On this day in 1901

CORRESPONDENCE
DAYTON

Basil Green spent Monday and Tuesday in Chicago.

The Q. bridge carpenters have been repairing the bridge here.

Jesse Green has been visiting old acquaintances here for the past few days.

Archie Fleming, now of DeKalb, is visiting his brother, Wm. Fleming, for a few days.

Mike Helffrich of Ottawa, dispenser of fresh meats, is now doing our town every Friday.

Ed McClary has just purchased some of the finest potatoes, shipped direct from New York.

Nothing billed on the boards here this week except the raffle of a watch on Saturday night.

Monday was a very agreeable day for the teamsters hauling props, ties and cord wood, it being pay day.

Deputy Sheriff Ole Benson was here on Saturday summoning witnesses in the Channel v. Merrifield suit.

Arthur Ladd who has been acting as operator for the Q. R. R. at Leonore is visiting his family for a few days.

Jennie Barends who has been visiting her sister, Mrs. Winn Green, at Joliet for the past three weeks, returned home on Sunday.

Dr. Shaw of Ottawa was called by ‘phone on Sunday morning to attend Ed Emmons, who has been on the sick list for a few days past.

One of Uncle Sam’s Government Inspectors called on our postmaster and found everything in first class shape, after having edited all the accounts.

The weather here on Sunday was like a raffle, very uncertain. Rain in the morning, sunshine at noon, and a good old-fashioned snow storm in the afternoon.

Clarence Barnard, general relief agent for the Q road, came from Oswego on Monday, to fill the place made vacant by Mr. McBrearty being called to Ottawa on court business. Mr. McB. is now back attending to his duties again.

The good people of our little hamlet know a good paper when they read it. Another new subscriber handed in her name for the daily Free Trader and more to follow. Keep up the good work and you will be sure to get all the news in La Salle Co.

The Merrifield v. Channel controversy, which was called for trial in the circuit court on Monday afternoon, Nov. 25, was of short duration, the jury being out only twenty minutes. Verdict: No cause for action.

John Gibson, son-in-law of Basil Green, now a resident of Chicago, was stricken down on Monday with a paralytic stroke, and immediately taken to the hospital, where the doctors have no hope of his recovery.

Miss Maud and Ralph Green and G. G. Galloway, were initiated into the Mary E. Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star, at the Masonic Temple, Ottawa, on Tuesday night, Nov. 26th. Mrs. G. G. Galloway, who has been a member for sometime, witnessed the ceremony.

Charles Burch, while handing down 12-inch tile from the top of one of the kilns at the tile mill, accidentally let one drop, striking George Wolf squarely on the foot, causing a painful though not serious injury. George was compelled to lay off for a couple of days and is limping around, but expects to be all right in a few days.

Will wonders never cease, and right in the midst of our little burg! A new five column “medical monthly paper,” known as “The Dayton Banner,” and published expressly for Ed McClary. It contains sure-cures for every ill known to the medical profession and has a two-column ad of Ed’s on the last page. That’s right, Ed, nothing like advertising your stock in trade.1


  1. The Ottawa Free Trader, November 29, 1901, p. 12, col. 1

Pages from the Jesse Green Bible – Births

His family with his first wife, Isabella Trumbo

Jesse Green
Dec. 21st 1817

Isabella T. Green
Dec 7th 1822


John Byron Green               July 23rd 1844
Rollin Trumbo Green          Jan 31st 1847
Clara Isabella Green           Dec 21st 1849
Newton Mathias Green      May 6th 1852
William Douglas Green       Nov 14th, 1854


His family with his second wife, Hannah Rhoads Green

Hannah R Green
November 26th 1831


Thomas Henry              Jan 9th 1857
Joseph                           Nov. 29th, 1858
James Arthur                 Oct. 20th 1860
Cora                                Sept 21st 1862
Sarah                              July 1st 1864
Frank                             Nov 17th 1866
Jesse Alvin                     Oct 18th, 1868
Kent                                June 9th 1870
Infant Son                      March 2nd 1872
Mabel                             Sept. 23rd 1873

Today is the 231st anniversary of Barbara Grove Green’s birth

 

 

Barbara Grove Green

Died May 5th, 1886, at the age of ninety three years, five and a half months. She had been confined to bed for about two months, and gradually and gladly passed away like an infant going to sleep. It was her desire to cast off this earthly tabernacle and be present with her Lord.

