded and became
members of other churches.
The Long Point Methodist Church was at the
north edge of the township in section 2 and stood west of the Long Point School.
Long Point was referred to as the area making up a long strip of land lying
between Hurricane Creek and Kent's Branch. The Long Point community area was
also known at one time as Kent's Community. The Long Point Cemetery is located
across the road from the church in Bird Township. The church congregation was a
branch of the Chesterfield Methodist Episcopal Church and pastors from that
church filled the pulpit. Church services were held alternately at the Long
Point schoolhouse and the Hazelwood school until a church was built west of the
Long Point school sometime between 1885 and 1890.
The church ceased to
operate in the late 1930's and in 1945 the building was sold. Many of the pews
were taken to the Rural Methodist Church east of Carlinville and the remaining
were sold to the Masonic Lodge in Chesterfield. The roof was removed and the
walls were cut into sections and moved to Chesterfield where the building was
reconstructed into a machine shop at the south edge of the village.
The
Church of Christ was organized before 1896 and met in the old Oak Ridge
schoolhouse at the top of the hill above Macoupin Station in section 23. The
school had been called Oak Ridge because it sat in a grove of oak trees on the
ridge of land between the Macoupin and Hurricane creeks. The small congregation
did not have a resident minister, and a minister came by train one weekend each
month and held services while present on Saturday night, Sunday and again Sunday
night.
Later a new Oak Ridge schoolhouse was built in section 15, and
more in the center of the school district. Mr. W. E. Sanders donated one acre of
ground across the road from the old school, and the building was moved across
the road, remodeled and used by the congregation as a church until about 1925.
By then the membership had decreased in number until it was no longer feasible
to operate as a body and the church disbanded. For many years after the church
disbanded, the building was rented by the township from the Sanders family and
used as a town hall and polling place for Polk Township.
In the fall of
1999, the old derelict building was donated by the current property owners to
the Macoupin County Historical Society which were desiring an old country church
to move onto the Historical Society grounds in Carlinville to be preserved as
past history of the county. Volunteers of the Historical Society worked
diligently in moving the building into Carlinville and in restoring the building
back into a church.
In the early 1900's, non-denominational community
prayer meeting were held in the Hazelwood schoolhouse in section 8. These
meeting were held on Wednesday nights and were led by residences of the
community. Later local Methodist members used the school house and services were
held alternately between the Hazelwood school house and the Long Point school
house.
The first school house in the township was built in section 6 in
1839. That same year, Ebenezer P. Upham taught this first school. The first
female teacher to teach in Polk was Miss Virginia Bement, who taught in 1842.
The first couples married in the township were James Halben and Matilda
Hall, Henry Miller and Catherine Wagoner, William Grimes and Nancy Wagoner,
George Keller and Elizabeth Raffurty. The marriages occurred between 1827 and
1836.
By early 1830's, members of the Illinois Legislature were making
grand plans of internal improvements in the state of Illinois without
consideration how funds would or could be raised to pay for these planned
improvements. The proposal was to build numerous shipping canals, highways and
railroads at various places about Illinois. At first, emphasis was to build
canals, particularly to build a canal to connect Chicago to the Illinois River.
The theory of railroads were just coming active and the scheme then came to
include the building of railroads along with the planning of internal
improvements.
In 1835, a proposed railroad linking Springfield to Alton
via Carlinville was surveyed. The State commissioned a General Mitchell, a
surveying engineer from Pennsylvania to survey this route. The path of this
railroad was to pass through the southeastern portion of Polk. Railroad
construction was a new idea and was very primitive at this time. The planned
road consisted of ties just laid on the ground without foundation and the rails
were made of wood with a metal strip of iron attached to the top of the rails.
Following the report of the survey of the planned railroad, Ross Houck and
his father-in-law Jacob Gonterman both of Madison County purchased eighty acres
in section 28 on the proposed route and proceeded to have the town of
Steubinville plotted on forty acres. Shortly after plotting the town they sold
one-third interest in the property to Jefferson Wetherford who at that time was
the elected Sheriff of Macoupin County.
