Chatham

A Civil War cannon honors veterans on the Chatham square

A Civil War cannon honors veterans on the Chatham square (SCHS photo)

The village of Chatham was laid out in October 1836 by Luther Ransom, who also built the first house in the community. Chatham got its first burst of growth following the building of the Alton & Sangamon Railroad (later the Chicago, Alton & St. Louis Railroad) through the area in the early 1850s.

“This marked the beginning of the development of the village of Chatham and it was later incorporated and has since had a conservative growth,” according to the Historical Encyclopedia of Illinois, Volume 2, published in 1910.

Chatham is in Chatham Township, which may  trace its name back to William Pitt, Earl of Chatham, the British prime minister known as “the great commoner.”

The township was first named Campbell Township, after its first European settler, John Campbell, who moved into the area in 1818. The township was renamed in conformance with a rule against naming townships after living people.

More information: The Chatham Railroad Museum, located in a former railroad station dating from 1902, is now owned by the village.

Other: The Caldwell Farmstead, off Illinois 4 north of Chatham, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It is privately owned and not open for tours.

Today: Chatham has long since gone beyond “conservative growth” — village population has jumped over the past three decades, benefiting from increasing suburbanization of Sangamon County, and the north boundary of Chatham now virtually abuts the south city limit of Springfield along Illinois 4. Chatham’s population was 11,500 in the 2010 Census, a 34 percent increase from 2000.bridge

Original content copyright Sangamon County Historical Society. You are free to republish this content as long as credit is given to the Society.

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3 Responses to Chatham

  1. Jim Foster says:

    Does anyone have a picture of the old water tank with the cow chip waving on it?

  2. James C Baggs Sr says:

    Is there any information available to you that will update the original name of Chatham? If what I have read is true, it was originally named Campbell after the man you actually started the area about 18 years before your article begins it’s history.

  3. editor says:

    Mr. Baggs: The village of Chatham was platted under that name in 1836 and has always been known as Chatham. I think you’re confusing the Chatham village with Chatham TOWNSHIP, which, as the entry states, indeed was first named Campbell Township. (In Illinois, a township generally takes in a much larger geographical area than a municipality.)
    Campbell Township got its name from the area’s first European settler, John Campbell; he moved there from Tennessee in 1818. As the entry also states, however, the name was changed to Chatham Township because state law made it illegal to name a township after a living person. John Campbell died on his farm in western Chatham Township in 1875, age 84.
    My source is the 1881 “History of Sangamon County, Illinois” (volume 2), page 827.
    Thanks for reading.

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