Quincy, Illinois, is located on the Mississippi River about 20 miles north of Hannibal, Missouri, and 100 miles west of Springfield, the state capital.
Early industry in Quincy included pork packing, tobacco processing, paper making, stove making, carriage making, the ice industry, and lumberyards..
These settlers were lured to the area by reports of the lush land called the "Jewel of the West," which was later called "The Gem City." Industrialists came from New York and other Eastern states and built many of the stately homes on Maine Street and the adjacent streets.
Many German and Irish immigrants came to Quincy, along with pioneers moving from Kentucky and Virginia.
As more people came, the village grew eastward from that spot.
In 1822, a man named John Wood built a cabin at the foot of what would later become Delaware Street, near the Mississippi River.
Both Quincy and the county in which it lies, Adams, were named for President John Quincy Adams.
Quincy, Illinois, is located on the Mississippi River about 20 miles north of Hannibal, Missouri, and 100 miles west of Springfield, the state capital