Quincy to 1857: Change and taxes

A person could have stood on the same spot on the Mississippi riverbank at various times from 1787 to 1825, and accurately described it as "Northwest Territory" in 1787, "St. Clair County" in 1790, "Indiana Territory" in 1800, "Illinois Territory" in 1809, "Madison County" in 1812, "State of Illinois" in 1818, "Pike County" in 1821, and "Adams County" in 1825. Some of those designations would have overlapped. Since 1825, the location has been Quincy, in the County of Adams, in the State of Illinois.
In 1787, just a few years after the end of the American Revolution, Congress designated the land between the Appalachians, the Ohio River, the Mississippi River, and the Great Lakes as the Northwest Territory, and the governor named the first county St. Clair, after himself. In 1800, the eastern-most part of St. Clair County had enough population to become designated as the Ohio Territory, and most of the remaining land to the Mississippi became the Indiana Territory. In 1809, the western half of the Indiana Territory was designated as the Illinois Territory. As parts of the Northwest Territory gained population, they became the states of Ohio (1803), Indiana (1816), Illinois (1818), Michigan (1837), and parts of Wisconsin (1838) and Minnesota (1848). Before the British were finally expelled in the War of 1812, however, few settlers came to the area between the Illinois and Mississippi Rivers.
On March 14, 1812, the governor of the vast Illinois Territory signed the bill to create the county of Madison to include much of the land between the Indiana line and the Mississippi River. Two months later, on May 6, 1812, an Act of Congress created a Military Bounty Land Tract of the land between the Mississippi River and the Illinois River. Bounties were 160-acre land grants the federal government awarded to veterans of the War of 1812. Some veterans moved west to settle their land, but many others sold their bounty grants and land speculation was rampant. The Illinois Bounty Land Tract was surveyed in 1815 and 1816. In 1821, a large section of Madison County was designated as Pike County, which included that land from the Illinois River to the Mississippi, and thereby, thousands of acres of Bounty Lands, including what would still later become Adams County and Quincy.
The first cabin at what became Quincy was constructed in 1822 on the river bank in what was then Pike County. By the time Adams County was formally organized out of Pike County just three years later, however, streets had been laid out on the bank and the bluff, and a square of property on the high land had been designated as John's Square or John's Prairie, after the community's founder, John Wood. It later became Washington Park.
On Nov. 16, 1975, the "From Quincy's Past" column by Carl Landrum in The Quincy Herald-Whig was titled, "A glance back into hotel history." In the first sentence, Landrum reported that he had found an article from the Jan. 19, 1857, Quincy Daily Whig so interesting, he was choosing to reprint it in its entirety. It's a boon for historians that he did, because today, the Quincy Public Library's exhaustive collection of microfilm of Quincy's newspaper articles all the way back to 1835 does not include that particular one, but Landrum's article does.
The article Landrum quoted has no author given or citation of sources, but it described the changes that continued to happen in the heart of Quincy around John's Square/Washington Park from its founding in 1825 to 1857.
The original 1857 article's author declared, "To those who take a glance back at Quincy as she used to be, and then look upon what she is now, the change is truly marvelous." He reported that the location chosen to build a city hall was a hill that had been a favorite sledding site for local boys, across the street from a pond of sufficient size and depth for ice skating.
That anonymous writer explained that before 1857, the town's newspaper offices changed addresses frequently. He described in detail the various locations of his employer, The Quincy Daily Whig, over the years. He said its publication began in a frame house on the east side of "the square," behind Levi B. Allen's saddle shop. From there, it moved to the upstairs of the building next door, which was west of Weber's Grocery. The city's other newspaper, the Herald, was being published next door.
That anonymous article and other old sources indicate that the Whig next moved to its permanent location on Fourth between Maine and Hampshire, and the Herald set up in the second story of the Campbell and Weisenberger Building and Post Office at 55 Fourth Street (old numbering).Numerous other moves followed for the Herald: first to third story of the same building, then to the previous Whig office, then to the Thayer Building at the southwest corner of Fourth and Maine, then to the Quincy House (later the Newcomb Hotel) on Maine, then back to the Thayer Building. Landrum noted in an insert that the Herald was occupying the Thayer Building when it burned in 1870. After that, the paper finally moved to the permanent location of the combined Herald-Whig on Fourth Street.
Of course, where structures were built and businesses operated, taxes were collected. Historical accounts indicate that the first Adams County Sheriff collected the first taxes in 1826. "It amounted to the magnificent sum of $48.25 to which was added $1.00 license fee from Rufus Brown's tavern and $6.00 for two fines, making a grand total in taxes for the year of $55.25."
In early Quincy, the old adage about the two things that are always certain might be accurately worded, "CHANGE and taxes."
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.





