Light and shadow: A review of Pekin’s African-American history and historiography

By Jared L. Olar

Local History Program Coordinator

As Pekin’s Bicentennial Year continues and we now find ourselves in Black History Month, it is fitting that we turn our attention now to Pekin’s African-American history. Compared to most other areas of our city’s history, this is an aspect of Pekin’s history that has been little researched and whose stories have been little told (which is why I have made it a point over the past five years or so to devote time to researching and writing about Pekin’s Black History here at “From the History Room”).

In fact, up till now the most extensive account of Pekin’s African-American history in the standard published works on Pekin’s history is that found in the 1974 Pekin Sesquicentennial volume. While the Sesquicentennial’s account is far from uninformative, the very nature of a celebratory commemorative historical volume dictates that its treatment of its topics will be more in the nature of a review or survey – and one that will tend to downplay or overlook aspects of history that are unpleasant, lamentable, scandalous, or matters of controversy or contention. Yet I also find it a regrettable omission that the Sesquicentennial’s author did not tell the story of Pekin’s Christian ministers, Rev. Lewis Andrew of First United Presbyterian Church and Rev. Larry Conrad of First Methodist Church, who with their Marquette Heights colleague Rev. David B. Jones answered the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s call to clergy to come to Alabama in March 1965 in the struggle for civil rights for America’s blacks, as was reported in the Pekin Daily Times back then. However, the Sesquicentennial author did make sure to tell (on page 180) of Sen. Everett M. Dirksen’s crucial role in getting the Civil Rights Act of 1964 passed.

On 20 March 1965, in the midst of the 1960s struggle for African-American civil rights, the front page of the Pekin Daily Times brought the news that two Pekin clergymen and one Marquette Heights clergyman had answered Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. call for Christian ministers to come to Selma, Alabama, to march for voting rights for African-Americans. The story of these three ministers will be told in full next week at “From the History Room.”
Sen. Everett M. Dirksen of Pekin visits the Lincoln Memorial.

In this article, I do not hesitate to discuss some of these difficult or unpleasant matters, for I am of the opinion that Pekin’s story should be honestly told, including the brighter and delightful aspects as well as the darker and unpleasant episodes – if for no other reason than to illustrate just how very far Pekin has come from its darker days and how many positive changes have taken place since then.

Nance Legins-Costley

One of the strengths of the Sesquicentennial’s treatment of Pekin’s African-American history is its account of Nance Legins-Costley (1813-1892), whose story has been spotlighted many times in recent years and who, along with her son Pvt. William Henry Costley of the 29th U.S. Colored Infantry, is now rightly honored with historical markers and a downtown Pekin park named and dedicated in her honor. Nance Legins-Costley is one of Pekin’s most notable and historically significant pioneer settlers, and she was also Pekin’s first known black resident. Pekin’s earliest historical records show that Nance and her family were loved and honored by their community.

But prior to 1974, no standard published work on Pekin’s history had ever tried to tell her story – especially the story of the important court case that secured freedom for herself and her children. The Sesquicentennial tells Nance’s story on pages 5-6 and gives a very informative account of the 1838-39 Cromwell v. Bailey and 1841 Bailey v. Cromwell cases.

Unfortunately our knowledge of Nance and her family in the 1970s was incomplete, so the Sesquicentennial’s writer could not provide any information on Nance’s family or Nance’s final years and death in Peoria and burial in Moffatt Cemetery. It was only in 2019 that Nance’s date of death and place of burial were discovered by Debra Clendenen of Pekin and announced for the first time anywhere here at “From the History Room.” Even so, the Sesquicentennial’s account was a big step forward for Pekin’s African-American historiography, and helped give later researchers such as Carl Adams a place from which to start.

Nance Legins-Costley’s historical marker at Legins-Costley Park in downtown Pekin.

