Railroads and ferries brought prosperity
A. B. Safford Memorial Museum in Cairo, Illinois, built in 1883 |
Cairo, Illinois, is at the extreme southern tip of Illinois, at the point where the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers converge.
I always have mixed feelings as I drive through Cairo (pronounced "Care-roh".) Sadly, the town has endured a long period of hard times and population loss. In the business district, empty lots suggest that many deteriorated buildings have been bulldozed and hauled away. Some old buildings, still standing, are candidates for the next demolition list.
I'm not sure if this church is in use. |
Cairo became an important railroad hub after the Civil War, and the town enjoyed several decades of great prosperity. Train cars (and other vehicles) were ferried across the rivers, and the ferry business was as important to local fortunes as the railroad and river-shipping businesses.
The Riverlore in Cairo, Illinois |
Then in 1889, the Illinois Central Railroad completed the Cairo Rail Bridge across the Ohio River (image, another image). It was a masterpiece of engineering. The metal bridge itself was nearly 2 miles long and the entire structure including the wooden approaches was almost 4 miles long. Freight from Chicago could travel directly to New Orleans via the Cairo Rail Bridge -- a revolution in rail shipping, but a blow to Cairo.
More mansions in Cairo |
Vehicles traveling in the Cairo area still used the ferries until two highway bridges were built -- the Mississippi River bridge (leading to Missouri) in 1929, and the Ohio River bridge (leading to Kentucky) in 1937. The bridges and roads connected a short distance south of Cairo, so travelers could quickly cross both rivers without even entering town.
The loss of the railroad and ferry industries was significant, but it alone did not kill the town. By the early 1900s, other serious problems (racism, corruption, violence, crime) were well-established in Cairo. Over the next century, these evils had a slow-but-deadly effect on the town. You can read about the darker side of Cairo's history at "Cairo, Illinois, Death by Racism."
Overgrowth and disrepair, too! |
Related:
A photo I took inside the Customs House some years ago
Seen at Wickliffe, Kentucky
Ohio River bridge, just south of Cairo |
5 comments:
Is that the Cairo in Huck Finn? Also, I thought your post was about brides, not bridges. Maybe these glasses aren't quite right!
The very same Cairo. Jim wanted to go up the Ohio River at Cairo to a free state, but they missed Cairo on a foggy night (no electric lights back then) and floated on into the South.
Cairo is in Alexander County. It is quite corrupt, even on Illinois standards. Last month it was reported that it had 7,100 voting age residents, but 7,800 registered to vote. Obama wrote movingly about it in "Audacity of Hope," while admitting its sorry situation. The union leader who hosted a barbecue for Obama in 2004 in Cairo was implicated, but never charged, in a 2000 vote buying scandal.
A barbecue on the river sounds like a nice thing in warm weather. Thanks for the Twain clarification.
Cairo is not pronounced Kay-ro except in the South. In the North, people generally say Ki-ro. The correct pronunciation is Care-ro. I would like to say that the Cairo of today is nothing like it was in the 40s to the 60s. It was a wonderful town and a great place to grow up -- as the 1940-1970 Cairo/St. Joseph High School graduates will testify at their ANNUAL high school reunions. Thanks for writing your blog about the old hometown of our hearts.
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