Fall Creek Township had just one small community

John Wood, the first settler in Quincy, came to the area as aguide for men seeking veteran land grants, called bounties, and his first land purchase was unwanted bounty land.
The first white settler in what later became Adams County arrived a year before Wood, and apparently located his bounty land without a guide.
Justice J. Perigo (also spelled Justus and Perrigo), was described as “an old soldier who had settled in Section 9, 3 S. SW. on the quarter section he had drawn,” although Illinois records designate it as 3SR8W.
Wood was only 19, but Perigo was much older: Records for his birth year differ, but all place him in his 50s when he arrived. His bounty was for land in what was to become Fall Creek Township, just south of Quincy.
In 1905, Collins and Perry wrote in their history of Adams County: “The story is that Perigo, practically conscious of what Adam had been told that it was ‘not well for man to be alone,’ went for a wife in the southern part of the state, and successfully dazzled the fancy of a ‘confiding female’ by the representation that he owned a farm of one hundred and sixty acres, on which he had two thousand bearing apple trees.
“Record has not perpetuated Mrs. Perrigo’s comments, when, on coming up to the farm, she found that the two thousand apple trees were crabs.”
Mrs. Perigo might not have been impressed, but the abundance of wild crab apple trees was a sign of what was to come.
By 1837 the Perigos’ new neighbor, Clark Chatten, had purchased grafted apple trees from Charles Stratton in Pike County and planted them. He had 40 acres of apple orchards by 1839, 12 acres of peach trees by 1840, and then peach, pear and more apple trees.
In 1861, the Executive Committee of the Illinois State Agricultural Society awarded Chatten top prizes in several categories, including two for orchards of more than 500 trees.
By 1867, Chatten’s orchards were the largest in Illinois: 240 acres of apple trees and 187 acres of peach trees. Both wild and cultivated apples thrived in Fall Creek Township.
During the years between Perigo’s arrival and Chatten’s renown, many others had settled in Fall Creek: John Thomas settled on Perigo’s section of land in 1823. Amos Bancroft, Rial Crandall, David Moore, Zephaniah Ames and Silas Beebe soon followed.
Bancroft officiated when Crandall married Anna Beebe in 1824, and that couple’s child Priscilla was the first birth in the township.
Industrious settlers immediately began making “improvements.” The first sawmill was built by Bancroft, Moore and Crandall in 1824, powered by the waters of Fall Creek. After 1825 when the county was formally organized, many more settlers came and prospered. A log schoolhouse was built, where Levi Wells taught in 1826. In 1831 a grist mill was added, and in 1832 John B. Young built a whiskey distillery.
In 1826 a Methodist circuit rider named Medford preached the first sermon in the area. A Christian church began meeting in 1831 and was formally organized in 1840. In 1865, it had 200 members. The first sabbath (Sunday) school was organized at the home of Zephaniah Ames in 1832. Methodists continued to meet in homes until they built the township’s first church building in 1847.
In the 1840s and 1850s many German immigrants settled in Fall Creek Township. The “old stone” German Evangelical Zion (Lutheran) Church, now called Bluff Hall Evangelical Free Church, was founded in 1860, and in the 1870s had over 100 members.
Since 1835, the highly agricultural township has had one town.
Michael Mast, John Coffman, and Stephen Thomas laid out a town where the corners of their farms met in the center of Section 6 and called it Millville. Mast opened a large general store there, and the town grew. The limestone bluffs of the Mississippi provided the opportunity to quarry limestone. The stone was heated in kilns, producing lime that could be used for making mortar and plaster. It was said that in the 1870s, “at Millville six large patent kilns are in active operation, employing 65 men, and turning out large quantities of the finest lime, which finds a ready market in various parts of Illinois and other states.”
Millville became one of three stations of the Quincy, Alton and St. Louis Railroad in the township, with Bluff Falls (or Bluff Hall) and Fall Creek the others.
About a mile west was the landing for a ferry that crossed the Mississippi to Marion County, Mo., which was “furnishing a great thoroughfare for immigrant travel as late as 1850,” and also carried freight. A railroad connection with Hannibal, Mo., was made at Fall Creek, which became a shipping center and got a post office by that name. The Millville Post Office was named Marblehead, and eventually the town was called Marblehead, too. The railroad provided a way to market the lime and agricultural products.
Besides Chatten’s fruit, the township produced crops of wheat in excess of 100,000 bushels per year before corn became an important crop.
When the settlers arrived, the land between the bluffs and the river was wild and untamed. Orestes Ames recounted two stories: In 1827 John Thomas heard a commotion at his pig pen. Thomas’ sons and dogs chased the “pork seeker” away and into a hazel thicket. There the culprit was found, and the dogs dispatched a “panther” that measured 71⁄2 feet, tip to tip. The next summer, Stephen Robinson and his dogs were searching for a lost horse when the dogs treed a large panther in a tall hickory tree. Robinson had not brought his gun with him, but he “could not afford to lose his game,” so he climbed the tree. High up, out on the same limb, the cat turned to face him, and Robinson used the only thing he had for defense — his hat, and swiped the panther hard, across its eyes. It lost its balance and its life, and Robinson got his game.
Linda Riggs Mayfield is a researcher, writer and online consultant for doctoral scholars and authors. She retired from the associate faculty of BlessingRieman College of Nursing and is on the board of the Historical Society of Quincy and Adams County.
Sources
Bluff Hall Cemetery. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=cr&CRid=2143952
Collins, William H. and Perry, Cicero F. from Tillson, John, History of the City of Quincy, Illinois. Past and present of the city of Quincy and Adams County, Illinois. Chicago, IL: S. J. Clarke, 1905.
Dunlap, M. L., Francis, Simon. Illinois Farmer (6 February, 1861).
Edmonson, Floyd J. "Country School District No. 254 in Fall Creek township in Adams County, Illinois," North Adams County's Look at the Past. http://fourstarlibrary.omeka.net/items/show/48 .
Fall Creek Township, Millville, Planeville. From Adams County 1872, Illinois. Andreas Lyter and Company,1872. Retrieved from http://www.historicmapworks.com/Map/US/55880 /Fall+Creek+Township++Millville++Planeville/ Illinois Archives.
Illinois Public Domain Land Detail. Justus Perrigo. https://us-mg4.mail.yahoo.com/neo/launch?.rand=64r1shibhovgo#9634986546
Murray, Williamson & Phelps (Eds.) History of Adams County Illinois: Containing a History of the County Its Cities, Towns, Etc. Chicago, IL: Murray, Williamson & Phelps, 1879.
Perry, Frank, and Piwarzyk, Robert, and Luther, Michael, and Orlando, Alverda, and Molho, Allan, and Perry, Sierra. Lime Kiln Legacies. http://limekilnlegacies.com/intro.php
Wilcox, William A., ed. Quincy and Adams County History and Representative Men. Chicago: Lewis Publishing Company, 1919.