She retained her faculties to the last, with the exception of her sight, of which she had been deprived for the past seven or eight years. She was never heard to murmur or complain of her misfortune, but on the contrary seemed cheerful and happy.

She was born in Shenandoah county, Virginia, November 15th, 1792. At the age of thirteen she, with her parents, removed to Licking county, Ohio, being in the year 1805, and lived there until the fall of 1829, when she and her companion, John Green and family, removed to this county. A few incidents of their journey will show the hardships and privations of those early pioneer days. We quote her own words from statements made by her to one of her grand daughters, who has recorded them:

“We started from Licking county, Ohio, on the first of November, 1829, for the state of Illinois. There were 24 in the company. Father had gone to Illinois the September before we started and bought land. He and three other men rode on horseback around by Cleveland and along the lakes. When they reached Chicago, where there were only two families besides the garrison, father bought some provisions and in paying for them pulled out quite a roll of bills. That night his brother, Wm. Green, dreamed there were robbers coming and woke the others up, but they refused to start out in the night just for a dream, and he went to sleep again only to dream the same thing again, and when he had dreamed it three times he told them they could stay there if they wanted to, he was going to leave; so they all started and soon after they saw three men following for the purpose of stealing they [sic] money.

“When we reached the ‘Wilderness,’ in Indiana, a man who lived on the edge of the woods told us it was impossible to go on, as the mud was so deep, unless we could travel on the wagons already stuck in the mud; but if we were foolish enough to try it, we must leave ‘those two smart little boys’ (Jesse and David), for we would surely freeze to death. But we did go on and the men cut a new road through the woods for sixty miles, about ten miles a day.

“Then, when we got to Cicero river, we had to take the wagons over with bed cords. One wagon, loaded with mill irons and blacksmith tools, was so heavy it tipped over, and we lost a good many things.

“Then the next place we came to was Sugar creek, and it was so high we had to pull the wagons over with ropes again and cut trees for us to walk on. Then there was a swamp next to the creek that the men had to carry the women over on their backs. Between Iroquois and Nettle creek there were five days the horses had nothing to eat, as the prairie was burnt, and they became so weak they got stuck in a ravine and could hardly pull the empty carriage out.

“One evening we had only bread and tea for supper, but that night father came back with corn and beef that he had obtained at Holderman’s Grove, and we were the happiest people you ever saw. We spent the next night at the Grove and the next day home, at what is known as William Dunavan’s farm.”

She lived in the town of Rutland something over a year when she removed to Dayton, being at this place at the time of the Black Hawk war in 1832. Of this war she says: “On the 16th of May, 1832, the girls and I were at the spring, near where the feeder bridge now stands, when Eliza came down on horseback and told us that the Indians were coming, and we would have to go to Ottawa immediately. Then we went to a place a couple of miles below Ottawa and stayed there all night, and the third day returned home again. This was Sunday, and the next day the men made a stockade around the house out of plank. After it was finished they tried it to see if a bullet would go through it, and as it did, they hung feather beds all around. There were about sixty people here at the time, and we were so crowded that they had to sleep on tables, under the beds and all over the house.”

Mr. Green had intended to remain in his improvised fort during the war, but at about twelve o’clock at night, hearing of the massacre on Indian creek, and fearing there might be too many Indians, all those in the fort went to Ottawa. “When we got to Ottawa, there was no fort there, only a log cabin on the south side of the river, but they soon built a fort on top of the hill. We went to the fort, but there was so much confusion there that we had the log house moved up on the hill and lived in it. The next day a company of soldiers from the southern part of the state passed through Ottawa on the way up the river.”

Grandma Green bore all the hardships and privations incident to the settlement of two new countries and lived to see the development of this vast prairie country far, very far beyond her anticipations. When she came here she supposed that in time she might see the country settled around the skirts of timber, but never in her early days did she anticipate seeing the prairies settled up.

Occasional


  1. The Ottawa (Illinois) Free Trader, May 22, 1886, p. 5, col. 2

A Tragic Shopping Trip

Violetta Henderson

On 16 Nov 1883, Lettie Henderson and her mother set off on a shopping expedition to buy her wedding outfit. They took the Fox River branch of the C B & Q railroad from their home in Wedron, intending to shop in Streator. When the train reached Otter Creek, about 3 miles north of Streator, a coal train stood on the tracks and a danger signal had been posted to warn the passenger train, which came to a standstill. The following freight train, however, was not properly signalled and crashed into the rear car of the passenger train. Lettie and her mother were killed outright, along with two others, and two more men died by nightfall. Seven others were injured.