Lloyd J. Oliver’s marriage

After the story of Nance Legins-Costley, past Pekin historical works have often retold the story of the marriage of Lloyd J. Oliver of Pekin, an African-American hero of the Spanish-American War. The Sesquicentennial volume also retells this story on pages 154 and 175, though it repeats a mistake regarding Oliver’s Christian name, and the maiden name of his wife Cora, that dates back to Ben C. Allensworth’s 1905 “History of Tazewell County.” Allensworth misread Oliver’s first name as “Howard” instead of “Lloyd,” and misread his wife’s name as Cora “Hoy” instead of “Foy.” Despite that confusion of names, the marriage of Lloyd Oliver and Cora Foy is one of the best remembered events of Pekin’s African-American history, because the organizers of the 1902 Pekin Street Fair chose to honor Lloyd Oliver’s service to his country by making the marriage of this African-American war hero from Pekin a central event of the Street Fair, and thousands of people crowded downtown Pekin to witness the wedding and celebrate their union.

This photograph of African-American Spanish-American War soldiers was originally printed with the caption, “Some of our brave colored Boys who helped to free Cuba.” Lloyd J. Oliver of Pekin served in the Regular Army during the war, his regiment suffering great casualties in the capture of San Juan Hill. PHOTO COURTESY THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS

The Ku Klux Klan in Pekin

The 1974 Sesquicentennial does not shy away from a discussion of the darkest and most shameful episode in Pekin’s history, when our city was home to the Ku Klux Klan’s Illinois regional headquarters. On page 83, the Sesquicentennial volume tells of the Klan’s control of the Pekin Daily Times in the early 1920s, reducing the city’s primary newspaper to a mouthpiece of racist, nativist, anti-immigrant, and anti-Catholic bigotry. According to the Sesquicentennial volume, the years when the Pekin Daily Times was owned and operated by three leading Klansmen were also years of careless mismanagement of the newspaper, for although the newspaper had produced bound volumes of its pre-1914 issues, “apparently those volumes disappeared during the Klan years.” As popular as the KKK in Pekin was in certain circles back then, there was also strong opposition and disgust, as indicated by the fact that the Pekin Daily Times then alienated so many of its subscribers that it almost went under.

Another reference to the KKK is found on page 106, in the tragic story of the deadly January 1924 Corn Products explosion. Describing the community’s rescue and relief efforts, the volume says, “Allegedly, the Pekin Ku Klux Klan was also on hand. Thirty-six of its members divided into three shifts to aid in the relief, providing food for the Salvation Army tent; trucks and drivers for transporting both men and materials; and aid to bereaved families in the form of food, fuel, and clothing.

There was no “allegedly” about it – the Pekin Klan, which had dubbed itself “The All-American Club” – was then an established presence like the men’s clubs and community service groups that were popular at the time, and their members were also affected by the tragedy like everyone else in Pekin. The KKK was also known for ostentatious displays of public charity. The Sesquicentennial on page 109 also mentions that when fire destroyed the Hummer Saddlery on 1 Nov. 1924, the Pekin Klan “offered assistance, including the use of the ‘Klavern’ on First Street (the old Pekin Roller Mills Building).”

The Sesquicentennial on page 172 devotes two rather oddly-worded paragraphs to the subject of the KKK in Pekin, as follows:

“It would be misleading to state that the Ku Klux Klan did not exist in Pekin; in fact, it is fairly certain that Pekin was the headquarters for a Klan — to be precise, organization number 31 of the Realm of the Invisible Empire, whose Grand Titan, in 1924, was recorded as one O. W. Friedrich. Further, the Klan, for a time at least, had their Klavern located at the Old Pekin Roller Mills Plant. The group owned the Pekin Daily Times in the early ‘20’s, and its meetings, policies, and plans were front page news, and its ‘good works’ much praised.

“In all fairness, though, it should be pointed out that the Klan was one of the leading social organizations of the day, and many people belonged in order to participate in the group’s activities, much as one might today belong to some fraternal organization. There seems to have been a distinct inner circle, relatively small in number, and a larger, more social outer circle Much more could be said, but it would serve no real use in this type of publication.”

