Skip to main content

J.F. Glidden Papers (DeKalb)

 Collection
Identifier: RHC-RC-006

Scope and Contents

The papers of J.F. Glidden primarily document the personal and business activities of Joseph Farwell Glidden during the years 1882-1906, and to a lesser degree, other Glidden family members, relatives and friends from 1885-1954. Additionally, there are small quantities of records from the Henderson and Olson Company, Lee, Illinois, which have as yet an undetermined relationship with J.F. Glidden and are included herewith. This collection does not contain any significant amount of material relating to Glidden barb wire. Series I contains personal and business correspondence of J.F. Glidden from 1885 to 1906. Glidden House, Series II, documents the operations of the hotel from 1886 to 1912. Included are the bills and receipts of individuals or businesses, arranged alphabetically, who did business with the Glidden House. J.F. Glidden’s non-agricultural business interests other than the Glidden House are contained in Series III while Series IV consists of J.F. Glidden’s agricultural business activities. Agreements with farms/individual farmers are alphabetically arranged. Series V is arranged alphabetically and contains bills and receipts made out to J.F. Glidden. Series VI is comprised of Glidden Family papers, other than J.F. Glidden, and is arranged alphabetically. Business records from the Henderson and Olson Company, Lee, Illinois are included in Series VII. Included with the collection are three bound account ledgers, 1896-1907, with name indexes, that relate to the Glidden Publishing Company.

Dates

  • created: 1869-1955
  • Other: Date acquired: 00/00/1967

Conditions Governing Access

There are no restrictions on access to the collection.

Conditions Governing Use

Property rights in the collection are held by the Regional History Center; literary rights are dedicated to the public.

Biographical or Historical Information

Joseph Farwell Glidden (1813-1906) was born in New York and spent much of his early life on several of his father’s farms. In 1842 Joseph and his brother, Josiah Willard, moved westward eventually reaching Mt. Morris, Illinois. In the winter of 1842-43, Joseph purchased 600 acres from his cousin near the village of DeKalb, Illinois, and this became the Glidden homestead. Primarily interested in farming, Glidden spent the 1840’s-1860’s increasing his acreage and encouraging agricultural development. In 1851 he donated right of way privileges to the Chicago and Northwestern Railroad; in 1852 he was elected sheriff of DeKalb County; in 1863 and 1866 he was on the County Board of Supervisors. Ending a long standing plague of the farmers, the free-ranging herd, Glidden perfected and patented a new, inexpensive barb wire fence in 1873. He formed a partnership with a local merchant, Issac Ellwood, and their business became an overnight success. Several years later Glidden sold his half of the business but not before becoming a wealthy man from his invention. Glidden kept busy in the local community. In 1876 he built the Glidden house, a fancy hotel that featured shops on the main floor and rooms in the upper stories. In 1879, he and partner Clinton Rosette founded a newspaper, the DeKalb County Chronicle. In the early 1880’s he was a partner with Henry B. Sanborn in a 250,000 acre ranch and cattle raising venture in the Texas panhandle. In the late 1880’s he was head of several industrial mills in DeKalb. And in 1895, after the state legislature passed a bill creating a State Normal School at DeKalb, Glidden donated 64 acres of his land which formed the campus of the new school. Inventor, farmer, businessman, community leader and politician, J.F. Glidden was a man of many talents. Although his interests helped found a university, start a newspaper, and run a hotel and a large Texas ranch, he is best remembered for his invention of barb wire. This latter invention deservedly gives Glidden a secure place in American history.

Note written by

Extent

5.50 Linear Feet

Language of Materials

English

Arrangement Note

The collection consists of seven series: J.F. Glidden Personal and Business Correspondence; Glidden House; J.F. Glidden’s Non-Agriculture Business Interests; J.F. Glidden’s Agricultural Business Activities; Bills and Receipts; Glidden Family Papers; and Henderson and Olson Company, Lee, Illinois.

Source of Acquisition

Waite W. Embree Collection

Method of Acquisition

The records of J.F. Glidden came to the Northern Illinois University Archives as part of the Waite W. Embree Collection in 1967. Mr. Embree, a local historian, had assembled these materials from a variety of sources.  In January 1978, the University Archives transferred the collection to the Northern Illinois Regional History Center.

Separated Materials

Included in this collection but housed in the Bradt Genealogical Reference section in the Reading Room is the following volume: The Descendants of Charles Glidden of Portsmouth and Exeter, New Hampshire, comp. By G. Chamberlain; ed. By Lucia Glidden Strong, Boston, 1925, 1974.

Title
Archon Finding Aid Title
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
Undetermined
Script of description
Code for undetermined script
Language of description note
eng

Repository Details

Part of the Northern Illinois University Repository

Contact:
Founders Memorial Library
Northern Illinois University
DeKalb IL 60115 US
815-753-9392