|
By 1900, the town was known as a fishing and hunting center, and was actually the most important inland fishing port in the United States. The economy boomed and the population peaked at about 5,000. There were hotels, bars, and gambling houses to entertain the sport hunters and sport fishermen who enjoyed huge catches of fish and game. |
|
Havana History Book
|
|
|
Havana was a bustling town during the first half of he twentieth century. Among its businesses were four floating fish markets (Watt's, Rudolf's, Shaffer's, and Riley's), five major grocery stores (A & P, Glick's, Kroger's, Morgan's, and West's), three movie theaters (Havana, Majestic, and Lawford), and three drugstores (Wolter's, Deckard's, and Tarbill & Ermeling's). In Havana's heyday, in the 1930s and 1940s, visitors and residents parked their cars on the main downtown streets on Saturday afternoons to get ready for an evening on the town visiting with friends and patronizing the restaurants, bars, night clubs, and gaming houses. |
|||
|
|
|||
|
Thanks to the internet and people who
have collected historical images and taken the time to scan them a little
searching can reveal many
This link is to a very interesting chronological
history of Illinois which includes a great deal of information about our
area with many more very interesting photographs. Please take a look by
CLICKING HERE .
There is another very interesting section from the Illinois State Museum
called "Harvesting
the River". This link will take you to
a section of general history,
CLICK HERE ,
but be sure to click on the links you see at there are many other sections
to this great history of this area with many photographs. There are many
photographs, slide shows, recordings, and many more features incorporated
into this great site, I urge you to visit. And then there is a site named
Illinois Alive produced by the Illinois
Library System. There are some great pages and audio presentations with
photos from our Havana Library. Havana
images and audio descriptions.
Please be sure to watch the following great piece I am
so glad was recorded for history.
Harvey Lee Ross, the founder of Havana, reenacted by
John Glick. |
|||
|
|
|||
|
Where Is Fay Rawley? NOTE: When I began this history section I did a lot of searching on the internet for information such as this and the story about Scott Lucas below. In fact I found both stories on the same website but there was no credit given to the authors. Part of the Fay Rawley mystery is now solved, well at least we now know who wrote this story. Interestingly it was written by local historian, C.O. Parkinson, of Lewistown who was kind enough to write me and tell me more about this story which was written originally in 1986. I am very happy to have this information to share with all of you who have found this story interesting. Thank you again C.O., Ted.
"If you want to get away with murder, do it in Fulton County, Illinois," stated an FBI agent on the Johnny Carson late night talk show just a few years ago. When asked, "What part of the country has the largest unsolved crime rate?" the answer was "a small county in Illinois by the name of Fulton!"
Research showed that all Rawley's accounts and holdings seemed to be intact. Rumors that perhaps he fled the area were deemed "unfounded." No man, it was theorized, "would take off unannounced and leave his fortunes behind!" Just the same, Fay Rawley was missing, and his whereabouts were unknown to his family, associates and friends. If he had enemies, they were not talking either! And it was a proven fact (as far as Sheriff Ball was concerned) that Fay Rawley did have some enemies! Enough so for Ball to conduct an investigation into Rawley's disappearance and his lifestyle. But years passed without results. Rawley's son and family publicized the fact that Fay Rawley was missing and rewards were offered for any and all information as to his whereabouts. The ads appeared in papers all over west central Illinois and elsewhere, but to no avail. An attorney froze Rawley's accounts and all assets that were a part of the elder Rawley's estate. (It was to remain so until seven years later when he was finally declared dead.) The investigation by the Fulton County Sheriff continued, with the blessing of Rawley's own County Board an investigation that would draw interest from the media all across America and even the world regarding the man from central Illinois who vanished from the face of the earth! Back when the disappearance first occurred, employees of a coal mine, working on mining leased land just across from Rawley's rural home, had reported noticing that his outside porch light had been on continuously for several days and nights. Upon investigation into this, "all that was found was a home that gave evidence of perhaps a minor skirmish taking place quite rapidly, in what could have been, earlier, a tranquil evening by its owner." Rawley's eyeglasses lay on the floor near his chair and a floor lamp was still on. His pants lay on the floor near the chair. Rawley was nowhere to be seen and his 1953 green Cadillac was not on the premises. The search then widened. Reports of Rawley's "womanizing" influenced the course of the investigation. Many individuals were questioned as to his "affairs," as well as who he kept company with and who perhaps had hard feelings towards Rawley. It was discovered by the Sheriff that there were indeed individuals who had "probable cause" to do harm to the old man because of his habits and actions. Further investigations brought out the fact that, in the summer of 1953, Rawley was seen early in the