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486:, presents an instance of such rapid and substantial growth as the city of Streator. From a single small grocery house... the locality has grown to be a city of 6,000 prosperous and intelligent people. Churches, school-houses, large, substantial business houses and handsome residences, with elegant grounds and surroundings, now beautify the waste of ten years ago, while the hum of machinery and thronged streets are unmistakable evidences of business importance and prosperity.
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his mines, but the
Vermilion Coal Company was unable to afford European employment agents. Instead, it alerted steamship offices of the new job opportunities and convinced local railroads to carry notices of Vermilion Coal's promise. Scottish, English, Welsh, German and Irish immigrants came to the area first, followed later by scores of mostly Slovaks. Czechs, Austrians and Hungarians came in lesser numbers.
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from complications of his wounds on
September 19, 1881. The funeral held on September 26, 1881, was a majestic, solemn affair. An estimated one hundred thousand visitors came to Cleveland for the service and two-hundred and fifty thousand people lined the streets to view the five-mile procession which concluded at Cleveland's
342:, in 1838. In 1839 he married Sarah Wakeley Sterling, of Lyman, New York. They had five children; Helen Gertrude (born May 20, 1842), Sterling Rush (born December 31, 1845), Henry Doolittle (born August 26, 1851), Edward H. (born August 20, 1855) and Harold Arthur (born August 5, 1861). By 1850, Streator moved to
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line for their needed rail service. The company purchased 3,000 acres (12 km) of land and dispatched Col. Plumb to begin work. Plumb surveyed the area for the incoming Fox River Line, platted the land for the new town and commenced to build a total of eight mine shafts. Plumb needed laborers for
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learned first of the vast, untapped coal fields on the banks of the
Vermilion River, Streator gathered other investors and formed the Vermilion Coal Company in 1866 with Streator as its president and Plumb as the Business Manager. Plumb and Streator "invited" Streator's friend, then Ohio Congressman,
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publishing company. Garfield appointed
Streator to political positions. Garfield represented Ohio in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1863 until his election as president in 1881. Garfield was in office for only four months, when he was shot and fatally wounded on July 2, 1881. Garfield died
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Streator continued to flourish for much of the 20th century. Ultimately the demand for coal was replaced with the new demand for oil. Many of the mines closed in the 1920s, with the last of the mines finally shutting down in 1958. Since then, growth has stagnated, but
Streator remains a viable
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Once in
Cleveland and removed from the practice of medicine, Streator embarked on his second career in developing railroads. With his partner, Henry Doolittle, their firm built the Greenville and Medina Railroad. In 1853 they contracted for the construction of the 244 miles (393 km)
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was commenced. The
Chicago, Pekin and Southwestern rail line came next and was followed by the Chicago and Paducah railroad. This increase in rail construction gave the region unparalleled advantages in shipping. By 1877, the Vermilion Coal Company employed 1,200 miners.
374:. This highly coveted railroad was a great financial success for Streator. The public's interest in the oil fields was so great that crowds gathered to view the oil being loaded onto the railcars. By 1866, Streator sold his interest in the Oil Creek line to the
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Upon completion of the Corry to
Brocton railroad line, Streator suspended his involvement in rails and began a third career developing coal mines on the Vermilion River in North-Central Illinois. While it is unclear as to whether Streator or his cousin,
616:, in honor of their friend. Construction of the 180-foot (55 m) graystone mausoleum began in 1885. It contained a chapel in its center which hold the crypt of President Garfield and his wife, Lucretia. The monument was dedicated by Presidents
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643:, houses the headquarters of the city's Parks and Recreation Department on land donated by Streator's estate. It is located at the corner of Long & Streator Streets. The Parks Department building was, until 1957, the Lorain Public Library.
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Throughout his life
Streator maintained close ties with the civic and business leaders in Cleveland and Ohio. He was involved with his church, the Disciples Church. He was a long-time resident of a grand mansion on 240 acres (0.97 km) on
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The success of the local mining operations and the introduction of the new glass making industry allowed for improvements in the living conditions and personal wealth of its miners and laborers. In his 1877
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Streator is known primarily for the city of
Streator, Illinois. In Cleveland, there was a street named Streator Avenue for many years, and currently there is a Streator Court. Streator Park, in
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With the success of the Vermilion Coal Company in Streator, Illinois, Streator turned his attention back to his home in Cleveland and specifically toward politics. In 1869 he was elected to the
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in 1880, Streator along with other Cleveland leaders enacted Case's plan to create a first-class research institute in Cleveland. The initial endowment by the group, led by the estate of
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in creating the firm of W.H. Doan & Company. They began selling crude oil on commission, shipping it from the oil fields of northwestern Pennsylvania to Cleveland.
