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Stillman Valley, Illinois

1875 establishments in Illinois1876 establishments in IllinoisCommons link is defined as the pagenamePopulated places established in 1875Stillman Valley, Illinois
Villages in IllinoisVillages in Ogle County, Illinois
Stillman Valley, IL Sign 03
Stillman Valley, IL Sign 03

Stillman Valley is a village in Marion Township, Ogle County, Illinois, United States. It lies east of Byron, south of Rockford and west of Davis Junction. The population was 1,120 at the 2010 census, up from 1,048 in 2000. The village is located on the Iowa, Chicago and Eastern Railroad, on the old Chicago Great Western Railway before it merged and was pulled up. Also, Illinois Route 72 runs through the village. It is near the site of the first battle of the Black Hawk War of 1832. The war memorial for the Battle of Stillman's Run is located in this village.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Stillman Valley, Illinois (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Stillman Valley, Illinois
Wilson Street, Marion Township

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.105833333333 ° E -89.18 °
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Address

Wilson Street

Wilson Street
61084 Marion Township
Illinois, United States
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Stillman Valley, IL Sign 03
Stillman Valley, IL Sign 03
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Battle of Stillman's Run
Battle of Stillman's Run

The Battle of Stillman's Run, also known as the Battle of Sycamore Creek or the Battle of Old Man's Creek, occurred in Illinois on May 14, 1832. The battle was named for the panicked retreat by Major Isaiah Stillman and his detachment of 275 Illinois militia after being attacked by an unknown number of Sauk warriors of Black Hawk's British Band. The numbers of warriors has been estimated that as few as fifty but as many as two hundred participated in the attack. However, reports found in Whitney's Black Hawk War (Letters and reports compiled by the Illinois State Library) indicated that large numbers of Indians were on the move throughout the region, and it appeared that widespread frontier warfare was underway. The engagement was the first battle of the Black Hawk War (1832), which developed after Black Hawk crossed the Mississippi River from Iowa into Illinois with his band of Sauk and Fox warriors along with women, children, and elders to try to resettle in Illinois. The militia had pursued a small group of Sauk scouts to the main British Band camp following a failed attempt by Black Hawk's emissaries to negotiate a truce. During the engagement, 12 militiamen were killed by Band warriors while making a stand on a small hill. The remainder of the militia fled back to Dixon's Ferry. Citizens erected a monument in 1901 in Stillman Valley, Illinois commemorating the battle. A 2006 article corroborates that militia volunteer Abraham Lincoln was present at the battleground's burials; sources agree about little else. Investigation continues in the early 21st century about facts of the skirmish.