The choice of words – “It would be misleading,” “In all fairness” – bespeak the writer’s understandable discomfort and abashedness, even shame, regarding this aspect of Pekin’s history. Not only would it be “misleading” to state the KKK wasn’t in Pekin, it would be flat out false. And the apologetic paragraph, “In all fairness . . .,” tends to excuse the KKK’s members for the racism (a word that never appears in the Sesquicentennial) that was so prevalent in America in that era, and that was intrinsic to the Klan’s central aims. This account also must be faulted for failing to acknowledge the Pekin Klan’s hateful intimidation of blacks, Jews, and recently-arrived ethnic families. A more forthright overview of Pekin’s Klan years can be found on pages 21-22 of the late Robert B. Monge’s “WW2 Memories of Love & War: June 1937-June 1946,” which says:

“The decade of the twenties and early thirties brought the KU KLUX KLAN to Pekin. Their ceremonial headquarters were on the second floor of the Pekin Daily Times building located at the southeast corner of Fourth and Elizabeth Streets. The Klan owned and published the paper during 1923, 1924 and 1925, praised its ‘good works’ and gave front page coverage of its meetings, policies and plans.

“For a time it was district headquarters for all the Klan chapters in Illinois. It was a terribly low period for the immigrants who lived here and they were the main target of the KLAN. They were devastated by the Klan’s acts of intimidation. Huge crosses were burned on the land known as Hillcrest Gardens (the present site of Pekin Insurance Company) to intimidate the immigrants. Many of these families huddled in fear in their homes nearby; however, the immigrant men were ready with shotguns just in case they were threatened physically.”

An image from a darker time, this illustration appeared in a Pekin Daily Times advertisement for a major Ku Klux Klan gathering in Pekin — the “Klantauqua” — that took place in late August 1924.

The presence – and absence – of African-Americans in Pekin

Finally, the Sesquicentennial on pages 175-176 devotes eight full paragraphs to Pekin’s African-Americans, and attempts to address the troubling absence of black people from Pekin for most of the 20th century. Much of this account is quite interesting and generally informative, and it covers much of the same ground that this weblog’s 2020 “From the Local History Room” series on Pekin’s African-Americans covered, only in less detail than we have been able to provide here.

The Sesquicentennial account is notably sensitive about Pekin’s reputation and does not acknowledge the role that racist attitudes and the KKK’s presence had, instead blaming the past absence of blacks here on economics and education (which were indeed reasons, albeit certainly not the only reasons). Understandably, the Sesquicentennial volume, written as part of a celebration of Pekin, would not be the appropriate publication to grapple with such issues. Here, then, is the Sesquicentennial’s account, in which he names several individuals and families who have become very well known to me over the past few years):

“But one ethnic element important in earlier generations has slowly become ‘invisible.’ Blacks came to this town by at least 1830 in the person of Nancy, the employee (sic – indentured servant) of the Cromwells discussed in the Overview, and many are mentioned throughout the long period ending after World War I. They had difficulties here, but not the kind of troubles the myth-makers would have us believe.

“The principle problem was the necessity of learning the German language—a barrier to many whites during the same period. Another drawback was the Blacks’ lack of skills, an inevitable problem in an era in which most of them remained uneducated. Nevertheless, they found jobs and homes for their families in the frontier community. According to Bates’ Directory, Nancy apparently lived the remainder of her life in Pekin (a period of about thirty-five [rather, 50] years) after the celebrated Supreme Court appeal argued by A. Lincoln.

“By 1845 the ten-person family of Moses Shipman and the Peter Logan family of four, along with at least six other Blacks, lived in the town. The families of Charles Cramby and John Winslow appear in the records of 1855, as does Benjamin Costly. During the Civil War, no less than ten Blacks from Pekin served in various elements of the Union Army, including Private Thomas Shipman of Company D, 29th United States (Colored) Infantry, who was killed in combat near Hatcher’s Run, Virginia, on March 31, 1865.

“The post-war amendments to the United States Constitution and the new 1870 Constitution of Illinois brought about new openness for the Blacks. Schools and voting were opened to them. The legendary former Sheriff, hero of the Mexican-American War, William A. Tinney (says Chapman in 1879), ‘distinguished himself in his old days by being the first white man in Pekin to lead a Negro to the polls to vote . . .’ Unfortunately, we cannot determine which black resident it was who voted.

“Dozens of others, with both good and poor reputations, lived in Pekin through the years. Anderson Blue, James Lane, and other names appear. ‘James Arnold Washington Lincoln Jackson Gibson’ was the mascot of Company G, 5th Illinois Infantry of the Spanish-American War; and a veteran of that conflict, Howard (sic – Lloyd) Oliver, returned to Pekin in 1902 to marry Miss Cora Hoy (sic – Foy).

