Rural electrification in West-Central Illinois
- by Quincy Herald-Whig
- May 04, 2024
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A photo of Louisan Mamar demonstrating what electricity could do in the home.
Photo Courtesy of RE Magazine
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We have all heard about Thomas Edison and the incandescent light bulb which he invented in 1879. But how could you use a light bulb if you had no electricity?
Edisonâs first power station was in New York City in 1882. It was direct current (DC) which had limitations. Along came George Westinghouse and others who set up an alternate current (AC) power station in Niagara, New York, in 1886. Throw in Nikola Tesla who had invented a generator which could transport AC electricity over long distances and the age of electricity was born.
Electricity requires a power source which in the early days was hydro and coal. The looming dilemma was the divide between those who had electricity and those who did not. Rural areas did not. Cities and towns had electricity and even Quincy had electric streetcars by 1891.
The election of 1932 pitted Herbert Hoover against Franklin Delano Roosevelt. While campaigning Roosevelt was appalled at the condition of rural America with many having no running water or electricity. Upon winning the election, Roosevelt planned large electrification projects beginning with the Tennessee Valley Authority in 1933.
In 1935, President Roosevelt issued Executive Order 7037 which established the Rural Electrification Administration (REA). Congress agreed and passed the Rural Electrification Act in 1936. As an east Texas farmer and Speaker of the House, Sam Rayburn was instrumental in passing that act. He knew that in the mid-1930s nine out of ten rural homes had no electricity. The investor-owned power companies in cities and towns were not interested in erecting power lines to scattered homes and farms in the county due to the expense involved. But famer-owned cooperatives were interested, and they were the ones who applied for loans through the REA.
Locally, both the Adams County Electric Cooperative in Golden and the Western Illinois Electrical Cooperative in Carthage serving Hancock County began in 1938. By the end of 1938, the Adams County co-op had 1,200 members.
Both groups held meetings and told farmers how to sign up for power by becoming members of the co-ops. To build lines, the co-op had to ask permission of land owners, and county and state authorities. The Dec. 11, 1938, Quincy Herald Whig reported, âPermission was received Saturday, from the state highway department for the Co-op association to build lines along the slab roads in the county. Permission to build along state aid roads was granted by Adams County authorities some time ago and now that the state has given the electric Co-op association the privilege of placing poles along the highway, work can go on faster⦠.â
The process of getting electricity to the rural homes involved the cooperation of friends and neighbors. A route was chosen when enough famers on a route wanted electricity. Loans would be requested from the REA for that route. Initially the Adams County Co-op planned to build 200 miles and requested a loan of $200,000. Unexpectedly and much to their delight, the loan was made for $400,000 allowing up to 400 miles of power lines to be constructed. When the final approval came from Washington, a call for bids was advertised. In Adams County, construction work began in late summer of 1938 and many rural homes hoped to have electricity by Thanksgiving. Additional lines would be built when enough farmers had joined the Co-op. A map would then be drawn and funds requested from the REA. The Co-op had 90 days to decide to build these extensions. The original build was 400 miles of power lines. Dues to the Co-op were $5.00 and the family had to pledge to use at least $3.50 worth of electric current per month. Loans would be paid over a 20-year period with interest rates below 3%.
Max Weinberg, a Quincy lawyer originally from Augusta, was the attorney for the Co-op and also for the Hancock County organization. George Simpson was the project engineer. Mr. Simpson was quoted in the July 22, 1938, Quincy Herald Whig, âAny man whose home is not now on the routes of the projected lines, ⦠and who wants electricity, should get busy and get his neighbors to join him in asking for extensions. Extensions will be built when the time for extension to be made serve groups, rather than a few farms.â
After a meeting held in Springfield with state and national officers of the REA, the Aug. 5, 1938, Quincy Herald Whig reported, âThe national officers are greatly pleased with the Adams County Electric Co-Op association because of the large number of members it has and because of the prosperity of the rural regions in this county that will be served.â
Frequently telephone poles had to be moved for the power lines and substations had to be built. One sub station near Ursa was delayed as the landowner was serving in a mission station in Tanana, Alaska, located on the Yukon River and still a town today. Letters and wires were sent, radios were used, and the Dec. 9, 1938, Quincy Herald Whig said, âMr. Weinberg has an idea that it is probable that his message and the reply was handled by dog teams somewhere between Tanana and Fairbanks.â
Once the farm was connected to the power lines, the families needed to learn how to use electricity. Born on a farm in southern Illinois without electricity and a graduate of the University of Illinois College of Agriculture, Louisan Mamer, was hired as an REA advisor. She traveled around the country showing folks how to operate appliances, cook, and do household chores with electricity. She and others like her used tents for their presentations. The tents became known as The REA Circus. According to the Aug. 26, 1939, Quincy Herald Whig, the âelectric showâ had demonstrations all day and into the evening with food provided by an âall electric lunch stand.â
World War II interrupted much of the rural electrification work. Fortunately for farmers the work was resumed after 1945. By 1959, 90% of farm homes were electrified.
Sources
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