Politsch stores: Hub of neighborhood and local lore

The ghosts of fur trappers, a tinsmith, a Civil War veteran, hardware proprietors and outdoorsmen may lurk about the stretch of Eighth Street from Jefferson toward Washington. For more than 100 years, the shops there were a center of commercial and social activity for the southsiders of Quincy.
Most notable were Politsch Hardware Co., owned and operated by Charles Politsch and later his son Leroy "Lee" Politsch, and its successor Lee's Sports. The stores became well-known gathering places for locals and a base camp of sorts later for Lee's outdoor activities and hobbies shared among a wide circle of friends.
The Politsch family's stores were not the first businesses on the site.
In 1869 Ernst Heidenreich purchased the lots at 836 and 838 S. Eighth from Quincy founder John Wood. In 1883 Heidenreich sold the lots to William H. Pieper, who planned to construct a new commercial building. Pieper had been operating a tinsmith shop at the northwest corner of Eighth and Jefferson (just down the block on South Eighth Street) since about 1878. He made and sold teakettles, wash boilers, tin cans, lightning rods, among other metalworks.
In about 1889 Pieper erected a 40-foot square building with a glass storefront and divided the first floor into two spaces. The second floor was a storeroom accessed by a hand-cranked elevator. The building, which stands today, was called an "ironclad" because the exterior was covered with sheets of galvanized metal. (It was painted yellow then as it is today.)
The first occupants were Anna and Martha Pieper, who operated a notions store in the north portion of the building, selling sewing items such as fabrics and tools. A year later Wemhoener & Schild Hardware opened in the south half. Henry Schild, one of the proprietors, had served in the 27th Illinois Volunteer Infantry during the Civil War. Later, in 1899 Will Pieper Jr., son of the building's owner, opened a shoe store in the north half.
In 1912 or 1913 the Pieper family extensively renovated the building. An apartment and a third-story attic replaced the upstairs storeroom and included distinctive double bay windows, among other changes. Will Pieper and his family moved into the apartment.
In 1914 Wemhoener & Schild sold their hardware business in the south half of the building to Charles W. Politsch, who was a store employee at the time, and his partner Will Pieper. Politsch became the manager and Pieper the secretary/treasurer for the store now known as Politsch Hardware Co. Schild stayed on as an employee, regaling customers and his colleagues with stories of his narrow escapes from danger in the Civil War. Will Pieper continued to own and operate his shoe store separately on the north half.
In 1923 Politsch bought the entire property and business from the Pieper family. In January 1924 he moved into the apartment with his wife Emma and son Leroy. Will Pieper sold his shoe store and moved to California in 1928. When the shoe store later closed, Politsch remodeled the building, tearing out the partition between the stores to make a single, larger store.
Throughout the store's existence, to supplement his hardware business, Politsch also bought and sold raw furs brought in by trappers. It seemed natural for Politsch Hardware to expand into sporting goods, archery and fishing tackle.
Charles Politsch's son Leroy, known as Lee, served in the Army Air Corps, then in 1946 returned to Quincy and joined his father in the hardware business. Both Charles and Lee Politsch enjoyed outdoors activities, which dovetailed nicely with their business. Lee was a founder and president of Wenois Field Archers Club and actively canoed, among other outdoors interests.
In about 1956 Lee became intrigued by a discovery and mystery that continued to occupy his attention and become a topic of conversation with many friends and acquaintances who visited the store or his home until his death – the Ellington Stone. The artifact, now available for viewing at the Quincy Museum at 16th and Maine, is a two-inch-thick slab of limestone, a foot high and eight inches across. It bears two crosses, the letters "IHS," and the year 1671, and was found, according to accounts, in the 1920s in Cedar Creek in Ellington Township by a farmer named Sam Cook.
Lee spent the remainder of his life investigating and promoting the stone as evidence of the exploration of the Mississippi Valley by a French explorer, possibly Robert Cavalier de LaSalle, two years before the widely recognized first European exploration of the river valley by Jacques Marquette and Louis Joliet.
In 1967 Lee took over the store from his father, who continued to be present in the store until shortly before his death in 1974. Market conditions had changed dramatically since Charles bought the business in 1914, and Lee had to adapt. He decided to focus on the sporting goods portion of the business, so in 1970 Politsch Hardware became Lee's Sports.
Lee built a new building for his store at 834 S. Eighth, immediately to the north of the old hardware store building. The basement included a 60-foot archery practice range and storage. He continued to carry some hardware items such as corn shucking pegs and double-thumb shucking mittens, cutlery, buck saws, and kerosene lamps. His sports line included archery items, canoes, toboggans, shotguns, shells, hunting clothes, and fishing equipment and supplies.
On May 29, 1982, he closed Lee's Sports after he recognized changes in the market for sporting goods and the investment needed to modernize his business. He sold off inventory slowly and quietly over time with regular customers. Lee then converted the store into his residence and continued to pursue his outdoors activities, model train hobby, and fascination with the Ellington Stone.
Lee memorialized his life stories and recollections of commercial and social life at Eighth and Jefferson in his collection of Christmas letters titled, "One Man's Life: Observations and Joys" by Leroy J. Politsch (2006). The book is available in the library of the Historical Society of Quincy and Adams County. He died in July 2008.
In 2009 the property at 834, 836 and 838 S. Eighth was sold to Lisa Wigoda, who has updated the wiring, plumbing and insulation, and refinished 3,000 square feet of wood floors in the old hardware store. She also installed a new wall between 836 and 838 S. Eighth, where there had been a wall originally. Her photography studio is located in the north half of the old hardware store, and an artist rents the south half. Lee's Sports is presently a residence.
The property will be on the Quincy Preserves 2014 Behind Closed Doors Tour.
Hal Oakley is a lawyer with Schmiedeskamp, Robertson, Neu & Mitchell LLP, a civic volunteer and former president of the Historical Society. He has authored several legal articles and edited, compiled and/or contributed to books and articles on local history.
Sources
"Author checking Ellington Stone." Quincy Herald-Whig. March 15, 1996.
"Ellington Stone analysis yields no answers." Quincy Herald-Whig. November 12, 2007.
"Ellington Stone – Slab of limestone may cause river history to be rewritten." Quincy Herald-Whig. July 7, 1985.
"End of era in sight at Politsch corner." Quincy Herald-Whig. September 29, 1981.
"Friend finds home in historic building." Quincy Herald-Whig. December 18, 2009.
Landrum, Carl. "The Pieper building on South Eighth." Quincy Herald-Whig. October 20, 1991.
Landry, Genosky, ed. People's History of Quincy and Adams County, Illinois, a Sesquicentennial History. Quincy, IL: Jost & Kiefer Printing Co., 1976.
"Leroy Politsch obituary." Quincy Herald-Whig. July 28, 2008.
"Politsch hit bull's eye spreading joy of life." Quincy Herald-Whig. August 2, 2008.
Politsch, Leroy J. One Man's Life – Observations and Joys. Compiled and produced by Carol Hillebrenner. Quincy, IL: n.p., 2006.
Politsch, Leroy J. "The Ellington Stone." Additional notes and letters, unpublished paper, spring 1988. In manuscript file, HSQAC, Quincy, IL.
"Romancing The (Ellington) Stone." Quincy Herald-Whig. May 7, 2001.
"Romancing the Stone." Quincy Herald-Whig. August 13, 2006.
"Strangely Engraved Stone, Found Near Quincy, Offers Link to Historical Facts." Quincy Herald-Whig, mid-1940s.





