Norris City, Illinois<\/h3>
The post office at Norris City was established May 15, 1871, with William A. Johnson appointed as the first Postmaster.\nThe name for Norris City had to have been decided prior to the time it was platted and prior to the opening of the post office. The question of how Norris City got its name has caused many debates throughout the years.\nThe new community, for a short time in early 1871, was called \u201cPopeye\u201d or \u201cPopeye\u2019s Station, after William A. Johnson, the first depot agent at the site who had the nickname of Popeye. The trainmen said they were stopping at \u201cPopeye\u201d or \u201cPopeye\u2019s Station.\u201d\nThe story is that Mr. Johnson\u2019s eyes protruded, so he was given the nickname of Popeye. This was before the days of the Popeye cartoon character, which was created by a native of Chester, Ill.. The story is, that children going to Gum Prairie Grade School near Mr. Johnson\u2019s house gave him the nickname. The other story is that he was given the nickname by the trainmen.\nStories about how Norris City got its name are varied, but the following is a result of my research:\nFirst off, it was not named after any of the aforementioned people involved in getting Norris City started and platted. This deepens the mystery.\nAccording to one story, the people of the new village got together to try to agree upon a name for it. It was decided that the name would come from the person or family having the most land in the area. After the acreages were added up, the Norris family beat out the Johnson family by just a few acres. Thus, as the story goes, it was named Norris City. William Norris was the head of the Norris family at that time so it was said to have been named after him.\n<\/p>
Another version is that a meeting was held and the railroad had been doing some business with William Norris so they decided to name the town Norris City after him. So the story goes that he went home from the meeting and told his wife, Emaline (White) Norris, and she replied she didn\u2019t think it was such a big deal to have such a small place named after you.\nAnother story is that Thomas Ridgway, for whom Ridgway was named, was on a train going through here. Mr. Ridgway was\u00a0 the President of the Springfield and Illinois Southeastern Railroad, and he asked what the town had been named. It is said that the foreman of the construction crew, or one version says he was conductor or engineer of the train, spoke up and said the trainmen call it Popeye or Popeye\u2019s Station. Mr. Ridgway, so the story goes, said that was no name for a town. This trainman is then supposed to have said, \u201cWhy don\u2019t you name it after me?\u201d So they did. His name was supposed to have been John William Norris of Fairfield. Nellie Johnson, wife of Mel Johnson, said her father was on the train when this happened. Mel and Nellie Johnson operated Johnson\u2019s Hardware of the south side of East Main Street in Norris City for years.\nAnother version of this story is that the engineer of the work train constructing the railroad tracks to the site of Norris City boarded at the home of William Norris, and his wife Emaline (White) Norris at the west edge of the site of the new village. It is said that he was the one who spoke up and suggested the name for the town. He was fond of the cooking of Mrs. Emaline Norris, who was noted as a good cook. For this reason, it is said that he suggested the name Norris City, naming the town after her and not her husband, William Norris. Jessie (Robb) Newkirk, wife of Vollie Newkirk (parents of Beth (Newkirk) Rister) and a granddaughter of William and Emaline Norris said that her grandmother always said that the town was named after her and not after her husband.A brother and a sister of Jessie Newkirk also told the same story that had been told to them by their grandmother Norris.\n<\/p>
The book, \u201cIllinois, a Descriptive and Historical Guide,\u201d compiled in 1939 by Federal Works Agency, Works Project Administration, states that Norris City, altitude 444, population 1109, a trading center for an agricultural and coal mining district was named in honor of a pioneer settler, William Norris.\nA reference report of the Illinois State Historical Library states, \u201cNo information is available in our records as to the origins of the name, Norris City.\u201d\n<\/p><\/div>\n
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