Tuesday, May 3, 2022

Lost Towns of Illinois - Challacombe, Illinois.

Challacombe, Illinois, was established on June 3, 1887, and disbanded on January 19, 1909. It is now a part of Medora, IL. Challacombe was located in Section 20 of Chesterfield Township in Macoupin County.
We're here! Welcome to Challacombe, Illinois.


Nicholas Challacombe, who came here from Devonshire, England, in 1840, settled on section 21 (the "Mound") homestead. He became a prominent farmer and stock raiser. Nicholas Challacombe and his wife Nancy G. Carson, eldest daughter of Harvey Challacombe, were newly married. The small area of the Mound was generally known as Challacombe.

Challacombe was established with the building of the St. Louis, Chicago, and St. Paul Railroad Line. All that is left is an intersection, Challacombe Road & South Alton Way Road, with a single house, two grain silos, and farmland. 

Unless you have an old road map, there is no way to know if you're in Challacombe, Illinois, or not.

Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.

Monday, May 2, 2022

La Rabida Hospital at Chicago's 1893 World's Columbian Exposition.

La Rabida Hospital on the south side of Chicago has it's origins in the Santa Maria de la Rabida Convent from the 1893 Chicago World's Columbian Exposition. The Convent of La Rabida is the last place Columbus set foot before he left dry land. Spain erected a full-scale replica of the convent for the fair.
Inside the Convent are found some of the most valuable relics of the Exposition, comprising illustrations of the life history of Columbus, relics of the court of Ferdinand and Isabella, and of the early history of this convent in the time of Columbus, and many historical paintings. The Columbian relics, including a small vial of Columbus' remains, have been gathered from every quarter of the globe.


After the World's fair, Spain gifted the building to Chicago and it became known as La Rabida Sanitarium. They treated infants of the poor on Chicago's south side free of charge. Most of the babies were suffering from what was termed "milk poisoning" which was really just spoiled milk due to a lack of proper refrigeration. The building burned down in 1922. The La Rabida Children's Hospital still exists today and is expanding. Their mission is the same. Provide free medical service to those that need it. The stones that you see around the building are still there today as part of Jackson Park.

Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.