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EDWIN W.
BAKEWELL
Edwin Bakewell was
born in Bethany, Virginia
on July 20, 1812. He lived there during
the early part of his life. In March of
1833, he married Julia Campbell, who was the sister of Rev. Alexander
Campbell,
the founder of the Campbellite Christian Church in that area. Edwin later moved his family to the town of Normal, (formerly known as North
Bloomington) in 1845, where he purchased 360 acres of land.
Edwin and Julia were the parents of five
children, three boys and two girls. One
of their sons, Albert Melvin, was the victim of a tragic accident in
1881. He was working in Sibley, Illinois
as a teamster and one afternoon while driving his team of horses across
the
railroad tracks was hit by a train traveling at twenty to thirty miles
per hour. His body was thrown a large
distance and his
head hit a piece of equipment causing instant death.
The accident was attributed to train cars
being parked on the track obscuring vision and the fact that he was
“very deaf”
according to newspaper accounts. In his
youth, Albert was known for being one of the “crack base ball players”
in town.
The incident Edwin would become well known
for dealt with the creation of Illinois State
Normal University, founded in
1857. The creation of a new school was
not an easy task. Other communities were
in the hunt and Normal’s
proponents had to make sure that prominent citizens were involved in
order to
make this a success. Many locals made
cash subscriptions, most commonly in amounts between twenty-five and
two
hundred dollars, often to be paid over a two or three year period. As an indication of Bakewell’s status at this
time, he donated forty acres of land, the same as Judge David Davis,
for the
founding of the “Normal” school. This contribution was valued at about $8000
though some felt that this number was somewhat inflated.
It was Edwin’s intention that the donated
forty acres would benefit the agricultural department, a point that
would
become part of a great dispute in later years. Edwin
was also an entrepreneur, who believed that he could
make good
money by selling off some of his remaining 320 acres as lots for houses
that
would inevitably be built around the school
For many years this land was used
essentially for nursery purposes. It was
rented by Mr. H. Augustine who used the acreage for the propagation of
fruit. In 1873
an economic panic spread across the United States.
This was largely brought on by the failure of
a large financial institution in Philadelphia
which was overextended in the railroad industry. Before
the panic ended in 1877 one out of
four railroads in the country went bankrupt, 18,000 businesses failed
and
unemployment reached 14% in 1876. Edwin
Bakewell was one of those severely impacted by the economic times. In 1875 Bakewell wanted his forty acres back,
nearly two decades after donating it to ISNU. This
was the beginning of a court fight that would last a
quarter
century until his death and would involve the state courts, but also
the
Supreme Court of the United
States.
Bakewell, like many of those early
contributors, had attached some conditions to his donation. Bakewell’s claim was that the land was
donated for the purpose of experimentation in agricultural chemistry
and that
any proceeds from the land would be used to fund a chair of agriculture.
Bakewell claimed that he had signed a
subscription paper in regard to donating those 40 acres of land for the
teaching of experimental agricultural chemistry. However,
the bond of deed which Abraham
Lincoln had drawn up and Bakewell had signed, never documented anything
about
this stipulation on how the land was to be used. The
bond of deed only stated that the
“institution should be located at or near its present site.” Regardless of the documentation, Bakewell
used this argument of ISNU not living up to the agreement, to try to
regain the
property and not only used the courts but the legislature as well. In 1885 a joint resolution was passed that
would have allowed the state board of education to deed the land back
to
Bakewell but they refused and the case headed to the courts. Twenty five years of legal fighting involved
many of the well known lawyers of Bloomington. At
times in this battle, ISNU feared loss of
state funding. School officials were
also constantly on the lookout for riders attached to bills that would
have
returned the land to Bakewell. Officials
of the school used all their political clout to ward off these threats.
Toward the end of his life, Bakewell, by
contemporary accounts, was completely obsessed with this battle and it
became
the sole focus of his life. He talked, wrote, and thought about
regaining “his”
forty acres almost constantly. Yet, he
would go to his grave with this hope unrealized. Edwin
died on July 18, 1901 at the home of
one of his daughters in Carbondale, Illinois and was then buried at Evergreen Memorial
Cemetery
in Bloomington, Illinois. His
wife Julia followed him in death in 1905, though some
accounts
record that she died several years before him. She
is also buried at Evergreen
Memorial Cemetery.
Today, this forty acre plot provides space
for University High School, tennis courts, the ISU baseball
field, soccer field, a
water tower and the Hudelson
Building. The Ropp agricultural building appears to be
just outside the old Bakewell property. Thousands of people pass this
area
everyday, unaware of the epic struggle over its ownership.
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