Peoria County, Illinois
RADNOR TOWNSHIP
[TOWN TEN NORTH, RANGE
SEVEN EAST.]
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1896 Atlas Map |
RADNOR TOWNSHIP In early times the territory included in this township was attached to Kickapoo precinct for election and other purposes. Under the law providing for township organization, the name Radnor was proposed for this municipality by Evan Evans, the first supervisor, after Radnor, Pennsylvania, and Radnorshire, Wales, the home of his ancestors, and the name was adopted. To a man named Miller is ascribed the honor of building and occupying the first cabin in this township. The Miller cabin was probably built about the latter part of 1832, or early part of 1833 ; and until 1835, if he remained here that long, he was " monarch of all he surveyed." In 1835, a number of persons came and founded homes. Erastus Peat, Griffith Dickison, and some other members of the Dickison family, were the next settlers after Miller, but the date of their settlement is not easily accessible. They probably came about 1834-5. John L. Wakefield moved over from Kickapoo township about 1835-6, and located on section 18, his present home. George D. Harlan, the Dunlaps, Calvin Blake, Griffith Dickison, Daniel Corbert, Elihu Pratt, Daniel Robinson, Robert Cline, Jedediah Hitchcock, Moses Harlan, William Gifford, and Harvy Still-man, came in 1837. The first precinct election was held at the house of Alva Dunlap, on the northwest quarter of section 14. Richard Scholes is reported as the first justice of the peace. The first couple married was George McMillan and Miss Phoebe Hill. The first birth was in the family of Henry Martin, on the southeast quarter of section 35, in 1836. The first death was that of Henry Martin the same year. The first post office was known as Orange Prairie, and was located at the residence of Enoch Huggins, who was the postmaster, on section 36. That post office was discontinued some years since, and was succeeded by the post office at Dunlap, Miss Frances Dunlap, postmistress. This is the only post office in the township. The first schools were taught in the Summer of 1837, and
were subscription schools. These schools commenced almost
simultaneously. One of them was taught by Miss Mary Twitchell, in a log
building on the Gifford place. The other school was taught by Miss
Phoebe Oline, in a small building on the Wakefield place, on section 18.
From the time of these primitive schools to the present, the educational
interests have not been allowed to languish. Schools were carefully and
steadily maintained in every neighborhood-in every part of the township
where there were children enough to make a school. Sometimes they were
taught in rooms belonging to private houses, and sometimes in houses
that had been vacated for better ones. At last the township was
districted, and public school-houses were built, until now there are
nine as handsome school-houses in Radnor township as in any other
political division in the county. Each district is composed of four
sections, and the school-houses are located, as nearly as may be, at the
adjoining corners of these sections. They are ail supplied with modern
furniture, and made as comfortable every way as possible. School is
maintained about nine months in each of them.
Source: The History of Peoria County,
Illinois, Johnson & Company, Chicago, 1880. |