Iroquois
County is the only county in the United States having the name Iroquois, a
name originally applied to a confederation of tribes of North American Indians.
According to tradition, a band of Iroquois Indians was once surprised and
defeated upon the banks of the river now known as the Iroquois, by a war party
of Illinois Indians, hence the name of the county and the river.
Iroquois
County is bounded on the north by the county of Kankakee, on the east by the
State of Indiana, on the south by Vermilion and Ford Counties, and on the west
by Ford County. Iroquois County in area ranks third in the state, being 35 miles
long and 32 miles wide, and containing 1,120 square miles, only 130 square miles
less than the state of Rhode Island. This county is exceeded in size only by
McLean and LaSalle Counties in Illinois. Watseka, the county seat, is located a
few miles east of the center of the county.
The
territory included within the present boundaries of Iroquois County was
subjected to various states of political evolution before the present county
organization was perfected. Under the charter of 1609 and supported by General
George Rogers Clarks request, Virginia laid claim to all the country north
and west of the Ohio River and organized it as the county of Illinois. In the
year 1784, Virginia surrendered her claims to the territory to the government of
the United States. This vast domain afterward became known as the Northwest
Territory. While the Illinois country was still a part of the Northwest
Territory, in the year 1790, we find Iroquois County a part of the county of
Knox and so contained until February 3, 1801, when it became a part of the
county of St. Clair, belonging to the Indiana Territory. The Illinois Territory
was established by act of Congress on February 3, 1809.
This
county continued to be a part of St. Clair County until the 14th of September,
1812, when upon reorganization it became a part of Edwards County. In the year
1816 the Iroquois country became a part of Crawford County and there remained
until Illinois was admitted into the Union in 1818.
When
Illinois was admitted as a state, she had fifteen organized counties. One,
Crawford County, embraced all the part of the state lying north of a line
running east and west near the present site of Louisville, Illinois, the county
seat of Clay County. It also included the area east of the third principal
meridian, which runs due north from the mouth of the Ohio River.
March
22, 1819, the territory included within the present limits of Iroquois County
became a part of Clark County. In 1823 Edgar County was organized and what is
now Iroquois County was attached to Edgar. It remained thus until the county of
Vermilion was organized in 1826, after which it continued until the formal
organization took place February 26, 1833.
The
law made it the duty of the judge of the Circuit Court of Vermilion County,
whenever he should be satisfied the new county had 350 inhabitants, to grant an
order for an election of three county commissioners, one sheriff, and one
coroner to hold office until the next general election. The special election for
first officers was on Monday, February 24, 1834.
Gordon
S. Hubbard, while a representative for Vermilion county in the 8th General
Assembly of Illinois 1832-1834 was instrumental in procuring the passage of the
act creating Iroquois County. The county embraced all that territory lying north
of its present south line and east of its present west line and extended north
of its present south line and east of its present west line, forming a rectangle
and about one-third of what is now Will County. As then established, Iroquois
County extended from the north line of Vermilion to the then south line of Cook
County.
Will
County was created in the year 1836 and extended south to the Kankakee River.
The river, except for a short distance at the northwest corner of the county,
became the northern boundary of Iroquois County.
In
the year 1853 Kankakee County was created from territory which had belonged to
the counties of Iroquois and Will. Thus, Iroquois was limited to its present
boundaries.
In
1835 the town of Montgomery offered the county 20 acres of land on which to
locate a permanent county seat. This land was located just east of Montgomery
and was platted down as a town site in 1836 under the name of Iroquois. The
offer was accepted, and the county seat was established in Iroquois. No
buildings were erected so space was rented for county offices and a courtroom in
Montgomery. As no town ever developed at Iroquois the plat was later vacated.
There
was general dissatisfaction with the county seat so far from the center of the
county. In 1838 an act was obtained from the Illinois legislature to relocate
the county seat. The town of Middleport offered the county 52 lots to locate the
county seat there. The offer was accepted and Middleport became the county seat
in 1839.
