Our journey
this past June to visit family took us to Omaha Nebraska and then on to St.
Louis Missouri. The drive home is
usually a sprint from St. Louis…but I couldn’t resist one more stop to check
out a little history along the way!
I
diverted from our drive south on I-24 in southern Illinois into the town of
Vienna. Vienna is the County Seat and
this is the Johnson County Courthouse. The
courthouse was built from 1869 to 1871.
Apparently county records are unclear on the matter and the courthouse
was either the fourth or fifth built in the county and the second or third in
Vienna. This Italianate style structure
has served continuously as the county courthouse since it opened…145 years as
of this year!
Johnson
County Illinois was named for Richard Mentor Johnson, the 9th Vice President of the United States. He
served with Martin Van Buren from 1837 to 1841.
At 26 years of age, Johnson was elected to the U.S. House of
Representatives in 1806. He became
allied with fellow Kentuckian Henry Clay as a member of the War Hawks faction
that favored war with Britain in 1812. At the outset of the War of 1812, Johnson was
commissioned a colonel in the Kentucky Militia and commanded a regiment of
mounted volunteers from 1812 to 1813. Johnson
participated in the Battle of the Thames. Some reported that he personally killed the
Shawnee chief Tecumseh, which he later used to his political advantage.
The
Vienna Public Library, (a Carnegie Library), was built in the Classic Revival
Style in 1911. The building provided a
permanent home for Vienna's library program, which was established in 1895 and
had rotated through a number of local buildings prior to 1911. County medical services have also been based
in the library. The American Red Cross used the building as its
headquarters during the 1917 influenza outbreak. The building has also been used as a gym, a
headquarters for city services, and a meeting place for several women's
organizations as well as the Johnson County Historical Society.
Back to
Richard Mentor Johnson… In addition to serving in the Kentucky Legislature,
Johnson also served in either the US House of Representatives or the US Senate
for 30 years! Add in the Vice Presidency
and his time serving in Kentucky... he spent over 41 years in politics.
Note:
· Johnson County has an interesting
population track, rising and falling over the years. In 1900, there were 15,667 residents. By 1960, there were only 6,928. However the estimated population in 2015 was
12,762! The population resurgence may
have something to do with employment at the 2 major penitentiaries in the
county
. Of course, as it is one of my missions in life, I was searching for the 2 railroad
depots that I’d researched that were located in Vienna. With the ramp on the side and those 2 freight
doors, I thought that this might be one of them. It is a nice old building now serving as an
antique store…but it wasn’t railroad related.
I’m not
done with Richard Johnson! He was an
interesting and polarizing character for his time… After his father died, Richard Johnson inherited
Julia Chinn, an octoroon slave (one-eighth African, seven-eighths European in
ancestry). Johnson began a long-term
relationship with her and treated her as his common-law wife. They were prohibited from marrying because she
was a slave. Johnson and Chinn had two
daughters, Adaline Chinn Johnson and Imogene Chinn Johnson, whom he
acknowledged and gave his surname. He
provided for their education. Both
daughters married white men. Johnson
gave them large farms as dowries from his own holdings.
Due to
his open relationship with a slave, he barely received enough nominating votes
from his party to run as Vice President.
When the Electoral College met to cast their votes after Van Buren and
Johnson won the popular vote, so many southern electors refused to vote for
Johnson that he has the distinction of being the only Vice President that had
to be ‘elected’ by the US Senate under the provisions of the Twelfth Amendment.
Finally! This is the first of the railroad depots that
I was looking for in Vienna. Although
trains haven't passed through Vienna for many years, the town is fortunate that
the old rail corridor was converted into the popular Tunnel Hill State Trail. From what I can gather, this replica railroad
depot in Vienna serves as trail headquarters.
I did find photos or postcards showing a similar looking structure in
Vienna when the railroad was still active…
The
Cairo and Vincennes Railroad was first built as the Cairo and Vincennes
Railroad. It was constructed between
1870 and 1874. After a series of mergers
and reorganizations via the Wabash, St. Louis and Pacific Railway in 1881; the
Cairo, Vincennes and Chicago Railway in 1889; the Cleveland, Cincinnati,
Chicago and St. Louis Railway; and the New York Central Railroad in 1906, the
line ended up under ownership of the Southern Railway, who abandoned this
portion of the line.
This original
and completely restored depot was moved to Vienna from a location near the old town
site of Forman, several miles to the south. The Forman Depot was built about 1900 by the
Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad and was at the junction of that
railroad's track and that of the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis
Railway. Following World War II the amount
of traffic through the Forman Depot decreased to a level that the Chicago,
Burlington and Quincy chose to close the depot.
A local
farmer convinced the railroad to sell him the depot rather than tear it down. He moved it to his farm where it remained for
more than 50 years. In 1998 the depot was given to the Johnson County
Genealogical and Historical Society and in 2002 the depot was moved to Vienna
City Park and the restoration of the depot was started. The depot now is a
railroad museum, Vienna Chamber of Commerce and Vienna Tourism Center.
To
learn more about the Vienna Railroad Museum, you can go to https://www.facebook.com/FormanDepotMuseum.
This is
the skyline of downtown Nashville Tennessee.
At this point we were only about 2.5 hours from home! The Nashville Metropolitan Area is home to
about 1.8 million residents and of course, it’s the home of Country Music!
This is
Nissan Stadium, the home of the feckless (so far) National Football Team, the Nashville
Titans. This stadium used to be called
the LP Stadium as per a 10-year agreement with Louisiana-Pacific Corp, a
building products company. Nissan is one
of middle Tennessee's largest employers with the Nissan Smyrna Vehicle Assembly
plant opening in 1983. It employs
more than 8,400 employees and Nissan moved its North American headquarters to
Franklin Tennessee in 2008.
From
here it was a relatively short drive home…after a couple of weeks on the
road. We had a great time, but it’s
always good to be home!
Just
click on any of the photos to enlarge them…
Thanks
for stopping by for a visit!
Take
Care, Big Daddy Dave
Hey Fellow--You didn't take a picture of the skyline when you got to GORGEOUS Crossville, TN.... HA HA HA HA....
ReplyDeleteYou confused me when you said that Johnson was the 9th PRESIDENT.... I think you meant VICE Pres.. In fact, I know you meant that.... He was an interesting character and one I don't know anything about....
Thanks for sharing Vienna and Johnson County with us.
Hugs,
Betsy
Like always nice and interesting pictures Don :)
ReplyDelete