“Then there was ‘Rastus’ Gaines. He is fondly remembered by older citizens as the cheerful, businesslike porter of the old Tazewell Hotel. As the Reverend Erastus Gaines, he made his mark as an evangelist in both Pekin and Peoria. Says one who knew him at the turn of this century, ‘He was uneducated, but within his abilities, he could give a good talk and could get his message across  . . . . While we kidded him a lot . . . we liked him a great deal.’

Sam Day, Al Oliver, the families of McElroy, Houston, and Good are names which can yet be recalled by the elder citizens of present-day Pekin. Walter Lee was for many years the masseur at the Pekin Hospital, and for a time had a private practice in the Arcade Building. Many others have come and gone.

“Why is there now this tear in the ethnic fabric of Pekin? Pure economics. When the depression bore down on everyone in the thirties, many persons lost savings, jobs, housing – everything. Black or white, they had to ‘double up’ with friends or relatives to make ends meet. Even though the language barrier no longer exists, and the myth about Pekin’s attitudes have been proven false, Blacks simply have not returned to again add their contribution to the cultural richness of the city which was among the first to recognize them as partners in the progress of an expanding community.”

William Edward “Rastus” Gaines, porter at the Tazewell Hotel in downtown Pekin, born 3 April 1878 in Washington, Georgia, son of Jesse and Mary (Tate) Gaines, died after 25 April 1942 probably in Baltimore, Maryland. PHOTO COURTESY TAZEWELL COUNTY GENEALOGICAL & HISTORICAL SOCIETY

Any discussion of the African-American experience in Pekin should include not only the stories of Pekin’s black families during the 19th and early 20th centuries, but will have to address Pekin’s reputation as a “Sundown Town,” a community unwelcoming to or hostile to blacks.  As we’ve mentioned here before, Pekin’s reputation predates the arrival of the Klan, but the Klan’s strong presence here certainly terrified Pekin’s small population of blacks. U.S. Census statistics show only four blacks in Pekin in 1900 (there were more than that), in 1910 only eight, in 1920 (just before the KKK arrived) a total of 31, in 1930 only one – and in 1940 not a single black person was left in Pekin, something that would not change until the 1990s.

Unlike other Midwestern communities, Pekin never had any city ordinances dictating that blacks had to be out of town by sundown – “unofficial” social pressure and intimidation were certainly present, though. The widespread story of a “sundown” sign on the Pekin bridge remains one of the unresolved mysteries of Pekin’s past, because no direct evidence has ever been produced that Pekin really had such a sign posted on its bridge, the way other “lily-white” Illinois communities posted anti-black signs at their town or city limits. If there ever was such a sign, it was not authorized by Pekin’s city government, and it was probably long gone by the 1960s if not earlier.

The fact that the story has long been so widespread suggests that it is based on truth, and yet the absence of any photographic evidence also suggests that the story could be only a legend. In my own research, the closest I’ve ever come to evidence for the bridge sign is a 14 Oct. 2010 Pekin Daily Times Letter to the Editor written by Randy Hilst, who said he had found the sign (or “a” sign) in an old house in Pekin that had KKK robes and relics. Hilst wrote, “I had the sign verified as to being old by a lady who lived in Peoria, who used to do appraisals at the Illinois Antique Center in Peoria. She said it was the first she had seen but always believed they did exist. We also talked about the possibility that they may have had to be replaced from time to time, so who knows how many were actually made and how many ‘knock-offs’ were made by local racists at the time.

Until solid documentation is found that might shed light on the old story of the bridge sign, it can only remain a haunting echo of a past that was vastly different from contemporary Pekin’s increasingly racially diverse community.

Next week, “From the History Room” will again feature an article in keeping with Black History Month, telling the story of the three Pekin-area ministers who joined the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. to march for African-American civil rights in Alabama in 1965.

