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Past To Present - Mining To Farming
The village of
Elizabeth, population 650, is nestled in the middle of the rolling
hill country of scenic Jo Daviess County in the northwest corner of
Illinois. Originally settled because of valuable lead deposits, the
community prospers today due to the surrounding rich farmlands.
The first white
settler, A.P. VanMatre, arrived in 1825 after hearing about the land
mining near the Fever River. He built the first smelter in this
area, and his mines were very productive for years to come.
A fur trapper, Henry
VanVolkenburg, came to Elizabeth two years later. That same year,
John Winters, James Flack, and John Flack settled here and raised
the first corn crop. The village of Elizabeth is built on a claim
owned by John Winters and Captain Clack Stone.
Resisting President
Andrew Jackson’s directive to relocate all Native Americans west of
the Mississippi, the Sac and Fox Indians went on the warpath in the
summer of 1832. Settlers around Elizabeth built the Apple River Fort
for their protection. On June 24, they successfully warded off Chief
Black Hawk’s raid, which came to be the last Indian attack east of
the Mississippi.
Elizabeth
was the site of an important battle during the 1832 Black Hawk War.
Black Hawk and a band of some 150 Sauk and Fox warriors attacked the
hastily erected fort on June 24, 1832. The fort has now been
reconstructed next to its original site, bringing the early history
of the area to life.
As a result of a series of controversial treaties, the Sauk and Fox
tribes moved from their villages near present-day Rock Island to
Iowa in 1828. Unhappy with their new lands, Black Hawk returned to
Illinois in April of 1832 with some 500 warriors and about 1,000
women, children and old men. They planned to plant corn in the
village of the Winnebago Prophet, about 50 miles up the Rock river.
But when the Illinois militia was called out, Black Hawk decided to
return to Iowa.
On May 14,
Black Hawk sent a three-man peace envoy to meet with Major
Stillman’s militia north of present-day Dixon. When the messengers
were captured and one of them killed, Black Hawk and 40 warriors
attacked the 275-man militia force. The militia broke ranks and
retreated to Dixon. The Black Hawk War had begun.
The
settlers, hearing of the battle and other Indian attacks, were panic
stricken. In the Apple River settlement (now Elizabeth), the
settlers felled trees, dug a trench, and built a stockade by
enclosing a settlers cabin and a second structure.
About 45
men, women and children were inside the fort when Black Hawk and
some 150 warriors attacked. The men scrambled for the guns, leaped
to the firing benches and took their places at the block house
portholes. The women huddled in the cabins on the back wall. Then
Elizabeth Armstrong rallied the women. They molded musket balls and
loaded weapons so that the men could keep up a steady stream of
fire. The battle raged for about 45 minutes. Black Hawk, thinking
the fort was heavily armed, abandoned the battle, raiding the nearby
cabins for supplies as he and his warriors departed. Considering the
ferocity of the fighting, casualties were light: in the fort, two
men were wounded, one killed; the number of Sauk casualties was
undetermined. The war itself ended on August 2, when U.S. Army
troops caught the last of Black Hawk’s band at the Bad Ax River,
attempting to cross the Mississippi into Iowa.
The Apple
River Fort was torn down in 1847, its lumber used to build a barn.
But through the efforts of the Apple River Fort Historic Foundation,
Inc., the fort once again stands on a hillside overlooking Elizabeth
and the surrounding countryside. It can be reached by a short trail
from the parking lot at the northeast corner of Route 20 and Mrytle
Street in Elizabeth.
The Apple
River Fort Interpretive Center was opened on September 11, 1998. The
exhibits tell the story of the Apple River Fort and the Blackhawk
War. The Center is located at the corner of Washington and Myrtle
streets in downtown Elizabeth.
The
Interpretive Center contains a model of the Apple river fort,
explains the time line of events leading to the Black Hawk War, the
ways of life of the Saulk & Fox Indians and the men and women of the
Apple River Settlement.
The Center
Includes an information desk, gift shop and the Blackhawk War
theatre. The center is open from 9:00 to 5:00 daily - except for
Major Holidays. Winter hours, November thru March are 9:00-4:00
daily, except for major holidays. For additional information, or
scheduling group tours, please call or write:
Apple
River Fort
PO Box 206
Elizabeth, IL 61028
Phone: (815)858-2028
E-mail:
info@appleriverfort.org
A surveyor named
Charles Bennett formally laid out the village of Elizabeth in 1839,
and, in 1868, the townspeople voted to incorporate. One legend says
the town got its name from Elizabeth Winters because she opened the
first hotel and was active in other community development projects.
Another theory holds that the village was named after Elizabeth
Armstrong, a woman who helped rally the men during the attack on the
Apple River Fort.
In 1888, the Chicago
Great Western Railroad came through Elizabeth, and the town
increasingly became the farming center of the county.
The
Chicago Great Western Railroad Depot on Myrtle Street in downtown
Elizabeth, Illinois was constructed in 1888 and is now listed on the
National Register of Historic Sites.
The
Chicago Great Western was nicknamed "The Maple Leaf Route" since its
three main lines with their branches took on the appearance of a
maple leaf. The stem of the "The Maple Leaf Route" ran from Chicago,
Illinois, through South Freeport, Pearl City, Kent, Stockton,
Woodbine, Elizabeth, and North Hanover to Dubuque, Iowa, and then on
to the railroad’s hub city at Oelwein, Iowa. From there, the
railroad ran north to Minneapolis, Minnesota; West to Omaha,
Nebraska; and Southwest to Kansas City, Missouri.
The
Elizabeth depot serviced the Winston Tunnel, located down the line
to the West. At over one-half mile in length, this tunnel is the
longest in the state of Illinois. In the days of coal-burning
locomotives, smoke built up in the tunnel to such an extent that
engineers wore gas masks. A huge fan was installed at the West End
of the tunnel to blow smoke out. When the fan broke down, a call
would be made to the Elizabeth station. A repairman would ride a
small gasoline-powered rail car out to the Winston Tunnel… known
locally as "The Speeder".
It was, in
fact, the costly repairs to the tunnel that contributed to the Great
Western's decision to sell out to the Chicago and Northwestern
Railroad Company. In 1969 the Elizabeth Railroad Depot closed and
the tracks were torn up. The Village of Elizabeth purchased it and
then sold to the Jo-Carroll Electric Co-operative, which used the
station as a storage building. In 1984, the depot was sold back to
the Village of Elizabeth, and in 1997 the Elizabeth Historical
Society opened the Elizabeth Train Depot Museum. In 2006, the
Elizabeth Historical Society opened a second facility, Elizabeth
Main Street History Museum. The Train Depot is the repository for
the Chicago Great Western Railway and train-related artifacts. The
Main Street History Museum displays local history of Elizabeth and
Jo Daviess County. Also exhibits of lead mining and the Apple River
Fort.
Hours at
both museums are 11 a.m to 3 p.m. weekends, May through October.
Tours by special appointment. For more information, please call or
write:
Elizabeth
Historical Society
P.O. Box 115
Elizabeth, IL 61028
Phone: (815) 858-2343
E-mail:
elizabethhistoricalsociety@yahoo.com
Just as it was rich
lead deposits that first brought settlers to Elizabeth 172 years
ago, now it is rich farmlands that make it possible for the village
to continue to thrive. From past to present, from mining to farming,
Elizabeth has always been a prosperous community, and a community
which takes real pride in its rich cultural heritage. |