evening in Macomb where an act of vandalism and perhaps an attack on his very person took place. Persons unknown threw a bottle of acid at Rawley and damaged his green Cadillac. Retaliation of sorts? Perhaps. Further investigation by the Sheriff brought reports to the surface that a car resembling the Rawley Cadillac was seen on an evening prior to the report of his disappearance in the area of the very mine land that he had leased, across from his home. It was this fact that Sheriff Ball followed up on immediately. It was then theorized by the Sheriff that Rawley could have been taken from his home, placed in his Cadillac, driven to the mine land, and covered forever there in the mine. Ball suspected various "persons" of "doing him in" and then covering more than their tracks! However, Ball still didn't have a body, nor the car nor any eye witnesses to what (if it were true) could have been a "crime of the century." Because of the tremendous press coverage from Life and Look magazines, the Saturday Evening Post and every major news gathering network in the country, the situation grew into one of the largest covered media events of the then modern day 1950s! Later, in 1957, permissions were granted, and the search for Rawley and his Cadillac on mine land near Summum began in earnest. Digging in various locations soon took place in what were known before only as corn, wheat and bean country. It was near the former home town of Gene Autry's old western film side kick, Smiley Burnett, who grew up there in Summum. However it was the digging for Fay Rawley near there that took precedence and gained the most notoriety and huge crowds! In Central Illinois that summer, it was commonplace for the population to stay glued to the radio and purchase every newspaper imaginable just to find out more information about the search for the wealthy farmer from Summum. With every move by the Sheriff and those conducting the search, tension grew. The question was, "Would Fay Rawley be found today?" No stone was left unturned by Sheriff Ball in his relentless endeavors to get to the bottom of the whole thing. Ball interviewed and re-interviewed those who knew anything at all that might solve his dilemma. Even psychics were to come forth with their "versions" of the situation. One even told Ball of her "vision of a dark and murky mine pond, complete and intact, with Rawley and his Cadillac." Ball was so determined to find and solve the mystery, he left no stone unturned. In the early days of the search he had even brought in and buried a similar automobile to test searching techniques. Sheriff Ball had total co-operation from state crime technicians with up-to-date equipment of the day magnetometers and instruments with which to locate even buried automobiles. Though some efforts proved futile when discoveries turned out to be old mine steel cables and discarded oil barrels, the search went on. Finally, the 1957 search and "dig" concluded without success. The Sheriff's term in office had ended. The next Sheriff chose not to pursue the Rawley matter any further. But this didn't stop Virgil Ball's interest in the matter. Ball was elected Fulton County Treasurer, and with persistence and his own expense, and with permission of Robert Rawley's widow and volunteer assistance, the search went on in 1962! In the interim time period, misfortune had once again entered into the situation. Fay Rawley's son Robert, who led the drive to find out what happened to his father, was killed in a tragic automobile crash on Route 9, north of Cuba. He was traveling home in a fairly new auto which, upon investigation, appeared (according to local officials) to have had the brakes cut or tampered with. When the investigation of the disappearance of the elder Rawley began again with new diggings in 1962, the Sheriff called on the assistance of Harley Hart of Summum, who was known for his expertise at "witching," or using what is commonly known to old timers as a "divining rod." Hart used various tricks of the trade in hopes of locating Rawley and his Cadillac, his methods including the use of human bone fragments, pieces of tooth and, of course, metals. He believed in his methods devoutly. At the end of the search, he stated emphatically, "We were within three feet of both Rawley and the car!" The only "witcher" I have ever met was Orville Fleming of Lewistown. He was a retired custodian from the local post office. I had occasion to interview him on the subject of "divining" and I had asked Mr. Fleming to what he attributed his powers. He stated, "When I was a young man I had hair as dark as anybody's; then one night I had an experience, and upon awakening the next morning my hair was as white as snow! and I have been able to witch ever-since!" He stood behind his beliefs and agreed with Mr. Hart's findings in the Rawley case as well. I never had the opportunity to ever interview Mr. Hart. Sheriff Ball filled me in on his part in the investigation. Ball, however, did tell me the following: "It was quite a sight that night Hart did his witching. The moon was full, and he walked the area with his paraphernalia as we all watched from the distance. Pretty soon he came over and stated he found where quite possibly the Cadillac could be found! Then he asked drag-line operator to hand him the "human bone" he had brought with him to use to "locate" Rawley's remains. The operator balked, stood back and stated that he "wouldn't touch that for $10,000!" Other unusual things also took place during the search. Sheriff Ball tells of how on more than one occasion he felt his own life was in