Former pleasure spot Kate's Lake now vanished

The Big Lake Hunting and Fishing Club was organized by F.W. and E.B. Heckenkamp, Wm. J. Ruff and others in May of 1905.
Centered on a group of small backwater lakes and sloughs in the south Quincy bottoms, the club sought to protect the rich hunting and fishing grounds for themselves and others.
In an article titled "Sportsmen's Paradise in Quincy and Vicinity," these grounds and similar areas both north and south of the city were described as "not far, only a few minutes spin by automobile or launch -- only a pleasant drive from office or store… a mecca for sportsmen, a marvelous playground for outing parties," in which "there is a rare fellowship, a kind of democracy that places for the time shoulder to shoulder, the richest and the humblest, the banker and the woman, the society leader and the barefoot urchin, as long as all observe the unwritten rules of the woods and the stream."
One of the most popular bodies of water for these outings was "Kate's Lake," just south and east of Big Lake, and just north of the small burg of Marblehead.
This natural parklike setting was reachable by train on the Wabash line, which regularly took church, civic and business/employee groups for day trips to picnic, fish and play games beside the lake.
One repeat group of revelers was comprised of city of Quincy employees. At their annual outing in September 1909, they numbered nearly 300, and the Quincy papers for days preceding the event were replete with descriptions of the festivities to come.
A "footlong" photograph of the 1909 group shows more than 200 quite serious-looking men in shirt sleeves, boaters, bowlers and fedoras, arranged in three rows among the trees.
Included in the group were two former mayors, J.H. Bert and John P. Micksell, plus John A. Steinbach, the incumbent. Events of the day included "card games, quoits, base ball, fishing in the lake, target shooting with pistol and rifle, singing, swapping stories," plus feasting on fish and fried chicken.
Many of the participants in these outings over the years were familiar with the story of how Kate's Lake got its name.
Although the exact family name of "Dutch Kate" might vary, all versions agreed that Kate and her family lived in a cabin along the bottom road, near the lake.
When the family fell on hard times, according to one version, Kate took to taking wagon loads of firewood cut around the lake to Quincy for sale.
She then converted the proceeds into purchases of tobacco and liquor, which she sold to picnickers and revelers as they passed her cabin on their way to the lake.
Eventually, Kate's enterprise became offensive to her neighbors, who, rallying to the cause of decorum and sobriety, "leveled the house with the ground, and that was the last of poor Kate."
Although today levees line both sides of the river and the Army Corps of Engineers is largely responsible for decisions on levee maintenance and flood prevention along the entire length of the Mississippi River basin, this was not always the case.
On a map from circa 1819, the era of settlement in Adams County, the entire river bottoms of the county are identified as "inundated lowlands," and early settlers were quick to recognize the generally unhealthy conditions in the swampy and mosquito-infested areas along the river banks.
The first inhabitants of "the bluffs," including John Wood and Willard Keyes, might have built their first cabins along the river banks, but soon moved to the relatively more healthful uplands on the bluffs immediately to the east, where the city of Quincy began to grow.
Likewise, early farming families, while recognizing the fertility of the low lying acres, preferred to build their homes on higher ground, where fresh water springs and timber were close at hand, and the miasma that seemed to bring illness and misery each summer was held at bay.
While farming the fertile but low-lying grounds was a risky endeavor due to the nearly inevitable yearly flooding of the Mississippi, there were other treasures to be had in the heavy timber stands, sloughs and shallow lakes of the bottoms.
Starting in the 1830s, through the heyday of steamboat travel and commerce, timber cutters could make good money providing corded wood to the boats plying the river.
The massive stands of hardwood in the lowlands were also heavily exploited to feed a growing lumber industry, which saw huge rafts of cut logs floated down the river to market.
And, for the inhabitants of the counties along the river, the hunting and fishing in the timbers, backwater sloughs and lakes made them a sportsman's paradise.
Market hunting, often with live decoy spreads, and seining of the waterways, small lakes and ponds for game and rough fish supplied a living or extra cash for many a family.
So, whatever happened to Kate's Lake?
Its fate was sealed Oct. 23, 1913, when a petition to form the South Quincy Drainage and Levee District was filed, with the aim of capturing and protecting the rich agricultural potential of the lowlands along the river.
Eventually, four local drainage districts, Lima Lake and Indian Grave to the north, and South Quincy and Sny Island to the south, would be formed.
For Kate's Lake the end came in November 1915, when the locally famous fishing hole was seined to rescue and relocate its fish population, and then drained by tiling and canal.
Lynn M. Snyder is a native of Adams County, a semiretired archaeologist and museum researcher, a former librarian and present library volunteer at the Illinois Veterans Home, and a Historical Society of Quincy and Adams County Board member and volunteer.
Sources
"Drainage Districts" " http://www.co.adams.iul.us/floodplain/drainagedistrictes.htm" ; http://www.co.adams.iul.us/floodplain/drainagedistrictes.htm
"MRC History" http://www.mvd.usace.army.mil/About/MississippiRiver Commission(MRC)/History.aspx
Sportsmen’s Paradise in Quincy and Vicinity" Mississippi Valley Magazine
"Allamandusels Give an Outing." Quincy Daily Journal, Jan 4. 1906, p. 8.
"Big Day in Tall Timber" Quincy Daily Journal, Sept. 17, 1909, p. 12.
"In the Leafy Woods." Quincy Daily Journal, June 23, 1890, p. 4.
"Kate’s Lake Fish to Permanent Water." Quincy Whig, Nov. 14, 1915, p. 5.
‘Legal Notice." Quincy Daily Journal, March 13, 1914, p. 10.
"Meeting the People." Quincy Morning Whig, Jan. 26, 1896, p. 8
"Will Save Fish in Kate’s Lake." Quincy Daily Journal, Nov. 12, 1915, p. 16.





