Easley Pioneer Museum

Easley Pioneer Museum is located at the corner of Mills Street and West Broadway in Ipava, Illinois. (40°21'11.05"N 90°19'37.73"W) The museum is privately owned by a descendant of the original Easley family. The Easley family founded the town of Ipava, Illinois and many descendants of the original family still live in the area. The museum houses a large collection of Easley family genealogical information as well as a very large collection of artifacts related to the World War II Army camp, Camp Ellis.[1][2][3][4]

One building of the museum complex is the restored former Freeman School #179 - a one-room schoolhouse in Fulton County, Illinois. The museum houses what is believed to be the original log cabin school of John Easley, the father of Ipava. The largest collection of the museum relates to the World War II Army camp, Camp Ellis, which was located nearby.[5][6]

By November 1949, Camp Ellis proper, minus designated areas the Illinois National Guard retained was declared excess and was approved for disposal on 1 December 1949.[7]

References

  1. "Easley". Illinois Stories. Mark McDonald. WMEC, Macomb, IL, 23 April 2010. Television.
  2. Fulton County, Illinois communities
  3. State of Illinois. Fulton County. Fulton County, Illinois Visitors Guide. 2003. Print.
  4. "Easley Pioneer Museum in Ipava keeps growing". Canton Daily Ledger. June 21, 2012. Retrieved August 7, 2015.
  5. Easley Pioneer Museum brochure
  6. Camp Ellis. Illinois Stories. Mark McDonald. WMEC, Macomb, IL, 18 September 2012. Television.
  7. Bordner, Marjorie Rich. Camp Ellis, From Cornfields to Marching Feet.Texas: Henington Publishing Company, 1993. 130-131. Print.

External links

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