| INSIDE THE STEPHENSON HOUSE - March 19, 2003 Hi! Henry the Stephenson House mouse is back again. Have 
        any of you noticed the big smiles on the faces of The Friends Board Members? 
        The Friends of the Colonel Benjamin Stephenson House received a donation 
        of a right tidy sum of money recently. It was an absolutely wonderful 
        donation! Thank you, thank you!! This will surely take some of the stress 
        away from some of the things that needed to be done at "my" 
        house!!!
 Ol' Henry here and Cousin Jake have been putting our heads together to 
        remember the stories great-great-great-grandfather Samuel told about when 
        Col. Ben was Representative to Congress. We've remembered a lot!
 It was Ol' Samuel who spun many a tale around the time when Col. Ben decided 
        not to run for re-election to Congress. Great-great-great grandfather 
        Samuel told about Col. Ben writing a long letter to the folks in the Illinois 
        Territory about his two terms in Congress. This letter was published in 
        the Kaskaskia newspaper in June 1816. The letter told of the laws Congress 
        had passed for the benefit of the Illinois Territory and Ol' Samuel would 
        chuckle. He knew it was Col. Ben who saw and heard what the Illinois Territory 
        needed and had introduced the laws and succeeded in getting them passed. 
        Ol' Samuel chuckled because Col. Ben was pretty closed mouth about what 
        he had accomplished, but most people understood.
 
 Col. Ben's first day in Congress was on Nov. 14, 1814, and only 11 days 
        later he introduced two resolutions. Not bad for the new boy in Congress! 
        One resolution was to employ more militia in our area for the War of 1812, 
        but the war soon ended so that one was withdrawn.
 
 The second resolution involved matters about land and land grants. The 
        law on the land matters had nine sections, so it covered a lot. Ol' Samuel 
        said Col. Ben made sure the settlers who had settled in the Illinois Territory 
        before the land was surveyed and for sale would be treated fairly. Col. 
        Ben proposed that if these early settlers who had settled on free land 
        could show they had occupied and improved the land, it would be legally 
        their land and it could not be sold by the Federal government. This resolution 
        was passed into law by Congress.
 
 This resolution about land also included wording about land claims made 
        by men who had served in the Militia. They were entitled to land grants 
        if they had a warrant certifying their service in the Militia. These land 
        warrants could also be purchased. Thomas Kirkpatrick, one of our first 
        settlers, purchased his land warrant from Pierre Lejoy, a Revolutionary 
        War veteran.
 
 Col. Ben also proposed in this land act that folks could be granted land 
        because of sufferings from treatment by the Indians. Col. Ben told in 
        his letter published in the Kaskaskia newspaper that he had secured land 
        for Mrs. Ann Gillham as compensation for her suffering while a prisoner 
        of the Kickapoo Indians. He said he could have done the same for others 
        if he had been provided with the proof needed. Henry here has heard that 
        the story of Ann Gillham is told in Brink's History of Madison County. 
        But, the story great-great-great grandfather Samuel told long, long ago 
        is the one that Henry knows and here it is!
  One day in 1790, James Gillham and his small son Isaac 
        were plowing his corn field in Kentucky. While Gillham was in the field, 
        a band of Kickapoo Indians sneaked into his house and took his wife Ann 
        and their other three children as prisoners. The Indians ripped open the 
        feather beds and used the ticking for sacks to carry the stuff they stole 
        from the house.
 The Indians hurried off with their prisoners, avoiding white settlements 
        along the way, hurrying forward without food or rest. Great-great-great-grand 
        pappy Samuel said how the adults had no food, but the Indians had some 
        jerked venison that they gave to the children. He said the kid's feet 
        were bleeding from all the walking and their mother used her clothing 
        to wrap their feet.
 
 Finally, after traveling a long way, the Indians stopped and sent their 
        two best hunters for game. They returned with one poor coon. They dressed 
        the coon, made a kind of soup and they all finally had a little food.
 
 The Indians were hurrying with the Gillhams toward the Kickapoo town near 
        the head waters of the Sangamon River in Illinois. Ol' Samuel said he 
        heard Mrs. Gillman tell that after they had crossed the Ohio River on 
        three rafts of dry logs, they finally started moving slower and found 
        food. The group marched by Vincennes and Terre Haute and finally reached 
        the Kickapoo Indian town of Salt Creek, about 20 miles from today's Springfield, 
        Illinois.
 
 Ol' Samuel said it was a terrible scene when James Gillham returned from 
        the field to his house. He saw the feathers from the beds scattered all 
        over and his wife and children gone. The frontiersman knew his family 
        had been taken by Indians. Gillham and his friends immediately started 
        to trail the Indians. They found footprints of Mrs. Gillham and her children 
        in several places, but soon the trail was lost. Gillham abandoned the 
        lost trail, sold his property in Kentucky and went to Vincennes and Kaskaskia 
        hoping the French traders who had knowledge of the Indian tribes could 
        be able to help him. However, at this time the whites and Indians were 
        very hostile and little information was to be found. After five long years 
        Gillham heard from a French trader that his family was with the Kickapoo 
        Indians. With guides and two French interpreters, Gillham visited the 
        Indian town at Salt Creek. He found his wife and children alive and well! 
        A ransom was paid through an Irish trader named Atchinson at Cahokia. 
        Great-great-great grandfather Samuel said the youngest child could speak 
        no English and it took some time before he could be persuaded to leave 
        the Indian country.
 
 In 1797, two years after finding his family, Gillham became a resident 
        of the Illinois Territory. The action of Congress in 1815 gave Ann Gillham 
        her choice of any available quarter section of land within the Illinois 
        Territory in testimony of the hardship and suffering she had endured during 
        her captivity among the Indians. Ann and James Gillham settled on 160 
        acres of land near Long Lake in Madison County in 1815.
 
 Well, Col. Ben did a fine job getting the land laws passed quickly by 
        Congress. And, there are other areas where Col. Ben provided a lot of 
        help for the folks in the Illinois Territory that I will tell you about 
        later. He really achieved a lot in his two terms in Congress. I do believe 
        that with Cousin Jake, Sid and Henry here working on this we are going 
        to find out a lot more about what Col. Ben did in Congress! I hope so.
 
 Here is some good news we all have been waiting for! Mark and his men 
        are here at "my" house and have started work on the electrical 
        part of the heating and cooling system. E.J. and his crew will be here 
        any day and let me tell you, when they get here my food situation will 
        definitely improve. I like the summer sausage from the Market Basket and 
        so do they!! Ummmmmmm, can't wait!
 See ya' later,Henry
 
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