#abraham-lincoln, #al-oliver, #anderson-blue, #bailey-v-cromwell, #benjamin-costley, #bridge-sign, #carl-adams, #charles-cramby, #charles-cranby, #charles-gramby, #civil-rights-act-of-1964, #cora-foy, #corn-products-explosion, #cromwell-vs-bailey, #debra-clendenen, #dirksen-center, #erastus-gaines, #george-e-mcelroy, #hummer-saddlery, #invisible-empire, #james-arnold-washington-lincoln-jackson-gibson, #james-lane, #john-winslow, #kkk, #klavern, #ku-klux-klan, #legins-costley-park, #lloyd-j-oliver, #moffatt-cemetery, #moses-shipman, #nance-legins-costley, #nativism, #o-w-friederich, #oscar-w-friederich, #pekin-african-american-history, #pekin-bicentennial, #pekin-daily-times, #pekin-history, #pekin-roller-mills-plant, #pekin-sesquicentennial, #pekins-black-history, #pekins-racist-reputation, #peter-logan, #racism, #racism-in-pekins-past, #randy-hilst, #rastus-gaines, #rev-david-b-jones, #rev-erastus-gaines, #rev-larry-conrad, #rev-lewis-andrew, #rev-martin-luther-king-jr, #robert-monge, #sam-day, #san-juan-hill, #selma, #spanish-american-war, #spanish-american-war-veterans, #sundown-sign, #sundown-towns, #thomas-shipman, #uncle-bill-tinney, #walter-lee, #william-a-tinney, #william-edward-gaines, #william-gaines, #william-henry-costley, #ww2-memories-of-love-and-war

History of the Pekin Hardware building – soon to be Olivia’s Playhouse

By Jared L. Olar

Local History Program Coordinator

Though Pekin has already lost much of the buildings lining its Courthouse Square, and a whole historic side of the square will soon be lost as the Tazewell County Board seeks to make room for a proposed new county courthouse, the Upper 300 block of Court Street still remains intact.

Older Pekin residents will recall the names of businesses that have operated in the buildings of the Upper 300 block – names such as Herget National Bank (where Yesterday’s Bar & Grill is today), Farmers National Bank, Reuling’s, McLellan’s Five-And-Dime (now Asher’s), Central Book & Toy, Will Harms, and Pekin Hardware Co.

The former Pekin Hardware Co. building at 341 Court St. has stood vacant since the early 1990s, but its new owner, Lisa Fuller, is restoring and remodeling the building with plans to open Olivia’s Playhouse, a toy and book store for young children and their parents.

In this Pekin postcard image from circa 1910, the J. W. Harmel Book Store at 341 Court St. is shown on the east side of the Pekin Hardware Co., which in turn is on the east side of C. Kraeger’s Drug Store. Harmel bought the store from John Oberly by 1907. Later on, Ernest P. Hoffman acquired the Pekin Hardware Co. and moved it into the former Oberly/Harmel building by 1939.

Wishing to highlight her building’s history for her customers, Fuller recently asked me to help her research the story of 341 Court St. Utilizing information from the old Pekin city directories and the Sanborn Fire Insurance maps of Pekin, I have been able to reconstruct a narrative of this building’s life and times.

The evidence provided by the earliest city directories can be difficult to interpret, since most buildings on Court Street did not have numbered addresses until the 1880s, and the present numbering system does not appear until the 1890s. The 1870-71 Sellers & Bates Pekin City Directory, however, shows Dr. W. E. Schenck, well-known Pekin physician and surgeon, with his office on the north side of Court St., four doors west of Capitol St. That seems to be the same location as the present 341 Court St. building, though may be adjacent to it.

Though our path of research is uncertain in the early years, we reach firm ground with the 1887 directory, which shows John Oberly (1860-1926) operating a store at 409 Court St. – an address that a few years later was renumbered as 341 Court St. John Oberly appears again in the 1893, 1895, 1898, and 1903 city directories, operating the same store at the same location. Oberly probably was already operating his business there in May 1885, the date of the first Sanborn Fire Insurance Map of Pekin.

