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Cherokee County History

OF THIS, THAT AND EVERYTHING
by: George K. Pettengill



History of Cleghorn
Cherokee County Historical Society Newsletter - Special Issue -
Volume 13, Number 1, January 1978
Another year has passed.  After a three-year tenure as Vice-president of the Cherokee County Historical Society, that job has now devolved upon other shoulders, Anne Wilberding of Meriden is now in charge of Vice for the Society.

This year I have been assigned the task of editing the Newsletter, and heading up the membership committee.  The easier you make the membership job, the more time I will have to devote to the Newsletter,so please send in your cards and letters, folks, along with your dues for 1978.

This month's issue of the Newsletter is devoted primarily to Cleghorn.  That town is the newest town in the county, being founded in 1890 and incorporated in 1902.  McCulla's 1914 History of Cherokee County almost totally ignores Cleghorn, the information about the town in that history is minimal.

The dirth of information is partially rectified by a publication called "Ten Score the American Way", a Meriden Cleghorn Bicentennial Commemorative Book published by the Bicentennial Committee of Meriden and Cleghorn in 1976.  That publication is the most comprehensive history of the Cleghorn Community available.

In 1896 the town of Cleghorn had a newspaper, the Cleghorn Recorder.  The first issue hit the streets May 28, 1896, but its subsequent history appears to be unknown.

One thing that strikes me about the Cleghorn community is the number of building that have been moved.  Our forefathers were great ones to jack a building up and move it to another site. None of this, tear it down so we can build new, for them.  When a building had outlived its usefulness in one place it was moved to another, and if necessary renovated for a new use.

The first church building in Cleghorn was a church moved in from the country, , and that tradition has been maintained.

I was reminded forcefully of this when around Christmas the old Steele house in Cherokee succumbed to the wreckers big machinery.  Our forefathers would probably have chopped that huge old home into sections and moved them to new locations, there to serve as housing for another fifty years.

Somehow I cannot help but compare modern construction with the building of the boom towns of a hundred years ago.  Then too the primary goal was to get a layer of something between the occupant and the weather.  Today's structures may be a little more cosmetically pleasing that the clapboard siding over two by fours of yesteryear, but for me, a two inch layer of chopped paper insulation does not satisfactorily replace solid construction.

Repeatedly the cost of new construction is cited as the reasoning behind the new construction techniques. Perhaps the difference is in our perspective.  The home builder once viewed the construction of a new house as an investment for the future, a home to be used by generations of people, preferably family. Now we seem to be building for the present generation only, and probably that's about as long as it will last.

I contrast this with the building constructed by the Cleghorn Christian Church in 1894.  When a new church was built in 1912, this structure was moved and remodeled into a home, which purpose it still serves.

The new home of the Cherokee County Historical Society was built in 1891 and moved to Cleghorn in 1922.  For 55 years it has served as a meeting place and lodge hall.  Fifty-five years of service after its original purpose was outlived and how many years of service yet remains, no one yet knows.

I suspect it will never be said of our generation that "They built better than they knew," a rather sad epitaph to pass to our descendants.
HISTORICAL SOCIETY'S NEW HOME
In January of 1978, the Cherokee County Historical Society acquired a new home.  The Adrian Olson Legion Post of Cleghorn deeded the American Legion Hall in that town to the Society for their use and preservation.

The building was built in 1891 in Larrabee as a school house.  It is a two story structure with hard wood floors and a magnificent staircase.  The building served as the Larrabee school until the construction of the present brick structure there.

In 1922 this building was moved to Cleghorn and put on a foundation for use as the I.O.O.F. Hall.  In 1970, the American Legion Post in Cleghorn acquired the building as their meeting place.

Now the building with all of its historical significance is the property of the Historical Society.

Most of the original schools in the towns in the county were constructed in a manner similar to this structure. The old school in Cleghorn was constructed from nearly identical plans.

The youngest town in the county thus becomes the home base of the county's Historical Society.

The building is in essentially good repair and requires more cosmetic restoration than structural renewal.

We thank the members of the Adrian Olson Legion Post and people of the town of Cleghorn for this tremendous boost to the Cherokee County Historical Society.

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