Rufus Brown: A Forgotten Pioneer

Rufus Brown was a pioneer of Pike
and Adams Counties. He settled Pike County with the Ross brothers. He was an
early acquaintance of John Wood. Those men and their families are well known
among local historians as first settlers. In Past and Present of Pike County Illinois
, Massie writes about these
earliest pioneers, the Ross brothers, Rufus Brown, John Wood, Willard Keyes,
saying, “… all will live in history as our first and most illustrious pioneer
citizens.” All were remembered and written about except Rufus Brown.
Brown was born in Stephentown, New
York in 1797. In 1820 he and his wife Nancy traveled from New York by covered
wagons with Major Jeremiah Rose, his wife Margaret, who was Rufus’ sister, and
their daughter Lucy. They wintered in Alton, Illinois where they met other
families who had come to settle in the Military Tract between the Illinois and
the Mississippi Rivers.
Brown and William Ross purchased 320 acres in the newly formed Pike County. In February 1821 the Browns and other families followed a rough trail up to recently named Ross Settlement. The future site of Atlas in Pike County now belonged to them.
Within the first month some of the settlers
died of what they called “the great pestilential sickness” including William
Ross’ wife. She was the first recorded
death in Pike County. With so few people left in the settlement, Ross decided
to return to New York to find a new wife. He was accompanied by Brown who needed
to settle his affairs in his home state before returning to Pike County.
The 1822 Illinois Legislature
defined the boundaries of the county, appointed commissioners and suggested
they establish what was called “a permanent seat of justice.” Ross and Brown had surveyed and laid out the
town of Atlas that same year. They deeded an acre of their land for a court
house. Brown built the first tavern in the county where the first court was
held in May 1823. The first July 4th celebration in Atlas was that
year. After the celebration, Rufus Brown fed about 50 people in his tavern.
Brown and his wife Nancy left Atlas and moved to Quincy which would soon become the county seat of the newly established Adams County. His travelling companions from New York in 1820, Jeremiah and Margaret Rose, had previously moved to Quincy and lived with John Wood in his cabin.
As he did in Pike County, Brown
established the first tavern in Quincy in 1826 on the southeast corner of Fourth
and Maine Streets. The corner lot was 99x198 feet and cost $27. The lot had the
distinction of being the highest price paid for a lot on the public square. He paid $10 for his yearly license, while the
county commissioners established the rates for his wares. A meal cost 25 cents,
lodging 12 ½ cents, ½ pint of whiskey 12 ½ cents, ½ pint of French brandy 37 ½
cents, and bottle of wine $1. Although no illustrations exist, the tavern has
been described as a large log house which also served as a hotel. John Tillson
described the tavern as the “brag hotel of the place.”
In addition, the Brown tavern housed
the first mercantile business in Quincy when Asher Anderson from Maryland began
selling groceries, fabrics, and “domestics” from the bar room the same year it
opened.
By 1829, frame structures were
being built in Quincy. Robert Tillson erected a two story frame building,
Willard Keyes built a frame tavern by his cabin under the hill, and Brown enlarged
his business by adding a frame addition to his tavern on the east side next to
his family’s log home.
Across Fourth Street from the Brown
tavern was the log cabin of Peter Felt. A group of citizens met there and
organized a church in 1830. These first church goers were Baptists,
Congregationalists, and Presbyterians. Rufus and Nancy Brown were in that group
and services were held in their home and the small log court house. Two years
later the congregation built a chapel called the Lord’s Barn and the church
became Congregational. For seven years,
this First Congregational Church met in the Lord’s Barn before building a more
substantial church at Fifth and Jersey Streets.
When Cholera first struck the
community in 1833, a group of citizens organized to prevent the spread of the
disease and to help the sick. The town was divided into three districts with five
men responsible for the welfare of their district during the epidemic. Brown and four others were responsible for the
south district.
By the time Brown decided to sell
the lot with his tavern, there were two other hotels in Quincy, the Land Office
Hotel and the Steamboat Hotel. John Tillson had the most ambitious plan. He bought
the Brown lot in 1837 for $8,500 and began work on the Quincy House Hotel. It opened in 1838 on that same southeast
corner of Fourth and Maine Streets where the Brown tavern stood in 1826. The
Quincy House Hotel was destroyed by fire in 1883. A few years later the Newcomb
Hotel opened in the same location.
Brown was among the small group of
Quincy Abolitionist who were active in the 1830s and 1840s. In 1840, Rufus and
Nancy Brown donated two pieces of property; one was 11 acres and the other 40
acres to a group of men to hold in trust for David Nelson’s Mission Institute
at 24th and Maine Streets. This
same group of men, including Rufus Brown, built homes or properties to rent
around the Institute and the area became known for its “nest of abolitionists.”
In 1854 a group was organized in
Quincy called The Nebraska Colonization Company whose members travelled to the Nebraska
Territory to find land for a town. They established Fontanelle. The Brown family moved to Fontanelle and was
one of the founding families of the Congregational Church there in 1856. Mrs.
Nancy Brown died in Fontanelle in 1860 with Rufus following in 1862.
Sources
Ancestry.com. U.S. General Land Office Records, 1776-2015 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA:
Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2008.
Ankrom, Reg, “Atlas Shrugged Off as Thriving City in Western Illinois,” Quincy Herald Whig, April 21,
2018.
Asbury, Henry. Reminiscences of Quincy Illinois . Quincy, IL: D. Wilcox and Sons, 1882.
Bell, John T., History of Washington County Nebraska . Omaha NE, Herald Printing House, 1876.
“First Congregational Church.” Quincy Herald Whig , January 23, 1972.
The History of Adams County, Illinois . Chicago: Murray, Williamson & Phelps, 1879.
“The Quincy House.” Quincy Whig , November 17, 1838, 2.
Richardson, William A. Jr., “Dr. David Nelson and His Times,” Journal of the Illinois State Historical
Society, Vol. XIII, Springfield, Illinois: Illinois State Historical Society, 1921.
Thompson Jess M., The Jess M. Thompson Pike County History as Printed in Installments in The Pike
County Republican, Pittsfield, Illinois , 1935-1937. Pittsfield: The Pike County Republican, 1967.
Thompson, Jessie M., “Pike County Settled 1820: 100 Years Ago,” Journal of the Illinois State Historical
Society, Vol 13. Champaign: University of Illinois Press, 1920, 74.
Tillson, John, and William H. Collins, History of the City of Quincy . Chicago: The S. J. Clarke Publishing
Company, 1905.
Massie, Capt. M. D., Past and Present of Pike County Illinois . Chicago: The S. J. Clarke Publishing
Company, 1906.





