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1 | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois House of | ||||||
3 | Representatives wish to congratulate Marion County on the | ||||||
4 | occasion of its 200th birthday; and
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5 | WHEREAS, Marion County was organized on the 24th of | ||||||
6 | January 1823 from portions of Jefferson and Fayette counties | ||||||
7 | and was named in honor of Revolutionary War General Francis | ||||||
8 | Marion, the "Swamp Fox", as recommended by State | ||||||
9 | Representative Zadok Casey of Mt. Vernon, who would later | ||||||
10 | serve as the 14th Speaker of the Illinois House; and
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11 | WHEREAS, Marion County is comprised of 576 square miles, | ||||||
12 | 572 square miles of land and 3.7 square miles of water; the | ||||||
13 | southwest corner of Marion County is the intersection of the | ||||||
14 | baseline with the Third Principal Meridian, the point of | ||||||
15 | origin for the third survey of the Northwest Territory under | ||||||
16 | the Land Ordinance of 1785; and | ||||||
17 | WHEREAS, Marion County consists of 17 townships, which | ||||||
18 | includes Alma, Carrigan, Centralia, Foster, Haines, Iuka, | ||||||
19 | Kinmundy, Meacham, Odin, Omega, Patoka, Raccoon, Romine, | ||||||
20 | Salem, Sandoval, Stevenson, and Tonti, all or portions of the | ||||||
21 | cities of Centralia, Kinmundy, Salem, and Wamac, all or | ||||||
22 | portions of the villages of Alma, Central City, Iuka, Junction |
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1 | City, Kell, Odin, Patoka, Sandoval, Vernon, and Walnut Hill, | ||||||
2 | and the current unincorporated communities of Greendale and | ||||||
3 | Tonti; and | ||||||
4 | WHEREAS, The permanent settlement of Marion County began | ||||||
5 | with Captain Samuel Young and his nine-year-old son, Matthew, | ||||||
6 | in 1818, prompted after the New Madrid earthquake and flooding | ||||||
7 | of 1811; there were nearly 2000 people living in the county by | ||||||
8 | 1823; and | ||||||
9 | WHEREAS, The history of Marion County is closely tied to | ||||||
10 | the livelihood and commerce of agriculture, the development | ||||||
11 | and expansion of railroads, the discovery of natural resources | ||||||
12 | including oil and coal, and the impact and service of many | ||||||
13 | public officials and leaders who have called Marion County | ||||||
14 | home, including U.S. Secretary of State William Jennings | ||||||
15 | Bryan, U.S. Senator Roland Burris, U.S. Congressmen James | ||||||
16 | Stewart Martin, John Cunningham Martin, Charles Wesley | ||||||
17 | Vursell, General Assembly Members Silas Bryan and John D. | ||||||
18 | Cavaletto, and Presidential Press Secretary James Brady; and | ||||||
19 | WHEREAS, Ninety-five percent of the more than 1,000 farms | ||||||
20 | in Marion County today are still family farms with 71% | ||||||
21 | dedicated to the sale of crops (soybeans, corn, wheat) and 29% | ||||||
22 | to the sale of livestock, poultry, and other products | ||||||
23 | (hogs/pigs, cattle/calves, horses/ponies, sheep/lambs, goats, |
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1 | chickens, and turkeys); and | ||||||
2 | WHEREAS, Seventy-nine farms are listed as Centennial Farms | ||||||
3 | with the Illinois Department of Agriculture, 16 of which are | ||||||
4 | recognized as Sesquicentennial Farms with continuous ownership | ||||||
5 | in the same family for at least 150 years, including the Kuhn, | ||||||
6 | Doolen, Snyder, Shanafelt, Garrett, Jones, Phillips, | ||||||
7 | Stevenson, Brasel, Whitchurch, and Hanks families; and | ||||||
8 | WHEREAS, Marion County, specifically the county seat of | ||||||
9 | Salem, earned the nickname "Gateway of Little Egypt" from the | ||||||
10 | year 1831, when crops failed in the northern two thirds of | ||||||
11 | Illinois and northerner's trips through the region for corn | ||||||
12 | were compared to biblical accounts of Israelites' journeys to | ||||||
13 | Egypt to purchase grain; and | ||||||
14 | WHEREAS, Marion County was a principal marketplace for red | ||||||
15 | top hayseed, which was in great demand in Europe during World | ||||||
16 | War I; it also boasts being recognized as the "Birthplace of | ||||||
17 | the G.I. Bill of Rights" at the American Legion Post 128 in | ||||||
18 | Salem; and | ||||||
19 | WHEREAS, The State's railroad history dates back to 1837, | ||||||
20 | boasted over 12,000 miles of tracks during its "Golden Age", | ||||||
21 | and, by 1856, was home to ten railroads; Marion County's | ||||||
22 | history has been associated with the Chicago & Eastern |
