Few
successful men of Macoupin county deserve greater credit for what they
have accomplished than John Gwillim, who came to America from a foreign
land as a boy of seventeen and in the face of many difficulties has won
his way to a place of large responsibility. His farm is one of the most
attractive properties of its size in the county and he has just cause to
take pride in its neat and thrifty appearance, representing as it does
many years of patience and energetic application. He is a native of
Llangwm, Monmouthshire, England, born August 31, 1853, and is a son of
James Gwillim, who was born on the C. W. M. farm, in the parish of
Abbeydoor, Herefordshire, in 1825, and died February 28, 1901. The
mother, whose maiden name was Temperance Griffiths, was born in
Tylloydd, Llansoy Parish, Monmouthshire, in 1829. The Gwillim and
Griffiths families were both long established in Wales, but lived for
many generations in England.
James Gwillim, the father of our
subject, received his education in the public schools and continued on
his father’s farm until twenty-one years of age. He then engaged in work
upon a farm with his brother and two years later was married to
Temperance Griffiths. After his marriage he farmed on his own account
and, being a man of unusual energy and good business judgment, he was
remarkably successful. In 1881 he purchased twenty-five acres of land
for which he paid about seven hundred and fifty dollars an acre. In 1895
he increased his holdings by seventy acres, being also the owner of two
cottages. He was a deacon in the Episcopal church at Llansoy and was a
man of high standing and wide influence. In his family were ten
children: Elizabeth, who died at the age of eighteen years; Julia
Temperance, who is now living near Ross, in Herefordshire; John, of this
review; Alfred, who held the trophy as champion plowman of England for
twenty years and is now living near Ross, in Herefordshire; Clara, who
married Caleb Madley and lives on the Pill farm, at Magor,
Monmouthshire; Sarah, who was a school-teacher and died at the age of
thirty; Ellen, who died at the age of five years; Percy, who died in
infancy; George, who is a farmer of Shipman township, Macoupin county;
and Arthur, who lives at Magor, Monmouthshire.
John Gwillim was
reared under the paternal roof and received his education at Raglan,
which he obtained under some difficulties, as he was obliged to walk
four miles to school. Pie continued with his parents until seventeen
years of age and then came alone to America, being desirous of finding
out for himself concerning the possibilities in this country for an
ambitious young man. He spent three months at Penn Yan, New York, and
then returned home where he remained until March, 1871, when he crossed
the ocean once more, going direct to Virden, Illinois. He worked for
several months on a farm and then secured employment in a grain elevator
at Virden. During the winter following he engaged in coal mining. He
next turned his attention to farming and well repairing and applied
himself industriously until 1874, when he returned to his old home in
England and engaged in farming on his own account in Monmouthshire for
seven years, carrying on his operations on the Pencarrig farm, in Raglan
Parish. He returned to Virden with his wife and son in 1881 and went to
work in a meat market, also engaging in mining coal during the winter.
As an evidence of his frugality at this time it may be stated that in
eighteen months as a laborer he saved seven hundred and seventy-five
dollars besides supporting his family. In 1883 he removed to Wahoo,
Saunders county, Nebraska, and leased school land which he purchased in
1885. He was a resident of Nebraska for nine years, during which time he
engaged in farming and also in operating a threshing machine. He
disposed of his land in 1891 and returned to Virden, purchasing eighty
acres on section 24, Virden township. Later he acquired more land, until
he became the owner of two hundred and forty acres in one tract. His
land was underlaid with coal and proved a highly profitable investment,
as he disposed of the mining privileges for twenty dollars per acre. In
1905 he sold his farm and purchased two hundred and twenty-five acres in
Shipman township, later acquiring eighty acres adjoining, so that he
owned three hundred and five acres on sections 7, 8 and 9; he disposed
of eighty acres in 1911 and purchased 155 acres in Missouri, so that he
now owns three hundred and eighty acres. He has greatly improved the
place by tiling and remodeling and erecting buildings and fences,
setting out shade and ornamental trees, etc., making it one of the most
attractive homesteads in the township. He is an extensive stockfeeder
and also raises Poland China hogs and Polled Angus cattle.
On
January 10, 1874, Mr. Gwillim was married to Miss Anna Williams, whose
father lived upon the Dufferin farm at Llansoy, England, and was a
member of an old Welsh family. Two children were born to this union:
John Alfred, who married Selina Mortimer and is engaged in the
real-estate business at Shipman; and Thomas Albert, who is living at
home. The mother of these children died July 5, 1892, at the age of
forty-six years, and is buried in the cemetery at Virden. Early in 1894
Mr. Gwillim went to England and on April 4 of the same year was married
to Mrs. Elizabeth (Shepard) Pullen, widow of Philip Pullen and a
daughter of Richard and Susan (Green) Shepard, of Magor, Monmouthshire,
both of whom are now deceased. The father was a farmer and belonged to a
well known family whose members had lived in Monmouthshire for many
generations.
Mr. Gwillim is identified with the Mount Pleasant
Baptist church at Medora and takes an active interest in the Sunday
school,'being one of its most efficient and valued workers. Politically
he is an advocate of the principles of the republican party in national
elections, but in local affairs he votes irrespective of party,
selecting candidates that are in his opinion best qualified to fill the
offices irrespective of party ties. He has never aspired to the honors
or emoluments of public office, but served efficiently for nine years as
a member of the school board in Girard township. Thoroughly honest in
all his dealings, he is fully entitled to the high esteem in which he is
held by his friends and by all who know him in Macoupin county.
Extracted 14 Nov 2018 by Norma Hass from History of Macoupin County, Illinois: Biographical and Pictorial, by Charles A. Walker, published in 1911, Volume 2, pages 326-332.
Macoupin County ILGenWeb Copyright
Design by
Templates in Time
This page was last updated
07/01/2022