Weldon Springs State Recreation Area
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Weldon Springs State Recreation Area is a 550-acre (2.2 kmĀ²) state park located near Clinton, Illinois. It centers on Salt Creek and the impoundment of a tributary, Weldon Springs, to form Weldon Spring Lake, a reservoir. It is supervised by the Illinois Department of Natural Resources.
Contents |
[edit] Geology and ecology
Weldon Springs is an unusual spring in the relatively flat Grande Prairie of central Illinois. The spring is a local reminder of the former presence of an immense buried river valley, the Teays River, once as large as the Mississippi River. Glacial till left behind during the Ice Age buried the valley and its bedrock bluffs below the current earth surface, but much later flows of groundwater were forced by this buried geological feature to the surface. Weldon Springs became a wetland with some of the northernmost bald cypress trees in Illinois.
[edit] History
In the 1800s, Weldon Springs was the fishing camp of a leading local citizen, Judge Lawrence Weldon. In 1900, Judge Weldon leased the springs to the Weldon Springs Company, which raised $7,500 to to redevelop the springs as a Chautauqua. From 1901 until 1921, Weldon Springs - which was served by a branch line of the Illinois Central Railroad - was a recognized stop on the Chautauqua circuit; for ten days annually, inspirational speakers and entertainers took top billing on the spring garden's outdoor ampitheatres. National leaders who appeared at Weldon Springs included William Jennings Bryan, Helen Keller, Carrie Nation, the Rev. Billy Sunday, and President William Howard Taft.
With the increasing availability of personal motor vehicles and distribution of movies, the Chautauqua circuit collapsed in the early 1920s. The Weldon family donated the springs to the county seat of Clinton in 1936, and the parcel moved to state ownership in 1948. It is the heart of what is now Weldon Springs State Recreation Area.
[edit] Today
When nearby Logan County, Illinois built its first-generation pioneer public schools in the 1860s, one of the one-room schools was named the Union School (1865). The name signifies the side Illinois took during the American Civil War at the time. After the Union School was consolidated about 1950, the building was moved to Weldon Springs and restored as the state park museum and visitor center.
From the Union School and parking lot, more than 7 miles (11 km) of trails fan out. Local hikers will find the largest trees in the Salt Creek bottoms, including the largest tree in the park, a silver maple. The 1.3-mile (2.1 km) Schoolhouse Trail accesses a restored tallgrass prairie which provides habitat for more than 30 different species of butterflies. More than 80 birdhouses are maintained to provide homes for bluebirds.
The spring-fed Weldon Spring Lake is managed for largemouth bass and channel catfish, with panfish also present. There is a power limit on the lake, with gasoline-powered motors not allowed.
The campgrounds and ampitheatres used during the spring complex's Chautauqua days continue in use.
[edit] External link
Protected Areas of Illinois Department of Natural Resources |
|
---|---|
State Parks | Apple River | Argyle Lake | Beall Woods | Beaver Dam | Buffalo Rock | Castle Rock | Cave-in-Rock | Chain O'Lakes | Channahon | Delabar | Dixon Springs | Donnelley/Depue | Ferne Clyffe | Fort Massac | Fox Ridge | Franklin Creek | Gebhard Woods | Giant City | Hazel & Bill Rutherford Wildlife Prairie | Hennepin Canal | Horseshoe Lake State Park (Madison County) | Illini | Illinois Beach | James "Pate" Philip | Johnson-Sauk Trail | Jubilee College | Kankakee River | Lake Le-Aqua-Na | Lake Murphysboro | Lincoln Trail | Lowden | Matthiessen | Mississippi Palisades | Moraine Hills | Morrison-Rockwood | Nauvoo | Pere Marquette | Red Hills | Rock Cut | Rock Island Trail | Shabbona Lake | Siloam Springs | South Shore | Starved Rock | Walnut Point | Weinberg-King | White Pines Forest | William G. Stratton | Wolf Creek |
State Forests | Big River | Hidden Springs | Sand Ridge | Trail of Tears |
State Recreation Areas | Clinton Lake | Eagle Creek | Eldon Hazlet | Frank Holten | Golconda Marina | Kickapoo | Moraine View | North Point Marina | Prophetstown | Pyramid | Ramsey Lake | Randolph County | Sangchris Lake | Stephen A. Forbes | Washington County | Wayne Fitzgerrell | Weldon Springs | William W. Powers |
State Fish & Wildlife Areas | Anderson Lake | Baldwin Lake | Carlyle Lake | Coffeen Lake | Crawford County | Des Plaines | Edward R. Madigan | Green River | Hamilton County | Heidecke Lake | Horseshoe Lake (Alexander County) | Iroquois | Kaskaskia River | Kinkaid Lake | Kishwaukee River | LaSalle Lake | Mackinaw River | Marshall | Mautino | Mazonia/Braidwood | Mermet Lake | Middle Fork | Mississippi River | Newton Lake | Panther Creek | Peabody River | Ray Norbut | Rend Lake | Rice Lake | Saline County | Sam Dale Lake | Sam Parr | Sanganois | Shelbyville | Silver Springs | Snakeden Hollow | Spring Lake | Ten Mile Creek | Turkey Bluffs | Union County | Woodford |
State Natural Areas | Cache River | Fults Hill Prairie | Goose Lake Prairie | Harry "Babe" Woodyard | Illinois Caverns | Kidd Lake | Piney Creek Ravine | Sielbeck Forest | Spitler Woods | Volo Bog |
State Trails | Tunnel Hill |