Unless you know where
Greenridge was located, you could not find it today. The community was
built at the turn of the century and was gone by the 1920's. A bustling
little community with the green houses built by a mining company.
Greenridge was located between Nilwood and Girard, north of Nilwood
about two miles on Route #4. The community was mostly located on the
west side of Route #4, and the mine was located on the east side "apiece"
from Route #4. Picture of Greenridge houses (no longer standing) provided by Carolynn
Jones Bettis. All rights reserved.
James Bullough Lansing was born James Martini on
January 14, 1902, in Greenridge.
Contributed by Carolynn Jones Bettis
1941 Jun 13
Your letter received and hasten to
answer same as best I can - and with happy remembrance of "School Days".
Just across the road from the farm I own, the first house was staked
off at 9 o'clock, October 22, 1894, just one hour before the first
accident at the mine, death of Rollin McGhee, who fell into the pit
while hoisting coal. The village of 65 houses was built and all painted
green as was a very large store and the place was named "Green Ridge".
About 325 people, miners and their families, "lived, loved and died" for
a period of about thirty years. And, many prosperous people yet remember
it as the place of their birth.
Because of financial
difficulties, consolidation and capitalistic manipulations, the mine
with such a rich vein of coal, was closed in 1923. The last pay was said
to be over $20,000 for labor.
There were many and varied events
to happen here, pleasant and otherwise scattered along and thru to its
short history from love stories to two first degree murders. The ax
story is true except the wife killed her stepson to spite the husband
and father.
When I bought all the land which composed Green
Ridge, there were 49 houses remaining, many having been destroyed by
fire, etc. There were several families remaining, but one by one they
vacated, the houses were salvaged and the "tall corn grows and whispers
the Indian Legend or sings with Whittier The Corn Song in mindfull of an
eventful past.
Green Ridge has contributed its coal to furnaces
of the past and is now helping to furnish food and meat to the nations'
food problem.
Post office, store, schools all have vanished and
memory only remains, as the story of its past is told over and over by
those who return to take fond view at the site of their early
remembrances.
As a young beginning teacher, I labored here with
65 to 70 pupils of various nationalities and languages, also teaching a
night school for the men so they could advance in their work and am
rewarded by living to see several very successful citizens who attended
school at Green Ridge when I taught those few years here.
The
mine tipple and all burned in August, 1930, and the hole was filled up
the summer of 1942. A new hard road is to be built thru Green Ridge this
summer.
Hope this fills the bill.
Yours as ever,
C.
E. Rutherford
Cecil Rutherford was born in 1877 and died
in 1958. Cecil was a Girard High School teacher and owned the land where
Greenridge had once stood. His son, Robert H. Rutherford, became a
medical doctor, and his daughter became a history teacher. Both son and
daughter were in their 80's and still living in 1997 when this letter
was contributed.
The two murders referenced in the letter were:
1. Mrs. Harmon, who lived east of the C & A RR, killed her stepson,
who was in his 20's, while the husband was at work in the mine. She
buried the body underneath the floor boards of the porch sprinkling it
with lime. Worried of the impending odor, so buried it in the coal shed
and ordered delivery of coal despite warm weather. Worried again of the
odor, and dug the body up again and wrapped it in a blanket containing
bricks and dropped it in a well east of their residence in the briars
and bushes. Two berry pickers, one a Joe Wallis, smelled a horrible odor
and followed it to the well, where the body had surfaced. Berry Funeral
Home of Girard stated it was one of the worst situations they ever had
to handle. She was arrested and jailed, but soon discovered she was
pregnant, and in the 1920's, they would not incarcerate a pregnant lady,
so she was released and they later moved from the area. When we held the
1985 Reunion, Mrs. Harmon was still living and in her 90's. The gossip
was that the stepson was molesting her and that's the reason she killed
him, but Mr. Rutherford's letter indicates it was to spite her husband.
2. Lewis Klun was shot allegedly by his wife as he was a heavy
drinker and abused her and their many children. Some say one of the
older children actually did the shooting in an attempt to stop the
father from physically abusing the mother.
Contributed 11 Aug
1997 by Sam Molen, with permission from Robert H. Rutherford.
The following list of names of
people who at one time resided in the now extinct village of Greenridge,
was obtained from rental, school, and church records, plus oral info
provided by former residents.
Ader, Allen, Arelio, Armstrong,
Barberi, Bardulis, Bartosik, Beam, Beck, Biancho, Blachut, Bohannon,
Bono, Brado, Brock, Brown, Bruno, Bunsy, Bunk, Burton, Butler,
Cain, Case, Cargnino, Castagano, Cervi, Chentofolsky, Chere, Cheers,
Clark, Clarkson, Clevenger, Close, Coginsky, Collins, Conlee, Coolens,
Cornwell, Corwin, Crowder,
Davidson, Davis, Dee, Dennis, DeVoric,
Dickout, Dickson, Drake,
Eades, Elliott, Elsperman, Evans,
Fenogletto, Ferguson, Fifer,
Gasko, Garcher, Gerham, Girardo,
Giriskis, Grableck, Graham, Griffiths, Goodman, Gooseman,
Haider,
Hall, Harmon, Harrison, Hatch, Hogan, Hudson, Hughes, Hunter,
Jacobs, Jakubauskas, Jajanc, Jerdan, Jiacoma, Jones, Jynello,
Katzmarc, Kinski, Klmasy, Klun, Kokos, Kochis, Kolar, Kolschinsky,
Kucak, Kussack,
Lachney, Larcher, Leroy, Light, Lisko, Little,
Loider,
Martin, McBride, McChere, McClure, McCrea, McGerk,
McGinnis, McGist, McGrain, McLean, Machelli, Martin, Miller, Mike,
Missourek, Mitchell, Morgan,
Nance, Nassels, Mewman, Niesen,
Novak,
O'Neil,
Pajanc, Pauls, Patran, Payne, Parnell,
Punnell, Perona, Pinkham, Pinkus, Piper, Potler, Powers, Prescott,
Randolph, Rebecauskas, Rebekowski, Recetelli, Rena, Renelds, Rose,
Rosenbush, Royal, Rutherford, Rychel,
Samrok, Scremen, Senalik,
Shall, Shaw, Shoemaker, Shores, Skager, Skaisgir, Skibenski, Skinner,
Skolski, Smith, Southerland, Sponsky, Strank, Straus, Stuver, Sumski,
Terosky, Thomas, Thorton, Tiona, Trainer, Trionis, Tucker,
Udder,
Vaughn, Vernetti,
Wallis, Whalen, White, Whitehead,
Whitis, Williams,
Yachtis, Yasko, Yem, Yowell,
Zafs,
Zazanc, Zions.
Contributed by Carolynn Jones Bettis
"One of the women in the picture (Olga Kaztmarek) married my uncle, Charles Mayernick, in 1921. She and my Mother use to walk to Greenridge to see her family. The short-cut was by walking down the railroad track. They were living in Virden at the time."
Contributed by Wanda Mayernick Bober
Macoupin County ILGenWeb Copyright
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This page was last updated
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