A AI \ \ << ~ AN \ XY \\ ‘yoOouU peaAreyg Parks & Memorials of the STATE OF ILLINOIS Under the Supervision of The Department of Public Works and Buildings Hon. Frank O. Lowden, Governor Frank I. Bennett, Director Thomas G. Vennum, Asst. Director Frank D. Lowman, Supt. of Parks Compiled by C. M. SERVICE [Printed by authority of the State of Ilinois.] ScHNEPP & BARNES, PRINTERS SPRINGFIELD, ILL. + Si ih ssshabiandar etecacmigaatct cee eee lea ecru i ot msi srecemmuteenerenrewinmeamineumncomimciimnimnndle | aimee ransom cme eauene : Franco a} O} Z|] OF (Lp > fo) TABLE OF CONTENTS. PAGE. 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Four million acres, in thirteen different localities, have now been set aside by the Na- tional Government for park purposes. But the people in a number of states have been more directly benefited through the establishment of state parks. Among the states which have been conspicuous in their legislation for this pur- pose are New York, California, Wisconsin, Massachusetts, Michi- gan, Ohio and Illinois. Illinois is developing a comprehensive system of State parks. The movement had its feeble beginning within the last decade but the Administrative Code originated by Governor Lowden furnished the impetus that has accomplished important results. Until two years ago the parks owned by the state were administered by a commission which scattered its efforts. In 1917 the Administrative Code placed the supervision of parks in the hands of the Depart- ment of Public Works and Buildings which began immediately to map out a progressive program. The Illinois plan has as its end the improvement or reclama- tion of every important spot in the state that is hallowed by his- toric memories. Many such places have already been taken over by the State and no effort is being spared to preserve them in their original grandeur. The newest accessions in park properties is Old Salem, the early home of Abraham Lincoln, located on the Sangamon River, near Petersburg and. Vandalia Court House, the first capitol after the admission of Illinois to the Union. Agitation is on foot for the purchase of Campbell’s Island, six miles east of Moline; the White Pine forest in Ogle county and Cahokia Mounds, a short distance from East St. Louis. Total appropriations of the Fifty-first General Assembly for improvements and maintenance of State Parks exceed $100,000.00. Of this sum $1,500.00 is to be spent for a marker to fix the location of Fort Creve Coeur near Peoria. It was at that point where LaSalle and Tonti established a temporary fortress. The historic spots and parks now under the supervision of the Department of Public Works and Buildings are: Lincoln Monu- ment, Lincoln Homestead, Vandalia Court House, Douglas Monu- ment, Fort Massac, Fort Chartres, Old Salem Park and Starved Rock Park. Illinois parks are surpassed by those of no other state and the program mapped out gives promise of greater developments. The State Park movement is well started and the conservation of nat- ural beauty spots and sites of historic interest is appealing strongly to the lover of nature and the patriotic people of Illinois. ‘souqdeyO WOT PIO 3B suUlzeseyy 9 FORT CHARTRES. ORT CHARTRES is located in Randolph County, about three miles north of the village of Prairie du Roches. Early Illinois history centers about Fort Chartres, the hub of French influence in the central west for almost half a century be- fore it was wrested from them in 1865 by the British. The first fort, constructed in an alluvial bottom, three-fourths of a mile from the Mississippi River, in the northwest corner of Randolph County, was built of wood with a stockade of timber. The second fort, con- structed of limestone quarried from the river bluffs, was located a mile above the old fort and half a mile from the river. Fort de Chartres, named for the Duke de Chartres, son of the regent of France, was built to give protection to the Company of the West or Mississippi Company, organized in 1717 and holding sway for fourteen years. A village grew up rapidly between the fort and the river and Jesuit missionaries established the church of St. Anne. Later Phillippe Francis de Renault, director general of mining operations of the Company of the West, brought over two hundred French miners and five hundred Guinea slaves, introducing negro slavery into what was later Illinois, although Indian slavery was not uncommon. In 1831 the India Company, successors to the Company of the West, retroceded possession to the crown and Louis XV proclaimed jurisdiction. Louisiana was separated from Canada and Illinois was organized as a dependency commanded by Captain Pierre D’Artagnette, later burned to death by the Indians. War was declared between France and England: in 1744 and the colonies became embroiled. It »was, in, 1765. that’ ‘the French Fleur de Lis was drawn down and the, Red Ctoks of St George unfurled. linge rer ier) freshe} tyyashed* “away the bastion of the fort and the garrisons deserted it, going to Kaskgskiaj whict i in later years fell be- fore George Rogers Clark and his valiant’men? After 1772 the fort never was occupied except by indians. In 1778 Congress reserved from entry or sale a tract of land a mile square, including Fort Chartres and its buildings. The following account of the fort was given by ————— Pitman, an English traveler who visited it during the year 1765. “The fort is an irregular quadrangle; the sides of the exterior polygon are four hundred and ninety feet. It is built of stone and plastered over, and is only designed as a defense against the Indians, the walls being two feet two inches thick and pierced with loop holes at regular distances, and with two port-holes for cannon in the faces, and two in the flanks of each bastion; the ditch has never been finished; the entrance to the fort is through a very handsome rustic gate; within the wall is a small banquette raised three feet for the men to stand on when they fire through the loop holes. The buildings within the fort are the commandant’s and commissary’s houses, the magazine of stores, corps de garde and two barracks; these occupy the square. Within the gorges of the bastions are a powder maga- zine, a bake house, a prison; in the lower floor of which are four dungeons, and in the upper, two rooms, and an out house belonging to the commandant. The commandant’s house is thirty-two yards long and ten broad; it con- 10 tains a kitchen, a dining room, a bed chamber, one small room, five closets for servants and a cellar. The commissary’s house (now occupied by officers) is built in the same line as this, its proportions and distribution or apartments are the same. Opposite these are the storehouse and guard- house, they are each thirty yards long and eight broad; the former consists ot two large store rooms (under which is a large vaulted cellar) and a large room, a bed chamber, and a closet for the store-keeper; the latter, of the soldiers and officers guardrooms, a chapel, a bed chamber and closet for the chaplain and an artillery store-room. The lines of barracks have never been finished; they at present consist of two rooms each for officers, and three rooms for soldiers; they are good, spacious rooms of twenty-two feet square and have betwixt them a small passage. There are fine spacious lofts over each building which reach from end to end; these are made use of to lodge regimental stores, working and entrenching tools, ete. The bank of the Mississippi, next the fort is continually falling in, being worn away by the current, which has been turned from its course by a sand bank now increased to a considerable island covered with willows; many experi- ments have been made to stop this growing evil but to no purpose. When the fort was begun in the year 1756, it was a good half mile from the water’s side; in the year 1766 it was but eighty paces; eight years ago the river was fordable to the island; the channel is now forty feet deep. In the year 1764 there were about forty famlies in the village near the fort and a parish church served by a Franciscan friar dedicated to St. Anne. In the follow- ing year, when the English took possession of the country, they abandoned their houses except three or four poor families, and settled at the villages on the west side of the Mississippi, choosing to continue under the French government.” Plans are now under way by the Department of Public Works and Buildings to restore the old fortress from the native rock which is available in large quantities in the near vicinity. Crumbling walls of the second fort still remain and the ancient powder magazine remains almost intact. Reports mention the fort as the best constructed forti- fication in Ametica. ; ‘he inasonry. was so well done that the original walls are now easily ‘traceable. Peiailed: