ESPN Staff Writer Visits Museum

Steve Wulf

The Williamson County Museum was host to Steve Wulf on Thursday, June 25, 2015. Steve is a staff writer for the ESPN sports network based in Connecticut and lives in Westchester, New York. With the introduction of the Cincinnati baseball team getting back into the All Stars this year, the location harkens back to 1970 when Ray Fosse and Pete Rose collided at home plate hampering Fosse’s career.

With the All Star game being held in Cincinnati where the 1970 collision occurred, Wulf decided to do a Marion perspective piece on Ray Fosse. Ironically, Pete Rose was held in the Marion minimum security work camp for years at the Marion prison.

WCHS society board member, past president and sports enthusiast Bob Jackson was able to give Wulf plenty of information about Fosse and his roots here in Marion as well as data and articles about Fosse’s career. Be sure to watch for Wulf’s report in the days to come.

Museum Receives Donation of Title Abstracts

Our museum recently received a donation of over 700 property abstract titles and numerous city and county property maps. Since property owners today no longer receive abstracts when their mortgage is paid off, many may not be familiar with them. An abstract is a chain of title to a particular piece of property and all of them begin with the purchase of the property from the federal government, in the case of Williamson County real estate, most were originally purchased between 1830 and 1860 or later. Each and every owner in the chain of ownership including mortgage holders are contained within the abstract up to the current owner or in this case, whenever the abstract records quit being kept.

Abstracts are a genealogical and historical gold mine, since they contain all of the details of each property transaction throughout the decades of ownership. Paperwork often found within an abstract will contain but not be limited to divorce, mortgage, foreclosure, insolvency, mental health, wills and probate records, partitions and much more.

The document collection was obtained from John K. Miller by Jim Powless over 25 years ago and was recently donated to the museum by his widow, Susan Powless, thanks to Jim’s brother, David Powless. John K. Miller was the son of Ray Miller and both of them operated the Marion Abstract Company located in the basement of the Bank of Marion for decades.

The items were sorted and carefully re-boxed for storage on Saturday, June the 13th , by Colleen Norman and Sam Lattuca.  At some point in the future, the abstracts will be indexed and itemized in a database. Since the museum is already woefully short of volunteers, it isn’t likely that the collection will be available for access at any time in the near future since we are already overloaded with projects and too few volunteers.

Marion Garden Club Makes Donation to the Museum

Marion Garden Club members Lynn Love (past president) and Debbie Lattuca (current club secretary) installed 6 new azalea shrubs in the beds at the front of the county museum on June 2, 2015. The Garden Club usually donates $150 per year to the museum after deducting the costs of annual bedding plants and supplies which club members plant for the museum each spring.

It was decided this year to install perennial shrubs which  will add color to the front of the building in the spring and require less overall maintenance in the long run. The azaleas were donated to the museum by Sam and Debbie Lattuca of Marion. Bedding plants were installed by the club in large planters on either side of the front entry steps to the museum.

On Monday, June 8, 2015, several of the Garden Club members visited the museum and the equivalent of $150 in money, bedding plants and mulch was donated to the museum. Sam Lattuca, current Williamson County Historical Society president accepted the donation on the part of the museum.

Wohlwend Family Visits Museum

Wohlwend

Shown L-R are John Wohlwend, Ron Wohlwend, Betty Neely and Sharon Wilson in background

Descendants of the Wohlwend family visited the museum on Monday, June 8, 2015 to research their local family roots, tour the museum and recollect times gone by. The Wohlwend family owned family farms west of Marion prior to the installation of the Illinois Ordnance Plant (Ordill) in 1941 which uprooted over 100 families. The properties are now part of the Crab Orchard Wildlife Refuge.

Many of the early family members attended rural one room school houses such as Bainbridge School while they were young. Betty Neely, a Marion resident, was one of those students and still has vivid recollections of those days.

The Wohlwend family were also involved in the formation of the Bank of Egypt and operated Wohlwend Motors (later called Westernaire Dodge.)

Members of the Wohlwend family in attendance on Monday were John and Ron Wohlwend, Betty (Wohlwend) Neely, Sharon Wilson. Also visiting with the Wohlwends was Rick Avery.