My family, paternal and maternal, keeps coming up with ties to Bloomington, Illinois.
My sister and her husband used to live in Champaign, which is just a few miles southeast of Bloomington.
My paternal grandfather Walter Hetherington Packard was born in Normal, which is just a hop, skip, and a jump north of Bloomington, and appears to have been swallowed up by the Bloomington municipality, looking at it on Google Earth.
My great-great grandfather Mathew Hale Packard and several of his siblings settled in Bloomington both before and after the Civil War. Mathew Hale Packard died there. They had all come down from Canada. Some went first to Massachusetts, others to New York, before all settled in the Illinois city. Some of these Packard family members were in Bloomington by 1855; others did not arrive until ten years or so later, after the Civil War.
Mathew's brothers whom he joined in Bloomington were Charles R., Major Wellman, William B., Thadeus Bullock, and Francis A. (“Frank”). Two of his sisters were also in Bloomington: Mary Frances, married to Joseph Munroe, and Emeline, married to Joseph Munroe's brother George.
My mother's side also has ties to Bloomington, in the person of Nathaniel Strong Sunderland, widely known as N. S. Sunderland. He provides a bridge between my maternal and paternal lines, being related to both. He is mentioned by his brother-in-law, Major Wellman Packard, in a letter Wellman wrote to a fellow Illinois lawyer, Abraham Lincoln. N. S. was the uncle of Sarah Ann Sunderland, my maternal great-great grandmother.
N. S. Sunderland had a farm somewhere between Towanda and Bloomington. Towanda lies just a few miles northeast of Bloomington. His farm was prosperous. His livestock was valued at $1,200, which in 2023 dollars, would be $21,837.89. His farm, exclusive of livestock or crops, was valued at $11,000, or $200,180.65 in 2023 dollars.
Not all of these branches on the Packard and Reed family trees remained in Bloomington. N. S. Sunderland later moved to Larned, Kansas, where he served several terms as a popular mayor. Oscar Merry Packard, son of Mathew Hale Packard, moved to southern California, where he prospered in his occupation as a real estate agent.
They all left their mark on Bloomington. Major Wellman Packard even had a street named for him. Bloomington also left its mark on the family, with both branches experiencing many events there.
Thanks, Bloomington.