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COURTHOUSE INFO:
County Courthouse
P. O. Box 339
Carmi, IL 62821-0339
Phone: (618) 382-7211
Fax: (618) 382-2322 HISTORY
White County was organized from Gallatin County in 1815, and was named
after Captain Leonard White (some accounts say Captain Isaac White), a
Gallatin County legislator who is credited with the idea of extending
the Illinois-Wisconsin border a few miles north of the southern tip of
Lake Michigan and was also in charge of the salt works at Equality. He
was killed in 1811 at the Battle of Tippecanoe. The county seat, Carmi,
was founded in 1814, and incorporated in 1816. The first courthouse was
in the log cabin of John Craw.
The first white settlers came to White County between 1807 and 1809. The
first settlements were near the Little Wabash River and Big Prairie, one
of the numerous prairies in the county. These families—Hanna, Land, Hay,
Williams, Calvert, Ratcliff, Holderby, Robinson, Stewart, among
others—typically had spent time in the Carolinas, Kentucky or Tennessee
before moving into Illinois, and most were of Scots-Irish descent. Many
came through the land office at Shawneetown, Illinois, which was a port
for flatboats which traveled the Ohio River.
Other early settlements were Grayville, located at the mouth of Bonpas
Creek and the Wabash River, settled by the Gray family around 1810;
Phillipstown, on the bluffs above the Wabash and Fox River floodplain;
and New Haven (mostly in Gallatin County), which was home to a brother
of Daniel Boone around 1818. Old Sharon Church (Presbyterian), located
near the later village of Sacramento, was organized around 1816, and the
village of Seven Mile Prairie was established a few miles north of the
church in the 1830s. The parents of longtime Abraham Lincoln girlfriend
Ann Rutledge were part of this group, along with families named McArthy,
Miller, McClellan, Pollard, Storey, Fields, and Johnson.
About 1839, a group of Irish immigrants began moving into the extreme
western part of Enfield Township, led by Patrick Dolan, as well as
members of the Mitchell and Dunn clans. Dolan was auctioneer in 1853
when the village of Enfield was platted, as Seven Mile moved west in
anticipation of a railroad line, which was not built until 1872. German
families moved into the middle portion of the county in the 1840s and
onward, especially from the Baden region, and included the family names
of Rebstock, Dartt, Brown, Sailer, Stanley, and Drone.
The second half of the 19th century saw the establishment of the towns
of Norris City, Springerton, Mill Shoals (once the home of a thriving
barrel-making industry which depleted the nearby virgin forests),
Epworth, Herald, Burnt Prairie (previously known as "Liberty"),
Crossville, Phillipstown, Concord (also known as Emma), Maunie and
Rising Sun (commonly called Dogtown)--the latter two villages are
located on the Wabash and attracted several African-American families. A
number of villages which no longer exist were also formed: Trumbull,
Roland, Middle Point, Stokes Station, Gossett, Bungay, Calvin, Iron, and
Dolan Settlement.
In 1925, White County was devastated by the Tri-State Tornado, the
deadliest tornado in U.S. history. A good proportion of the 127 killed
in Hamilton and White counties were in White County itself. The main
town affected was Carmi.
Agriculture was the primary industry of White County until the summer of
1939, when oil was discovered in the Storms and Stinson fields in the
Wabash River Bottoms. The population of Carmi doubled within two years,
from 2,700 to 5,400, with corresponding increases at Crossville and
Grayville—in 1940 it was said one could walk between these two towns by
simply walking from rig to rig. Many of these workers migrated from
previous oil booms in Texas and Oklahoma.
The current population of White County is a little over 17,000, with
6,500 in the county seat of Carmi. There is a high number of retired
people, and many citizens work in the factories of Evansville or Mount
Vernon, Indiana, located 45 and 25 miles to the east, respectively.
Besides oil and agriculture, industries include auto parts
manufacturing, plastics, a convenience store distribution center and
underground coal mining.
White County, Illinois was also the site of the ill-fated Erie Canal
Soda Pop Festival also known as the Bull Island Fest in 1972.
County Seat: Carmi
Year Organized: 1815
Square Miles: 495
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ADJACENT
COUNTIES:
1 -
Edwards Co. - North
2. - Gibson Co. - Northeast
3. - Posey Co. - Indiana - East
4. - Gallatin Co. - South
5. - Saline Co. - Southwest
6. - Hamilton Co. - West
7. - Wayne Co. - Northwest |
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Townships: * Burnt Prairie
* Carmi
* Emma
* Enfield
* Gray
* Hawthorne
* Heralds Prairie
* Indian Creek
* Mill Shoals
* Phillips
Cities:
* Carmi
* Grayville (south half) |
Villages: * Burnt Prairie
* Crossville
* Enfield
* Maunie
* Mill Shoals
* Norris City
* Phillipstown
* Springerton
Unincorporated towns:
* Brownsville
* Bungay
* Calvin
* Centerville
* Dogtown
* Epworth
* Gossett
* Herald
* Rising Sun
* Sacramento |
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