Sunday, September 4, 2022

Lost Towns of Illinois - Clayville, Illinois.

Clayville was a roadside hamlet (fewer than 100), inhabited from 1824 into the 1850s, located in Cartwright Township, 14 miles northwest of Springfield, Illinois. 
A visual aid.


The settlement was never very large but was firmly centered on a once-thriving tavern on the main road between Springfield, the state capital, and the Illinois River port of Beardstown. The Broadwell Tavern continues to stand on its original foundation today as a reminder of the once-active frontier settlement.

With its heyday in the 1830s and 40s, life in this town centered around a successful tavern that served stagecoach travelers. The town faltered with the rise of railroads. Even when the roads were paved and became Route 125, things continued to go downhill, and the area was abandoned.

Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.

John T. McCutcheon (1870-1949), Newspaper cartoonist, author, war correspondent and combat artist.

John Tinney McCutcheon won a Pulitzer Prize for his 1932 editorial cartoon, "A Wise Economist Asks a Question.
"A Wise Economist Asks a Question." 1932


Among his best-known works is "Injun Summer," considered one of the best in his "boy" series of cartoons.
WALL ART UP TO 40" x 60"
Printing Options: Archival Paper (+Framing Options), Metal, and Acrylic.

John T. McCutcheon
During a trip to Europe in 1914-1916 as a war correspondent, McCutcheon was an eyewitness to the German invasion of Belgium at the beginning of World War I. He also covered the war in England and France before returning to his work as a cartoonist in Chicago.

During his sixty-year career as an artist, McCutcheon became one of the highest-paid cartoonists in the United States. He also supplemented his income with freelance work and publishing numerous books. In addition, McCutcheon was considered the "Dean of American Cartoonists" even before his death in 1949. Although he drew fewer cartoons in his later years, McCutcheon's work appeared on the front page of the Sunday Chicago Tribune until his retirement in 1946. He also continued traveling the world, an activity he had enjoyed throughout his life and took frequent trips to his island home in the Bahamas. McCutcheon also began work on his autobiography, but he died before completing it.

A Sunday Trolley Trip Along The North Shore.



Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.