This reliable scrap
of history, by W. H. Rose, is taken from The Avon
Sentinel:
Before the
discovery of oil wells in Pennsylvania kerosene, or coal
oil, as it was more commonly called, was manufactured from
cannel coal in several different places in the United
States, and was a very profitable business, as the product
sold at a fancy price, never less than $1.00 per gallon and
sometimes as high as $1.50. On account of the high
price, the oil was but little used and its sale was
principally confined to the larger cities.
Veins of cannel
coal were considered very valuable and were much sought
after. In 1857 a large vein of this coal was
discovered along the creek north of town by some miners from
Pennsylvania who were working in the neighborhood.
It had been seen by many persons before, but they supposed
it to be slate stone, which it much resembles. The
news of the discovery spread rapidly, and attracted the
notice of George R. Clark of Chicago, who formed a company
of New York and Chicago capitalists, for the manufacture of
oil, called the Avon Coal Oil Company. The capital
stock was $50,000, which was afterwards increased. Mr.
Clark, who was made superintendent of the company, came
here and secured mining privileges and options on a large
tract of land along the creek where the coal was dicovered.
In the spring of
1858, a mine was opened under the direction of James
Timmons as superintendent, and the company proceeded
at once to erect works for the manufacture of oil. The
site occupied by the works was near the southeast corner of
the northeast quarter of section 13, in Greenbush township,
now known as the Saunders farm. The
entry to the mine started on the east side of the road and
extended under the hill on which the Saunders house
now stands. The entry was made large enough for mules
to go in and haul out the cars of coal and extended under
ground a distance of nearly 40 rods.
The apparatus
employed for the manufacture of oil consisted of fifteen
large cast-iron retorts, each with its cover weighing more
than four tons. These retorts were set in a straight
line on fire brick arches with furnaces under each and
connected together by a large cast-iron pipe. Each
retort held about three tons of coal, the oil being
extracted by baking the coal until it became redhot, by
which time the oil had passed off in smoke and gases, which
were condensed by being passed through cold water, the oil
running off in crude form. At first only crude oil was
made, which was shipped in casks to a refinery in St. Louis.
A ton of coal would make about 15 or 20 gallons of crude oil
and it required about two days to work off a batch of coal.
There was a certain
amount of gas that could not be condensed and was allowed to
escape through an iron pipe, and was kept constantly
burning. At night the flames would light up the surrounding
country. Many small dwellings had been erected near
the works for the accommodation of the miners and other
workmen; and at night the little village, brilliantly
illuminated, presented a beautiful picture.
The coal or coke,
after being taken from the retorts, was used for firing the
"furnaces, a small amount of bituminous coal being mixed
with it.
The second year, a
refinery was built near the other works. This was a
large building, constructed of stone, procured from quarries
near by. After its completion the company did
its own refining. The burning oil was much the same as the
kerosene of the present day.
In refining the
crude oil many different products were obtained; namely, benzine,
gasoline, kerosene, lubricating oil, paraffine, coal tar,
and asphaltum.
When the works were
in full operation, they furnished employment for nearly 100
men.
The works, however,
did not prove to be a financial success, for about this time
oil wells were discovered in Pennsylvania, which reduced the
price of oil to a figure much less than that for which it
could be manufactured from coal.
When it was found
by the company that the works could no longer be carried on
successfully, they were abandoned and a large number of
debts contracted by the company were left unpaid. The
works were finally sold at sheriff's sale for the benefit of
creditors. They fell into the hands of the Frost
Manufacturing Company of Galesburg; and the outfit,
comprising many carloads of old iron and machinery, was
shipped to that city.
The refinery
building was used for a time by David Morse
for a barn, but was finally torn down by Dr.
Saunders and the stone used for different purposes.
Some of them may be seen at the present time in a wall along
the road in front of the Saunders house.
At the same time
the Avon works were put in operation, similar works were
constructed in Peoria county, and with like results.
The work of mining
the vein of cannel coal necessitated the removal of large
quanities of fire clay underlying the coal. After the
oil works had been in operation about a year, a large dump
of clay had accumulated; and a company, composed of James
McDougal, A. Horrocks, and George K. Clark, was
formed for the purpose of manufacturing it into fire brick.
The company erected quite extensive works on
the land now owned by the James Mings
estate, consisting of kilns, drying sheds, etc., and
also installed the machinery necessary for grinding the
clay. They manufactured a variety of wares, consisting of
locomotive fire backs, cupola brick, flue tops and many
different shapes of fire brick, nearly all of the product
being shipped to Chicago.
But their venture,
like the oil works, did not prove a success financially. The
works finally passed into the hands of Jerome
Goodspeed, then a prominent merchant in Avon. It
proved a profitable investment for him. He ground the clay
and shipped it to Chicago by the carload, where it found a
ready sale. He continued the business until the dump was
exhausted.
W. H. Rose.