Rose
Whipp Northrup (1850-1944)
Rose Whipp Northrup was born
on September
27, 1850 in Beardstown,
Illinois.
She was the daughter of John Whipp and Elizabeth VanNess Whipp. Sometime between 1850 and 1860, her father
John moved their family to Bloomington
where he was a banker. It was while in Bloomington that he was appointed to become an
assistant
state treasurer for the state of Illinois. It
is not known exactly when this happened in
the 1850s, but the family was living in Springfield
by 1860 where John’s occupation was listed as a clerk.
It was while living in Springfield
that Rose met and became
acquainted with Abraham Lincoln. As an
older woman, she recalled that her family lived on the same block as Lincoln’s family in Springfield. Her
father also worked in the Illinois State
House where Lincoln
spent much time since he was a lawyer on the Eighth Judicial Circuit. She often went to work with her father. Rose remembered that Lincoln was a great friend of
children and
was always kind to her. While she was at
work with her father, she would often play with Lincoln’s youngest child, Thomas,
called Tad
for short. They became great friends and
would often chase each other down the halls of the Illinois State House. She stated that she would run in and out of Lincoln’s office
as if
she were his own child. She also
recalled that Lincoln
often took her on his legs and stroked her blonde hair.
Because of her blonde hair, he gave her the
nickname of “Silverhair.”
Sometime after Lincoln
became President (between 1861-1865), Rose and her family moved back to
Bloomington
where her
father once again took up the trade of banking.
It was while they were living in Bloomington
that Lincoln
was assassinated. Rose later recalled
the day her family received the news that Lincoln
had been assassinated on Friday, April 14, 1865. The
people of Bloomington
did not find out about what
happened until the next day when the President had died.
Rose was about fifteen years old at the
time. She had come home and found her
mother was crying. When she asked her
mother what was wrong, her mother replied, “Oh, they have assassinated
our dear
President.” The next day, (April 16th)
following Easter Sunday church services, an estimated crowd of 5,000 to
7,000
area residents gathered on the courthouse square in downtown
Bloomington to
officially mourn the brutal death of President Abraham Lincoln.
Rose recalled that she and her mother went
down to the courthouse where hundreds of others were streaming in the
same
direction and there at the square a great crowd had gathered and men
like Jesse
Fell, Ashael Gridley, and Leonard Swett were making speeches. This meeting was known as an “indignation
meeting,” which is a mass meeting of people who were angered and
outraged about
some injustice, in this case Lincoln’s
brutal assassination. Lincoln had been
“so well known personally to so large a number of people and had so
long been
regarded as” a citizen of McLean County, “that his death seemed to fall
with the
most crushing severity upon” the people of McLean County.
She stated that many men were cursing and
swearing vengeance of the perpetrators of the murder of Lincoln.
She and her mother stayed at this meeting until it ended later
in the
day. A photograph of this meeting was
taken, showing a great crowd gathered around the courthouse. This photograph is thought to be one of the
only photographs of such meetings (which were held in hundreds of
cities and
towns across the country) after Lincoln’s
assassination.
Rose also remembered that while she and
her mother were at the meeting, near where she was standing, “some man
who had
just heard of the death of Lincoln
threw up his hat and shouted ‘Hurrah’ or something like that. In a moment, a crowd gathered and threatened
him and he ran like a scared deer to get away.” Other
accounts of this same incident reported
that this man, who was thought to have been a man named John Hinzey,
(who was
staying at the Ashley Hotel located across the street from the
courthouse), was
said to have been heard rejoicing the day before the indignation
meeting, when
news first arrived about Lincoln’s assassination. The
crowd of people around him went mad with
anger hearing his cheers and set out to hang him. He
was only saved when a few cooler heads
spirited him away in a carriage heading towards Peoria.
Five days after this meeting, Lincoln’s
funeral train left Washington
D.C.
on April 21st and followed a circuitous route through 15
states and
about 180 cities and towns. It made many
stops along the way, including New York,
Cleveland and Indianapolis. All
along the train route, especially the
final leg of the journey from Bloomington
to Springfield, people lined the tracks
to pay their final
respects to Lincoln
as the train passed. In the days leading up to the funeral train
passing
through Bloomington,
the Daily Pantagraph carried news about the reception of the
train in other
cities across the country. Finally,
at about 5 a.m. on May 3rd,
(two hours later than scheduled) the train stopped in Bloomington
for about ten minutes to take on wood and water before continuing on to
Springfield. Bloomington
had the honor of being the only stop of the funeral train between Chicago and Springfield. The
people of both Bloomington
and Normal
had
erected funeral arches to span the Chicago and Alton Railroad tracks. However, those people who wished to attend Lincoln’s funeral in Springfield
could not stay to greet the funeral train when it arrived in Bloomington.
