Jacob B. Beattie

Mr. Beattie was born in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, June 24th, 1818.  In the fall of 1820 his father and family left Pittsburgh in a small family emigrant boat, and started down the Ohio River for the then far west.  They landed at Shawneetown, Jan. 1st, 1821, and...

William Barnett

William Barnett had engaged in the Indian campaigns of 1811-1813. When they ended, William was on his way to his father’s home, within two mile of his destination, when he drowned in Plum Creek.

Alexander Barber

Alexander Barber came from Ohio to Randolph County in 1805. He was a capable and energetic man with a particular skill in building mills. For many years, his services were sought after, by those wishing to establish an industry of this type. After construction of...

Andrew Barbeau

Andrew Barbeau was the son of an early French settler, and grew up in Prairie du Rocher. He became a prosperous citizen and as one of his ventures, built a mill on the creek south of the village in 1824. Barbeau’s mill was widely known, and the hollow leading...

Cornhill Ballard

Cornhill Ballard – Cornhill sounds odd for a man’s given name. By the work in which he engaged, partly lived up to his given name.(What Cornhill and blacksmith have in common, is unknown) He became one of the early blacksmiths in the Sparta region where he...

Christian Beare

Christian Beare did not do anything in particular to attract attention to himself. He might easily have passed on and received no mention had he not been the first native of Switzerland to take up residence in Randolph County, arriving here in 1832.

Joseph Aronowski

In the late 1860’s, an iron foundry was established at Chester by a stock company. In 1869, it was leased to Joseph Aronowski, who bought it in 1873. this foundry made many furnaces, railings, and various parts of machinery. Many old castings carry its...

Seth Allen

Seth Allen was an early resident on the site of the present city of Chester. We find him there in 1829, when he began operating a cooperage shop. Flour mills and slaughterhouses required the services of coopers, since most of their products were shipped in barrels....

Captain William M. Adair

Captain William M. Adair was born in Randolph County, Illinois, January 6, 1837. The family is of Scotch-Irish ancestry. His grandfather came to America from North Ireland, and settled in South Carolina, and there his son William was born in 1781. The latter grew to...