MONTHLY ARCHIVES: August 2017

August 20, 2017
The Town of Antioch It’s First Hundred Years 1837 – 1937 By: Roberta Selter Knirsch Published by the Trustees of the Antioch Township Library in observance of The Town Sesquicentennial 1987 Part One. The history of Antioch Township began on a December day in 1836. It was then that the Gage brothers, Darius and Thomas, with their friend Thomas Warner reached the banks of a winding stream just south of the Illinois-Wisconsin border. They had followed Indian trails from the Aux Plaines River, near which Warner already had staked a claim, to the Mill Creek and then to Loon Lake. There on a rise beside the Muquonago Trail and overlooking the lake, Warner decided to settle. The Gages chose a site several miles to the north where the trail forded the lively little creek that was to be named the Sequoit. With winter fast deepening, it was necessary for the men to return to shelter farther south along the trail. In later years, they often retold the story of that hazardous journey. Overtaken by a blizzard and freezing temperatures, they were in imminent danger of death when at last they reached the safety of Willard Jones’s home fourteen miles from Warner’s claim. The next April the Gages returned and erected a log cabin – – the first house in the town of Antioch, on the north bank of Sequoit Creek. When the cabin was built, Illinois had been a state for nineteen years. The comparatively late date for the settlement of this area can be attributed to the reluctance of the Indians to vacate the land. It had been acquired by treaty with the Pottawatomies and other tribes at Prairie Du Chien in August of 1829, but it was not until the defeat of the Sauk leader Blackhawk in 1832 that the tribes began their exodus to beyond the Mississippi. The Gages did not remain alone for long in their wilderness home. Reports of rich farm land at $1.25 an acre, abundant game, and plentiful water supplies combined with hard times in the Northeast to make the arduous journey seem well worth the sacrifice. Henry S. Rector was one who made that journey. With his wife and two daughters, he arrived at the Gage cabin 1837. The newcomers stayed with the Gages until their own cabin could be built. The Rectors provided the community with its first white native on June Twenty-third, 1838 when their son Edwin was born.
August 9, 2017
The Village of Antioch has vacancy in the Parks & Recreation Department:  Zumba® Instructor One position is available at this time Under the direct supervision of the Program Supervisor, the Zumba® Instructor will instruct Zumba® to participants at the Parks Building Gym minimally twice a week. Essential Functions: Track payroll, record participation data and submit money collected Complete accident & incident reports Attend and participate in continued education workshops and sessions to keep Zumba® certification current Qualifications: Completion of Zumba® Basic Instructor training course Must commit to teaching 2+ classes per week Previous paid experience as Zumba® instructor highly preferred First Aid, CPR/AED Certifications To Apply: If interested, please fill out an application for employment at www.antioch.il.gov or apply in person at The Parks Department or the Village Hall, 874 Main Street, Antioch, IL, 60002. Applications accepted Monday through Friday between the hours of 8:30 AM-5:00 PM
August 2, 2017
Due to contract agreements and the threat of severe damaging winds and rain, the “It’s Thursday Classic & Custom Car Show” scheduled for August 3, 2017 has been RESCHEDULED to August 17, 2017.

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