LaSalle County
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1932 Stories

EARLY SETTLERS IN OSAGE

By John Cramer, Dist. 17

Let's feel the years slipping backward until about 1850. Across the vast fertile region of Illinois comes a prairie schooner containing a forlorn-looking immigrant with his wife and family, which consisted of baby sister, brother and myself, then a lad of fourteen, and the sole survivor left to relate this event.

We came from the state of Ohio about 1850, making the trip with one ox team and one horse team. We were met by a family who had moved to Illinois a few years previous, and had taken up a grant of land near where we planned to make camp for the night. They were delighted to see us and insisted that we share their home with them until we built, which was gladly accepted. As nightfall was rapidly overtaking us and we were all tired, we started to arrange our beds in our wagons, but nothing would do but we must sleep in the house, which was only 16x18 in size. So after supper, which consisted of dried vegetables and a little game we Wl killed along the way, we prepared to retire. It was agreed that the old folks should sleep on the upper standposts, as they were called, the girls should sleep on the trundle beds below, and my brother and I were to bring in our bed out of the wagon and spread it lengthwise on the floor. In a very short time we were all asleep and remained in unbroken slumber through the night.

It has been our dream for a long time to take up forty acres of the fertile Illinois soil, and my father decided to take up the forty acres east of our neighbor, which proved to be in La Salle county, Osage township, near where Wenona now stands. He was attracted to this snot because of the level plains and fertile fields. The plain was covered with green grass, which made it look like a green sea. We made plans for building our house, which was about 16 by 24 feet, and about seven feet high, with a floor, one door and two windows. It was boarded up and down and well battened. It had a fireplace at one end which burned wood, hauled from the timber near Streator. It was warm and comfortable, and we loved it very much for it was home.

If you could have looked into our home while the door was ajar one would have seen a picture similar to this: The furniture which we had consisted of three three-legged stools, three four-legged ones four feet long, and one table — all made of split timbers. The musical instruments were a spinning-wheel, instead of a piano, and the loom, instead of the organ, and a fiddle.

Whenever we were short of supplies my father would hitch up his team to Irs wagon and start out for the village.

Soon we found it was necessary to make a trip to the mill to get our cornmeal ground. The first mill of this community was not in Osage township. It stood .on the banks of the Prairie creek in the village of Ancona, in Livingston county (Redding township), about four miles east of here. There was a dam and a waterwheel. We had all our grinding done there for many years. It ground with two large millstones, one turning on the other, crushing the grain. Those old stones still lie on the banks of the creek at the site of the old mill, the mill having been moved to Streator many years ago.

When we got the cornmeal and my mother baked it, with perhaps some pumpkin in it, it made a dish fit for a prince, especially as we had plenty of milk from our cows and had only to go into the woods to get our meat — venison, prairie chickens and wild ducks. With us, even in the pioneer days, the land flowed "with milk and honey."

The first year we broke twenty acres of prairie sod and planted it to sod corn, which made a good yield. This was done with a very rude-looking wooden plow which my father had purchased on one of his previous trips to Chicago. The next year we planted that ground to wheat and it made forty bushels per acre. This wheat was hauled to Ottawa to market, it taking about three days to make the trip. With the money my father purchased groceries and clothing for the family. For firing we used wood, which we got from the timber along the Vermillion river. We were happy and contented in -our new home.

We were getting new neighbors every day. Some settlers stopped there because of the good soil, while others stopped because they were tired and could not go on without more expense and trouble. My father sold all his surplus stock, grain and horses to the new settlers coming in. They paid very well for them, as that was the only way they could get supplies.

There were many wild deer and plenty of prairie wolves, which we killed whenever they came near our home. We had cattle, hogs and sheep, which we had to pen up every night. We had two large dogs, which we called "Sanco" and "Lyon." They always stood guard around our home, and they killed many wolves.

We burned off the prairie grass around our home every fall to protect it against prairie fires. Whenever we wanted meat I took my gun and went out, got some prairie chickens, wild ducks, and once in a while a deer.

These conditions soon changed, as our neighbors, who were also from the eastern states, soon had many herds of cattle running at large on the prairie. Then the land which we farmed had to be fenced to keep the cattle from destroying the crops. It was many years before there was any law passed to protect the early settlers from cattle running at large.

Neighbors and friends were coming on so surprisingly thick that Wenona, the first and only town of the community, was fast becoming a thriving village and a good market for wood, as the I. C. railroad burned wood in its engines in those days. In the winter-time the farmers were employed in hauling coal from the Vermillion river near Streator and loading it in cars in Wenona, where it was snipped northward. Wenona, our little village, was thriving rapidly. Everybody was excited. It had a post office, a general store and a blacksmith shop. The buildings were rudely put up by some of the men around there. Everybody was so pleased now by having the mail come and go so fast — by stagecoach. It was drawn by several horses. Wenona was doing a thriving business.

But as the years progressed, times were changing and we were advancing with them. We made many improvements on our farm, were raising large crops and had a fine orchard.

Now, let's skip ahead and compare. This 1932, about eighty years since this lone immigrant made his way across the Illinois land in his prairie schooner to the very spot where I now live. If you were to visit this same spot now one would see a very different picture. All that remained of our first house has been removed, and in its place stands a large, modern brick home, equipped with electric lights and all other conveniences. A beautifully paved state road runs by the door. With the telephone, the radio, and the electric lines of the Public Service Company, our home is equal to that of the city dweller. Any member of the family can be at church or at high school in ten or fifteen minutes.

Osage is now one of the greatest agricultural townships in the county of La Salle. The greatest improvement made in the land was tile drainage. With its level land and fertile soil, beautiful homes and hard roads, it ranks second to none in the state.

CONTINUE to NEXT 1932 story

Extracted 08 Nov 2018 by Norma Hass from Stories of Pioneer Days in La Salle County, Illinois, by Grammar Grade Pupils, published in 1932, page 33.


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