If they did, they would not have been able to make it to Springfield in
time for
the funeral. People had to choose to
either stay to greet the train or travel to Springfield for the funeral. Rose, her father and an uncle made the choice
to attend the funeral in Springfield
on May 4th, 1865. While it
was estimated that between 3,000-4,000 mourners gathered at the train,
it was
said it would have been larger if people did not have to choose between
going
to the funeral or staying to greet the train.
Upon reaching Springfield
on May 3rd, Lincoln’s body
was taken
to lie in state at the Capitol
Building, where it
was
reported that 75,000 people filed past his coffin from 10 a.m. until
11:00 p.m.
that day. The next day, the funeral
procession began at 11:30 a.m. The day
was hot and humid. It was 2 ½ miles
to Oak Ridge
Cemetery, north of
the city. Bands played dirges and hymns,
(four funeral
marches had been composed for the occasion).
At the cemetery, Lincoln’s
2nd inaugural address was read.
Methodist Reverend Bishop Matthew Simpson, a friend of Lincoln, gave
the oration which surely left
many in tears. It was said that 100,000
people were present in Springfield for
the
funeral, with at least 1,000 of those people from Bloomington.
About twelve years after this tragic event,
Rose married Charles Northrup on September 27, 1877.
Northrup was a local merchant from Lisle, New York. He
came to Bloomington
in 1868 and established himself
as a dry goods clerk first and eventually opened his own mercantile
store. The couple was married at her
parent’s home
in Normal,
which was attended by family and intimate friends.
Their wedding announcement in the Daily
Pantagraph, recorded those people who attended and the gifts which
they
received. One such gift was a case of
silverware from the congregation at Second Presbyterian Church, which
Charles
and Rose would be long time, active members of that church. It was also reported by the Daily
Pantagraph that Rose was “held in high esteem for her womanly
virtues and
her natural gifts and accomplishments.”
For some years, she had held “a leading place among the singers
of the
city, and, with a disposition as sweet as her voice, has drawn her many
warm
friends and admirers.”
Rose and Charles would go on to have four children:
Fred, Charles, Lyle, and Julia and their home
was located at 510 East
Front Street.
Sadly, Rose’s life was struck by tragedy
once again. On Sunday, July 8, 1898,
Rose’s eldest son, Fred, went on a camping trip with two of his friends. They stopped at the town of Kappa,
(a short distance from the town of Normal)
to rest, and after dinner, Fred went out hunting by himself. A short time later, one of his companions
heard a gunshot and went looking for him.
His friend found him dead, with a gunshot wound to the face. Fred’s breech-loading shotgun had
accidentally discharged while he was carrying it, killing him instantly. He would have been 20 years old later that
fall.
Her husband Charles was a well known and
highly respected merchant in McLean County. His store, C.J. Northrup Dry Goods,
Carpets, Notions, and Fancy Goods, located at 118 N. Center Street first and
then
expanded to include 208
W. Washington Street, opened in 1878 and
remained so
for the next 32 years, until Charles retired in March of 1930. Sadly, just over three years after his
retirement, Charles passed away on November 18, 1933.
The Daily Pantagraph reported that the
city had lost “a pioneer merchant and business man.”
Rose would continue on for another 11
years after the death of her husband.
She led a relatively quiet life during her remaining years. However, she did gain some fame in locally,
having been interviewed by The Daily Pantagraph; first in 1938
and again
in 1942, about her memories of Abraham Lincoln when she was a young
girl and of
her memories of the famous indignation meeting held after news of
Lincoln’s
assassination reached Bloomington in 1865.
On July 23, 1944, at the age of 93, Rose
died quietly at Brokaw Hospital, where she had spent the last few years
of her
life. She had been in failing health
for the last three years of her life.
She was also the oldest member of Second Presbyterian Church,
the church
which she and her husband had been life long members and supporters. She was buried next to her husband and their
oldest son at Evergreen Memorial Cemetery in Bloomington.