I recently went to a seminar and learned a lot about land searches, migration of ancestors, etc. I remember one phrase: "Your people may have moved, but their land didn't."
He suggested making a "time line" for the county you are researching, because even though the land didn't move, the county boundaries certainly did. So.....I worked up a time line for Jasper County, and was I ever surprised. I was looking in wrong places!!!! So to share with all of you, here is the time line I worked up for Jasper County. |
Year | Before Jasper County Created |
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1673 | France |
1763 | Great Britain |
1774 | Quebec (Canada) |
1787 | Virginia, Illinois County |
1790 | Northwest Territory, Knox County |
1801 | Indiana Territory, St. Clair County |
1803 | The Southwest Corner was in Randolph County; the rest was in St. Clair County |
1809 | Split diagonally SW to NE NW = St. Clair County SE = Randolph County |
1812 | Illinois Territory, Madison County |
1815 | Illinois Territory, Edwards County |
1816 | Illinois Territory, Crawford County |
1818 | Statehood (still a part of Crawford County) |
1831 | Jasper County created |
Submitted by Linda Lang. Thanks, Linda!!!
Obituary from Mattoon, Illinois Daily Journal-Gazette - December 4, 1912 |
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Newton, Ill., Dec. 4, 1912 -- Joseph PICQUET, perhaps the oldest citizen of Jasper county, and certainly longer a resident therein than any one else now living, died at the family home in Ste Marie last Saturday morning, aged ninety-six years, eight months and thirteen days. Mr. PICQUET was born in Hagauenau, Alsace, France, now Germany, on March 17, 1816 and came to America in young manhood as the advance representative of a number of relatives and neighbors who desired to locate in the then frontier west. He traveled through various parts of the United States after landing in New York, on on seeing the country in and a round Ste. Marie, was so favorably impressed that he returned to France, reported his opinions and investigations, was commissioned to act, came back to America and on October 12, 1837, at Palestine, entered a claim to purchase and patent 10,700 acres of land, the same being granted and made to include the village that he founded and where practically all his active, useful and honorable life was passed. (Printed 4 Dec 1912, Wednesday, in the Daily Journal-Gazette, Mattoon, IL) |
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