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PROTECTING AND PRE'ERVING FOR GENERATION' NEW PHILADELPHIA By CharlotteKng continueto advocateNew Philadelco-sponsors phia'sinclusion in the NP5. Advocatesand supporters of New Philadelphia, Amongitsstringentstandards, the NPSmandates lllinois,the first known town in the United States that,"The nationalparkrystemshouldpossess vafounded,plattedand officiallyregistered by an Af- riety,accepting the supremein eachof the various ricanAmerican,are dedicatedto preserveand pro- typesand subjectsof scenic,scientific,and historitect the siteas a unit of the NationalParkService,cal importance."Presently, no unit of the NPSis stewardsof the nation'selite naturaland cultural comparableto New Philadelphia. None can tell resources. An act of Congressis requiredto autho- the story of an integratedcommunitywhere forrizethe Secretary of the lnteriorto evaluatea site's merly enslavedand free-bornAfrican Americans (NPS)status. lived alongsideEuropeanAmericansduring one qualifications for NationalParkService The legislativeprocessto authorizea specialre- of the mostraciallyturbulenterasof our country's sources studyof New Philadelphia beganin 2009 history. with the introduction of The New Philadelphia, lllinois StudyAct to the Senateby SenatorRoland THE STORYOF FRANI(MCWORTERAND Burrisand co-sponsor SenatorRichardDurbin.Con- N i W P H I L A D E L P H I A gressmanAaron Schockpresentedidenticallegisla- New Philadelphia wasfoundedin 1836by Free tion to the Houseof Representatives. After hiselec- FrankMcWorter.Bornenslavedin SouthCarolina, tion, SenatorMark Kirk joined SenatorDurbin as McWorter purchasedfreedomfor himselfand fiflllinoislegislators co-sponsor. and their bi-partisanteen family membersand acquiredproperty in ll- buildingfoundationsand the remainsof wellsand throughhisown initiatives.McWorter earned suchassubstantial linois,all accomplished fundsby hiringhistime to other settlers,miningcavesfor crudeniter, pit cellars. to black,white and mulattosettlers, sellinglots in New Philadelphia NATIONAL H I'TORIC5I6N I FICANCE and other enterprises. achiazednationalrecognitionfor historicalsignifiNer,vPhiladelphia asa nodalpoint New Philadelphia HistorianJamesDavisdescribes In for regionalblackactivities.However,accordingto censusrecords,Af- cancein 2W5 W inclusionin the NationalReginerof HistoricPlaces. New Philadelphia a Nationof the lnteriordesignated the minority of New Philadel- 20O9the Secretary ricanAmericanshistoricallyrepresented extraordinarynationalsignifial HistoricLandmark.NelruPhiladelphia's phia'spopulation.The integity,whichmayprovide archaeological canceisattributedto e<cellent highest representation lifewaysand economicand about the information nationally significant of African American '1 l l llli !,1,1,11"t socialrelationships o ti ,,* \l :\\r{:. Americans in a pioandEuropean of AfricanAmericans lriijr: residents occurred in i{r' rti s.];;,.;';;'; dataalsoholdthemajorpotentialto Thesite'sarchaeological neersetting. l85O when 38 permethodsabout race,ethnicity,and acculturation. affectresearch cent of the town's resinationalhistoricsigNew Philadelphia's The NPSfurtherrecognized dentswere recordedas "black." Accordingto in 2013by inclusionin the NationalUndergroundRailroad nificance Network to FreedomProgram.Mc\Worterfamily and local residents' Bureauof the Census accountsand documentedoral historiesattestto the town's particirecords,the proportion harboring, pationin the movementto abolishslaveryby concealing, of black and mulatto guidingand, sometimes, AfricanAmericansseeking accompanying in New Philaresidents freedom.LocalhistorianCapt.M.D. Massiewrote in 1906that Pike delphia far exceeded of participationin County residentsoften sufferedthe consequences the entire state of llthe UndergroundRailroad:"Many honoredold citizenswere often linois,which reported they shelteredand fed runawaynegroes." severelycensuredbecause 0.6 percentof the entire populationasblack IA A C T I V I TE I 5A T N E W P HI L A D E L P H CURRENT in 1850. propertyin New Philadelphia