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History of the
Campus
The
Millikins
James
Millikin was born in Ten Mile, Washington County, Pennsylvania,
August 2, 1827, according to Dr. Albert Reynolds Taylor's
research, which found considerable uncertainty as to exact
dates. He was the son of Abel and Nancy (Van Dyke) Millikin,
a moderately wealthy farmer in Western Pennsylvania. His grandfather
came from Ireland as a Scotch-Irish Presbyterian in 1771.
His mother was of Dutch origin, whose ancestors came to American
in the seventeenth century. James Millikin would later name
Van Dyke Street in northwest Decatur in her honor around 1880.
Little
is really known about his childhood. As a farm boy, James
helped drive herds of steers to New York City. In the fall
of 1846, he matriculated in Washington College (now Washington
and Jefferson College), Washington, Pennsylvania. It was while
attending Washington that he made the vow to found an institution
of learning, if ever he were able, to fit youth for occupations.
The lure
of the west called James, and in 1849 he accompanied his father
on a sheep drive into Indiana and again in 1850 to Danville,
Illinois. During the winter of 1850, he was at Wabash College,
although records are unclear as to what he studied, or how
long. Returning to Pennsylvania in 1851 for more sheep, he
again drove them to Danville with a partner named McFarland.
During
the 1850's, James continued to increase his flocks and herds.
He rented many farms for grazing and was called "the
cattle king of the Prairie State." He also started purchasing
real estate, most of it from public domain.
In 1856,
James Millikin arrived in Decatur, where he continued in his
livestock and real estate dealings. On January 1, 1857, he
married Anna Bernice Aston, daughter of the Rev. Samuel M.
Aston, pastor of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church in Mount
Zion since 1855. Mr. Aston was pastor of the Presbyterian
Church in Ten Mile, Pennsylvania, when James was in his early
teens, and Anna and her sister Nancy had been educated in
Washington Female Seminary in Washington.
James
Millikin entered the banking business in 1860, placing his
board J. Millikin & Co. in front of the building that
was formerly home to the Railroad Bank, which had recently
failed. He gradually reduced his livestock holdings and devoted
his interests to real estate and banking, with some investments
into local industry. He assisted in the organization of the
Union Iron Works, serving as its president, as well as the
Decatur Coal Company. His bank became the largest banking
institution in Illinois outside of Chicago. In 1897, he reorganized
his bank as the Millikin National Bank of Decatur.
He served
on various boards in the city, including as member of the
Board of Supervisors and as an Alderman. While he ran for
State Senator, a distrust of banks that was prominent in the
Middle West defeated him.
In 1876,
he built a house at Pine and West Main Streets in Decatur.
Following the founding of the university, Mr. Millikin continued
in his banking business until his death on March 2, 1909 in
Orlando Florida.
Mrs. Millikin
died on July 29, 1913. To the city of Decatur she left her
early benefaction, the Anna B. Millikin Home for aged women,
which had been organized in 1879 as the Girls' Industrial
School of Old Ladies' Home. In her will, she bequeathed her
home and lot to be the home of the Decatur Art Institute,
owned by the university and managed jointly by the university
and the citizens of Decatur. She had participated in the selection
of the university colors and served as chairman of the Women's
Hall section of the Building Committee after July 7, 1908.
Faculty committee and the Board of Managers would later name
this dormitory Aston Hall for her family. The Millikins died
without issue, besides the philanthropic gifts to the city
of Decatur.
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