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CHAPTER XXVIII.
pg. 101
Manufacturing After the Civil War.
Manufacturing in Union
County had been moved from the homes to small individually owned
concerns by the time the Civil War was over. During the
following forty years an even greater change took place.
Building was one of the leading industries so that saw mills,
brick kilns, etc., came into being.
By this time flour was manufactured by steam and roller
mills and lime was manufactured from our large limestone
deposits. To take care of the barrelling of lime and
flour, a cooperage plant was in operation.
In 1856 David Davie and Daniel Goodman
were operating the largest and most extensive mills in this part
of the state, The Flora Temple mills. This mill changed
hands several times during the ensuing years. Other mills
were in operation during this period which manufactured less
than 100 barrels of flour per day.
In 1856 Jessie Lentz and James DeWitt
built an extensive wagon, plow and repair shop in Anna where
they manufactured and repaired wagons, plows and farm
implements. Later on the Willoughby-Segar
wagon and repair shop was in business, also the Stokes
Company. since horses were used for farm work these were
among the leading businesses of the county. In 1879, J.
W. Dandridge started a saddle and harness factory here.
These business were of great importance in the community until
the decade following 1910 when motor driven vehicles replaced
the older types of conveyances, etc.
R. B. Stinson carried on an extensive barrel
factory near the railroad into Anna where he employed 30 men and
manufactured 50,000 barrels per year and other packages for
shipping fruit and vegetables. Later names connected with
box factories were F. P. Anderson and James Wood.
At present three such factories are operating in the county, the
Randall L. Lawrence Box Factory in Cobden; the H. A.
DuBois Box Mill in Cobden, and the Fruit Growers Package
Company in Jonesboro.
The firm of Finch and Shick manufactured
lime for commercial purposes manufacturing as much as 300
barrels per day. In 1879 Hunsaker and
Richardson, Edwards and Carmack and J. E. Lufkin
all had lime kilns.
In 1859, the Kirkpatrick Brothers had a pottery
where they manufactured all kinds of stoneware, tiles, vases,
pottery and fire brick. There has never been a pottery in
Union County since the death of W. Kirkpatrick who was an
artist in this line of work. No person sufficiently
skilled in this art to carry on the work has come to the
locality since that pottery has gone out of existence.
M. M. Henderson and Son began a cotton gin in
1866 but there was not sufficient need for this plant to enable
it to stay in business so it was later changed to a planing
mill.
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From 1865 to 1875, F. A. Childs and Bro. had a
drain tile factory in operation.
Unlike today with our large packing house centers, the
local supply of meat was killed and cured within the community.
Since the Anna State Hospital was located in Union County, the
demand for meat was large and the largest dealer in this
industry was M. V. Ussery. During the year July
1881 to July 1882, he slaughtered _42 beeves, 156 sheep and 56
hogs and purchased 150 dressed hogs which he resold. He
sold 32,000 pounds of hides from these animals.
While the same general industries, namely agriculture
and its subsidiary enterprises still exist since 1900, many
changes in manufacturing have come into being.
With the use of more machinery and less hand work in
manufacturing, most of these industries have become concentrated
into industrial centers and finished products shipped into Union
County to be sold.
The Green Brick Yard was probably the last industry of
its kind in the community and it was discontinued because they
could not manufacture their products cheaply enough to compete
with larger manufacturers.
As mentioned before, manufacturers of fruit packages
have become jobbers or retailers buying their stock from
manufacturers in other centers.
Packing companies have moved to larger
places and meat is distributed to local dealers by these large
companies.
Clothing is bought in industrial centers by our retail
merchants of various products. Of these only five, the
Defiance Box Co., W. P. Messler & Co., Bruchhauser Bros. T. A.
Carlile, and the St. Louis Stone and Lime Co, valued their
machinery at over $1,000.
Modern manufacturing has shown another change also,
that of individual ownership to ownership by corporations or
companies.
The 1939 tax list shows that the small manufacturer has
completely disappeared in the county and only six manufacturers
whose personal property is assessed at from $2,000 to $35,000.
These are the Anna Quarries, the Fruit Growers Package Company
of Jonesboro Shoe Company, the Phoenix Flour Mills and the Atlas
Powder Company.
The Anna Quarries has grown to large proportions since
the beginning of the better road program in Illinois. It
manufactures crushed rock, lime and building stone made from a
very high grade of limestone of which there is a large deposit
where the plant is located.
While there were several mills in the county in the
past, the only one remaining is the Phoenix Flour Mills.
It is interesting to consider that much flour and feed is
shipped into Union County
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for consumption from mills as far away
as Minneapolis and Kansas City.
The Atlas Powder Company is located in the northwest
part of the county near Wolf Lake. It is located in this
spot because of its isolation rather than any other reason.
It manufactures explosives used mainly in mining and all
materials used in its products are shipped into the plant to be
mixed. None are produced locally. Most of the people
of the village of Wolf Lake earn a livelihood at this plant and
its employees are probably the highest paid people in the county
due to the hazards of the work and the skill necessary to
produce the powder, etc.
The international Shoe Company is located in Anna,
Illinois. It was placed here when the community raised
funds to provide a building for the company. Five hundred
people are employed here and few of them work less than eleven
months each year. The salaries are in keeping with those
of other such industries but it can be generally stated that
each of the five hundred empolyees earns a living wage
which is in keeping with the general standard of living of the
county. During 1940 an addition to the factory is to be
completed which will employ an additional 150 persons.
During the World War period kaolin was taken from the
Mt. Glen area in large quantities and shipped to users in other
parts of the country. Since that time a small amount of
clay has been shipped away but now plans are complete for the
kaolin mill which will refine the clay which will in turn be
sold to manufacturers of rubber tires, pottery, stoneware,
whitewash, high grade tile, paper filling and coating, linoleum,
oil cloth, paint of all kinds, cement, fire bricks, foundries,
steel manufacturing, asbestos, enameling, and other clay
products. Large deposits of the highest grade of kaolin
clay are available in this area and the company expects to
install a $75,000 plant which will employ about fifty people.
In 1939 the Vulcan Heel Co. put a factory in Anna which
employs an average of seventy-five persons annually in much the
same manner the International Shoe Company employs its help.
There are still natural resources in the county which
are not in use such as silica, fluorspar, possibly oil and many
building materials.
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