that inIn 2005 the NPA purchased Located near major cludesan unoccupiedmid-twentiethcenturydwellingknown asthe transportation routes, BurdickHouse,situatedon a lot soldto VirgilBurdickin 1921.One of New PhiladelphiabeBurdick, familyancestor Spaulding New Philadelphia's earliestsettlers, came a regiona' cenacquiredthe southportion of Block4 Lot I from Frank a shoemaker, ter of activity. Area Historicalkiosk at the New Philadelphiasite. McWorterin 1846.The NPA recentlyexpandedits holdingsby purfarmerspatronizedthe Courtesy office of lllinois StateSenator5am chasingthe majority of Ihe 42 acretown site.ln 2009, the Archaeotown's craftsmenfor a McCann. 50th District. to be the purchased 9.14acresof landconsidered logicalConservancy products and varietyof the town's commercial center. post significant section, most archaeologically for a time, a school and, The town boasted a one-room services. kiosk boundary a newly constructed Philadelphia's north the At New for success, seemed destined Although New Philadelphia office. tell with interpretive signs to greets be equipped proposed visitors and will soon the when tracks for for the town in 1869, knell tolled death Hannibaland NaplesRailroadwere routedawayfrom the community. the story of the historictown and its founder.Kioskconstrudionwas Cooperative(IREC)and A few familiesremaineduntil the 1940s,but most moved elsewhere. fundedby a grantfrom the lllinoisRuralElectric College WorkforceTraining Community (History the local John Wood lllinois) built by of Pike County, Charles C. Chapman ln 1BB0historian 'At grant an award from the NPSNetpromise, funds complimented great Program. IREC but time it had wrote of New Philadelphia, one installation andto dwelop for marker to Freedom hogram street has work passing towns spring up, it a mile distant,and other the railroad Aaron Schockdeditour. Congressman interactive site forgotten. a smart-phone Philadelphia was not killed it." Althoughabandoned,New lllinois State SenatorSam 3,2014 ceremony. the kiosk at a June the New Philadelphia cated plaque from the 1950s, and markedthe site A with several D. Davidsmeyen along C. McCann, State Representative (NPA) Frank McWorter in 1996 to commemorate formed Association attended the ceremony. many area residents, local dignitaries and other and the town he founded. Effortsare underwayto ensurepermanentcommemorationof the through storyof FrankMcWorterand New Philadelphia inspirational IA ARCHAEOLOcYAT NEW PHI LADELPH Park preservation as unit of the National protection of the site a and only a arevisibleat New Philadelphia; Today,no originalstructures (NPS). NPS status would furPhiladelphia's In addition, New usedisturbed Service few buildingfoundationsremain.Althoughagricultural to naAfrican-Americans our the contributions of the upper lB inchesof soil,the town siteretainsexcellentarchaeologi- ther acknowledge percent the units of the than 5 of 4Ol fewer tion's history.Currently, cal integrity. history. with African-American Archaeologicalinvestigationsat the site, conductedfrom 2OO4- NPSaredirectlyassociated lllinois Study ActS.1328will be of TheNew Philadelphia, Founda- Progress were sponsored by NationalScience 2006 and 2OOB-2O'12, Association's website:newphiladelprogramgrants.The postedon the New Philadelphia for Undergraduates tion Research Experience New Philadelphia collaborativeprgect includedthe Universityof Maryland,University phiail.org.As a unit of the NationalParkService, lllinoisStateMuseum,Universityof will inspirecurrentand future generationswith themesimportantto of lllinoisat Urbana-Champaign, Associa-all Americans:the strugglefor freedomand opportunitywith an emlowa, Universityof North Carolina,and New Philadelphia recoveredmorethan l5O,O00artifactsspanningthe phasison love for family. tion. lnvestigators floral and faunal town's occupation,includingdomestic,architectural, features, CharlotfeKing is a Director of the New PhiladelphiaAssociation. are many intact subsurface remains.Among the discoveries ) I L U N O | 'A N T r Q U r r yV , O L U M E4 9 , N U M B E R4