|
Judith Ann Major Allin Bradner
Judith Major Allin Bradner was born on May
9, 1814 in Bourbon County,
Kentucky to Mr. and
Mrs. William T. Major. In
1834, her father and his brothers decided to sell their Kentucky
plantation and move north after having visited central Illinois.
During that visit William had
purchased 30 acres and a house in Bloomington, Illinois. By 1835, William and his family of eleven,
several milk cows, and what would be the first piano in McLean County,
set out
on a sixteen day journey to their new home. The furnishings were sent
by water
to Pekin, Illinois.
Most of the family rode in covered wagons. Judith and two of her
brothers rode
the whole way on horseback.
Judith’s observation of the wild fruit and
nut trees growing “abundant and in every variety,”
as well as the experience of riding her horse
over the prairie to return with its “feet stained and dripping with the
juice
of wild strawberries,” make one aware of a very different and lush
world from
the one we see today.
Her father, William T. Major, became an
important and active member of the new community Bloomington, which had a population
of just
300 when the family arrived. He was instrumental in organizing First
Christian
Church, which he started at his own home in 1837. He
founded Major’s College School For Girls,
which was open from 1856 to 1879, until it was absorbed by Illinois Wesleyan University.
He was also
responsible for building Major’s Hall, which served as a classroom,
(housing
the first classes of Illinois
State Normal University)
and meeting
place for various social, educational, and political interests. Lincoln’s famous
“Lost Speech”
was delivered at Major’s Hall during a convention in May of 1856, the
results
of which would lead to the formation of the Republican Party.
In 1838, two years after coming to Bloomington,
Judith married William H. Allin, son of James
Allin, who is considered to be the founder of Bloomington. Judith and her husband
often entertained
guests in their home, in particular the lawyers who met in Bloomington
while court was in session. Abraham
Lincoln was one of the well-known, prominent lawyers who were present
in their
home for dinner. “Lincoln
was so full of life and fun all the time,” Judith commented in a later
interview.
In the same article, she tells of the pleasure she took from her
involvement in
community and church social activities.
Her husband, William, was a land owner and
operated a store for nineteen years. He
first sold miscellaneous stock and ended with selling dry goods. He was
a
supporter of both Illinois State Normal
University and Illinois Wesleyan University.
Her husband,
along with Judge David Davis and William Flagg, was also instrumental
in
establishing Franklin Park. Judith
and William
had five children, three daughters and two sons. After
only 21 years of marriage, her husband
William died in 1857.
After remaining a widow for twenty years,
Judith married George Bradner in 1876. He was also a local merchant and
his
business was selling hardware. Judith had known George and his first
wife for a
number of years before his first wife’s death. Judith was a good friend
to
George’s first wife. She and George went
to the Philadelphia Exposition in 1876 for their honeymoon. The Philadelphia Exposition was the
centennial celebration of the founding of the United States. Sadly, after only twenty years of marriage,
George died on December 31, 1896. She lived the remainder of her years
with her
son, Edwin, at the family’s home located at 807 W, Jefferson Street.
Judith was described as public spirited
and never idle. Judith sold a block of ground to build the county jail
as well
as erecting a store building on North Main Street. She was also
often seen at sewing
bees and kept busy knitting and quilting. In her later years, Judith
was the
subject of several articles featured in The
Pantagraph where she reminisced about her family’s pioneer
experiences and early
life in Bloomington.
These interviews are valuable contributions to the community’s history.
She remained alert and active until
shortly before her death on February 28, 1922 at the age of
ninety-eight. A
special memorial service was held in her honor at First Christian
Church, as
she was the last of the charter members of the church. Books from her
library
were also donated to the McLean County Historical Society, which were
considered
a valuable possession. Some of these books included a copy of Homer published in 1766 and a copy of The New York
Exposition of 1814.
Her home on the corner of Roosevelt Avenue
and Jefferson Street, which had been built by James Allin, her first
husband’s
father, was sold two years after her death to George Gildner for
$7,000. It was
described as “one of the oldest of the better buildings of this city.
The house
stands on a quarter of a block and was for many years a type of the
best of McLean county homes.”
|