The following advertisement was
printed in the Alton Telegraph newspaper on April 6, 1836
SALE OF LOTS IN
THE TOWN OF STEUBENVILLE
The town of Steubenville is situated in Macoupin
County, 13 miles from Carlinville, 22 miles from Alton, 30 miles from
Carrollton, and 28 miles from Edwardsville.
Steubenville is located in a
high rolling prairie immediately joining first rate timber and inexhaustible
quarries of rock, and may be supplied with the very best building materials
without cost. The railroad from Springfield to Alton will run through this
place, it being situated on the first high ground, and exactly where the road
from Alton to Springfield will enter into the broken ground and the wide bottom
of the Macoupin Creek, it must be a place of deposit for the railroad cars going
and returning. Likewise the main road from Carlinville to Alton runs through
this place. It having all the above advantages and being situated in one of the
most fertile and populous parts of the county, having first rate water
privileges for every kind of machinery within one mile of the place. It will be
perceived that Steubenville is distained at no very distant period to become one
of the most flourishing inland towns in the state.
The beauty and
advantageous location of this town must insure it a rapid progress in
improvement. Merchants and mechanics will find it to their interest to purchase.
A plat of the lots and town at anytime can be seen at the clerk's office of
Macoupin County or at the residence of either of the proprietors. Indisputable
titles will be given.
The sale of lots will take place at the town of
Stuebenville on Saturday the 16th of April next. Terms: One half in twelve and
one half in eighteen months with approved security.
Ross Hauck
J. C.
Gonterman
J. Wetherford
Proprietors
Later in 1836 the state of
Illinois was struck by a financial crisis and plans for internal improvements
were dropped. Therefore this railroad was not built.
Abstracts show that
only fifteen lots in Steubenville were ever sold. By 1842, lots were no longer
offered for sale, and the property with the exception of the few sold lots, was
sold to Elisha Dorman as farmland. It is thought that at one time, a general
store did unsuccessfully operate at the site of Steubenville.
The first
early settlers traveled as far as Carrollton or Edwardsville to have grain
milled and later to Tegard's mill east of Carlinville. Around the year 1850,
Stephen Marshall erected the only grist mill in Polk Township. It was a
water-powered mill projecting over the Macoupin creek in section 28.
The
Sangamon-Alton railroad was started in 1849 and completed in 1852. Work started
at Alton and progressed towards Springfield. Irish emigrants that were coming
into this country did most of the construction work. At this time a large influx
of Irish were immigrating to this country escaping the potato famine of 1848-49
in Ireland.
During the time of this major Irish migration into the United
States, a devastating cholera epidemic spread across the country and especially
in this area. Many of the settlers living in the county were immune to cholera
that had plagued earlier settlers, but the newly arrived Irish emigrants were
not immune and many died during the acute cholera epidemic while the road was
being built through Polk township. The men would become sick, die and be buried
all in the same day. Most of these men were young, single, and new arrivals.
The majority of these victims were buried on a hillside east of the railroad
in section 13 and some were buried in the northeast corner of the Waggoner
Cemetery in section 6 in Hilyard Township. Others were just buried along the
banks of the railroad. During the epidemic, the majority of the men were living
in a construction tent camp along the railroad in section 13. It is believed
that approximately two hundred workers died and the majority are buried there.
Wood crosses marked many of the graves, but over the years these deteriorated or
were destroyed by grass fires. Nothing remains today to tell where these graves
are.
At the time of this cholera epidemic, ten percent of the population
of nearby Carlinville died during this epidemic.
The railroad was built
through the eastern and southern part of the township. It entered the township
in section 12 and exited through section 34.
About the time the railroad
was being constructed, a store and a small community started up along the route
of the railroad in section 23.