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1 | Illinois Railroad (C&EI), which became part of the Missouri | ||||||
2 | Pacific in 1976 and is now the Union Pacific Railroad, which | ||||||
3 | was established by Abraham Lincoln in 1862, and the Illinois | ||||||
4 | Central Railroad, which merged in 1972 with the Gulf, Mobile, | ||||||
5 | and Ohio Railroad to form the Illinois Central Gulf Railroad, | ||||||
6 | which became the Canadian National Railway in 1998; and | ||||||
7 | WHEREAS, The Illinois Central, the original "Charter Line" | ||||||
8 | from Freeport to Centralia, is memorialized by the 1970 Steve | ||||||
9 | Goodman song, City of New Orleans; and | ||||||
10 | WHEREAS, The first oil well in Marion County was drilled | ||||||
11 | near Patoka in the northwest section of Marion County, | ||||||
12 | discovered by the Adams Oil and Gas company; by the end of | ||||||
13 | 1937, there were 200 new producing wells in Illinois, 85 of | ||||||
14 | which were in Marion County with 18 on the Merryman Farm near | ||||||
15 | Patoka; and | ||||||
16 | WHEREAS, In 1938, the Salem Field was discovered in Marion | ||||||
17 | County and produced more than 20 million barrels in its first | ||||||
18 | 12 months of operation from July 1938 to July 1939; Marion | ||||||
19 | County alone produced 93 million barrels in 1939, with 259,000 | ||||||
20 | barrels daily in March of 1940; in 1942, Salem became the | ||||||
21 | eastern terminus of a 550-mile petroleum pipeline from Texas; | ||||||
22 | and |
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1 | WHEREAS, Marion County boasts eight listings on the | ||||||
2 | National Register of Historic Places, the Sentinel Building | ||||||
3 | and Centralia Commercial Historic District of 55 buildings in | ||||||
4 | Centralia, the Illinois Central Railroad Water Tower & Pump | ||||||
5 | House and the Calendar Rohrbough House in Kinmundy, the | ||||||
6 | William Jennings Bryan Boyhood Home, the Badollet House, the | ||||||
7 | Charles and Naomi Bachmann House, and the Methodist Episcopal | ||||||
8 | Church (Grace United Methodist Church) located in Salem; and | ||||||
9 | WHEREAS, The Illinois State Historical Society currently | ||||||
10 | lists five historical markers in Marion County, commemorating | ||||||
11 | William Jennings Bryan (dedicated 1962), the Half-Way Tavern | ||||||
12 | (dedicated 1964), Salem (dedicated 1965), The Third Principal | ||||||
13 | Meridian (dedicated 1976), and the Centralia Coal Mine No. 5 | ||||||
14 | Disaster (dedicated 1991); and
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15 | WHEREAS, The Illinois State Historical Society has awarded | ||||||
16 | the Sesquicentennial House of Worship Award for a number of | ||||||
17 | churches in Marion County who have continuously served for at | ||||||
18 | least 150 years, including the Little Grove Christian Church | ||||||
19 | in Walnut Hill (1838), the First United Presbyterian Church in | ||||||
20 | Centralia (1856), and the First Christian Church in Centralia | ||||||
21 | (1856); and
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22 | WHEREAS, The Salem Historical Commission has also | ||||||
23 | recognized the Lemen-Frakes House on their local registry for |
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1 | its connection to Abraham Lincoln, Rev. Benjamin Lemen and | ||||||
2 | Mary (Rand) Lemen, who co-founded the first college in | ||||||
3 | Illinois, and the Sobieski Polish Royal Family; and
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4 | WHEREAS, The Salem Historical Commission, the Marion | ||||||
5 | County Genealogical & Historical Society, the Centralia Area | ||||||
6 | Historical Society, and the Kinmundy Historical Society all | ||||||
7 | help promote the rich history of Marion County; therefore, be | ||||||
8 | it
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9 | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE | ||||||
10 | HUNDRED THIRD GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that | ||||||
11 | we congratulate Marion County on its 200th birthday and | ||||||
12 | acknowledge all of the contributions by the residents, | ||||||
13 | churches, community organizations, farmers, families, factory | ||||||
14 | workers, and community leaders that have had an impact on our | ||||||
15 | State and the nation; and be it further
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16 | RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be | ||||||
17 | presented to the Marion County Board as an expression of our | ||||||
18 | respect and esteem for a vibrant first two hundred years and a | ||||||
19 | leading example of progress.
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