Address
6th St. and Van Buren Avenue
Charleston
Illinois
61920
United States
Address
6th St. and Van Buren Avenue
Charleston
Illinois
61920
United States
CURRENT OFFICERS
President: David Kent Coy
Vice President: Ann Winkler Hinrichs
Recording Secretary: Joyce Cox St.Michael
Corresponding Secretary: Donna Shepherd Stewart
Treasurer: Brenda Bayes Taber
Board Member: Linda Childress Keeler
Board Member: Debbie Neff Clark
Board Member: Steven Lawyer
Coles County Genealogical Society PO Box 592, Charleston, IL 61920
Charleston Carnegie Public Library 712 6th Street, Charleston, IL 61920
Coles County Genealogical Society PO Box 592, Charleston, IL 61920
Charleston Carnegie Public Library 712 6th Street, Charleston, IL 61920
CURRENT OFFICERS
President: David Kent Coy
Vice President: Ann Winkler Hinrichs
Recording Secretary: Joyce Cox St.Michael
Corresponding Secretary: Donna Shepherd Stewart
Treasurer: Brenda Bayes Taber
Board Member: Linda Childress Keeler
Board Member: Debbie Neff Clark
Board Member: Steven Lawyer
Coles County Genealogical Society PO Box 592, Charleston, IL 61920
Charleston Carnegie Public Library 712 6th Street, Charleston, IL 61920
CURRENT OFFICERS
President: David Kent Coy
Vice President: Ann Winkler Hinrichs
Recording Secretary:
Joyce Cox St.Michael
Corresponding Secretary:
Donna Shepherd Stewart
Treasurer: Brenda Bayes Taber
Board Members:
Linda Childress Keeler
Debbie Neff Clark
Steven Lawyer
Website Design by Angela Freeman for Dau Consulting
A brief overview of Coles County, Illinois’ history
Coles County was formed December 25, 1830 and was named for Edward Coles, who was the second Governor of the State of Illinois, serving from 1822 to 1826. The original county was formed from parts of the already existing counties of Clark and Edgar, both now to the east. Records pertaining to the area prior to 1831 may be found in the county seats of Clark and Edgar Counties.
On March 2, 1843, Cumberland County, was formed from the southern part of Coles County. Then on February 8, 1859, Douglas County, was formed from the northern part of Coles County, being the second to the youngest of Illinois’ 102 counties. In other words, if your ancestor lived in “Coles County” before 1859, you have a much larger area to search, than what currently comprises Coles County.
Charleston was chosen as the County Seat and has always remained the center of county government. The earliest records kept at the courthouse include land and marriage records, dating to late 1830. Pioneers flooded into the area during the aftermath of the Black Hawk War, 1832, when the Native Americans had been relocated west of the Mississippi River and white settlers felt more safe. Coles County has always been primarily a farming community, with some of the most fertile and flattest land in the world in the northern part of the county. Abraham Lincoln’s father and step-mother, with various other relatives came into Coles County in the Spring of 1831, after the “Winter of the Big Snow.”
With the later coming of the railroads, Mattoon developed very quickly and was incorporated as a village in 1857. Ashmore, Bushton, Cooks Mills, Campbell/ Farmington, Diona/Dogtown, Dorans, Etna, Fairgrange, Humboldt, Hutton/Salisbury, Janesville, Lerna, Loxa, Oakland, Paradise, Rardin are other communities through-out the county, where people gathered to live.
The Fourth Lincoln-Douglas Debate took place on the county fairgrounds on Saturday, September 18,1858. The Coles County Fair is still held there annually and is the oldest continually running county fair in the State.
Coles County contributed liberally to the North’s cause during the American Civil War. Coles County ranked near the top of the 102 counties in the State. The population of Coles County in 1860 was 14,174. The total troop quota for the war was 2,728, and Coles County furnished 2,741 in all, or 13 more men than the quota demanded. The Charleston Riot, which is sometimes considered to be the furthest north and west battle of the Civil War took place on the Charleston Square on March 28, 1864. Nine men were killed and 12 were wounded. Coles County has done it’s patriotic duty providing service men and women ever since then.
Established in 1895 as the Eastern Illinois State Normal School, Eastern Illinois University continues to serve the college education needs of the area.
While mainly an agricultural county, Coles County has also welcomed many businesses and industries to the area over the years. There is a centrally located airport. The main hospital, Sarah Bush Lincoln Health Center, located in Lafayette Township, serves a large portion of east central Illinois.
There is no known history of a courthouse disaster in this county. The original records are housed at the County Courthouse or at Illinois Regional Archives Depository (IRAD) at Eastern Illinois University, in Booth Library. Both Charleston and Mattoon have large public libraries. The 2010 Federal Census reported that there were 53,873 people living with the County.
In summary, Coles County is an area rich in history.
Saturday July 15, 2023
Charleston IL Public Library, Rotary Room
Open at 10am
Presentations: Open to the Public
11am “Our Abolitionist Ancestors and Coles County”
Presented by Jane Gregga, Eli Skinner Chapter of the DAR
12pm “My Circa 1850 Ashmore Twsp. Farm House and Farm History”
Presented by Eric Coon
1pm Book Signing with Author David Bowles of the Westward Sagas Series.
The Mitchell Family Westward Odyssey (tentative)
https://westwardsagas.com/