W.E. Sanders and his wife operated a
general store in a building known locally as the "Beanery". The building had
been built and used as a storage warehouse during the construction of the
railroad. The store was in the front part of the building and they resided in
the back portion. Mrs. Sanders usually ran the store while Mr. Sanders worked in
the timber as a timber man. The Macoupin creek bottomland through which the
railroad was being constructed was heavily forested with large oak and hardwood
trees and local men were hired to cut and hew rail ties for the railroad.
Later about 1885, the Sanders family erected and operated their store in the
large brick structure that still stands and is known as Macoupin Station. At one
time the railroad had a huge water tower at Macoupin Station where the steam
locomotives could replenish their boilers. Mr. Sanders would pump water from the
Macoupin creek into the tower until one day a spark from a locomotive set the
structure on fire and the wood water tower burned to the ground. The railroad
company built a new water tower a few miles up the track at what is called
Rinaker Lake just south-west of Carlinville because the trains that had been
taking on water at Macoupin Station was having difficulty making the grade from
the bottomland from a full stop after loading with water.
Macoupin
Station in the past had a covered waiting platform along the tracks for
embarking passengers. There was also a scale house, stockyards for loading
livestock onto the train, and a milk loading dock.
After the brick store
was built, a Mr. Rhoads operated a feed and grain business from the old
"Beanery" building and shipped grain out of Macoupin Station. At another time,
one other small general store operated across the road just north of the
Sander's store, but that did not remain in operation for a very long period of
time.
A post office was established at Macoupin Station April 11, 1866.
It was discontinued August 19, 1869, and re-established December 20, 1869. On
May 14, 1883, the post office name was changed from Macoupin Station to
Macoupin. Years later in 1951 the post office was discontinued and became a part
of R.F.D. Plainview.
During the late 1800's a cluster of cabins sprang up
along the road near where the Starr farmstead is now in section 29 west of the
Halliday Bridge and not too far from where the site of Steubenville was. This
community was referred to as Stringtown, Springtown, and Dogtown. All these
building are gone now.
Tragedy struck twice in the spring of 1882 when
James and William Rhoads, sons of Edmund Rhoads, lost their life while trying to
reach their hogs which were marooned by the flooding Macoupin creek. They built
a raft and tried to float to the hogs to release them, but the raft was wrecked
and one of the boys injured. Although the boys were good swimmers, the other
brother would not desert his injured brother and they climbed a tree on the
Brayford land (in creek bottom across from Beaver Dam Park) some distance from
the banks of the flooding stream. Word soon spread and a crowd of neighbors and
people gathered at the creek bank but all rescue attempts proved impossible
because of large waves that kept upsetting attempts in a rowboat from reaching
the boys. A wagon bed was tied to a rope and attempts to float the wagon bed to
the boys were not successful either as the waves also kept upsetting the wagon
bed. A heavier river type rowboat was sent up from Alton by a special train but
arrived too late. During the night the temperature dropped to near zero and the
boys slowly froze and expired. One of the boys fell into about six feet of water
and the other was found frozen to death still in the tree.
A month later
during another flood, on March 22, 1882, Peter Baushman, his wife and
twelve-year-old daughter was attempting to cross the flooded Macoupin in a
canoe. About half way across, the daughter in some manner lost her balance and
fell overboard. Her mother sprang to catch her and in doing the canoe was upset,
throwing them all into the water. The current carried the mother and daughter
down stream and they were drowned. Mr. Baushman being nearly blind, could not
see them, and could not render any help, but managed to swim ashore. The bodies
of the unfortunate mother and daughter were found about two hours later after
the accident. (The Carlinville newspapers carried the name as Peter Baushman
while the Bunker Hill newspaper listed the husband and father's name as Timothy
Beckman.)
At one time Hurricane creek flowed into the Macoupin west of
Beaver Dam Lake. Sometime long ago in past history, probably during a flood, the
eroding creek cut a new channel through the narrow ridge of land dividing the
two creeks and now the Hurricane creek empties into the Macoupin northeast of
Macoupin Station.
