John Wood and Willard Keyes find their brids

Among his many talents, Quincy founder John Wood knew how to throw a party. They could be one-nighters like the Christmas party at his month-old log cabin. Or they could be life-changing events like the connubial soiree that brought nearly two dozen young pioneers together on a balmy summer night in 1825.
Local historian Thad W. Ward recounted that Wood hosted the first Christmas party in what would become the city of Quincy on Dec. 22, 1822. The party occurred a month after Wood completed his one-room, 18 by 20 feet log cabin, which faced west from the southeast corner of today's Delaware and Third streets. Ward wrote that about a dozen men straggled into Wood's cabin that night. They brought bear, venison, wild turkey and honey. According to Ward, Wood provided the whiskey--and the guests stayed all night.
By 1825, the year the Illinois General Assembly carved Adams County from Pike, the settlement that would become Quincy had 17 residents and families. There were 22 more homesteads in rural Adams County. Most county residents had arrived in the previous year. They were generally young people who were suited to the unregulated life at the western edge of Illinois. It was said that no one knew deprivation because it was so common among them. Nature provided what was needed. Game filled the forests, fish swarmed in the ponds, creeks and rivers, and cattle grazed in unlimited pastures. The rich soil of their small farms grew vegetables, grains and fruits.
John Tilson Jr. wrote in "The History of Quincy" that these young settlers knew each other and "were as social as distances would permit. ... Hospitality was the universal rule. Every man's house was a free resort for the neighbor or traveler, though the latter be a stranger,"
Strangers were expected to "unfold their budget of news, all that they had seen or known or had heard in his distant former home or learned on his way to the West," Tilson wrote.
There were few diversions from the industry that life in the primitive West required. Hunting was one. Logrolling -- helping a neighbor erect his cabin and expecting that he would help erect yours -- was another. And there were occasional get-togethers, which when more formal were called pioneer festivals.
Willard Keyes, a Vermonter who with Wood of New York was a founder of Quincy, recalled that no festival could "hold a candle" to the one Wood organized in May 1825. Sixteen young people attended individually, but would find themselves pairing off during the party. There were enough married couples "to preserve decorum," said Keyes in his journal.
They arrived throughout the afternoon of a fine day. Hostess Margaret Brown Rose, who with her husband, Major Jeremiah Rose, and their 3-year-old daughter, Lucy, were the third permanent settlers of Quincy, set out a board of an ample feast. Wood volunteered to be master of ceremonies for what he called this "Feast of Reason and the Flow of Soul."
The young men earlier that day had prepared for an excursion up Boston Bay, which stretched for nearly 3 miles above Keyes' cabin a mile north of Wood's along the river. They positioned two large canoes side by side and lashed them together with transverse timbers. The craft was large enough for all to embark on the outing. Frivolity distracted the boaters from the gathering clouds that spread darkness like a thick linsey-wool blanket across the northern sky. It was the beat of thunder upriver that eventually roused them, and the boaters turned their craft and pulled the oars in earnest to get back to shore.
Keyes wrote that as wind and rain overtook them, they landed the boat. The young men jumped overboard, helped the women out, and made their way running along a deer path lit by flashes of lightning for about a mile. They reached a cabin familiar to them, where the drenched young ladies were taken in and changed into dry garments lent them by the cabin's inhabitants. Wood concocted in a teakettle a drink made of aquavita, a distilled grain and potato liquor, with some sugar added. The women sipped the beverage, designed to keep them from catching a cold or fever. The elixir apparently worked. No one became ill.
Without explaining their activities during the rest of the night, Keyes reported that the next morning, the partygoers boarded buggies and horses to form a cavalcade that took a "grand excursion" for 2 1/2 miles before getting everyone home by noon.
Greater events occurred shortly afterward, or as Keyes put it, "Tall oaks from little acorns grow." He observed that "this Pioneer Festival did not end in smoke."
"Twice six congenial minds here found their mates," he explained in his journal, "and most of them tied the hymeneal knot within the year." Among the newlyweds were the party's organizers, Willard Keyes and John Wood.
First married were Miss Mary Grushong and George Campbell of Ursa Township on Aug. 18, 1825. With no licensed minister in the area, Keyes, a justice of the peace, officiated at the Campbells' wedding, the first after the pioneer festival. Their son, Andrew Jackson Campbell, arrived Aug. 12, 1826. Called A.J. in the new county that bore the name of Jackson's nemesis, he was the first child born in Adams County.
On Dec. 22, 1825, Keyes married Laura Harkness, the daughter of Fall Creek Township farmers Ebenezer and Sarah Pierce Harkness. The couple had three children before Laura's death on May 8, 1832. Keyes would marry twice more: to Cornelia Burgess on March 5, 1834, and to Mary Folsom on March 29, 1836.
Wood married Ann M. Streeter, daughter of Joshua Streeter, who became one of Adams County's first justices of the peace, on Jan. 26, 1826. Wood's friend Keyes, then an Adams County commissioner, united the couple in marriage. After Ann Wood's death on Oct. 5, 1863, Wood married Mary A. Holmes, a widow, in June 1865.
Others who attended Wood's festival and married within a year were Amos Bancroft and Ardella Ames, Fernando Slayton and Louisa Hadley, Jotham Streeter and Olive Whipple, and Truman Streeter and Maria Jackson.
Reg Ankrom is a member of the Historical Society of Quincy and Adams County. He is a local historian, author of a prize-winning biography of U.S. Sen. Stephen A. Douglas, and a frequent speaker on Douglas, Abraham Lincoln, and antebellum America.
Sources:
Collins, William H. and Cicero F. Perry. "Past and Present of the City of Quincy and Adams County, Illinois." (Chicago: S.J. Clarke Publishing Co., 1905), pp. 18-20, 23, 324, 351, 432-3, 878.
Doneva Shepard's family, friends and neighbors wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=donevanell&id=I41594
Keyes, Willard. "A Journal or Diary By Willard Keyes of Newfane, Windham County, Vermont, Commenced." June 2, 1817. (Historical Society of Quincy and Adams County: MS 900 KEY)
"Keyes, Willard--Family." (HSQAC: MS 920 Keyes)
"History of Quincy." The Directory: History and Statistics of the City of Quincy for the Years 1864-5.
(Quincy, Illinois: S.B. Wyckoff, 1864), pp. 165-166.
Tillson, John Jr. "History of Quincy." (Chicago: S.J. Clarke Publishing Co., 1905), pp. 19, 23, 26.
Ward, Thad. "Quincy and Adams County, Illinois." (Quincy, Ill., 1925), p. 27.
Wilcox, David. "Quincy and Adams County History and Representative Men." (Chicago: Lewis Publishing, 1919, pp. 99-100.
"Wood Comes to Quincy." Scrapbook, Vol 1. (HSQAC File: 977.34, H 39.)