jeopardy, as certain attempts were made to perhaps silence him. This was done by some of the very individuals he suspected of doing Rawley in! Still other suspects refused to co-operate in any way in the investigation. As time passed, so did the interest and the crowds. However, the County Board was in the process of hearing from disgruntled Fulton County taxpayers who made it known they had had enough, expense wise, in regards to the search. Meanwhile the search continued, and suddenly the word was out that they had indeed came across a vast mass of metal that could very well be the automobile and perhaps the body of Rawley. Even Fleming told of samples of teeth and bone, possibly Rawley's, that came up in drillings that were made at that location. Ball had contacted the local high school principal as to his needs, and students and instructors devised a special magnet which was put down into the drill holes to attract metal flakes for examination. It was while using this procedure that samples of metal fragments apparently came up on the drill bits. It was said at the time, "The samples in tests in Springfield showed paint samples matching GM paint specifications on Rawley's particular model of Cadillac." According to spectators and others, "Suddenly, as quickly as it started, the operation ceased there at the digging site. The Sheriff was informed by those who had the lease on the land that they stood to be sued mightily should Rawley and his car be un-earthed! They demanded an immediate cease to activities there and the removal of all equipment for they could not take that chance." Thus ended what was perhaps the greatest manhunt in Fulton County history, closing forever, or so it seems, what was one man's attempt to see justice done here on the plains of the Prairie state. Words could not and cannot explain the disappointment Sheriff Ball suffered in that attempt. Now, 35 years later, the area is once again private land, and where they once dug, there is now a pond. Just over a ridge was, for a while, a ball park, and now there is a convenience store in this location just outside, Summum, Illinois. Across the way, yet today, stands a remodeled homestead that once was the home of a well-known-farmer, County Supervisor, and friend to his neighbors known as Fay Rawley. He now belongs to the legends of Fulton County this was only one of them. The former Sheriff has been retired for several years now, and he only speaks on the subject of the search when it comes up as it does. Perhaps the FBI agent I mentioned at the beginning of this story was correct! You can "get by with anything in Fulton County!" Even Murder?? Final note: Four years ago, a fellow I know had the opportunity to visit the former home of Fay Rawley on the eve of the 40th anniversary of his disappearance. He described the experience in this way: "Upon entering the home, immediately I had the feeling that, indeed, something terrible took place in this home. It was an eerie feeling. I browsed through the home, and upon arriving at the area of the stairwell, an even more uneasy feeling ran through my body! "I felt suddenly the coldest chill I had ever experienced in my life! At first I thought it could have been my imagination. I walked around the premises, and each time I entered that area, the chill hit again. It was not my imagination! "Truly, some sort of terrible folly transpired within the parameters of that home. It was as though someone's very spirit was calling for whatever happened there to be rectified!" Financial problems: Virgil Ball had high hopes that the mystery around Fay Rawley's disappearance would be solved with the finding of Rawley's body in the strip mine at Summum. A Lewistown Attorney also had the same hopes! The attorney had this hope because of the mess it caused Rawley's estate from the time he disappeared till he was declared dead at the end of the seven-year waiting period. The law stated that no person can legally be presumed dead for seven years unless a corpse is found! In Rawley's case, as a result, all business and legal transactions in which Rawley was involved remained "status quo" from the night of November 7th, 1953, the last time Rawley was seen! The attorney was a former Fulton County State's Attorney and was Rawley's personal attorney at the time of his disappearance. Because of the size of the estate, the attorney was concerned with the filing of estate taxes that would be due. However, the government wired a communiqué stating, "We take the position you don't know this guy's dead, so there is nothing due." Relying on the seven year rule, the attorney kept track of every dime that came in or went out in regards to the estate, then filed a report at the end of the seven years. Nothing in the form of any pointing fingers appeared anywhere within the estate that could provide a clue as to Rawley's whereabouts. Another thing that bothered the attorney was the fact that Fay Rawley could come back at any time and say, "There's no presumption of my death," and ask, "Where's my stuff'?" Another "bookkeeping" worry for the attorney was the fact that Rawley had about 35 loans made, secured by trustees. Under the law, a trustee could not release them unless he gave the note to the borrower. They couldn't do that the notes were in one or more of Rawley's three lock boxes which were in the Astoria Farmers State Bank, of which Rawley was a former director and stock holder. Thus, the attorney was left with a situation in which "we had people with the money, wanting to pay off their notes, but the attorney couldn't get to them for seven years!!
