Camp Point once a Native American campsite

Circuit rider Peter Cartwright wrote of traveling from cabin to cabin in early times in Western Illinois to hold Methodist "classes," finding his way through unbroken miles of tall prairie grass from one distant landmark to another.
His autobiography indicated that directions from one cabin to the next were often given based on the only reference points in sight -- patches of woods miles apart that could only be seen on the horizon from horseback.
Such a "point" of timber was a well-known landmark in northern Adams County. Because it also had been a transient camping spot for Native Americans in the past, it was known as Indian Camp Point.
In 1828, brothers-in-law Daniel Smith and James Lasley came to the recently surveyed area and settled in Sections 28 and 29, just west of where the town would be built years later. Lasley sold his homestead to Jezreel Shomaker in 1829. The next year several more arrived: a man named Figley and "an old sea captain named Calley, and his son-in-law Rand," and a settler named Lock who soon sold his "improvement" to William Wilkes.
Wilkes' son Daniel, Jonathan Brown and Farrow Hamrick arrived in 1832, as did Lewis McFarland, and William and Samuel McAnulty. In 1835, the Rezin Downing family, Peter B. Garrett and Richard Seaton established residence.
The area was becoming populated, and by 1836 a school was needed. One was constructed on Garrett's farm on Section 26, where a Mr. Brewster taught. In 1840, two more schools were needed: One was on Daniel Smith's land, taught by Thomas Bailey, later one of the founders of the town of Camp Point; the other was taught by P.W. Leet. Soon, increased settlement demanded more and they too were built. According to the 1879 History of Adams County: "[T]he school-house erected in 1853, which was probably the best finished and most comfortably arranged school-house in the county, and afforded sufficient facilities for school purposes for some two or three years, when, owing to the growth of the village, another school-house was demanded and was built in the west part of the village, which afforded school accommodations for a year or two more, when both houses became crowded, so that more school-room was found necessary."
After much community discussion, it was agreed that a grade school large enough to combine all of the others was needed. A three-story 66-foot-by-80-foot brick building was constructed. The grounds were landscaped with maple trees, and the school that opened in 1867 under the direction of S.F. Hall, with seven teachers, was called Maplewood. Attendance for many years was about 500, with about 100 students coming from other parts of the county to access the higher mathematics, philosophy, rhetoric, botany and Latin they could not get elsewhere.
The school year at Maplewood was eight months long, followed by a special four-week course of study called "a Normal course" that trained students who wanted to become teachers. By 1879, it was estimated that about half of the teachers in Adams County had attended Maplewood.
A Methodist church, the first in the township, was built in 1848, soon followed by a Presbyterian church in Section 28 in 1849.
The first mill in the township, for grinding corn and operated by horses, was erected about 1838 by John Newland. The next mill, with a carding machine, was built by Peter Garrett in 1844. In 1845 he added an oxen-driven inclined wheel grist mill and eventually converted it to steam. It prospered so long that for many years, the growing community was known as Garrett's Mill.
Benjamin Booth had been the first blacksmith, then James Langdon came from Quincy and opened a shop near the mill. Lewis McFarland, who was justice of the peace from 1838 to 1858, operated a tannery. In 1847, a post office for the growing community was established, with Peter Garrett the first postmaster. Indian Camp Point was deemed too long a name, and the name chosen was Camp Point.
Camp Point Township was "politically organized" in 1849 and named in 1850. Granderson Hess opened the first general store in 1854, and with the coming of the railroad in 1855, the town of Camp Point was platted by former teachers Thomas Bailey and Peter B. Garrett, blacksmith Benjamin Booth and farmer William Farlow on their land. It soon had a variety of stores and eventually a bank and manufacturing businesses.
Camp Point's citizens had strongly held opinions about what they wanted their community to be, and did not hesitate to make them known. In 1850, Thomas Stevens came north from the community of Columbus and rented land from Benjamin Booth, on which he built a house and a store. Booth made it a condition of the lease that no whiskey be sold in the store. "It was believed that Stevens religiously adhered to the conditions of his contract for some two years, but probably realizing a small profit on a very small stock of goods, and having previously realized a large profit on a small stock of whisky, laid in a fine stock of the contraband material. The indications of the new order of things were soon apparent; signs of imbibing freely were becoming every day more and more apparent."
A citizens' meeting was held and a resolution passed that those present would all contribute and buy out Stevens' whiskey at wholesale price, which they immediately attempted to carry out. Stevens faced about 20 of his neighbors, money in hand, and given no option except to sell out the hated drink. "The parley was a short one. The money was paid over, and about a barrel and a-half rolled out in front of the store and the heads knocked in, which was the first wholesale trade made in the town." Apparently trade comes in many descriptions.
Linda Riggs Mayfield is a researcher, writer and online consultant for doctoral scholars and authors. She retired from the associate faculty of Blessing-Rieman College of Nursing, and serves on the board of the Historical Society.
Sources
Cartwright, Peter. "Autobiography of Peter Cartwright the Backwoods Preacher. " In the Methodist Book Concern, edited by W. P. Strickland. 1856.
Kerr, Ruth. Camp Point: A Celebration of its Families. Camp Point, IL: Elliott Publishing, 2008.
Murray, Williamson, & Phelps. The History of Adams County IL: A History of the County -- its Cities, Towns Etc. Chicago, IL: 1879.
Quincy and Adams County History and Representative Men. Edited by David F. Wilcox. Chicago: Lewis Publishing, 1919.





