An Interview with
Mrs.
Bailey Hobson
(By a representative from the "Inter-Ocean")
July 8th, 1883.
Mrs. Hobson still lives to tell the story
of her early trials, which were such as few would now believe
possible
for a woman to pass through and a better historian for what
came
within her experience could not be found. Her little white
cottage
near the river bank in Naperville surrounded by flowers, is not
more cheerful than the little white haired lady whose home it
is.
"Yes," said she, "so far as I know, I was the first white woman to
live in what is now Du Page county, but it was not Du Page then;
it was a part of Cook County. There were others living
just
over the line in Will County. The Scott's and the
Hawley's
had moved there in the Fall of 1830 -- my husband, myself and
five
children came here in March 1831. My husband took up a
great
deal of land out here on the river about three miles from this
place,
but new settlers coming in, located so near us that in fixing
up
the deeds there was a great deal of mixing up, and much of what
he had taken was settled on by others. That was one result of
settling the country and locating land before there were any
surveys.
It left the farms in bad shape too. Our land was on both
sides
of the river, and our house stood in the timber to protect it
from
the storms. Not long after we came my husband built a
mill,
and the people from all over the country came there for their
flour
and meal. This induced many new comers to settle near
us.
They wanted to be near the mill, and while it was at first very
lonesome, our nearest neighbors being three miles away, in a few years
we had plenty close at hand -- that is it was a good many at that
time. I shall never forget the first we went to Chicago.
You have no doubt read a good deal about it, but you will never
know what it really was to the people who really lived there
then."
Question: "You refer to the massacre in 1832?" "Yes, we
had
been here a little over a yaar. It was May 17th -- we
were
just settling down to dinner when a man and a boy came in from
a
field near by and began to talk about the Indians coming. The
boy said they were killing and burning everything in their way, and
were at Hollenback, 30 miles away (that is where Newark is now
located).
We had lived there a short time before moving here. The
report
was exaggerated, but there was some shooting, but the fright
was
a good deal worse than it should have been. I don't think
we would have all been killed had we
remained at home, but I did think so then. A friendly Indian
came and advised us to leave. Just after dinner my
husband
started out to learn something further, but I would not stay at
home alone with the children, and we all went together.
On
the high ground near, we could see some men, and we thought
them
Indians, but after we learned they were men from the
Naper settlement who had come there to look for Indians. You
could see a great way across the prairies from a high piece of
ground
there. We were frightened and went into the woods where
we
remained until night. Then I came back to the house with
my
husband and helped him fix the wagon and hitch up the oxen for
the
journey. We had left the children in the woods. In the
night,
we loaded up and started for Chicago, where we arrived the next
day about sundown. We had to cross the North branch of the river
on an old wooden bridge. There was a little ferry boat
but
not one fourth of the people who came from all over the
country,
could cross on that. We got into the Fort and I was
telling
some people last year, that 50 years ago I was drinking water
from
the Chicago River, and not eating much of anything. We
could
not get down to the lake for the sand bar. I remember the boats
had to anchor so far out, they were almost out of sight. I
have not seen much of Chicago lately, but I remember well
enough
how it looked in 1832. "How long did you remain in the
fort?"
"Until the last of June -- the men left earlier and came back
here
to build a fort at home. The women and children remained,
and three weeks passed without hearing anything from our husbands.
We had pretty fair provisions, after the rations for the soldiers
came.
But when Major Whistler and his soldiers
arrived it was worse than the Indians; they drove us out of the
Fort, that the soldiers might have the place for their
protection.
They were sent to Chicago to protect the settlers. They
came
and drove women and children from a place of protection that
they
might protect themselves. They had better not had
been sent us. The proclamation was read one night, that the
soldiers would be there the next morning and we must all be out
by that time. Our husbands were away hunting Indians or
building
places of protection to take us to. We had no place to
go.
There were a few little cabins in Chicago where some of the
women
went, but there were three of us who remained in the Fort
--Mrs.
Hawley, Mrs. Blodgett and myself. Some Wisconsin men who
had come down to Chicago to help defend us were there yet when the
soldiers came, and they secured a little room about 15 X 20
feet
in another side of the Fort, which we with our 15 children
occupied
for three weeks. Yes, it was rather crowded, but it was
better
than being massacred by the Indians. We did not know whether
our
husbands were alive or not -- we could hear nothing from
them.
The soldiers said we were staying to eat up their
provisions, rather than because we were afraid of the Indians.
We did eat some of the food furnished them by the government,
but
we had to or starve. I don't think the soldiers were of
much
account. When Fort Payne at Naperville was finished, we
came
there, and remained until the war ended in August. I
often
think of the trials of those early days, and I believe they
were
too great for the men. There were five of us left with our children
years ago. My husband died in 1850. The wives of both the
Napers
have been widows for years, and so were Mrs. Blodgett and Mrs.
Hawley
-- they are dead now. The men had to work too hard and it
shortened their lives.
I have often remarked that I passed thru
two wars and one famine. The war of 1812 and the
rebellion
and it was a famine when we came here. We had to go 50
miles
to mill. My husband built a mill in 1834 and the people from
all over the country came here to mill."
Question: "Were you very sociable in
1833?"
"Yes, more so than people are here now -- our neighbors lived
three
and four miles away, but we visited each other often and had
some
pleasure in our sociability, but now people don't care whether
they
live for any one except themselves."


Bailey Hobson was the first settler in what is
now
Du Page County. In May, 1830, he came west from Orange County,
Indiana,
and made his claim near Holderman's Grove (Newark). He returned
to
Indana for his family and they reached the prairies of Illinois,
accompanied
by Lewis Stewart, on September 21, 1830. Link to genealogy of
Bailey Hobson.


Taken from Naperville Centennial, 1831-1931,
Copyright 1931, Fort Payne Chapter - Daughters of the American
Revolution,
Naperville, Illinois. Transcribed with permission by Diane Bauer.
Back to DuPage
County
Illinois History