Kingston once a thriving town

About 15 miles east of Quincy, a few miles past Liberty on Ill. 104, a small sign indicates a blacktop heading south to Kingston. The sign would have been unnecessary 140 years ago: Kingston was a thriving town on the road that connected Quincy to Jacksonville. Today, Kingston is an unincorporated collection of a half dozen residences south of the highway, a church, a water tower, and a vast, hilly cemetery that contains more than 830 marked graves, a reminder of the town that used to be.
In the early 19th century, veterans were awarded land grants called bounties, as rewards for their service. Congress set aside 5,000,000 acres between the Illinois and Mississippi Rivers for the veterans of the War of 1812. Bounty lands lured Easterners west, and veterans who chose not to go west often sold their land, sight unseen, to the more adventurous. Beginning in 1816, people settled in the newly opened lands of the Illinois Military Tract. Some stopped briefly and moved on, but the first settlers in Kingston, in what is now the northwest corner of Beverly Township of Adams County, planned to build a city.
Thomas King, the "proprietor" of that parcel of land, had it surveyed and laid out on April 19, 1836, and named it Centerville. The town was platted with 160 lots arranged in 16 city blocks, 10 streets, and four alleys. Anticipating the grandeur King thought would come, the streets were laid out 60 feet wide, with the central street, Maine, an astounding 130 feet wide. Apparently the residents soon began calling it Kingston (King's Town). Its name as Centerville was not even known until its discovery on a deed in a government indexing project in the mid-20th century.
Kingston's early settlers established an election precinct and selected election judges: Richard Buffington, Azariah Mayfield, and George W. William. William Stevens was elected supervisor; James Sykes Sr., clerk; and James Sykes Jr., judge. Mayfield had been the first settler in the township in 1834, and lived on his farm about two miles east of the nearby village of Beverly in the Mound Prairie area. The senior Sykes had come from England to Brooklyn, New York; then two generations of his family settled near the Mayfields at Mound Prairie in 1834. Beverly Township was not officially organized until 1850, so evidently Beverly and Mound Prairie were included in the first Kingston voting precinct.
The two main "highways" for the settlers coming into western Illinois were the Mississippi and Illinois Rivers, and well-used trails that connected docking points on the rivers became roads for the immigrants' oxcarts. Soon a road between Quincy on the Mississippi and Meredosia on the Illinois went through Kingston.
As many as 35 families from England settled in southeastern Adams County, and many of their graves are in Kingston Park Cemetery. Surnames still found in Adams County are those of the early English settlers: Henthorn, Hill, Holt, Mason, Morley, Sykes, and others. Several Bimson brothers came to Kingston from England and shared a house on the north side of town until they became established, then their families joined them. A legend persists that at least one brother died at sea on his way to bring his family back to Kingston. Another brother reportedly built the first mill in the community on the west bank of Grindstone Creek, the first steam-operated mill in the county.
The "mill of McVey and Bimson" at Kingston was two stories high, with the "bolter" upstairs. Two 20- by 3-foot boilers, lying side-by-side, were powered by burning 4-foot cord wood. A large mill pond was scooped out to provide the required water. In dry times, farmers were permitted to bring their livestock there to drink. Farmers brought their grain and ate their packed lunches, played cards, and pitched horseshoes while they waited for their order to be ground. One memorable day the head block on the boilers "blew," filling the building with steam and sending the four mill hands frantically racing across the field.
The traffic on the road through Kingston increased. Teamsters hauling freight stopped to spend the night, and the town became the stage route's relay station between Quincy and Perry. The drivers changed horses at Kingston. Commercial traffic required service providers: hotels, blacksmiths, barbers, and doctors for people and animals. The men who provided those services had families, who also needed goods and services. Stores opened. Traveling salesmen, known as "drummers," came and stayed in the hotels while they made local sales.
Five hotels, several blacksmith shops, several grocery and dry goods stores, a molasses mill, drug stores, and pool halls thrived. J. W. Bowman operated a hauling business, making two round trips to Quincy each week with teams of horses, one way per day. A dentist set up his practice on the second floor of the home of Hack Edgly, and Dr. John McKinley presided over a small hospital.