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in Ohio. Work continued on this and other ancillary lines of the railroad until completion in 1861, when he sold his unfinished contracts upon the death of Doolittle.
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became one of the leading independent religious magazines in the church. In 1887, Streator was instrumental in founding the Disciples Union of Cleveland.
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507:'s 25th senate district from 1870 to 1872. In 1872 he left the senate after one term and was named by then Ohio Governor (and later U.S. president)
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The coal operation was an immediate success due to the increasing appetite for coal in the United States. In 1870, the Dwight Division of the
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408:, then the president of the American Central railroad, in getting the railroad to "bend their lines" to the coal mine in the area known as
272:(October 16, 1816 – March 6, 1902) was an American physician, railroad developer, industrialist and entrepreneur after whom the city of
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609:. Streator was one of twelve friends and colleagues who took their place alongside Garfield's funeral car to serve as pall-bearers.
600:. Streator offered Garfield a partnership in the Vermilion Coal Company in 1866. Garfield partnered with Streator in creating the
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284:(B&O), and financed the first large-scale coal mine operation in Northern Illinois in 1866. He served as an
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manufacturing town with a glass bottle and a heavy equipment industry in addition to retail and agriculture.
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A year after Garfield's death, Streator became a principal member of an association created to build the
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In 1868 the newly developed town that was created in conjunction with the mines was incorporated as
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for the Ohio 20th district in 1874 and voted for Hayes. In 1879, Hayes appointed Streator as
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Vermilion River (Illinois River Basin) Area Assessment - Volume 4.1: Socio-Economic Profile
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552:" along Euclid Avenue in Cleveland. His neighbors included the first American billionaire,
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1018:. Illinois Department of Natural Resources - State Geological Survey Division. p. 105
416:. Eventually the plan did not work. The Vermilion Company then made arrangements with the
292:. He was an influential in the development of many civic institutions in his home city of
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and J.P. Robison organized the Christian Standard publishing company. Its periodical,
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for the Northern District of Ohio. He was re-appointed by Presidents Garfield and
338:, Militia. At age eighteen he entered medical school and upon graduation moved to
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Streator died at age 85 on March 3, 1902, in Cleveland, Ohio. He was buried at
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378:. He then began construction of a new line from Corry to New York Central's
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to sign on as an investor. In return, Garfield was expected to work with
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A genealogical history of the descendants of Stephen and Ursula Streeter
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832:. University of Wisconsin - Madison: David Clapp and Son. p. 450
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A National Register of the Society, Sons of the American Revolution
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Palmer Groups: John Melvin of Charleston... and His Descendants
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By 1886, Streator returned to business, when he partnered with
314:. He was a pallbearer at President Garfield's funeral in 1881.
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The Streator Public Library, a Carnegie library listed on the
699:. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Archived from
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Perhaps no city...in Illinois, outside of the great city of
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State Senator from 1870 to 1872, and was the first mayor of
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Office of Scientific Research and Analysis (2000-10-01).
276:, is named. He was instrumental in the creation of the
796:Cornish, Louis Henry; Clark, Alonzo Howard (1902).
1289:. University of Wisconsin - Madison: Grafton Press
1217:The Past & Present of LaSalle County, Illinois
1199:Cleveland Past and Present; Its Representative Men
1042:. University of Wisconsin - Madison: Grafton Press
946:
918:The Past & Present of LaSalle County, Illinois
858:Cleveland Past and Present; Its Representative Men
737:"Ancestors & Descendants of Dr. John Streator"
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366:, which would bring newly discovered oil from the
802:. University of Michigan: A.H. Kellogg. pp.
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1066:. The Westbote Co., State Printers. p. 375
596:Streator had a long association with President
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768:"Worthy Namesake: Where Streator got its name"
370:fields in western Pennsylvania to the town of
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1108:. Kent State University Press. p. 1272.
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1238:. Kent State University Press. p. 716.
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885:. Kent State University Press. p. 716.
1202:. Fairbanks, Benedict & Co. p. 500
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861:. Fairbanks, Benedict & Co. p. 500
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1360:19th-century American railroad executives
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953:. University of Illinois Press. pp.
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1370:Burials at Lake View Cemetery, Cleveland
1220:. Chicago: H.F. Kett & Co. pp.
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921:. Chicago: H.F. Kett & Co. pp.
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302:magazine, he was an original endower of
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1157:"Home Where Dr. W. S. Streator Died".
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569:After the death of Streator's friend,
1173:"City of Lorain-Parks and Recreation"
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577:created what was later to become the
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1385:People from LaSalle County, Illinois
1345:Republican Party Ohio state senators
1226:History of La Salle County Illinois.
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1101:
1063:Ohio Statesmen and Hundred Year Book
933:History of La Salle County Illinois.
