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Friday, March 13, 2026 at 3:39 AM
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Pioneers of The Past

McDonough County Genealogical Society

CAMP CREEK SETTLEMENT

Just months after William Pennington settled Pennington’s Point, William Osborne camped in the summer of 1828 along a creek on the border of Scotland and Industry townships. The area became known as Camp Creek, named for the creek itself. Osborne had migrated from Kentucky with the Pennington and Carter families. His daughter Rebecca, who married William Pennington in 1820 in Indiana, also came to McDonough County with her family.

The 1907 Historical Encyclopedia of Illinois – McDonough County described the area as having large timber along the creek, with hazel brush, crab apple, and plum trees covering the surrounding land. Today, this site is home to Camp Creek Cemetery.

William Osborne spent the remainder of his life in McDonough County and died on September 14, 1838, as the area began to develop. He left ten children; seven remained in the county as adults and married into other founding families, including the Russells, Joneses, Mayfields, and Cockerhams.

No known photographs of William Osborne exist, but images of two of his sons, Larkin and John Osborne, survive.

Pioneers of the Past by Julie L. Terstriep, of the McDonough County Genealogical Society, facebook. com/mcdcgs, www.mcdcgs. com/pioneers-of-the-past/

John S. Osborne
Larkin S Osborn

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