|
|||
|
Is Havana Haunted? Interesting tales found online include: Havana - Old Park district Gym
- 15 years ago a y Havana - Lawford Theater - Cold chills have been felt behind the curtains before opening night performances. It is said that this is the presence of past actors coming back to watch a play one more time. There are also reports of the Apparition of a Stage Manager in the Basement of the Theatre. Opened in 1914, this 500 seat Art Deco, Neo-Classical Theater in downtown Havana is situated next door to the City Hall. The Lawford was operated by the Kerasotes Theatre chain from 1946 until it closed in 1982. In 1997 it was restored and reopened for use as a Legitimate Theater which it served as until 2001 when it again closed. |
|||
The Mississippi River, which makes up the
western border of Illinois, has long been a breeding ground for ghosts and
legends. There are scores of haunted places located along, and connected to,
the river, including many in Illinois. In One story tells of a steamship and a boiler that exploded one night and took the life of a young steersman. The captain of the ship was especially fond of the young man and spent days and nights searching for him in the river and along the banks. After the captain’s own death, a ghostly light was said to appear near where the accident took place. The stories say that it is the light of the captain’s lantern as he still searches for the body of the crew member. Other stories tell of a phantom riverboat that has been known to appear all along the Mississippi River. They say that when the boat appears, and its whistle is heard, a river worker will be injured in an accident. The Spoon River region has another story that is similar to this one of the “phantom riverboat”. This tale has been a part of Fulton County lore for generations. It seems that in the late 1840’s, the Spoon River rose dramatically one spring after a particularly wet season. The experienced river pilots avoided the swollen and muddy waterway, but one morning, a crew of adventurous and unseasoned men launched a small steamboat onto the river. They took with them a group of passengers, boarded the boat and set off downriver. According to the St. Louis Republican newspaper, the last thing that was heard from the boat was the sharp sound of its whistle and the passengers on deck singing the old hymn “Sweet By and By”. The vessel steamed off around a bend in the river - and disappeared without a trace. The passengers from the steamboat were never seen again and despite several searches, the boat was never recovered. It was thought that perhaps the vessel had run aground somewhere, but if it had, there was no sign of it. Several years passed and in the spring of 1853, the waters of the Spoon River once again swelled and rushed over the banks. According to reports from people who lived along the river, they heard the distinctive sound of a steamboat whistle piercing the air one night around midnight. Several of them, curious to see what fool would be trying to navigate the river after dark, hurried to the banks to see the boat. A heavy mist lay over the river but they watched as the fog bank parted and a steamboat appeared. It was the same vessel that had disappeared several years before! The craft moved silently on the water, giving off a strange and eerie glow. As the people on the shore watched, white apparitions appeared on the deck and the faint snatch of a song could be heard echoing on the river. The song was the old hymn... “Sweet By and By’! The steamboat drifted past and floated down the river and out of sight. It was never seen again. |
|||
|
In 1949, Look magazine polled one hundred Washington correspondents for their views on the 81st Congress, which had convened earlier that year. The question, "Which senator contributes the most to the country's welfare?," drew a near-unanimous response: Robert A. Taft, the Republican Conference chairman. In contrast, the reporters did not even list the new Democratic majority leader, Scott W. Lucas, among the top twenty-five most powerful senators. Lucas did rank highly in one respect--he won the category, "best dressed senator." Known for his double-breasted suits and homburg hats, the "farmer's son" from Illinois maintained a dapper, "well groomed" appearance even under the most trying of circumstances. While Scott Lucas may have aspired to Taft's power, as majority leader he faced an impossible situation. In the postwar years, the Democratic party split between liberal and conservative factions, and Lucas' efforts to unify his colleagues only resulted in further alienating one side from the other. At the same time, constrained by his leadership duties, he lost touch with his constituents–as one journalist put it, Lucas experienced the "misery" of his leadership position without the "glory." In fact, his one term as Senate majority leader took a physical toll. He had at least one unreported heart attack in office prior to his 1950 reelection defeat by Everett Dirksen, the Illinois Republican who would have more influence as a minority leader than Lucas ever achieved as the majority leader. Born in 1892 in southern Illinois, Lucas grew up on an impoverished tenant farm. While his parents named him for Scott Wike, a Democratic U.S. representative, it was his older brother, Thurman, who steered him towards a political career. Thurman encouraged Lucas to study law in college and helped him with his initial expenses. Lucas then supported himself at Illinois Wesleyan University by stoking furnaces, waiting on tables, and performing other odd jobs. A consummate athlete, he lettered in football, basketball, and baseball. During summer breaks from college, he played semiprofessional baseball in the Three-I League, consisting of teams from Illinois, Iowa, and