Good Samartain Restoration Team |
Gallatin County |
Old Slave House History
John Hart Crenshaw |
Slave Auction |
In
1829, Crenshaw and his brother, Abraham, bought the land where the Old Slave House
would be built and broke ground in 1834. The house was finished in 1838. Crenshaw
claimed the house was built for his wife, Sinia Taylor Crenshaw and their five
children, but it was also used as a holding station for kidnapped free blacks
before they were sent “down the river” and into slavery in the south. With
Kentucky (a slave state) just across the river, it was easy to do.
Whipping Post |
3rd Floor of the Old Slave House |
Saline River |
Burning of Mill |
Old Slave House |
John & Sinia Crenshaw |
Then in
December 2000, the State of Illinois acquired the house and two acres of land
from George Sisk, Jr. In 2011, the Center for Archaeological Investigations at
Southern Illinois University in Carbondale finished their historical,
architectural and archaeological research and excavations of the property.
Crenshaw's Stone |
Restoring the Cemeteries
Angie Johnson |
Cleaning Stones |
Hoisting a Stone in Place |
Placing the Stone on the Pedestal |
Hickory Hill - Before |
Hickory Hill - After |
Paperwork for Hickory Hill |
Good Samaritans Restoration |
Toppled Stone ... |
... Restored Stone |
Crenshaw House |
While Crenshaw was not the only slave trader in the state of Illinois, he
became the most notorious and the most ruthless in Illinois’ history.
Unfortunately, the state
of Illinois has no plans to reopen the house. That's a shame since this sad part of the state’s history could make a powerful impact on
visitors, and future generations.
Now Owned by the State of Illinois |
Posted - NO Trespassing |
Hickory Hill Cemetery |
~
Joy