During the “Winter of the Deep
Snow” in 1830-1831, and some severe winters following, counties in the south of
Illinois supplied food to the northern part of the state, an action that may
have given rise to the name “Little Egypt” or just “Egypt” for Southern
Illinois:
There is an old
tradition handed down from the early settlers along this road about the people
coming down from the north to buy corn in an early day. The frost having killed
all the corn in the north, in the southern part of Illinois the corn was not hurt
by frost. The people near Goshen had come down the Old Goshen road to Knight's
Prairie west of McLeansboro where they stopped to stay over night with one of
the early settlers by the name of Knight. The corn buyers accosted the early
settler by using the Bible expression “We are the son of Jacob and have come
into the land of Egypt to buy corn.” From this expression we derived the
cognomen of 'The land of Egypt.” Since then all Southern Illinois is known as
'EGYPT" or The land of Egypt." (H. M. Aiken, Franklin County
History, Centennial Edition)
It is sometimes claimed the southernmost
Illinois city was given the name “Cairo” because it lay in “Little Egypt,” but
the reverse may be true. On 9 Jan 1818 the governor of Illinois territory
signed into law an act to incorporate the “City and Bank of Cairo.” The city
was named well before the food shipments following the winter of 1830 and
afterwards. Perhaps the position of Cairo at the confluence of the Ohio and
Mississippi rivers, reminded the founders of the Egyptian Delta. But, of course,
there may have been earlier food shipments.
And the Egypt designation could have
began in 1799 when Baptist minister John Badgley termed the fertile lands near
southern Illinois town of Edwardsville, Illinois, the “Land of Goshen,” a
Biblical area in Egypt.
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City of Cairo, Illinois, panoramic map, 1885. |
Southern Illinois, “Little Egypt,” was
known for its huge coal deposits, though the Summers family was apparently
never involved with this. And it was also known for its large concentration of
settlers from southern states, such as North Carolina and Tennessee, from which
the Franklin Co Summers immigrated.
In his 1918 book on the history of Franklin Co, H. M. Aiken states
The early
settlers of the county who came from the South, brought with them, a hospitality
and sociability, that could not be excelled anywhere in the U. S. The typical
Yankee possessed many good traits of character but the genuine hospitality and
sociability of the people of the South was a great inheritance of which
Franklin County received in her early days.
Franklin
County is indebted to her early settlers for the gentle, Christian spirit that
had been a great factor in moulding[sic] the character of the founders of
Franklin County.
Joy, peace,
and contentment and affection encompassed and enveloped their homes. Southern ideas
govern our social intercourse and Southern hospitality is dispersed. The
traveler passing through the county upon our public highways is always greeted
with an affable "Good-day, Sir," and if he should stop at a farm
house in quest of information he will be politely invited to 'light and come
in." Refreshments will be offered him so cordially and unostentatiously
that he at once concludes that he has found a county where kindness, chivalry
and hospitality do not entirely belong to the ages that are past.
No description could be further from the truth. Inhospitable and unsociable, Southern Illinois had a plethora of crime and
violence. In 1875 a newspaper reporter described Little Egypt residents as
Dirty roughs, clad
in two shirts, butternut homespun, and cowhide boots, hanging round the
"drug stores" (here grogshops are so designated), to drink benzine,
discuss who is "the best man," and, if enough benzine have been consumed,
to settle that great question by fighting it out then and there. Men, as one
soon learns of them, who are born bullies, every mother's son of them, and who
are so proud of nothing as having knocked down some other man, and, while he
was down, kicked, choked, bit, and gouged him, until the victor has spent his
strength and his rage.
The stereotypic resident was said to be “lazy, ignorant,
anti-intellectual drunkard who loved a good fight and held the law in slight
regard” (Illinois
Historical Journal, Spring, 1985, pp. 17-44). Assaults and murders were
rampant, particularly in Williamson Co, with its vicious family vendettas, but
also in adjacent Franklin, Jackson, and other Litte Egypt counties. Suspects usually escaped punishment owing to badly managed prosecutions; lying, threatened, or murdered witnesses; and biased or frightened juries. And all
too often they were simply "nolled" (legal slang from L. nolle prosequi, charges dismissed) for no apparent reason.
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Counties in black voted
for the constitutional convention
that could have legalized slavery. |
Little Egypt was exceedingly racist,
particularly the city of Cairo, home to a large number of blacks, estimated at
more than ten thousand during the Civil War, mostly fugitive “contrabands.” About
three thousand remained in the city after the war. Though the first Illinois
state constitution, published in 1818, stated that slavery shall not be “thereafter
introduced,” slavery continued to be tolerated. The historian Darrel Dexter has described Illinois as a "quasi-slave" state. Use of slaves was allowed by
law until 1825 for the salt works in the southern Illinois county of Gallatin.
Documents show that at least five southern counties—St. Clair, Gallatin,
Randolph, Edwards and Pope, where blacks were bought, sold, indentured, gifted,
and taxed as property—embraced the institution of slavery. In 1853 the state legislature passed a law which made the
settlement of African Americans in Illinois a crime. If African Americans
remained in Illinois beyond 10 days, they could be arrested and fined.
The 1818 Illinois
census for statehood showed Franklin Co with only sixty-seven blacks, fifteen
“indentured” (slavery by another name) and fifty-two free. But, despite these
low numbers, Franklin certainly supported slavery. When a vote was taken in
Illinois in 1824 for or against a constitutional convention that could have
made slavery legal outright, Franklin was one of eleven southern Illinois
counties with a majority of votes for the convention. In Franklin Co, the vote was
170 for and 113 against. But Illinois, as a whole, voted 4972 for and 6640
against. Had the measure passed, the course of Illinois history would have been
much different.
In 1876, after defending several clients
accused of “crimes that would make the bailiffs of Hades blush,” the magniloquent
lawyer Milo Erwin wrote a book about Williamson Co, inviting the world “to look
with joy and pride upon a county redeemed from crime, and sparkling with
brilliant gems of innocence and virtue.” Any sparkle was short-lived. Crime and
violence continued in Williamson and the rest of Little Egypt, culminating in
the 1920s with violent labor strikes, prohibition violence, and the rise of the
Ku Klux Klan. But, as we will see in our next blog, the latter was not a rise
but a rebirth.
And this was home for the Wittenberg
Summers Line! But crime-ridden Egypt may have been more than just their home. As we will see, it may have been their cultural
cradle.
Darrel Dexter, Bondage in Egypt, Slavery in Southern Illinois, Southeast Missouri State University, Cape Girardeau, Missouri, 2010.