Indiana. After graduating from college in 1914, Lucas taught in a one-room schoolhouse before opening a law practice in Havana, Illinois. World War I interrupted his plans, however, and he enlisted in the army in 1917. Although he never saw combat, Lucas rose from the rank of private to lieutenant by the end of the war. Returning to Havana, he established himself as a "first-rate" country lawyer and served as a state's attorney for five years in the 1920s. In August 1934, the Speaker of the House, Henry T. Rainey of Illinois, died in office. Lucas won the election to the House seat of his political idol and soon became an advocate for farmers and working people. A champion of Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal, he actively supported the Soil Conservation Act of 1935 and the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938. He also fought for a minimum wage, employment insurance, and the abolishment of child labor. Lucas broke with FDR, however, over the president's crusade to enlarge the Supreme Court in response to its anti-New Deal rulings. He called the "Court-packing" plan, "useless, selfish, and futile." In 1938, Lucas ran for an open seat in the Senate. The Democratic primary proved to be the most difficult hurdle in the campaign. Members of the Chicago political machine favored another candidate. Lucas capitalized on the situation, taking the motto, "Defeat the Bosses." He won the primary and reconciled with Chicago's Mayor Edward Kelly, who supported his successful bid in the general election. As a freshman senator, Lucas kept a low profile, preferring to be a "good listener" rather than a prominent speaker, but Franklin Roosevelt's death in 1945 led to Lucas' rise to leadership early in his second term. Backed by President Harry S. Truman and the liberal Democrats, he drew enough support from his more conservative colleagues to be elected party whip in 1946.Lucas was popular in the position of whip, both with his
fellow senators and his Illinois constituents, whom he aided with favorable
farm bills. He did anger a number of Republican and Democratic senators,
however, by voting to sustain Truman's veto in 1947 of the Taft-Hartley Act,
the controversial legislation that restricted labor unions' right to strike.
The House and Senate overrode the In 1948, Lucas assisted Truman throughout his difficult presidential race. He took charge of the midwest campaign and helped pull off one of the greatest political upsets of the twentieth century. Not only did Truman unexpectedly defeat the Republican candidate, Thomas E. Dewey, but the Democrats took back the control of the Senate, gaining nine seats in the election. After the party's Senate leader, Alben Barkley, resigned his seat to assume the vice presidency under Truman, Lucas' colleagues unanimously elected him to be the majority leader and chairman of the Democratic Conference. While Majority Leader Lucas regarded his role as "harmonizing the different views" in his party, he had little success in building a Democratic consensus. On matters concerning Truman's "Fair Deal" domestic policy, the southern Democrats broke ranks with their party, voting with the Republicans to defeat priority administration measures. Lucas' majority rule, then, was a majority "on paper" only, as the southern bloc held the balance of power in the Senate. In 1949, the southern senators staged a lengthy filibuster against Truman's civil rights legislation. After trying and failing to close debate, Lucas received the "lashing" of southern colleagues, as well as the "counter-blows" of liberal Democrats, who decried his "soft" stance against the conservatives. Constituents and members of the press joined the chorus of criticism, accusing him of losing the "civil rights war." Sensitive to the "slings and arrows" that came his way, Lucas spent three weeks in the hospital recovering from the filibuster ordeal. The New York Times reported the mysterious illness as a case of "exhaustion." Other newspapers, perhaps at Lucas' request, announced that the majority leader had a bleeding ulcer. In retrospect, however, it is likely that Lucas actually suffered from a heart attack, as he hid his serious coronary disease while in office. Lucas' inability to please either the liberals or the conservatives in his party became more apparent during his 1950 reelection campaign. Accused of kowtowing to the president, he declared, "I could never have advanced from farm boy to senator if I wasn't independent by nature." Yet he told an erstwhile supporter, "You must remember as Majority Leader I am compelled to reconcile some of my viewpoints with those of the President. . . . I have flexed my conscience a bit on some things." Lucas' Senate opponent, Everett Dirksen, took advantage of the majority leader's predicament, linking him with Truman's unpopular policies. Meanwhile, Republican Senator Joseph McCarthy launched an attack against Lucas, charging him with condoning communism, just as the Crime Investigation Committee, led by Democratic Senator Estes Kefauver, uncovered corruption among the Chicago politicians who backed Lucas' reelection bid. Advised to return to Illinois to defend his record, Lucas instead spent most of the election year in Washington, attending to his leadership duties.On November 7, 1950, Lucas wrote one word in his appointment book: "defeated." Later, his physician said that the election loss saved his life. His heart could not endure one more year of job-related stress. In fact, Lucas lived another seventeen years, dying in 1968 at the age of seventy six. The former majority leader spent his forced retirement on the golf course, content to rule the links as he never ruled the Senate.
|
|||
|
|
|||
![]() |
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||