Later in time water flowed from a spring on each side
of a point that stretches into the middle of Beaver Dam lake from the north
side. The water from the spring on the east side of the point flowed toward the
Hurricane creek and water from the west side towards the Macoupin creek. Beavers
built a dam across the stream flowing westward toward the Macoupin creek and
created a small shallow lake. Many years later, by the time white settlement
arrived here, the beavers had long departed. During the hot summer months, the
remains of this shallow lake would dry up and the lake became known as Dry
Beaver Lake.
In the early 1890's, eighteen influential businessmen from
Carlinville leased the grounds containing Dry Beaver Lake from the owner Henry
Brayford and formed the Beaver Dam Lake Club. They spent $2600 to build an
earthen dam on each end of the lake raising the water level to form a much
larger lake. Membership erected a clubhouse and used the grounds and lake as an
elite private recreational fishing and picnic association.
Henry Brayford
owned 711 acres and was a coal miner by trade. He and his wife had come to
Illinois from England after marriage and settled near Edwardsville in Madison
county where he was engaged in the operation of a couple of successful coal
mines. They later bought farmland here in Polk township containing this lake and
moved here to reside. Mr. Brayford oversaw his farm operation here and commuted
back and forth to Madison County to oversee his mining business there.
With the railroad running along of the edge of his property and a demand for
prospective local coal, Mr. Brayford had plans of developing a coal mine on the
farm. In 1899 he began the digging of a coal shaft north of the lake and at a
depth of 144 feet found a vein of coal six feet in thickness. Water problems
persisted while sinking the shaft, and this wet problem had to be resolved prior
to the mining of the coal. However, before he could open the mine, he
unexpectedly died in December of 1900, and the family dropped plans of
developing the mine. One of his daughters was Mrs. Sarah Rhodes, the wife of
Frank Rhodes.
Mr. and Mrs. Rhodes soon took over the property. They
cancelled the lease of the lake and grounds to the Beaver Dam Lake Club and
built a small two story, sixteen-room hotel and began the operation of the
Beaver Dam Lake Hotel and Fishing Resort. When the lodge opened in 1901, fishing
was advertised as one dollar a day and lodging was advertised at two dollars per
night. Meals were served to guest and the fishing public in the Hotel.
Outdoor camping was allowed, but Mrs. Rhodes would not allow women camping as at
that time it was considered improper and undignified for women to be camping out
in the woods. Guest coming by train were met by a large horse-drawn coach at
Macoupin Station and taxied to the Hotel, the Hotel being about a mile up the
road from the Macoupin Station.
The Hotel and Resort operated for
approximately thirty-five years. By this time automobiles with improved roads
had become the popular mode of transportation and over-night guest had
diminished. People wishing to fish were just coming for the day and were seldom
staying overnight. The Hotel then closed, however fishing for a fee at the lake
continued for another ten years. In 1947, the property consisting of 425 acres
north of the road was sold to the State of Illinois and made into a State Park.
Following World War II, the state of Illinois began purchasing and developing
more recreational Parks for the advantageous use by the public. Mr. Bill Lions
of Carlinville, an elected member to the Legislature in Springfield, was
instrumental in inducing the State to purchase the Rhodes property containing
the Beaver Dam Lake.
The State set about improving the property by again
raising the dams at each end of the lake and developed a lake of 59 acres. Roads
about the lake area were built, along with camping and numerous picnic areas.
The top floor of the old hotel was removed and the lower part of the building
was converted into a Park Ranger's cabin. The rough large fish in the lake
consisting of buffalo, carp, gar, and catfish were seined and the remaining fish
poisoned and killed. The lake was then restocked with game fish.
The
following year, in 1948, the former fishing resort, lake and farm was opened to
the general public and became known as Beaver Dam State Park. In 1955,
additional land purchased to the west of the Park increased the park acreage to
737 acres. Over the years, continued improvements have been made to the Park.
