Our Community
Jersey County, Missouri
Forty miles north of St. Louis, then due east of where the great Mississippi
and Illinois rivers meet, lies
Jersey County. About
22,000 people live in the largely rural county, rich with breathtaking vistas
and scenic villages along the meandering Mississippi. About 8,000 of those
residents dwell in Jerseyville, the county seat. Other cities include Brighton,
Dow, Elsah, Fidelity, Fieldon,
Grafton, and Medora.
Jersey
County was named after the state from which many of the early settlers emigrated
New Jersey. However, the first residents were the Kickapoo, Menomini,
Potawatomi, and Illini Indians. Evidence of their cultures, and that of other
tribes, were found by archaeologists in what is now Illinois largest state
park,
Pere Marquette State Park in Grafton. There are burial grounds throughout
the park, including one on top of McAdams Peak. Present-day visitors to the
8,000-acre park will find an ideal environment for horseback riding, camping,
hiking, fishing, hunting, and boating.
Grafton is also known as the winter home of the American Bald Eagle, and the
towns historic district extends two blocks on the north and south side of West
Main Street, with historic Shafers Wharf as a focal point. Sixteen structures
are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
The county is also home to Americas newest National Scenic Byway, The
Meeting of the Great Rivers National Scenic Byway. Other historically
significant sites: the county is the
Charles Brainerd House, a Queen Anne-style brick and slate structure built
in 1881 in Grafton; and
The Hamilton School, the first free and integrated school in the United
States.
