Log cabins weren't meant to be home for long

The earliest settlers in Adams County cut logs from the abundant timber and built cabins along the river, beside the creeks and on the prairies. The image of a collection of log cabins surrounded by woods and wild animals has been reinforced in books and film, and indeed, most settlements in the region began that way.
Records of the settlement of this county, however, indicate that log cabins were often intended for as brief an occupation as possible. The settlers had all come from somewhere else, and for many of them, that previous home was a community with the comforts of civilization.
Alone and only in his early 20s, John Wood had left his home in New York state and headed west. He built an 18-by-20-foot log cabin on the Mississippi River bank near the present foot of Delaware Street in fall 1822. Soon he was joined by his friend from Pike County, Jeremiah Rose, who, with his wife and daughter, shared the home with him until 1826. In 1824, their mutual friend Willard Keyes also joined them but built his own 16-by-16-foot log cabin near what is now Vermont and Front streets. After Adams County was organized the next year, Keyes' one-room home served as the first courtroom.
A Frenchman named John Droulard settled nearby in 1824. Wood and Keyes did not yet have title to their land when they built their cabins, but Droulard did, so he was the first landowner. His cabin also was his cobbler shop, where new arrivals could buy handmade shoes.
Building a cabin in a wilderness was a daunting and labor-intensive task. In his "Reminiscences of Quincy," Henry Asbury noted: "Mr. Wood … used a hand-mill of his own construction -- never patented. The first three cabins built at Quincy were constructed without nails or tools except an ax and an auger; all the fastenings were made with wooden pins; the auger that bored the holes was used in the hand mill by Wood for a mill-spindle."
Other settlers quickly followed the first young men. Adams County was organized in early 1825, and on Nov. 9, the county commissioners authorized the town clerk, Henry Snow, to plat the town of Quincy. It contained 230 lots about 99 feet by 198 feet, and the first ones were sold at auction. The most expensive was $38, which Willard Keyes paid for the lot on which his cabin stood. Within a few years, cabins and frame and brick houses were built at an astonishing rate.
Although no record of a cause-and-effect relationship was found, in 1826, the same year the Rose family moved out of the Wood cabin, Wood married Ann Streeter, and she moved in. Ann soon persuaded her husband to build a larger, two-story cabin on his newly purchased land on what is now the northwest corner of 12th and State, but no mere cabin was to be their permanent home.
Wood hired skilled German workmen from St. Louis and from 1835 to 1838 built a majestic, Greek-Revival style mansion just east of the two-story cabin. It showcased an ornate decor, magnificent woodwork and backstairs for servants.
In the 1860s, John and Ann Wood built an even grander home a little farther north of the mansion on 12th Street. Known as the Octagonal House and completed in 1864 at a cost of $200,000, it was the costliest house in Illinois at the time.
John gave the mansion to their son, Daniel, cut it in half and used 20 teams of horses to move the halves to the east side of 12th Street and rotate the restored building to face west. Unwilling to lose his 12-foot-high Osage orange hedge, he had ramps built, and the horses pulled the house halves up and over it. Now on the National Register, the home at 12th and State is known as the John Wood Mansion. A two-story log cabin like the Woods', built in 1835, is on the same property.
Not all of the early settlers left their cabins behind to move into bigger and better homes, as the Woods had done. The first settlers in Beverly Township built their log cabins within sight of the present Mound Prairie Church and cemetery. Isariah Mayfield and his family arrived in spring 1834. Two friends from Brooklyn, N.Y., James Richardson Sr., and James Sykes Jr., arrived a few months later. Mayfield invited them to stay in his cabin while they hauled in logs and constructed their own on their land south of Mayfield's. That accomplished, they returned to their comfortable homes in New York and brought their families, J.B. and Thomas Robertson, and George Wood to their new homesteads. One of the sons recorded in his journal that when the women traveled by wagon from Quincy and first caught sight of the primitive cabins they were to live in, they burst into tears.
Their men were not insensitive to the women's wishes, however. When more construction was needed, Sykes went to Quincy and hired Jacob Funk, a young master wood craftsman, newly arrived from Germany. Funk went to Beverly and found both work and a wife: He built much of the exquisite woodwork in the Beverly homes, and the Methodist and Mound Prairie churches, and he married Sykes' daughter Mary.
A century later, on a farm in Beverly Township, a little girl named Eunice, descended from at least two of those original families, discovered why the walls of her bedroom were thicker than any of the others in her large, Victorian home: Her room was the original log cabin. When the time came to replace it with something better, her ancestors had not found a different lot on which to build and left it behind, like John and Ann Wood had done. Eunice's ancestors had simply built their big, new house around their old cabin and plastered over the logs as they plastered the walls.
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
Asbury, Henry. Reminiscences of Quincy, Illinois. Quincy, Ill.: D. Wilcox & Sons, 1882.
Funk, Eunice M. Our Tree Grew in Beverly. Self-published: Quincy, Ill., 1995.
Funk, Eunice M. Personal interviews by the author. July 2012.
Gov. John Wood Mansion. http://www.adamscohistory.org/html/mansion.html
Mound Prairie Cemetery. http://www.usgennet.org/usa/il/state2/adams_mound _prairie_cemetery.htm





