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HR0484 |
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LRB094 12483 CSA 46968 r |
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| HOUSE RESOLUTION
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| WHEREAS, In 1904, mining experts from the St. Paul Coal |
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| Company discovered a vast vein of bituminous coal in eastern |
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| Bureau County that was almost unequaled in quality, and |
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| instantly began to sink the State's largest coal mine in what |
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| was to become the Village of Cherry; the mine and the Village |
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| were named after James Cherry, former Seatonville mayor, who |
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| was the regional superintendent of mines; and
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| WHEREAS, In April of 1905, the Village of Cherry was |
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| incorporated; by June of 1905, the St. Paul Coal Company had |
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| invested $200,000 in developing the mine and the Village to |
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| house its workers; and
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| WHEREAS, The mine company's plan for the new Village called |
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| for a park, a school, a bank, and several general stores; |
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| expecting Cherry to be its crowning jewel, the Chicago, |
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| Milwaukee, and St. Paul Railway Company built a first-class |
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| railroad station two blocks from the main business district; |
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| the coal company built a fifty-room hotel and fifty modern |
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| model homes and sold 120 acres of land for building and |
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| business purposes as the Village began to grow across the |
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| prairie; and
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| WHEREAS, In its heyday, Cherry consisted of 125 company |
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| houses and 250 private homes and had a population of over 2500; |
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| and
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| WHEREAS, Disaster struck on November 13, 1909; hay that had |
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| been brought down to feed the mules stabled in the third level |
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| of the mine caught fire, and the quickly spreading fire |
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| resulted in the loss of 259 lives; on November 20, twenty-one |
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| men were found alive and rescued from the mine; no other miners |
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| were found alive, and when fire broke out again on November 25, |
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| a decision was made to seal the mine; on February 1, 1910, the |