The Cooksville Archives contains many family histories of
the early settlers in the Cooksville area. They are stories of migration from
eastern American states and from the British Isles and other European
countries— stories that document the eagerness and determination, the
accomplishments and happiness—and the hardships— of their new lives .
Europeans were emigrating from their home countries in
the mid-19th century for a number of reasons—spreading revolutions
and wars, serious potato famines, divisive inheritance laws—all of which
created a desire to improve their lives elsewhere in the world.
Some of the settlers’ stories handed down are more
complete than others, usually because someone took the time to write down the experiences
and the anecdotes, and then shared them with others—and they also frequently
visited the popular new photography studios for portraits.
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Helen Porter Richardson (1848-1926)
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The Richardson family’s story, now in the Cooksville
Archives, is one of those, although it begins with a special twist. The story
was related by Helen Porter Richardson (1848-1926), a prominent Cooksville area
music and vocal teacher, who wrote a narrative about her Richardson family for
her son, Robert (1887-1955).
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Helen Porter Richardson, an earlier photograph |
Helen’s father, Alexander Richardson (1814-1853), came to
America from Scotland after he was a victim of a robbery in England, and
Helen’s story begins with that incident.
Helen relates that Alexander Richardson was the owner of
a large dry goods store in Edinburgh, Scotland, and that he was robbed of a
reported $12,000 in gold on a buying trip to London. He then decided to migrate
to Australia and join a brother in the “sheep business.” But an old schoolmate
of Richardson’s, Alexander Mitchell, already in Milwaukee, persuaded Richardson
that a better opportunity was in the New World, specifically in Wisconsin, So Richardson exchanged his tickets to Australia for passage
to America instead.
The family sailed from Glasgow for Boston on April 7, 1849,
arriving in Boston June 3, 1849.
At the time, the Richardson family consisted of Alexander
(1814-1853), wife Elizabeth (1815-1892) and their children, Elizabeth
(1842-1922), John (1843-1917), Alex (1846-1918), and Tom (1847-1931). After
arrival, Lucy (1851- ?) and Frederick (1853-1890) were added.
Richardson had to remain in Boston after the family arrived
to collect the luggage and furniture, but he sent his family onward, in the new
railroad “cars,” with three changes, to the Erie Canal in New
York State. There they boarded a boat for their journey on the canal westward to Buffalo, New
York, and the shores of Lake Erie. From there, the mother and children took a
longer boat-ride across the Great Lakes to Milwaukee, which took about a week.
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Erie Canal, c. 1855 |
Helen continues her story:
“There
was no pier or landing at Milwaukee, so they put down planks from the boat to
the shore and ropes on each side for the passengers to take hold of. They were
met by Alexander Mitchell… Your grandfather did not come with furniture for two
weeks, which caused great anxiety on the part of your grandmother, as she was afraid
he would be robbed again. As soon as he arrived he went to Alexander Mitchell’s
bank and deposited all his gold in Alexander Mitchell’s bank, where he met John
White of the Town of Porter, and he and Mitchell advised him to come out to
Cooksville and start a store.
“They
then sold a lot of their furniture in Milwaukee, and Mr. White and his son,
Alex, loaded the rest of the furniture into their two farm-wagons. On the third
day out from Milwaukee coming over the hill, on the wide, open prairie, they
saw a little farm nestling on the hillside with its deep wooded ravines and
heavy foliage facing the wide expanse of prairie with its variety of beautiful
flowers, and on the south bordered with a fine young orchard of peach, apple
and plum trees. Your grandmother exclaiming, 'Oh, what a beautiful place. If I were to live in the country this is
just such a place as I would like.’ Mr. White said the place is for sale…as he
was anxious to get all the Scotchmen he could into the neighborhood… Your
grandfather bought the place… [with] the new lime-and-gravel house.”
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Richardson Grout House (1849) |
The house, now known as the Richardson Grout House, was built
early in 1849 and is now listed in the National Register of Historic Places,
and still stands on Riley Road in the Town of Porter. The house and
property were sold to William B.
Porter in 1888..
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Richardson Grout House, front porch |
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Town of Porter census 1850 with Richardsons |
Helen’s story continues :“The farm proved a poor paying investment… he [Alexander] sent money to England to bring an
experienced farmer, named Robert Shepherd, to take charge of the farm and all
the stock, cows, pigs, horses, sheep, and cattle. While planning for this he
went to Indian Ford to the saw mill; on coming home it grew dark and stormy;
the forward wheel went into a ditch. He was thrown from the wagon and a plank
struck him in the back of the neck, breaking it and killing him instantly. This
accident changed all plans. Your grandfather was thirty-eight years old at the
time of his death. He was buried in the corner of the orchard.”
A sad ending to this chapter in the Richardson family story.
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Alexander Richardson (1814-1853) tombstone piece
Alexander Richardson tombstone, bottom
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Later, Alexander, Jr., apparently removed his father’s
gravestone about 1888 from that Richardson family burial site when the farm was
sold to the John Porter family. Perhaps Alex removed it hoping to preserve the
tombstone from possible neglect or loss. The stone was stored in the barn on
the historic Van Vleck House property in Cooksville, which Alex used as a summer
home. When that home was sold in 1955, the gravestone was purchased by E.
Marvin Raney, Cooksville historian and antique collector, who lived nearby in
the Duncan House, Marvin stored the gravestone in his barn where it remains. No
doubt, Marvin bought the memorial stone to keep it in the village. |
Lyell Porter Richardson (1887-1947) |
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Clara Porter Richardson (1895-1946)
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The Richardson family went on to flourish and prosper in
the Cooksville, Evansville and Rock County area over the years, along with
their close relatives, the Porter family. And both generations of Richardsons
and Porters participated in many village events including the famous Old Settlers Reunions and picnics held
in Cooksville in the 19th and 20th centuries.
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Richardson children in a pony cart, Cooksville, photo c.1920s |
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[Thanks to
Helen Batty Porter and Amey Elizabeth (Lisa) DeSoto for recently sharing their family
stories. Lisa DeSoto’s great-great-grandmother was Ann Eliza Bacon Porter, wife
of Joseph K. P. Porter, and Lisa’s great-grandmother was Helen Porter
Richardson, the story teller. Helen Porter’s husband was Bill Porter, whose
great-grandfather was Joseph K. P. Porter, one of the three Porter brothers who
originally settled at Cooksville-Waucoma in 1846. Thanks to Lisa and Helen for
providing the story materials and thanks to their ancestors for telling the stories.
The photographs and the Richardson and Porter information are in the
Cooksville Archives. Larry Reed, Chair,
Historic Cooksville Trust.]