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Alhambra, Illinois One Place Study

Privacy Level: Open (White)
Date: 8 Jun 2022
Location: Alhambra, Madison, Illinois, United Statesmap
Surnames/tags: One_Place_Studies Illinois OPS_Alhambra_Illinois
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Contents

Alhambra, Illinois One Place Study

This profile is part of the Alhambra, Illinois One Place Study.
{{OnePlaceStudy|place=Alhambra, Illinois|category=Alhambra, Illinois One Place Study}}

Name

Alhambra, Illinois

Geography

Continent: North America
Country: United States
State/Province: Illinois
County: Madison
GPS Coordinates: 38.888611, -89.7325
Elevation: 172.0 m or 564.3 feet

History

ALHAMBRA HISTORY - (Taken from the Alhambra Centennial Souvenir Book, 1949)[1]
Alhambra was laid out in 1849 by Dr. Louis Sheppard who came here from the East and bought considerable land in this section. Upon first coming here, the Sheppards made their home with the Levi Harnsberger family. Mrs. Harnsberger and Mrs. Sheppard had been reading Washington Irving’s book, “The Alhambra,” and suggested that the town be given that name. The Alhambra is a Moorish castle in Spain. The word, Alhambra, means “The Red Castle,” and was so named because of its red-tiled exterior. Mr. Sheppard arrived here on a bright moonlight night and being enchanted with the beauty of the scene, thought the name, Alhambra, very fitting. Thus this name was selected.
The history of Alhambra is not altogether serene. On October 19, 1859, another site was chosen and platted by Levi Harnsberger, W.S. Handle, Henry Harnsberger and Captain J. Thornburg, on the corners of sections ten, eleven and fourteen which they called Greencastle. There was great rivalry between the two villages and really hard feelings at times. But time heals all wounds, and so it did the feelings which existed between the two settlements.
The idea of incorporating the village of Alhambra was growing among the many civic-minded people, but evidently there was some opposition as an item taken from a newspaper clipping reads as follows: “The Plank Walk” – The sidewalk is not completed as far west as the residence of R. D. Utiger, and is two feet wide, and is appreciated by our school children. In fact, everybody and those that did such terrible kicking last spring when we wanted to incorporate, now have nothing to say and won’t even walk in the middle of the road as they promised.”
The villages of Greencastle and Alhambra were united and incorporated on April 5, 1884."

Population

According to the 2000 census, there were 630 people, 209 households, and 145 families residing in the village. The population was 681 at the 2010 census. In the 2020 census, it was 22.[2]

Notables

Web Links

Village of Alhambra: http://www.villageofalhambra.com/index.html
Cemeteries (Find A Grave)[3]:
Harris Cemetery: https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/106059/harris-cemetery
Reaves Burial Ground: https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2256912/reaves-burial-ground
Saint Vincent Cemetery: https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/108095/saint-vincent-cemetery
Salem Cemetary: https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/108106/salem-cemetery
Vincent Cemetary: https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2196671/vincent-cemetery
West Cemetary: https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2270640/west-cemetery

Sources

  1. “ALHAMBRA HISTORY - (Taken from the Alhambra Centennial Souvenir Book, 1949).” Village of Alhambra, http://www.villageofalhambra.com/index.html.
  2. “Alhambra, Illinois.” Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation, 15 Mar. 2022, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alhambra,_Illinois.
  3. “Searach Results.” Find a Grave, https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/search?cemetery-name=&cemetery-loc=Alhambra%2C%2BMadison%2BCounty%2C%2BIllinois%2C%2BUnited%2BStates%2Bof%2BAmerica&only-with-cemeteries=cemOnly&locationId=city_40395. Searched for cemeteries in Alhambra, Madison, Illinois, USA.

Last Updated

13 Jun 2022




Memories: 1
Enter a personal reminiscence or story.
My father, Charles grew up in Alhambra. My grandmother lived there until I was in college. When I was in elementary school, in the early 80s, the restaurant that my parents met at across the street from my grandmother's house was still the old-school lunch counter. And you could get 2 scoops of ice cream for 42 cents. I can't tell you how many trips a day my sister and I would make back and forth - until we cleaned my grandma completely out of change.
posted 26 Nov 2023 by Heather Weatherholt   [thank Heather]
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