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Blogroll
Category Archives: Germans
German newspapers
German-language newspapers came and went for more than 60 years in Springfield. Abe Lincoln even had a hand in one. But the Staats Wochenblatt had staying power. German immigration to the U.S. took off after the failure of the German … Continue reading
Lincoln Tomb streetcar line (1880)
The Lincoln Tomb State Historic Site is a mile-and-a-half from downtown Springfield. That distance isn’t a problem in the 21st century, but it was a considerable obstacle when the tomb was new 150 years earlier. Distance was a big reason … Continue reading
First burial at Oak Ridge Cemetery
Eliza Helmle, the infant daughter of Carl Albert and Marie Helmle, was the first person buried at Oak Ridge Cemetery, according to cemetery records. A handwritten cemetery ledger says Eliza died of “teething” at nine months old; the record … Continue reading
Posted in Children, Germans, Markers, Oak Ridge signs
2 Comments
St. John’s Hospital
Mary Lincoln may have been one of the earliest patients to benefit from care provided by what is now the Hospital Sisters Health System. The story was handed down by a Franciscan nun, Sister Francis Dreisvogt (1849-1933), who was among … Continue reading
Posted in Germans, Lincoln, Abraham, Medicine, Public health, Social services, Uncategorized
8 Comments
Sacred Heart Church
It was a warm day in June 1884 when Catholics gathered on 12th Street near Cook Street in Springfield to lay the cornerstone for what was to be the area’s second German-oriented Catholic church. The two-story brick building, which included … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Buildings, Churches, Ethnic groups, Germans, Slovenians
26 Comments
Concordia Theological Seminary
Concordia Theological Seminary educated prospective Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod clergy from 1876 until 1975 1976 on a campus north and east of 12th and Carpenter streets in Springfield. (The Missouri Synod took over the facilities after Illinois State University, a Lutheran … Continue reading
Posted in Churches, Education, Germans, Prominent figures
Tagged Charles Carpentier, Nelson Howarth
9 Comments