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117 Irvine St. Ste. C, Galena, IL 61036
sales@oldnorthwestlandco.com
Telephone: 815.777.1776

 

Old Northwest Land Co inc. © All Rights Reserved.

(815) 757-1776

(815) 777-1776 office           (815) 880-7822 fax

Dick@GalenaProperties.com

Dick Deininger, Realtor®
Licensed in Illinois & Wisconsin

117 Irvine St. Suite C

Galena IL 61036

   * This information is deemed reliable but not guaranteed.

A Galena Illinois and Jo Daviess County Real Estate Company

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The Old Northwest
by Skip Schwerdtfeger,
BA, MS U.S. Military Historian

 

Only two lifetimes ago, this area was beautiful wilder-

ness with only glimmering hints of the rapid approach

of the frontier. The great sky swept over green hills,

crystal clear rivers, abundant fish and wildlife and

fascinating people. The Indian tribes knew what other

cultures had been here long before them by the many

mounds that remained following the ancient peoples'

mysterious disappearance. Long before them, nature

had singled out this area to be spared when the great

glaciers ponderously crept down and flattened much

of the Northern Hemisphere. Somehow, the native Americans knew how special this land was, so they called the unglaciated area "The Great Metatoomie, or "God's Country," and kept it in high regard.

 

Following the American Revolution in 1783, the United States displaced Great Britian (who had only displaced France in 1763) as the official owners of the land. The U.S. Government was poorly organized and administered at that time, due to the weaknesses built into the governing base, the Articles of Confederation. In fact, the weaknesses were so significant that our Founding Fathers wrote the U.S. Constitution in 1787 to replace them. It is interesting to note that only two laws of lasting significance were passed during the period of Confederation-the Land Ordinance of 1785 and the Northwest Ordinance of 1787.

 

The 1785 law created the land system of 640 acres to a section (one mile by one mile) thirty-six sections to a Township and one section per Township (Section 16, in most cases) for the support of public schools for all people.

 

The Northwest Ordinance identified the land north of the Ohio River and east of the Mississippi River as the Northwest Territories and stipulated that, after a period of time under Federal control and after attaining a population of at least 60,000, a portion of the Northwest Territory could petition for statehood as a full and equal part of the USA. No fewer than three nor more than five states could be created under the Northwest Ordinance. It was in that manner that Illinois became a state in 1818 with its first capitol-a tiny, two story house in Kaskaskia.

 

While those brilliant and far-reaching laws were being passed under a failing form of government, this area was still not a frontier, but a pristine wilderness. And, it was only two long lifetimes ago.

When the United States purchased the Louisiana Territory from France in 1803, a NEW Northwest was gained, so the area known as the Northwest Territories became forever known as the OLD NORTHWEST.

Around that time, white people began to come to this area to mine "Galena" a pure form of lead crystal. Jo Daviess County was organized to include all the land north of the Rock River and east of the Mississippi. The original country included Galena and what is now Savanna, Sterling, Freeport, Rockford, Dixon and all or parts of seven counties in Illinois (and for awhile three counties in what is now Wisconsin). In a sense, Jo Daviess County was the

Old Northwest replicated in miniature. With the age of steam on the great rivers and the blazing of the first wagon road to Galena, the Kellogg Trail, Galena became the metropolis of the upper Mississippi.

 

People were mining lead so vigorously that slavery was practiced in the mines for a time. A stop was put to that under the leadership of the famous Methodist Circuit Rider, Peter Cartwright, but some slave quarters still exist in Galena to this day.

 

With fortune came fame, and with fame came more

people. The Native Americans who lived here were

clearly being displaced by the new arrivals. In April

1832, an old respected leader (not a chief) named

MAKATIAMESHEKIAKIAK, or Black Sparrow Hawk, led

his band of Sauk and Fox Indians back into Illinois to

plant corn. This move triggered the last Indian War

east of the Mississippi, the Black Hawk War. Battles

were fought all around Galena (in {Prophetstown,

Elizabeth, Waddams Grove, Polo and Kent in Illinois

and Wiota. Sauk City and Victory in Wisconsin). When

the war ended with massacre of Blackhawk's band of

on August 2, 1832, Indian power was forever finished

east of the Mississippi. Jo Daviess Country boomed,

as did all of the Old Northwest. Railroads helped the

swampy mud-hole known as Chi-ca-gu begin to grow

into a great city. When riverboats and railroads were

competing evenly, Galena continued her heyday. But

as the convenience of railroads gained notice, Galena

slowly began her decline.

 

At the time of the Civil War, Galena Congressman, Elihu Washburne, got an embattled Illinoisian, President Abraham Lincoln, to appoint an unknown retired West Pointer, Captain U.S. "Sam" Grant from Galena as a Brigadier General. Grant's brilliance led to his eventual command of all Union Armies and to Civil War victory. Galena glowed with pride (with a few notable exceptions).

Following "THE" war, Galena, along with the entire area, became a lovely agriculturally based area with pretty towns, pictures, picturesque farms and a declining number of mines. Sleeping quietly in one of the backwaters of history, Galena was blessed by not having enough money to "modernize".

Blessed? Yes, blessed. Eventually the area became discovered for the beauty of the unglaciated hills and the living museum quality of its towns, especially Galena. In spite of the decade of lean years, the preservation of this special area for the people of the late 20th and 21st centuries must be called a blessing.

 

In the pioneer spirit, and with the traditional values of

the Old Northwest, a special real estate company was

formed to help preserve, protect and to pass on that

blessing. In January 1989, Skip and Carol Schwerdtfeger

formed the Old Northwest Land Company. Today the

company is proud of its agents, and its listings clients

in over seven counties, and a reputation for honest,

ethical and efficient service, unsurpassed in this

beautiful area we call home. The wisdom that created

the Northwest Ordinance was the inspiration that

created the Old Northwest Land Company, Inc. Knowledge of the past combined with faith in the future will together allow the company to further grow based on that motto.

'SERVICE, SERVICE, SERVICE."