The first Sanborn Fire Insurance Map of Pekin, dated May 1885, shows 409 Court St. (later renumbered 341 Court St.) as the location of a first floor store selling books and toys, with dentist’s office and a business selling musical organs on the second floor. The 1887 Pekin City Directory shows that the book and toy store was owned by John Oberly, who continued to operate his business there until the early 1900s.
An advertisement for John H. Oberly’s store from the 1893 Pekin City Directory. Oberly’s store was located in the building now numbered 341 Court St. and appears in city directories from 1887 to 1903. Oberly sold his store to J. W. Harmel by 1907. Current building owner Lisa Fuller was delighted to learn that the store she will soon open at 341 Court St. in some ways will bring the building full-circle, back to Oberly’s original toy and fancy goods store.
Advertisement for John Oberly’s book and toy store from the 1895 Pekin city directory.
In this detail from a vintage 1890s photograph, the black arrow indicates the location of John H. Oberly’s book and toy store.
John Oberly’s book and toy store continued to operate out of 341 Court St. at the time of the Jan. 1892 Sanborn Fire Insurance Map of Pekin.
John Oberly’s store selling art and sheet music was located at 341 Court St. at the time of the March 1898 Sanborn Fire Insurance Map of Pekin.
The Nov. 1903 Sanborn Fire Insurance Map of Pekin shows “Art & Music” was then being sold at 341 Court St. The building was then still the home of John Oberly’s book, stationery, and sheet music store.

In 1907, however, the city directory shows that John Oberly had sold his business to John Wesley (“J. W.”) Harmel (1862-1937).  Harmel is listed in the city directories as the business owner at 341 Court St. in 1907, 1908, 1913, and 1914.  In addition, in the years 1908, 1913, and 1914, we find the Central Union Telephone Co. upstairs, at 341 ½ Court St.

A close-up of the Harmel, Pekin Hardware Co., and Kraeger drug store buildings from the above shown postcard image.
By the time of the Dec. 1909 Sanborn Fire Insurance Map of Pekin. J. W. Harmel had purchased John Oberly’s business at 341 Court St.
The Oct. 1916 Sanborn Fire Insurance Map of Pekin shows a book and stationery store at 341 Court St. – that was the J. W. Harmel book store.

We have a gap in the library’s collection of city directories – our next one is for 1922, when we find that J. W. Harmel’s store had been replaced by Louis Hoff Books, operated by Louis O. Hoff (1883-1939). In addition, the Central Union Telephone Co. upstairs had been replaced by (purchased by?) the Illinois Bell Telephone Co. Also upstairs at 341½ was Dr. Gilbert C. Cleveland, dentist.

341 Court St. appears in the Sept. 1925 Sanborn Fire Insurance Map of Pekin. This was about the time that Louis Hoff Books was replaced by Unland’s Book Store, run at 341 Court St. by Otto H. Unland.
The arrow points to 341 Court St. in this Christmas-time photograph taken during the 1920s.
A closeup crop of the above photograph.

The 1924 city directory shows the same thing as in the 1922 directory, but in the 1926 directory, Louis Hoff Books had been replaced by Unland’s Book Store, run by Otto H. Unland at 341 Court. However, the Illinois Bell Telephone Co. was still upstairs at 341½, along with Dr. Cleveland, dentist. Oscar W. Friederich (1879-1934) also had an office upstairs for just that year. (O. W. Friederich was a former vaudevillian, but is better known in Pekin history as erstwhile Grand Titan of the Illinois Ku Klux Klan when the Illinois Klan’s headquarters in Pekin during the 1920s.)

The 1928 directory shows that Unland’s Book Store had been replaced by (bought by) Eugene F. Lohnes’ Central Book & Toy. Upstairs at 341½ was Dr. Cleveland, dentist, and Clifford I. Martin, lawyer. We find the same entry in the 1930 city directory.

But in 1932, Central Book & Toy is shown to have moved to 345 Court St.. Instead, we find Hartley W. Walker, physician, at 341 Court., while Dr. Cleveland, dentist, and Wayne R. Walker, physician, had their offices upstairs.

The 1934 city directory shows Berty C. Allen’s Pekin Market groceries and meats at 341 Court St. Hartley W. Walker had moved upstairs to join Wayne R. Walker and Dr. Cleveland.

In 1937, we find that Pekin Market had become Poppen’s Market grocery store, Karl W. Losch, manager. Upstairs we find the same tenants as in 1934.

In 1939, the Pekin Hardware Co., owned and operated by Ernest P. Hoffman (1902-1974) – a merchant and store still well remembered by older Pekin residents – makes its first city directory appearance at 341 Court  St. Pekin Hardware is listed as sharing the same building with Poppen’s Market, and upstairs are still the same tenants as in 1934 and 1937.

