Coddiwompling in Illinois

Since the Covid shut down all my vacations in 2020 I have been heading out on short trips to see parks, small towns, geological formations, and wildlife. On Halloween, I visited some of the most rural areas in the Midwest – central western Illinois. You can’t find any coffee shops, there aren’t any museums, there are barely any people. The land is glaciated and generally flat. There is lots of corn. And of course, colorful trees.

Illinois has an abundance of sweet gums and maples.

After the Mexican war and Blackhawk war soldiers were given land in Illinois. One gentleman, George Meyer, was given a beautiful piece of property in western Illinois near the Illinois River. This land had a spring and a small town grew up around it. The man lived to be 104 years old, so everyone believed the water was healing. After George passed on, a real estate man got his hands on it and sold the water for decades. Later this area became Siloam Springs State Park. This history is hidden among the picnic pavilions and hiking trails.

In the valley today.
The spring is still there. The huckster who sold the water built this pavilion and a lodge.
The park has also added a reservoir lake the sycamores are beautiful.
The sycamore leaves fill me with awe – they are large and the patterns are cool
A sunny day on Halloween is a treat indeed.
We found a forgotten pavilion filled with mystery
We saw no people. It’s like Western Illinois is abandoned. A ruin from an society long forgotten.
Serenity or spookiness?

We left Siloam Springs for the biggest town in the region – Jacksonville: the county seat of Morgan county. When we arrived, it too was a ghost town.

Live Downtown with the ghosts of the…
Trail of Death
March of Death

Or…

Memorial to the Abolition of Slavery
Closed today…

I don’t know if the coffee shop was really closed today or everyday. I don’t know how it could survive with no people. I walked into the bakery to see if I could find a doughnut. The door was open but nobody was inside. I could see cakes and cupcakes – but no doughnuts. And no people.

The missing people of Jacksonville – at least had a cannon.

We wandered to another remote state park – Beaver Dam State Park. We heard there was people there.

But there were none. Not even ducks. Or Beavers.
The observation deck was inaccessible and frankly looked like a good place for zombies.
The concessionaires were gone but supplies were available. The people of western Illinois were simply gone

So we headed home.

Bonus photo 1
Bonus photo 2
Still no people.

Leave a comment

Filed under American History, Art, Photography, Travel

Leave a comment