The following are the only three water-powered mills
that I have found through researching mills ever being built along the Macoupin
Creek in Macoupin County. "On the June 6, 1836 term of the Court, a petition was
made to the County Commissioners Court by Robert Holiday, the new and present
owner of property in section 27, T9, R8, ( now Polk township), petitioned and
received permission to build a water-powered sawmill in the stream of Macoupin
creek at the intersection with Dry Branch creek. The dam and sawmill was erected
around 1840 and was located approximately a mile south of where present day
Macoupin Station is now. That area became known in early days as "Holiday
Mill's."
[A Huskinson Mill is said to have been in Macoupin County from
research done by Christy Jacobson. Jim writes, "Was the Huskinson mill where
Holiday earlier had his mill or was it elsewhere in the Macoupin bottom is the
unknown question? If it was water-powered it should be recorded as given
permission by the Court of Commissioners of Macoupin County to dam the Macoupin
creek and with Robert Holiday already having a water-powered saw mill on
Macoupin Creek in this bottom land at the time of the railroad building. I can't
believe there would be permission to add another water-powered saw mill.
Huskinson may have had a steam powered saw mill somewhere here, but I am not
familiar with the Huskinson name here in this locality."]
David Wright in
1834, petitioned the Court and received from the County Commissioner's Court,
permission to build a water-powered grist mill and dam across Macoupin Creek in
section 28, T9, R8, (now Polk Township). The mill and dam was never built.
However, later in 1850 Stephen Marshall erected a grist mill and dam at this
same location on Macoupin creek. The mill was destroyed a couple of years later
during a massive flood and was never rebuilt. Marshall before building this
water-powered mill, operated of a small horse driven grist mill near the
Challecomb area in Chesterfield Township.
During the same Court of the
1834 session, a Mr. John Harris, petitioned the County Commissioner's Court and
received permission to build a water-powered grist-mill and dam on Macoupin
creek with location just east of Carlinville. Upon receiving permission, this
dam and grist mill was built and operated several years. Later the water-powered
grist mill was known as "Tegards' Mill."
I've often heard my parents tell
that in the spring of 1923 or 1924, that they looked at a farm listed for sale
in the Macoupin bottoms near Eldred in Green County. That farm had been recently
flooded that spring and there were shallow, drying up slues of water with
rotting dead fish and along with the odorous smell everywhere, they definitely
weren't impressed with the farm and then soon bought our farm north of
Plainview.
Contributed by James Frank, extracted from his book, History of Polk Township
Macoupin County ILGenWeb Copyright
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