Seven miles of hiking trails and paths have been developed. A sizable shallow
marsh lake was built to the west of the original lake. This marsh simulates the
numerous marsh lakes that made up the original Macoupin creek flood plain.
Approved water about the Park, electrical hookups, restrooms, and a shower room
have been added for mobile and tent camping. Several picnic pavilions and a
children playground have been built.
In 2001 a major Park improvement was
undertaken. The old rangers cabin was sold and moved from the grounds. The snack
bar and bait shop was torn down and in its place a new larger restaurant and
bait shop was constructed. All major roads were resurfaced with black topping.
During 1934 to 1937 the Blacktop road was built from Carlinville to Shipman
by the State. This was an experimental road as bituminous was just beginning to
be used. Every half-mile of the highway had a different combination of base soil
and of mixes of bituminous. The base soil was stretches of clay, topsoil of
various kinds, hard pan, and various mixtures. The road was built at a cost at
several times what a concrete road would have cost. The cut through the hill
south of the Macoupin Creek bridge was to have been the deepest cut in the state
at that time. However, the hard pan earth was too difficult to remove, as they
didn't have the large bulldozers at that time as they have now, so the last
eleven feet of the proposed cut could not be made. Thus, this is the reason the
road rises up and down a grade instead of being a gradual grade from the bridge
to the top of the upland just north of Plainview.
The bridge over
Hurricane creek was considered a historical engineering marvel in its day when
built because it was the first bridge in the state ever built on a curve with
each of the four corners laid on a different elevation. This bridge was replaced
and the sharp curve onto the bridge eliminated in 1996 when this section of the
road was improved by the State.
All of the rural school districts were
consolidated in 1948, thus closing all the small local rural schools. All of
Polk township with the exception section 31, 32, and a part of section 33 became
a part of Unit District I and students attend school in Carlinville. Those
living in the three other sections mentioned attend school at Unit District 9 at
Shipman and Piasa.
Previously up until the time of school consolidation,
Polk Township had been divided into seven rural grade school districts. Hopewell
School District 118 was in the southwestern part of the township. However the
schoolhouse was across the township line in section 5 of Hilyard Township. The
school was on Drew road. Dorman School District 119 had its school in section 34
on Newby road. East Liberty school district 113 had a school in section 25 on
Lake Catatoga road. Earlier the East Liberty School District and the Dorman
School District had been one school district called Liberty School District.
Before 1870, this school was called Bushwack. As the district was divided by the
Dry Fork creek, at times because of flooding, it was impossible for those living
west of the creek to attend school, so in 1896 the district was divided and a
school house was erected in section 34 and called Dorman. The school was called
Dorman after the family who donated the tract of land on their farm for the
school. The other half of the district erected a new school farther east in
section 25 and the named the new school East Liberty. This building stood on the
east side of Lake Catatoga road just north of the north entrance into where Lake
Catatoga Subdivision is now. The old original abandoned Liberty School building
was purchased by a local resident Mr. Crouch and moved to be attached to his
home.
In the Oak Ridge School district 114, the first school house stood
on the east side of Meredith road in section 23 at the top of the hill above
Macoupin Station. After a new school was built in the district years later in
section 15, the old school house was moved across the road and became a church
used by the Church of Christ membership.
Hazelwood School District 117
made up a large area of the west central part of the township. The schoolhouse
stood on the north side of Snell road in section 8. Raffurity School District 91
was in the northwest corner of the township. The school stood on the south side
of Rinaker road in section 6. Raffurity was the first school district organized
in the township. A part of the district was also in Chesterfield, Bird, and
Western Mound townships.
Long Point School District 84 covered the
northeastern part of the township and the schoolhouse stood besides the Long
Point Methodist Church in section 2 on the south side of Rinaker road.
