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Susan Augusta
Pike Sanders (1842 –
1931)
Susan Augusta Pike Sanders was born
in Maine
on
March 25, 1842. She was the third of seven children and the first
daughter of
Harrison Wallace Pike and Susan A. Mayberry Pike. The family moved to Bloomington, Illinois
in
1854, following Harrison’s brother Meshack, who moved prior to this and
opened
the Pike House Hotel on the square in downtown Bloomington in 1853.
Sue Pike Sanders spent
much of her life engaged in public
work. Much like her mother, she prized literacy, writing, and education
and
kept scrapbooks of newspaper clippings, which she later contributed to
the
McLean County Historical Society. Along with that, Sue was asked many
times to
write accounts and summaries of her participation in major public
service
activities for which she was well-known.
Before engaging in public
work, Sue began teaching school in
June 1858 at the “Reeder District” in Heyworth, McLean County, IL.
In 1861, she placed a small flag bearing all the emblem of “Old Glory”
over her
desk at that school. Some of her pupils ripped it down, stamped it into
a mud hole
and tried to bury it. Sue lectured them about the story of the stars
and
stripes of the flag, and when she asked how many of the children would
help her
keep the flag from being torn down, only one boy did not raise his hand
and
said “Papa won’t let me.” Sue further explained what “Old Glory” meant,
to
which the little boy said he would bring his knife and fight anyone who
tries
to take down the flag. In honor of her placement of the flag inside the
schoolhouse,
Sue received a bronze medal that was made in her honor and distributed
all over
the nation.
Sue’s talent for teaching
and motivation was useful in her
later years when she joined the Women’s Relief Corps in 1861, also
known as the
“Girls of ’61.” During the Civil War, Sue had four brothers and nine
cousins who
fought for the Union. Her brother
Edward,
fought in Company A of the 33rd Illinois Infantry Regiment,
often
known as the “Teacher’s Regiment” because so many soldiers were
students and
faculty at Illinois State Normal
University in Normal, IL.
Edward received a Congressional Medal of Honor for his “gallantry in
action,”
for saving his regiment’s cannon during The Battle of Cache River in Arkansas. Her
brother Alpheus, was one of the
youngest soldiers to enlist at
fifteen years-old. He was taken prisoner and sent to the infamous
Confederate
prison, Andersonville, in Andersonville,
Georgia.
The Women’s Relief Corps
was an aid society formed to support
Union soldiers in their fight. The WRC in Bloomington
was created to send aid in particular to the 33rd Illinois
Infantry Regiment,
which was made up of many men from McLean County.
The women made
clothing and quilts, canned various foodstuffs, and prepared medical
supplies
such as bandages and sent them to soldiers or hospitals in need. In her
article
called “Private Benefactions to the Soldiers and Their Families, 1861 –
1865,” Sue
described the scene at the community worksite, writing: “As one of the
girls
who gave all the time I could from my school work, I well remember the
speed
with which this work was done, with grinders, cutters and knives in the
hands
of Bloomington’s loyal girls.” Even after soldiers came home, their
work was
far from over because many soldiers came home disabled and could not
support
their families. Overall, the WRC raised $18,237.50, which would equal
about
$442,786.85 today. Some of the WRC’s manufactured items include 582
pillowcases, 595 rolling bandages, 245 cans of fruit, and 10,000 pounds
of
books and papers.
At the National
Convention in Washington
D.C.
in 1892, Sue gave a small speech to motivate the ladies of the WRC
similar to
the one she gave to the schoolchildren about “Old Glory.” In her
account of the
Convention, she wrote, “I said, ‘Ladies of the National Woman’s
Committee of
the WRC, I want to know if among you there are 18 delegates that will
volunteer
to defend this convention from intruders.’ As I requested obligation to
defend
each sights, an Indiana
woman sung out, “I’ll defend it with my honor and fist if necessary.’
Such was
the spirit of my delegates.” True to the spirit of the WRC, Sue was
able to
revive the group in Bloomington
in 1917 with the outbreak of World War I and served as president of the
aid
society. She also served as president of the National WRC.
Despite her attempts to
swear off public service, Sue was
volunteered into serving as president of the project to improve the
Girls’
Industrial Home in 1892 after just moving back to Bloomington
from Delevan, IL. She was so well-known at that
point,
that she was introduced to the Board for the Home as follows: “Ladies,
this is
Mrs. Sue A Pike Sanders, of course you all know her and there is no
need of any
formality.”
Sue was involved in the
creation of Bloomington’s
first public library, later named
Withers Library. After returning to Bloomington,
Sue joined the Ladies’ Library Association. She was elected president
of the
Board of Directors and threw herself wholeheartedly into the efforts of
creating a public library. The City of Bloomington
approved the plan, and the first public library in Bloomington was formed. Sue also
served as secretary
for the library board in 1894.
Sue continued to be
active throughout her life. She co-founded
and became secretary of the Delavan Cemetery
in 1872, helping
to raise funds and provide labor to make the cemetery presentable. She
co-founded a social club known as the B.D. Society in 1880, with the
initials
standing for something secret. Club activities included playing cards,
desert
social hours, and literary productions. Sue also took on the role as
historian
for the Letitia Green Stevenson Chapter of the Daughters of the
American
Revolution in 1902 and helped found the Lucy Orme
Morgan Home
for Girls.
With all her
participation in public and community work, the
McLean County Historical Society often asked Sue to write accounts of
her
experiences. She spoke at quarterly meetings of the society about
topics she
felt were important, such as the treatment of the Kickapoo Indians who
were
driven from their homes by the people of Hudson.
She also contributed over 60 scrapbooks to the society, which she had
pieced
together over a 40-year time period. Sue utilized her writing abilities
even
more when she was editor of the National Vidette in Delavan from 1885
through
1890.
Even though she worked
tirelessly for different
organizations and charities in the community, Sue was still able to
maintain
her roles as a wife and a mother. She married James T. Sanders on
September 19,
1867 in Jacksonville,
IL. James hailed
from Millersburg,
Kentucky and worked as a special
agent of the
Chicago and Alton Railroad at Delavan,
IL, from 1869
through 1888. He
also participated in the real estate and fire insurance business in Bloomington
after he and
his family moved to town on November 7, 1902. James also acted as the Bloomington agent of the Citizens Insurance
Company of Missouri.
Sue and James
had four children, one dying in infancy. They had two sons, Harold Pike
Sanders
and Royal Woodson Sanders, and one daughter Bernadine Sanders, who died
at the
young age of fifteen due to diabetes.
Sue died on September 8,
1931 after experiencing a stroke of
paralysis, similar to the one that took her husband’s life three years
before.
She had been ill for several years prior to her death and had been
hospitalized
at St. Joseph’s
Hospital a few weeks before she died. She was buried at Evergreen Memorial Cemetery
next to her
husband and one of her children.
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