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454:National Register of Historic Places
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357:Atlantic and Great Western Railroad
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1265:. Robison & Cockett. pp.
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671:. Robison & Cockett. pp.
324:Hamilton, Madison County, New York
278:Atlantic and Great Western Railway
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1400:19th-century American legislators
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693:"1880 US Census, Cleveland, Ohio"
494:
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1262:History of the City of Cleveland
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987:Wischnowsky, Dave (2003-10-27).
668:History of the City of Cleveland
255:
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766:Stanley, Charles (2008-11-24).
579:Case Western Reserve University
556:. In 1865, Streator along with
362:In 1862 he began plans for the
336:Berkshire County, Massachusetts
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16:American politician (1816–1902)
1375:Mayors of East Cleveland, Ohio
1365:People from Streator, Illinois
1340:People from Hamilton, New York
1283:Mack Sterling, Albert (1909).
1036:Mack Sterling, Albert (1909).
826:Wilder Leavitt, Emily (1905).
714:
304:Case School of Applied Science
280:in Ohio, was president of the
1:
1102:Rose, William Ganson (1990).
774:. p. B-1. Archived from
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521:Collector of Internal Revenue
346:, and retired from medicine.
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478:, author H.F. Kett states:
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7:
1161:. March 5, 1902. p. 3.
1139:. Streator Times-Press News
1135:Staff writer (2007-03-05).
991:. Streator Times-Press News
945:Laslett, John H.M. (2000).
282:Baltimore and Ohio Railroad
10:
1416:
1395:Politicians from Cleveland
1259:Robison, W. Scott (1887).
665:Robison, W. Scott (1887).
459:
426:Chicago and Alton Railroad
332:American Revolutionary War
308:James A. Garfield Monument
1350:Physicians from Cleveland
989:"Welcome to Hardscrabble"
772:Streator Times-Press News
734:Templeton, Roger (2004).
513:Ohio Agricultural College
476:History of LaSalle County
380:Buffalo and Erie Railroad
376:New York Central Railroad
328:Gloucester, Massachusetts
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1390:People from Aurora, Ohio
414:LaSalle County, Illinois
1137:"History: Looking Back"
949:Colliers Across the Sea
270:Worthy Stevens Streator
1286:The Sterling Genealogy
1232:Peskin, Allan (1998).
1196:Decker, Edgar (1869).
1060:Taylor, W. A. (1892).
1039:The Sterling Genealogy
879:Peskin, Allan (1998).
855:Decker, Edgar (1869).
544:
488:
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390:Vermilion Coal Company
166:Sarah Wakeley Sterling
49:from the 25th district
1235:Garfield: A Biography
882:Garfield: A Biography
720:Milford B. Streeter,
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146:Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.
1355:History of Cleveland
1316:at Wikimedia Commons
770:. Life & Times.
531:Cleveland civic life
517:presidential elector
334:as a private in the
296:. He co-founded the
290:East Cleveland, Ohio
246:East Cleveland, Ohio
1214:Kett, H.F. (1877).
915:Kett, H.F. (1877).
618:Rutherford B. Hayes
586:William Halsey Doan
554:John D. Rockefeller
509:Rutherford B. Hayes
372:Corry, Pennsylvania
226:coal mine developer
1380:Streator, Illinois
1314:Worthy S. Streator
634:Lake View Cemetery
607:Lake View Cemetery
602:Christian Standard
563:Christian Standard
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511:as trustee of the
468:Streator, Illinois
462:Streator, Illinois
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442:Streator, Illinois
433:Streator, Illinois
364:Oil Creek Railroad
299:Christian Standard
274:Streator, Illinois
143:Lake View Cemetery
115:Hamilton, New York
87:Allen T. Brinsmade
23:Worthy S. Streator
1312:Media related to
624:on May 29, 1890.
622:Benjamin Harrison
614:Garfield Monument
598:James A. Garfield
592:James A. Garfield
558:James A. Garfield
550:Millionaires' Row
541:Millionaires' Row
525:Chester A. Arthur
515:. He served as a
501:Ohio State Senate
406:Robert C. Schenck
402:James A. Garfield
384:Brocton, New York
312:James A. Garfield
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223:Railroad promoter
83:Benjamin R. Bevis
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127:(1902-03-06)
78:Succeeded by
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1335:1902 deaths
1330:1816 births
1075:Archive.org
191:Ralph Plumb
66:Preceded by
45:Ohio Senate
1324:Categories
1293:2008-11-14
1272:2008-11-10
1251:2008-10-23
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229:politician
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155:Republican
108:1816-10-16
1105:Cleveland
975:Streator.
418:Fox River
368:Oil Creek
350:Railroads
252:Signature
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187:Relations
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193:(cousin)
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