Following consolidation in 1948, the schools were sold at auction. The Dorman
and Oak Ridge schoolhouses were made into homes. Hopewell schoolhouse when
purchased was moved about a mile east to the Shipman-Carlinville Blacktop and
converted into a tavern. Long Point school building was moved into Carlinville
and became a dwelling. East Liberty was torn down and moved. Raffurty
schoolhouse remained at its original location and was used as a hog farrowing
house and farm storage building. The Hazelwood School building also remained at
its original location and stands derelict and deserted.
Up until the
school consolidation, very few of the township roads were improved, remaining as
original dirt roads. Following the consolidation, it was necessary for the
school district to run school buses on these roads to transport students. Tax
funds from the township, county and state level were implemented to make the
roads all weather and year round passable. That year in 1948, the voters of the
township passed a road oil levy and the township expedited the oiling and
improvement of the township roads, making year-round farm to market travel
possible.
In 1935 during the depression, the WPA government program was
founded to provide work and a source of income for the needy. A rock crusher was
established at a rock quarry in section 34 at the southern edge of Polk to
furnish this employment and at this time a couple of the main traveled roads in
the township were thus rocked to be maintained as improved roads.
The
Congress of the United States passed the Rural Electrification Act in 1935 to
provide loans to bring electricity to the rural area of the country. In 1938 the
first REA electrical lines of the newly organized Macoupin, Jersey, and
Montgomery Power Company began reaching throughout Polk township bringing
electricity to the township farms and homes, thus enabling the rural dwellers
the advantage of a modern and mechanized living.
Polk Township had no
villages or subdivisions in its boundaries until 1974 when John and Earl Bellm
purchased 101 acres in Section 35 and 36. They built a large lake, divided the
acreage into lots and named the property Lake Catatoga. They sold lots to
purchasers who built weekend cabins and permanent homes around the lake. Mail is
now being delivered to around ninety addresses in Lake Catatoga.
There
are very few cemeteries within the boundary of Polk Township. A small cemetery
is in section 21 on property of Beaver Dam State Park. It is known as the
Brayford Cemetery, although the official name is the Barnes Cemetery. Since
1965, Beaver Dam Park personal has been maintaining the cemetery.
Another
cemetery east of Macoupin Station in section 24 was known as the Knoles
Cemetery. The cemetery was used by early settlers and is thought to have
contained over one hundred graves. The cemetery was obliterated by brush and was
destroyed about 1960 when a path was cleared through the timber for the
construction of a power line.
There are also a few family gravesites on
individual farms scattered about the township. Two young Witt men are buried on
the Witt farm in section 33. It is thought that there may be two Witt infants
also buried in the same plot. Two children are buried on the Young farm in
section 14. In early days it was common to bury family members in a gravesite on
their own farm. In winter with impassible roads, often it was impossible to
transport the deceased to a neighboring cemetery.
In very early days,
there were also two small family cemeteries along Eldred road in section 6, but
both of the small cemeteries have been destroyed in the past years. One of the
small burial plots was known as the Raffurity cemetery. Family members of the
Raffurity and Rhodes family were buried there.
At one time there was a
small graveyard just up the hill above Macoupin Station that contained a small
number of tombstones, but that graveyard cannot be found now. The last reported
burial there was around 1912. It is possible the graveyard was located in the
path where the State built the new Macoupin Station-Chesterfield road around
1970.
An old plat book of Macoupin County shows a small graveyard at the
southwest corner of section 15. This old burial ground was on the east side of
the road at the end of what is now Parkside road where this road ends at the
north edge of Beaver Dam Park. Who or how many were buried there is unknown, as
there is no evidence of a graveyard there now.
Oxen were used to farm
with in the earliest days. Only the oxen had the strength to pull a sod-breaking
plow. Gradually the use of oxen then gave way to farming with horses and mules.
During the period of farming with horses, there were many popular breeds of
horses in use and oats were one of the crops grown, as oats were needed as feed
for the horses. By the late 1880's steam power was also being used on the farm.
