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Monthly Archives: November 2013
Amrhein Bakery
Amrhein Bakery, founded in 1888 by Christoph Amrhein (1864-1935) operated first from a shop in downtown Springfield, but moved to Eighth Street and North Grand Avenue a few years later. Business grew to the point that Amrhein built a large … Continue reading
Aristocracy Hill neighborhood (Fever River)
Springfield’s Aristocracy Hill neighborhood, which takes in an area just south of downtown, is one of five areas of Springfield that have been exhaustively studied by Fever River Research of Springfield. The resulting reports are extraordinarily informative historical and archaeological … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Communities, Fever River
Tagged Apartment living, Jack Robinson System
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Association of Commerce and Industry
The Association of Commerce and Industry was formed in 1953 by a merger involving the Springfield Chamber of Commerce, the Springfield Manufacturers and Employers Association and the Springfield Industrial Development Commission. See Greater Springfield Chamber of Commerce.
Posted in Business
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Bank run of 1932 (George Bunn Jr. memoir)
George “Gib” Bunn Jr. remembered Springfield’s banking crisis of December 1932 in an oral interview conducted in 1973. The interviewer was John Bucari. Below is an edited transcript of the section of the interview dealing with the failure of the … Continue reading
Posted in Buildings, Business, Depression, Prominent figures
Tagged First National Bank, Illinois National Bank
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Bates Experimental Road
The Bates Experimental Road of 1922-23 was, literally and figuratively, a groundbreaking study. In the early 1920s, the Illinois Division of Highways was preparing to embark on a major road construction program to accommodate the rapidly growing population of automobiles. … Continue reading
Benjamin Franklin statue
The Benjamin Franklin statue that sits in front of the former headquarters of the Franklin Life Insurance Company was unveiled on Sept. 8, 1949. Featured speaker for the ceremony was Vice President Alben Barkley. Ann Otway Byrd Castle, the great-great-great-great-great-granddaughter … Continue reading
Posted in Arts and letters
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Rev. John Bergen (1828 pioneers)
Rev. John Bergen (1790-1872) was the first full-time pastor of Springfield’s original Presbyterian church, which was founded in 1828. He, his wife Margretta (1793-1853) and their family moved to Springfield in late 1828 from New Jersey, where John Bergen had … Continue reading
Posted in Churches, Early residents, Parks, Prominent figures, Uncategorized
Tagged Presbyterian Church
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Bettie Stuart Institute
The Bettie Stuart Institute educated young women, mainly from the Springfield area, from the 1860s into the 1930s. Courses ranged from English, math and foreign languages to art, vocal and instrumental music, but, as an advertisement for the school pointed … Continue reading
Black farmers at Chinkapin Hill
Chinkapin Hill was the colloquial name for an area northwest of Springfield that was settled starting in the 1830s by a cluster of African-American farmers. Curtis Mann profiled the Chinkapin Hill settlement in the Sangamon County Historical Society’s newsletter, Historico, … Continue reading
Black residents’ resolution opposing Liberia emigration (1858)
Black residents of the Springfield area met on Feb. 12, 1858 to protest the Dred Scott decision by the U.S. Supreme Court and to express their opposition to proposals that the United States solve its slavery problem by encouraging blacks … Continue reading
Posted in African Americans
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