The Streator Free Press, 24 Nov 1883, p. 1

This clipping mentions Lettie’s engagement to John Green of Dayton. At this time in 1883 there were two John Greens living in Dayton. John, son of Jesse and Hannah Green was only 13 years old, so John, son of David and Mary Green is the more likely candidate. At that time he was 28 years old and unmarried. There is no family record indicating that he was once engaged to Lettie, and the newspaper could, of course, be in error, but he would have known her. Her name appears in the descriptions of the social life of Dayton at the time.

The Ottawa Free Trader, 24 Nov 1883, p. 4

Following the accident, the two were buried in the same grave in the West Serena Cemetery.

The Streator Free Press, 26 Apr 1884, p.1.

After the accident, the railroad company was held liable for the accident and paid monetary settlements to the relatives of the deceased. Mr. Henderson collected $6,000 dollars, $4,000 for his wife and $2,000 for his daughter.

Violetta G. “Lettie” Henderson was the daughter of Alexander S. Henderson and his wife, Atha D. Curyea. Alexander was born in North Carolina about 1835. He came to Illinois in the 1850s, and in 1860 was married to Atha Curyea, a sister of C. J. Curyea of Ottawa.. Their daughter, Violetta, was born November 5th, 1860, in Dayton township.

The Centennial Reenactment

Covered WagonThe following comes from the hand-written notes of Maud Green about the Dayton exhibit in the La Salle county centennial celebration.

The 24 people who came from Licking County, Ohio in 1829 to La Salle County, Illinois

  1. John Green
  2. Barbara Grove Green
  3. Eliza Green (m Wm Dunavan)
  4. Nancy Green (m Albert Dunavan)
  5. Jesse Green
  6. David Green
  7. Katherine Green (m Geo. Dunavan)
  8. Joseph Green d. 1854
  9. Rachel Green (m Geo W. Gibson)
  10. David Grove
  11. Anna Howser Grove d. 1849
  12. Elizabeth Grove (m. David Conard)
  13. Henry Brumbach
  14. Elizabeth Pitzer Brumbach
  15. David Brumbach
  16. Rezin DeBolt
  17. Emma Grove DeBolt d. 1843
  18. Barbara DeBolt d. 1851 (m David Conard)
  19. Jacob Grove [Grove crossed out in pencil and DeBolt written in]
  20. Samuel Grove
  21. Joseph Grove d. 1858
  22. Jacob Kite
  23. Alex. McKey
  24. Harvey Shaver

Of these 24 – two returned to Ohio.  Of the 22 who remained, only seven died in 41 years.
“Jacob Kite never married.  A sort of Nimrod, he lived by hunting and went West.” (Baldwin)  He is the man who refused to eat when the provisions ran short on the way from Ohio, as he was afraid the women and children would not get enough food.  Thinking to tempt him, they put eatables in a box on the back of the wagon where he was in the habit of walking, but they were untouched.


List of people who represented the 1929 party and rode in a covered wagon drawn by oxen in the Dayton exhibit at the La Salle Co centennial in 1931.

John Green                  40        Lyle Green
Barbara Green             37       Mabel Myers
Eliza                            15         Ruth Mary Green
Nancy                          14        Helen Myers
Jesse                            12        Lewis Myers
David                          10        Kenneth Green
Katie                           7          Ruth Van Etten
Rachel                         3          Ann Van Etten
Joseph                         1          John Van Etten
Rezin DeBolt              23        Floyd Smith
Emma Grove DeBolt  19        Lona DeBolt
Barbara                        3 months
David Grove               25        Henry Grove
Anna Grove                24        Nellie Grove Geen
Elizabeth                     1          & Louise Geen
Henry Brumbach                    Howard Smith
Eliz. Pitzer Brumbach             Myrna McMichael
David Brumbach                     Boy baby
Young men
Joseph Grove                          Billy Grove
Samuel Grove                         Elias Trumbo
Jacob Kite                                Donald Gardner
Alex McKey                             Donald Ainsley
Harvey Shaver                        Howard Shaver
Jacob Grove                            Leon Maynard