Dr. Walter Davison, born in the township in 1875, practiced medicine in Kingston for 58 years. Charlie Deihl was known as "doctor of livestock." The closest undertaker, Fred Frey, was several miles north at Liberty, so a supply of coffins was kept upstairs above John Buffington's blacksmith shop. Grieving residents in need could purchase one without having to travel.
William and Conrad Hofmeister emigrated from Germany to Kingston to access the abundance of white oak timber. William set up his cooper's shop to make barrels, and the family also operated one of the hotels. John Rickart's store ledger recorded William's 1854 purchase of "11 yds, calico @ 12-1/2 ¢, $1.38; 1 lb. coffee, 25¢; 5 lb. sugar, 25¢; blacking, 5¢."
As the town grew, entrepreneurs bought and sold their new businesses in rapid succession. Mr. Roth sold his store to Mr. McVey and Mr. Nations, who sold it to Mr. Terrell, who sold it to Mr. Stitler, who sold it to Mr. Chapman, who sold it to Bill and Walter Flick, who sold it to Bill Fusselman. The population of Kingston reached at least 200.
The need for social, educational, and religious institutions grew. In 1854, a two-story school was built on the southeast corner of lot where the last school, now boarded up, stands. Classes were held on the first floor, meetings of the Grand Army of the Republic and Masonic orders were held in the meeting room on the second floor, and the G.A.R. stored their guns there. Eventually a large Masonic lodge was built, reported to be second only to Quincy's in size and elegance. Baptist and Methodist churches served the town. A Christian Church was built in 1854 and sold to the Methodists in 1862, for $350, after their church burned. It is now the oldest church in continuous use in Adams County.
When Kingston became big enough to have its own post office, there was already a one with that name in Illinois; so on April 22, 1851, Kingston's was given the name Fairweather. It remained Fairweather until the post office was closed on January 31, 1907, and Kingston residents' mail was delivered from the Beverly post office.
Kingston thrived, but roads and transportation improved, and eventually there was no need to include an overnight stop when traveling from Jacksonville or Springfield to Quincy. Although a few businesses remained open until the 1960s or later, the town's population decreased steadily. Centerville had been a little-used and long-forgotten name, Fairweather only a historical postal name, and finally, most of the town of Kingston, itself, became a memory.
Linda Riggs Mayfield retired from the associate faculty of Blessing-Rieman College of Nursing. She is a researcher, writer and an editorial consultant for academic researchers and authors. Mayfield serves on the board of the Historical Society.
Sources
Bowen, Gladys Buffington. "Recollections of a Kingston Resident." Barry, IL: Barry-West Pike News. May 21, 1969.
Bower, Nellie. "Kingston of Yesteryear: A Series of Articles by Alice Jackson & Arvilla Chamberlin." Barry, IL: Barry-West Pike News. November 22, 1967.
Carlson, Theodore L. The Illinois Military Tract. Champaign: University of Illinois Press, 1951.
Edison, Charles. "Recollections." Barry, IL: Barry-West Pike News. August 16, 1967.
Family Quest Archives. Illinois 1870 Census Index. Bountiful, UT: Heritage Quest, 1998.
Find A Grave. "Grave Search Results for Kingston Park Cemetery." Accessed May, 2013. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gsr&GSsr=41&GScid=2231431& ;
Guy, Dollie Callahan. "Recollections of Kingston." Barry, IL: Barry-West Pike News. n.d.
Jackson, Alice, & Chamberlin, Arvilla. "History of Kingston Community: A series of articles by Alice Jackson & Arvilla Chamberlin." Barry, IL: Barry-West Pike News. 1967.
Kieslar, George. Personal interview, Kingston, IL, May 23, 2013.
"Kingston Methodist Church History." Barry, IL: Barry-West Pike News. April 30, 1969.
Mayfield, Linda Riggs. Private notes. May 16, 2013.
Morley, George. "Old Mill of Kingston." Barry, IL: Barry-West Pike News. n.d. (Series appeared 1967 to 1969).
Morley, George. "Recollections of Kingston." Barry, IL: Barry-West Pike News. February 5, 1969.
Potter, Alan and Jean Kay. Private correspondence. April 10, 2002.