Ernest P. Hoffman’s Pekin Hardware Co. at 341 Court St. is shown in this photo from circa 1960.

Ernest P. Hoffman continued to operate the Pekin Hardware Co. at 341 Court St. until 1972, the last time he and his business appear in Pekin city directories – two years before Hoffman’s death. But the tenants upstairs changed somewhat during those decades. In 1941, the upstairs tenants were Aug. L Lauterbach, justice of the peace, Glen Hayes, constable, and a certain Jesse Kollman also had an office up there. The tenants were almost the same in 1943, except James M. Rahn had replaced Glen Hayes. In the 1946 directory, we find Orville A. Smith, lawyer, and Louis A. Lynch, dentist, upstairs instead of either Hayes or Rahn. Smith and Lynch were still up there in 1948 and 1950 – but in 1950 the U.S. Army Recruiting Office was also upstairs.

In 1952, however, the upstairs tenants were just Smith and Lynch, just as in 1948. Then in 1955, we find Ward A. Justi, dentist, and the Bargain Nook alteration shop as the upstairs tenants. The next year, Ward Justi is gone but the Bargain Nook is still up there – we find the Bargain Nook there also in 1958.

In 1959, the address of 341½ Court St. is listed as “vacant” – no upstairs tenants, just Pekin Hardware Co. on the ground floor. In the 1961 directory, the address of 341 ½ Court St. is not even listed – and so it has remained to the present day’s directory.

As I mentioned above, Ernest Hoffman’s Pekin Hardware Co. last appears in the Pekin city directories in 1972. In 1973 and 1974, the address of 341 Court St. is listed as “vacant.”

In 1975, we find Ronald J. Tindall operating two businesses at 341 Court – J & K Furniture (discount new & used), and Joe’s T.V. Service. Those businesses didn’t last long, because in 1976 we find the World of Wheels used motorcycle shop, operated by Steven L. Budisalich and Paul Dowl. That, again, was a short-lived business, because the 1977 directory lists the address as “vacant.”

Continental Cablevision of Pekin (with Gilbert Nichols, manager) moved into the building next, as we see in the 1978 city directory. Cablevision’s service office operated out of this building until 1987. In 1988 and 1989, 341 Court is listed as “vacant.”

The last business that tried to make of go of it at 341 Court St. was Mrs. Cynthia Pruett’s “Pruett’s Gallery of Flowers & Gifts,” which appears in the 1990 city directory. From 1991 to 1997, the address of 341 Court is listed as “vacant,” and after 1997 the address doesn’t appear in Pekin city directories at all. That is soon to change.

The final version of the logo of Lisa Fuller’s Olivia’s Playhouse, which will open at 341 Court St. in the near future. IMAGE COURTESY LISA FULLER OF OLIVIA’S PLAYHOUSE LLC

Fuller says she’s made great progress in her preparation to open Olivia’s Playhouse. “I have been successful with installing all-new plumbing, new electrical, new heat and A.C., as well as installing a new roof, front door and transom, new glass in one of the display windows, new ceiling and lots and lots and lots of other necessary renovations.  All that’s left now is basically finishing work.

Otherwise, I’m still so in awe of this gorgeous, historical building. We have become very good friends, my building and I. It’s a friend that has taken lots of my time, money and emotional ups-and-downs to restore, but I love it, and know it will all pay off in the end,” Fuller said.

An earlier version of the Olivia’s Playhouse logo. IMAGE COURTESY LISA FULLER OF OLIVIA’S PLAYHOUSE LLC

#341-court-st, #c-kraeger, #central-book-toy-store, #central-union-telephone-co, #courthouse-square, #dr-gilbert-c-cleveland, #dr-w-e-schenck, #ernest-p-hoffman, #illinois-bell-telephone-co, #j-w-harmel, #j-w-harmel-book-store, #john-oberly, #john-oberly-store, #john-wesley-harmel, #lisa-fuller, #louis-hoff-books, #louis-o-hoff, #o-w-friederich, #olivias-playhouse, #oscar-w-friederich, #oscar-w-friedrich, #otto-h-unland, #pekin-businesses, #pekin-city-directories, #pekin-hardware-co, #pekin-history, #sanborn-maps, #unlands-book-store, #upper-300-block-of-court-st