Peoria County, Illinois Genealogy
Trails
TIMBER TOWNSHIP
Peoria County, Illinois
|
1896 Atlas Map |
Timber township forms the extreme
southern point of the county, and was originally chiefly covered with
timber. The north part is rolling; the southern part is bottom lands.
The Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw railroad, passes across the lower portion,
and opens to market some valuable lands. Timber township is settled by
an industrious and energetic class of citizens, who have made some of
the best farm improvements in Peoria county. It is well watered and
rolling, and is well adapted to stock and grain raising. One of the old
settlers asserts that they have not had a failure in crops for
forty-five years.
It is claimed that a man by the name of Daniel
Hinkle was the first settler in the township. Mr. G. laid out the town of Glassford, December 9,
1868. The first name given to it was Glascoe, but it was afterwards
changed for the reason that there was another town by that name in the
State. The town contains two general stores, one Baptist church, a good
school-house, two blacksmith shops, one flouring and saw mill, two
shoemaker shops, a warehouse and one wagon maker shop. The first
school-house, says Mrs. G., was a small log building near Dry Run,
16x18, with greased paper for windows. The benches were made of slabs
turned flat side up with pins for legs. Here some of the best people in
the township got their education. Kingston, formerly Palmyra, is situated on the Illinois river, and was laid out by James Monroe. The chief business is coal mining. Source: The History of Peoria County, Illinois,
Johnson & Company, Chicago, 1880. |
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Peoria County, IL Genealogy Trails
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11-25-2006