Online Encyclopedia

JACKSONVILLE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 113 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JACKSONVILLE  , a

city and the county-seat of Morgan county,
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Illinois, U.S.A., on Mauvaiseterre Creek, about 33 M . W. of
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Springfield . Pop . (189o), 12,935; (1900), 15,078, of whom 1497 were
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foreign-horn; (1910 census), 15,326 . It is served by the Chicago,
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Burlington & Quincy, the Chicago &
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Alton, the Chicago,
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Peoria & St Louis and the
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Wabash
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railways . It is the seat of several educational and philanthropic institutions . Illinois College (Presbyterian), founded in 1829 through the efforts of the Rev . John Millot Ellis (1793–1855), a missionary of the
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American Home Missionary Society and of the so-called Yale
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Band (seven Yale graduates devoted to higher
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education in the
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Middle West), is one of the
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oldest colleges in the Central States of the
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United States . The Jacksonville
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Female Academy (183o) and the Illinois Conservatory of
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Music (2871) were absorbed in 1903 by Illinois College, which then became co-educational . The college embraces, besides the collegiate department, Whipple Academy (a preparatory department), the Illinois Conservatory of Music and a School of
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Art, and in 2908–2909 had 21 instructors and 173 students . The Rev .
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Edward Beecher was the first president of the college (from 183o to 1844), and among its prominent graduates have been Richard Yates, jun., the Rev .

Thomas K . Beecher, Newton Bateman (1822–1897), superintendent of public instruction of Illinois from 1865 to 1875 and president of Knox College in 1875–1893, Bishop Theodore N . Morrison (b . 285o),
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Protestant Episcopal Bishop of
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Iowa after 1898, and William J . Bryan . The Illinois Woman's College (Methodist Episcopal; chartered in 1847 as the Illinois
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Conference Female Academy) received its
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present name in 1899 . The State Central Hospital for the Insane (opened in 1851), the State School for the
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deaf (established in 1839, opened in 1845, and the first charitable institution of the state) and the State School for the Blind (1849) are also in Jacksonville . Morgan Lake and Duncan Park are pleasure resorts . The
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total value of the factory product in 1905 was $1,981,582, an increase of 17'7% since 2900 . Jacksonville was laid out in 1825 as the county-seat of Morgan county, was named probably in honour of Andrew Jackson, and was incorporated as a
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town in 184o, chartered as a (mean low
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water), and by 1909 the
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work had been completed; further dredging to a 24 ft.
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depth between the navigable channel and pierhead lines was authorized in 1907 and completed by 1910 . city in 1867, and re-chartered in 1889 . The majority of the early settlers came from the
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southern and border states, principally from
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Missouri and
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Kentucky; but subsequently there was a large immigration of New England and Eastern
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people, and these elements were stronger in the population of Jacksonville than in any other city of southern Illinois .

End of Article: JACKSONVILLE
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