'Pioneer history must be mainly biographical'

At the beginning of his richly detailed and often quirky "History of Quincy," (1879) Gen. John Tillson, who came to the young town of Quincy with his pioneer parents in 1843, describes his work thusly:
"Pioneer history must be mainly biographical. It is the record of the actions of individuals. Often seemingly insignificant, they lead to results of high importance. The pioneer goes into the wilderness, often prompted by restlessness of temperament, and unconsciously with his axe and rifle, help[s] lay the foundations of city and state. He builds more wisely and broader than he knows."
The first inhabitants of this area of Illinois were two young men, John Wood and Willard Keyes, who came to the "Old West" independently. But here they would form a lifelong friendship that led them to the high limestone bluffs, rich alluvial bottoms and a protected freshwater bay that would become their home. Their life stories of pioneer exploration, hard work and vision are in many ways typical of local history, which expanded leads to national and even international connections in time and space. It is this personal experience and these stories that cumulatively enrich our own histories, and it is the record of these multiple individual experiences that local historical societies were formed to collect and preserve.
Although a local history organization started in Quincy in 1841, it did not flourish. It was not until June 11, 1896, that the Quincy Morning Whig noted "a movement for such an organization in Quincy."
The "object of the society," the Whig reported, was "to gather up all that relates to the history of the city, and provide a safe place of deposit for all books, pictures, portraits, manuscripts and documents of every sort which illustrates this history."
Sixty prominent citizens of the area were signators to the initial public notice, resulting in the first meeting of the Historical Society of Quincy, Illinois, to which all were invited to become members at a fee of $1 per year.
A life membership could be had for $10. At the first meeting of the society, a committee was appointed to search for a permanent headquarters in which documents, pictures and "relics" of our history could be gathered, cared for and shared. Also at that first meeting members anticipated the future when they commented on "the importance of preserving the house of the late Gov. Wood, Quincy's most eminent and principal founder." Soon the new Society was receiving donations from local citizens who felt confident such an organization was the proper place to entrust some of their family's most precious documents and bits of local history. In July of 1896, Joseph Fees presented to the society "an assessment book of Quincy in 1852." By October of 1896, a room in the Quincy Free Public Library at the southeast corner of Fourth and Maine had been provided for storage of "all the relics of the society connected with the early history of the city."
Also in October the society received from the daughter of Jeremiah Rose, whose young family had shared John Wood's first log cabin, the Bible used by Jabez Porter, Quincy's first preacher in the 1830s. Two years later the society would also receive the bell that had rung for services at the city's first church, the Lord's Barn.
In 1898 John Wood's son, Daniel, donated to the Historical Society a much smaller object, but one of great value to those who call Quincy home. It was the brass and wooden compass used by his father in 1821 while "prospecting" for his new home in Adams County.
Another small and exceedingly intriguing early donation to the collections of the society is a solid brass cylinder less than 2 inches in diameter. Depicted in reverse on its flat upper surface, a gentleman in top hat leans upon his cane and gazes up at a leafless tree. The story, often told and perhaps true, is that this seal depicts Quincy's first citizen John Wood, who worked diligently to beautify his frontier hometown by transplanting trees to its squares and open spaces. One of these trees, planted by Wood in "the Square" (later Washington Park), was girdled by unknown individuals as a prank, causing Mr. Wood much sorrow when it subsequently died. As a gentle joke perhaps, the incident was immortalized in the city's first seal, still retained with honor and care in the collections of the Historical Society.
It was not until 1906 that the 10-year-old Historical Society determined to save the grand neoclassical hand-built home of John Wood near the corner of 12th and State. With a concerted effort, the society raised the $1,700 purchase price, a cost that would grow to nearly $10,000 as additional property surrounding the structure and restoration costs were added.
And now, in spring of 2015, the Historical Society of Quincy and Adams County is again reaching out to preserve and continue public access to an iconic Quincy building. In 2012 the Historical Society acquired by gift the building and collections of the former Gardner Museum of Architecture and Design, built in 1888 as the Quincy Free Public Library. After two years of planning and preparations, this building will become the new home for the Society's History Museum on the Square. With this move many of those "treasures" of local history collected over the past 119 years will again be displayed in the building at the corner of Fourth and Maine.
Lynn M. Snyder is a native of Adams County, a semi-retired archaeologist and museum researcher, former librarian and present library volunteer at the Illinois Veterans Home, and a Historical Society of Quincy and Adams County board member and volunteer.





