D. Leigh Henson introduces new works
focused on the Gilletts of Elkhart
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[March 27, 2019]
In 2018 the sale of the Gillett Mansion near
Elkhart and in 2017 the sale of vast tracks of Gillett heritage
farmland concluded a chapter in the near-epic family history of John
Dean Gillett--the 19th-century Cattle King of America. That family
history ties to three-term, Illinois Governor Richard J. Oglesby and
his descendants.
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Oglesby married the oldest daughter of John Dean
and Lemira Gillett. The Oglesbys’ older son, John Dean Gillett
Oglesby (twice elected lieutenant governor of Illinois), later
managed thousands of acres of Gillett heritage farmland.
Members of the Gillett-Oglesby families have contributed
significantly to the economic, political, and cultural history of
central Illinois. Much has been written about these families, but
the Gillett story especially needs to be told more completely.
Accordingly, I have created a research-based, collaborative webpage
as a pictorial history of the Gillett family from its beginnings in
the 1850s to the present. After Mr. Gillett's death in 1888, his
family endured several scandals, including the 1900 divorce of his
only son, whose mother then had him arrested on a charge of
insanity. In 1904 two of John Dean Gillett's daughters went to war
over ownership of the family real estate. The resulting civil trial
split the family into two factions and was one of the most expensive
in Illinois judicial history.
William Maxwell, the native Lincolnite and acclaimed author, had
written about the 1904 Gillett estate trial in Ancestors: A Family
History (1971).
His grandfathers were attorneys on opposing sides
in the trial, but Maxwell admitted he had limited knowledge of the
dispute: “What was being fought over was, at a rough estimate of its
present-day value, five or six million dollars. I still don't know
anything like the full details of this immensely complicated story;
the broad outlines I got partly from a newspaper clipping in my
grandmother's scrapbook and partly from a Lincoln lawyer, a man of
my father's generation. He was a schoolboy when all of this happened
and was present at the trial” (p. 161).
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My research rediscovered detailed newspaper reports
of the trial that Maxwell had not seen, and I transcribe them in my
Gillett family history webpage. I also provide information about the
ironic site of the trial in Gillett Hall in Lincoln, the trial
lawyers, and judge as well as questions unanswered by the trial. My
webpage presents extensive Gillett-Oglesby family history before and
after the trial, including other scandals and how the heirs have
managed their heritage farmland.
Visit the website: Finding Lincoln Illinois
The Real
Estate Empire of the John Dean Gillett Family of Elkhart, Illinois;
the Gillett Great Estate Trial of 1904 at Lincoln, Illinois; and Gillett History
to the Present
[D. Leigh Henson]
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