After
the establishment of the county seat at Middleport, the first county building to
be erected was a jail. It was made of hewed logs and was 16 x 20 feet in size.
It cost the county $159.30.
In 1843 it was
decided to build a courthouse. This was to be a two-story brick structure, 40 x
40 feet square. The downstairs was to be the courtroom with offices for the
county officials upstairs. To defray the cost of the new building, the sum of
$1,506 was appropriated for county funds. To this was to be added the receipts
from the sale of the remaining town lots given by Middleport for locating the
county seat there. Still another source of funds was anticipated. The county
owned some land along the Salt Fork River west of Danville. This land had salt
springs on it and was part of some similar land given by the federal government
to Vermilion County before Iroquois County was formed. It had been hoped that
the salt springs would be developed commercially, and the income was to be used
to build a bridge over the Vermilion River at Danville and the Iroquois River at
Montgomery. The land was never developed so Iroquois County retained a share of
either 40 or 80 acres (the record is 40 or 80 acres (the record is not clear).
It was decided to sell this land, and a representative was sent to Danville to
dispose of it. The best offer he could obtain was in trade for a horse. The
trade was made, and the horse taken to Chicago and sold. The records do not say
how much this transaction added to the courthouse building fund. The new
building was completed in 1847.
In
1858 the Peoria and Oquawka Railroad was building its line east from Peoria to
the Indiana state line. The route was surveyed through Middleport, but a dispute
arose in regard to the town donating land for the depot ground. A group of land
owners to the southeast of Middleport offered a proposition to the railroad.
This offer was accepted, and the route ran south of Middleport. A new town,
called South Middleport, came into being about a mile southeast. The name was
changed in 1865 to Watseka; and upon incorporation of Watseka, Middleport become
a part of that town. The old courthouse in Middleport was abandoned and a new
one built in Watseka. All that remains of the old courthouse completed in 1847
is the square on which it stood. This is now a small park located one block west
of the West Watseka School. A picture of the courthouse appears in the large
painting on the north wall of the present circuit court room.
Until
the new building was completed the county offices were located in a building on
the northeast corner of Fourth and Walnut Streets, Watseka. On October 16, 1866
about 2 oclock a.m. the building caught fire and many county records were
destroyed. It was thought that the fire was set by disgruntled citizens of
Middleport over the removal of the courthouse to Watseka. The new courthouse was
completed in 1866. Additions were made to it in 1881 and 1927. The new
courthouse had the county jail in its basement. One of the original cell blocks
can be seen there today. A new jail and sheriffs residence was built in 1893.
This courthouse is now the site of the Iroquois County Historical Museum located
at 103 West Cherry Street.
The present
Iroquois County courthouse and jail was given to all the people of Iroquois
County by the late Katharine Clifton. Mrs. Cliftons bequest to the people of this County is
without doubt the first time any individual ever gave the entire cost price for
the construction of these units, together with all appurtenances, furnishings
and
accessories necessary to its functioning. The amount was over $1.5 million.
Charles W.
Raymond, then a Federal Judge at Muskogee, Oklahoma, Indian Territory, married
Grace Matzenbaugh Fisher, a young widow and mother of our Katharine Clifton (nee
Fisher), who was then 8 years old at the time of Judge Raymond and Mrs. Fishers
marriage on January 8, 1902, in Muskogee, Oklahoma.
The land on
which the new courthouse and jail are located at 550 South Tenth Street in
Watseka was originally purchased by Mrs. Cliftons husband, William Pete
Clifton, who had planned before his death to construct a municipal airport on
the site.
The new
courthouse and jail held their open house and dedication ceremonies on Saturday,
September 17, 1966.
In 1833
Iroquois County had a population of 350, in 1860 a population of 16,000, and in
1950 a population of 32,348. The 2000 population of Iroquois County was 31,334.