Large steam powered tractors were not only used for thrashing but also to power
sawmills and other farm use. After 1900, powered tractors were becoming a common
sight on the farms, and by 1930, steam engines had given way to kerosene and
gasoline combustion powered tractors. The gasoline engine by 1970 was giving way
to diesel powered machinery.
Over the years, the horsepower of machinery
has increased, making obsolete the mechanization used by the previous
generation. Today's large and powerful machinery capable of farming thousands of
acres that is used in present farming operations was undreamed of in previous
generations. . Weather has always played an important role in the lively hood of
those residing in Polk. With the numerous creeks and tributaries in the
township, flooding of bottomland often caused havoc to those farming these low
lands. Many times, flooding following extremely heavy rains have wiped out a
summer's effort at growing crops. During a spring flood in 1904, the record
height for high floodwater was set when high water flooded over the railroad
tracks and reached the steps at Macoupin Station.
Heavy windstorms and
small tornadoes at times have destroyed individual homes, farmsteads, and
orchards. The most disastrous tornado to strike Polk Township was on May 18,
1883 when a tornado traveling through Hilyard, Polk, Brushy Mound and Shaws
Point townships left a path of destruction and death. Seven people were killed
and twenty-one were seriously injured. Among those that died in Polk Township
were Mrs. George Baker and two granddaughters ages twelve and fourteen. The
Baker farmhouse was in section 36 south of what is now Lake Catatoga. They were
instantly killed and other members in the family injured. At another farm in the
same neighborhood, Mrs. Frank Rice was killed and ten other members of her
family injured. On this same day, because of bizarre weather conditions in the
mid-west, over one hundred tornadoes touched down in the states of Illinois,
Missouri, and Wisconsin.
On May 12, 1978, a tornado touching down north
of Piasa and traveling in a northeasterly direction entered Polk Township in
section 30, passed through and exited in section 2, leaving a path of
destruction to farmsteads and homes in its course. There were no serious
injuries incurred during the storm.
Polk Township reached a peak in
population around 1890 with a population of nine hundred fifty people. The
population continued to decrease as individual farms increased in size
swallowing up the numerous small farms. Since 1970 a surge of urban living has
taken place in Polk and again the population has taken an upswing as more
families who are employed elsewhere are buying wooded property and constructing
homes and now reside in the township. The township population has also increased
from the ninety or more residences built around Lake Catatoga.
A Rural
Water District was formed in 1996 and with government help in financing, water
lines were built along all the roads in the township bringing clean potable city
water to the rural population by the fall of 2000.
The number of
individually operated farms in the township has been on a steady decrease since
1900. In 1978 there were 121 farms listed in Polk Township. Sixty-seven farms
were owner- operated and fifty-four farms were tenant operated. Now twenty- four
years later, more than two-thirds of the farms in the township are rented to
larger farm operators. Almost all of the farmers in the township now have off
farm employment to supplement income.
References:
Macoupin County
History 1879
Here I Have Lived by Paul Angle
Prairie State Impressions of
Illinois 1673-1967 by Paul Angle
World Book Encyclopedia
Macoupin County
Enquirer March 8, 1952
Carlinville Democrat April 8, 1952
Carlinville
Democrat March 22, 1882
Carlinville Democrat June 4, 1883
1875 Atlas &
1893-4 Plat Book Macoupin County Illinois
Illinois Place Names, Illinois
Historical Society by James N. Adams
Macoupin County History Vol. I and Vol.
2 by Charles Walker
Bunker Hill Revisited by Carl L Stanton
Oral
information gathered from:
Alfred Ruyle
Walter Frank
William E. Witt
Jefferson Rhodes
Harold Maquire
Charles Komoros
Mrs. Jess Sanders
Mrs. Annabel Rhodes
Harold Reiher
Anita Paynter
Mrs. Gertrude Gunter
Mrs. Frank Pressler
David Deffenbaugh
Virgie Emery
Researched, written, and contributed in 1978 and revised 2002 by Jim Frank
Macoupin County ILGenWeb Copyright
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